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The mechanism of azide activation of polyphenol oxidase II from tobacco.
Author(s) -
Chunhua Shi,
Qingliang Liu,
Ya Dai,
Yongshu Xie,
Xiaolong Xu
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
acta biochimica polonica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.452
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1734-154X
pISSN - 0001-527X
DOI - 10.18388/abp.2002_3763
Subject(s) - azide , chemistry , polyphenol oxidase , catechol oxidase , activator (genetics) , peroxide , sodium azide , enzyme , active site , photochemistry , nuclear chemistry , inorganic chemistry , stereochemistry , biochemistry , peroxidase , organic chemistry , gene
So far, azide has been consistently reported to act as an inhibitor of metal enzymes, especially copper proteins. The present work shows that azide can also act as an activator of polyphenol oxidase II (PPO II) from tobacco leaves. From the square-wave voltammetry of native PPO II, peroxide-PPO II complex and azide-PPO II complex, the reduction of nitro blue tetrazolium by the enzymes and activation of PPO II by peroxide it follows that the binding of azide to PPO II induces the formation of CuO(2)(2-)Cu in the active site of PPO II from CuO(2)(-)Cu in native PPO II. The reason for azide acting as an activator can be attributed to azide complexing with PPO II, thus inducing the formation of CuO(2)(2-)Cu, which is the active site of the peroxide-PPO II complex in which peroxide plays the role of activator.

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