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Metal insertion chelatases

The biosynthesis of chlorophylls diverges from that of heme at the metal insertion stage. Magnesium is inserted into protoporphyrin IX by a little-known enzyme, called magnesium chelatase, followed by esterification of the propionic acid side chain on C-13 by transfer of a methyl group from... [Pg.39]

The logic of the evolution of insertion can now be considered. Much as the most primitive selectivity of the chemistry of the uptake process, pumping, carrying and final binding to form a useful enzyme is not an invention by organisms but is a necessary consequence of inevitable equilibrium considerations (see Section 4.17), so the binding of particular metal ions to particular chelatase proteins was similarly selected... [Pg.215]

Perhaps the best-characterized example of this mechanism involves the synthesis of heme cofactors and their subsequent incorporation into various hemoproteins (see Iron Heme Proteins Electron Transport). Succinctly, enzyme-catalyzed reactions convert either succinyl-CoA or glutamate into 5-ammolevulinic acid. This molecule is further converted through a series of intermediates to form protoporphyrin IX, the metal-ffee cofactor, into which Fe is inserted by ferrochelatase. Analogous reactions are required for the synthesis of other tetrapyrrole macrocycles such as the cobalamins (see Cobalt Bu Enzymes Coenzymes), various types of chlorophylls, and the methanogen coenzyme F430 (containing Co, Mg, or Ni, respectively). Co- and Mg-chelatases have been described for insertion of these metals into the appropriate tetrapyrrolic ring structures. ... [Pg.5512]


See other pages where Metal insertion chelatases is mentioned: [Pg.212]    [Pg.479]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.481]    [Pg.5511]    [Pg.40]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.213 ]




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