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Molybdenum enzymes pterin-containing

DNA cleavage by, 43 158-159 reactions, copper proteins, 39 25 Oxo-trichloroselenates(IV), 35 270-271 Oxo-type molybdenum enzyme, see Molybdenum enzymes, pterin-containing Oxovandium (IV), solvent exchange and ligand substitution, 42 47-49 Oxyanions, Groups VIB and VIIB, redox reactions, kinetics and mechanism, 40 269-274... [Pg.224]

Bioinorganic Chemistry of Pterin-Containing Molybdenum and Tungsten Enzymes John H. Enemark and Charles G. Young... [Pg.512]

In the first family, the metal is coordinated by one molecule of the pterin cofactor, while in the second, it is coordinated to two pterin molecules (both in the guanine dinucleotide form, with the two dinucleotides extending from the active site in opposite directions). Some enzymes also contain FejSj clusters (one or more), which do not seem to be directly linked to the Mo centers. The molybdenum hydroxylases invariably possess redox-active sites in addition to the molybdenum center and are found with two basic types of polypeptide architecture. The enzymes metabolizing quinoline-related compounds, and derivatives of nicotinic acid form a separate groups, in which each of the redox active centers are found in separate subunits. Those enzymes possessing flavin subunits are organized as a2jS2A2, with a pair of 2Fe-2S centers in the (3 subunit, the flavin in the (3 subunit, and the molybdenum in the y subunit. [Pg.167]

Another factor that characterizes molybdenum and tungsten enzymes is that instead of using the metal itself, directly coordinated to amino acid side-chains of the protein, an unusual pterin cofactor, Moco, is involved in both molybdenum- and tungsten-containing enzymes. The cofactor (pyranopterin-dithiolate) coordinates the metal ion via a dithiolate side-chain (Figure 17.2). In eukaryotes, the pterin side-chain has a terminal phosphate group, whereas in prokaryotes, the cofactor (R in Figure 17.2) is often a dinucleotide. [Pg.280]

Figure 17.2 The structure of the pterin cofactor (1) which is common to most molybdenum- and tungsten-containing enzymes and schematic active site structures for members of the xanthine oxidase (2,3), sulfite oxidase (4) and DMSO reductase (5-7) enzyme families. (From Enemark et al., 2004. Copyright (2004) American Chemical Society.)... Figure 17.2 The structure of the pterin cofactor (1) which is common to most molybdenum- and tungsten-containing enzymes and schematic active site structures for members of the xanthine oxidase (2,3), sulfite oxidase (4) and DMSO reductase (5-7) enzyme families. (From Enemark et al., 2004. Copyright (2004) American Chemical Society.)...
The evidence for a pterin-substituted 1,2-enedithiolate was first reported by Raja-gopalan, Johnson, and coworkers, who isolated pterins from the oxidative decomposition of molybdenum-bound MPT, Figure 4 [7,49,55,56], In complementary work, Taylor and coworkers confirmed the structure of several of the pterin decomposition products by direct synthesis (see Section V. A) [30,57-59], Urothi-one, first isolated in 1940 from human urine [60], was shown to be a metabolic degradation product of MPT [37], Other isolated pterin-containing decomposition and/or derivatized products from molybdenum enzymes include Form A, Form B (a urothione-like product), and camMPT (Figure 4) [7], Two other pterins, Form Z and the MPT precursor, can be obtained from molybdenum deprived organisms, N. crassa Nit-1, and oxidase-deficient children, neither of which pro-... [Pg.88]

Bioinorganic Chemistry of Pterin-Containing Molybdenum and Tungsten Enzymes... [Pg.480]

BIOINORGANIC CHEMISTRY OF PTERIN-CONTAINING MOLYBDENUM AND TUNGSTEN ENZYMES ... [Pg.1]

This chapter is restricted to the bioinorganic chemistry of pterin-containing molybdenum and tungsten enzymes. Primary emphasis is given to recent results and to the interplay of model and enzyme chemis-... [Pg.3]

The molybdenum-containing oxidoreductases that catalyze Eq. (1) have been variously termed molybdenum hydroxylases (6), oxotransferases (7), and oxo-type molybdenum enzymes (8). Molybdenum hydroxylase aptly describes the conversion of xanthine to uric acid, but the name seems less appropriate for the reactions catalyzed by sulfite oxidase and nitrate reductase oxotransferase implies that the function of these enzymes is to transfer oxo groups, even though relatively little is known about their actual mechanism of action and the name oxo-type molybdenum enzyme recognizes both the apparent oxo transfer chemistry of Eq. (1) and the fact that the molybdenum atom in each of these enzymes contains at least one terminal oxo group. In this chapter, we shall refer to these enzymes as pterin-containing molybdenum enzymes because a 6-substituted pterin appears to be a common chemical feature of all of the enzymes. [Pg.3]

The chapter consists of nine sections. Sections II through VII deal with the pterin-containing molybdenum enzymes. Biochemical and model studies of molybdopterin, Mo-co, and related species are described in Section II. In Section III, we briefly survey physical and spectroscopic techniques employed in the study of the enzymes, and consider their impact upon the current understanding of the coordination about the molybdenum atom in sulfite oxidase and xanthine oxidase. Model studies are described in Sections IV and V. Section IV concentrates on structural and spectroscopic models, whereas Section V considers aspects of the reactivity of model and enzyme systems. The xanthine oxidase cycle (Section VI) and facets of intramolecular electron transfer in molybdenum enzymes (Section VII) are then treated. Section VIII describes the pterin-containing tungsten enzymes and the evolving model chemistry thereof Future directions are addressed in Section IX. [Pg.4]

The characteristic fluorescence spectra of oxidized pterins observed in solutions of denatured molybdenum enzymes provided some of the first clues that the molybdenum cofactor contains a pterin unit (24). [Pg.15]

The postulated catalytic cycles for pterin-containing molybdenum enzymes involve a two-electron change at the molybdenum atom (Mo(VI) Mo(IV)). Microcoulometric titrations of nitrate reductase Chlorella vulgaris) (76), milk xanthine oxidase (77), and sulfite oxidase (78) show that their molybdenum centers are reduced by two electrons. The reduction potentials for the molybdenum center of chicken liver sulfite oxidase are strongly dependent upon pH and upon anion concentration (78). [Pg.16]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 ]




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