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Groups prosthetic

Various prosthetic groups, e.g., heme or Fe can be incorporated by heating with the amino acid mixture. Although the chemical structure is not known in each case, such nonamino acid compounds are firmly held they appear to be fixed by covalent bonds. [Pg.379]

There is an enormous amount of literature on the optical rotation and absorption of prosthetic groups of proteins. Only a few examples will be given here, which derive from the past interests of the reviewer. The points to be made, hopefully, will be of general utility and are chosen to relate to the previous discussions. [Pg.319]


Enzymes often need for their activity the presence of a non-protein portion, which may be closely combined with the protein, in which case it is called a prosthetic group, or more loosely associated, in which case it is a coenzyme. Certain metals may be combined with the enzyme such as copper in ascorbic oxidase and selenium in glutathione peroxidase. Often the presence of other metals in solution, such as magnesium, are necessary for the action of particular enzymes. [Pg.159]

Conjugated proteins Proteins with a prosthetic group ... [Pg.332]

Nucleoproieins. The prosthetic group of the nucleoproteins is nucleic acid, often linked through salt linkages with protamines or histones. The nucleoproteins are present in the nuclei of all cells. Chromasomes are largely nucleoproteins and some plant viruses and bacteriophages have been shown to be pure nucleoproteins. See also histones. [Pg.332]

Mode of Action. The fluoride ion inhibits enzymes, such as enolase, which require Mg as a prosthetic group, by precipitating a complex magnesium fluorophosphate thus it prevents phosphate transfer in oxidative metaboHsm. [Pg.268]

Structure of the MoFe Protein. Extensive spectroscopic studies of the MoEe proteia, the appHcation of cluster extmsion techniques (84,151), x-ray anomalous scattering, and x-ray diffraction (10,135—137,152) have shown that the MoEe proteia contains two types of prosthetic groups, ie, protein-bound metal clusters, each of which contains about 50% of the Ee and content. Sixteen of the 30 Ee atoms and 14—16 of the 32—34... [Pg.88]

Fig. 7. View of the FeMo-cofactor prosthetic group of the nitrogenase MoFe protein with some of the surrounding amino acid residues where ( ) represents the molybdenum coordinated to a-His-442 and homocitrate (at the top), ( ) represents the iron, interspersed with the sulfur (O) and carbon... Fig. 7. View of the FeMo-cofactor prosthetic group of the nitrogenase MoFe protein with some of the surrounding amino acid residues where ( ) represents the molybdenum coordinated to a-His-442 and homocitrate (at the top), ( ) represents the iron, interspersed with the sulfur (O) and carbon...
In order for the cyclooxygenase to function, a source of hydroperoxide (R—O—O—H) appears to be required. The hydroperoxide oxidizes a heme prosthetic group at the peroxidase active site of PGH synthase. This in turn leads to the oxidation of a tyrosine residue producing a tyrosine radical which is apparendy involved in the abstraction of the 13-pro-(5)-hydrogen of AA (25). The cyclooxygenase is inactivated during catalysis by the nonproductive breakdown of an active enzyme intermediate. This suicide inactivation occurs, on average, every 1400 catalytic turnovers. [Pg.152]

In contrast to the nicotinamide nucleotide dehydrogenases, the prosthetic groups FMN and FAD are firmly associated with the proteins, and the flavin groups are usually only separated from the apoen2yme (protein) by acid treatment in water. However, in several covalently bound flavoproteins, the enzyme and flavin coen2ymes are covalently affixed. In these cases, the flavin groups are isolated after the proteolytic digestion of the flavoproteins. [Pg.80]

Flavin mononucleotide was first isolated from the yellow en2yme in yeast by Warburg and Christian in 1932 (4). The yellow en2yme was spHt into the protein and the yellow prosthetic group (coen2yme) by dialysis under acidic conditions. Flavin mononucleotide was isolated as its crystalline calcium salt and shown to be riboflavin-5Lphosphate its stmeture was confirmed by chemical synthesis by Kuhn and Rudy (94). It is commercially available as the monosodium salt dihydrate [6184-17 /, with a water solubiUty of more than 200 times that of riboflavin. It has wide appHcation in multivitamin and B-complex solutions, where it does not require the solubili2ers needed for riboflavin. [Pg.80]

Riboflavin-5 -Adenosine Diphosphate. Riboflavin-5 -adenosine diphosphate [146-14-5] (flavin—adenine dinucleotide, FAD), C27H33N9O15P2 (2), mol wt 785.56, was first isolated in 1938 from the D-amino acid oxidase as its prosthetic group (95), where it was postulated to be... [Pg.80]

Covalently Bound Flavins. The FAD prosthetic group in mammalian succinate dehydrogenase was found to be covalently affixed to protein at the 8 a-position through the linkage of 3-position of histidine (102,103). Since then, several covalently bound riboflavins (104,105) have been found successively from the en2ymes Hsted in Table 3. The biosynthetic mechanism, however, has not been clarified. [Pg.80]

The alkynyl steroid (96) inactivates aromatase, an enzyme which catalyzes the conversion of androgen to estrogen. It has been suggested (81JA3221) that the inactivation process involves the oxidation of (96) to an oxirene which rearranges to an oxocarbene which then binds to the enzyme prosthetic group, thus inactivating it. [Pg.124]

Oxidation of P-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) to NAD+ has attracted much interest from the viewpoint of its role in biosensors reactions. It has been reported that several quinone derivatives and polymerized redox dyes, such as phenoxazine and phenothiazine derivatives, possess catalytic activities for the oxidation of NADH and have been used for dehydrogenase biosensors development [1, 2]. Flavins (contain in chemical structure isoalloxazine ring) are the prosthetic groups responsible for NAD+/NADH conversion in the active sites of some dehydrogenase enzymes. Upon the electropolymerization of flavin derivatives, the effective catalysts of NAD+/NADH regeneration, which mimic the NADH-dehydrogenase activity, would be synthesized [3]. [Pg.363]

Casein may be considered to be a conjugated protein, that is the protein is associated in nature with certain non-protein matter known as prosthetic groups. In the case of casein the prosthetic group is phosphoric acid. The protein molecule is also associated in some way with calcium. The presence of these inorganic materials has an important bearing on the processability and subsequent use of casein polymers. [Pg.855]

HEMOPROTEINS. These proteins are actually a subclass of metalloproteins because their prosthetic group is heme, the name given to iron protoporphyrin IX (Figure 5.15). Because heme-containing proteins enjoy so many prominent biological functions, they are considered a class by themselves. [Pg.127]


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4 phosphopantetheine prosthetic group

Anion as a Prosthetic Group for Labelling Proteins with Astatine

BPh and other prosthetic groups

Bilin prosthetic groups

Catalase prosthetic groups

Coenzymes prosthetic groups and

Cofactors, Coenzymes, and Prosthetic Groups

Collagen prosthetic groups

Conjugated proteins. Prosthetic groups. Coenzymes

Enzyme prosthetic groups

Ferritin prosthetic groups

Flavocytochrome prosthetic groups structure

Group extraction, prosthetic

Heme prosthetic group

Hemoglobin prosthetic group

Horseradish peroxidase heme prosthetic group

Iron-Sulfur Cluster, an Ancient Indispensable Prosthetic Group

Iron-sulfur proteins with other prosthetic groups

Location of post-translational modifications and prosthetic groups

Mucins prosthetic groups

Myoglobin prosthetic group, structure

Nitric oxide synthase prosthetic groups

Other Subunits without Prosthetic Groups

Ovalbumin prosthetic group

Peroxidase prosthetic group

Prosthetic

Prosthetic Groups, Cofactors, and Post-Translational Modifications

Prosthetic Groups, and Cofactors

Prosthetic group carrier protein

Prosthetic group determination

Prosthetic group flavoprotein

Prosthetic group metalloprotein

Prosthetic group nucleoprotein

Prosthetic group or cofactor

Prosthetic group phosphoprotein

Prosthetic group protease

Prosthetic group structural protein

Prosthetic group synthesis

Prosthetic group, definition

Prosthetic group, of enzymes

Prosthetic group, structure

Prosthetic groups analysis

Prosthetic groups chromophores

Prosthetic groups conformations

Prosthetic groups conjugated

Prosthetic groups globular

Prosthetic groups glycoproteins

Prosthetic groups haemoproteins

Prosthetic groups in proteins

Prosthetic groups lipoproteins

Prosthetic groups of proteins

Prosthetic groups peptide link

Prosthetic groups polypeptides

Prosthetic groups primary structure

Prosthetic groups secondary structure

Prosthetic groups simple

Prosthetic groups tertiary structure

Prosthetic groups water solubility

Prosthetic groups, measurements

Prosthetic groups, succinate dehydrogenase

Prosthetics

Protein prosthetic group

Pyruvic acid dehydrogenase prosthetic groups

Quantum yield bilin prosthetic groups

Quinones prosthetic groups

Redox-active prosthetic groups

Structure of the Heme Prosthetic Group

Structure of the Prosthetic Group

Transferrin prosthetic group

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