Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Molybdenum hydroxylases sources

Another selenium-containing molybdenum hydroxylase that has been isolated from Clostridium barkeri (identical to Eubacterium barkeri) is nicotinic acid hydroxylase (NAH). Clostridium barkeri was isolated initially as a fermentor of nicotinic acid and thus NAH is a key enzyme in the efficient fermentation of nicotinic acid as a source of carbon and energy. NAH contained selenium when purified from cells labeled with Se-selenite. However, this label was lost during denaturing gel electrophoresis and also on heating of the enzyme (Dilworth 1982). Exhaustive analysis of selenium-labeled alkylation products of NAH under various conditions revealed selenium was bound as a labile cofactor (Dilworth 1982), and not as seleno-cysteine. This report was the first to describe a selenium-dependent enzyme that did not contain selenium in the form of selenocysteine. [Pg.166]


See other pages where Molybdenum hydroxylases sources is mentioned: [Pg.446]    [Pg.449]    [Pg.458]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.456]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.2781]    [Pg.2780]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.86 , Pg.88 ]




SEARCH



Molybdenum hydroxylase

Molybdenum hydroxylases

Molybdenum sources

© 2024 chempedia.info