Bovine serum amine oxidase (BSAO), reduced by excess amine under limited turnover conditions, was over 80% inactivated by H2O2 upon oxygen exhaustion. The UV-Vis spectrum and the reduced reactivity with carbonyl reagents showed that the cofactor topaquinone (TPQ) was stabilized in reduced form. The protein large M-r (170 kDa) prevented the identification of modified residues by amino acid analyses. Minor changes of the Cu2+ EPR signal and the formation of a radical at g = 2.001, with intensity a few percent of that of the Cu2+ signal, unaffected by a temperature increase, suggest that Cu2+-bound histidines were not oxidized and the radical was not the Cu+-semi-quinolamine in equilibrium with Cu2+-aminoquinol. It may derive from the modification of a conserved residue in proximity of the active site, possibly the tyrosine at hydrogen-bonding distance of TPQ C-4 ionized hydroxyl, The inactivation reaction appears to be a general feature of copper-containing amine oxidases, It may be part of an autoregulatory process in vivo, possibly relevant to cell adhesion and redox signaling. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
Modulation of bovine serum amine oxidase activity by hydrogen peroxide / Pietrangeli, Paola; S., Nocera; P., Fattibene; X. T., Wang; Mondovi', Bruno; L., Morpurgo. - In: BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS. - ISSN 0006-291X. - STAMPA. - 267:1(2000), pp. 174-178. [10.1006/bbrc.1999.1925]
Modulation of bovine serum amine oxidase activity by hydrogen peroxide
PIETRANGELI, Paola;MONDOVI', Bruno;
2000
Abstract
Bovine serum amine oxidase (BSAO), reduced by excess amine under limited turnover conditions, was over 80% inactivated by H2O2 upon oxygen exhaustion. The UV-Vis spectrum and the reduced reactivity with carbonyl reagents showed that the cofactor topaquinone (TPQ) was stabilized in reduced form. The protein large M-r (170 kDa) prevented the identification of modified residues by amino acid analyses. Minor changes of the Cu2+ EPR signal and the formation of a radical at g = 2.001, with intensity a few percent of that of the Cu2+ signal, unaffected by a temperature increase, suggest that Cu2+-bound histidines were not oxidized and the radical was not the Cu+-semi-quinolamine in equilibrium with Cu2+-aminoquinol. It may derive from the modification of a conserved residue in proximity of the active site, possibly the tyrosine at hydrogen-bonding distance of TPQ C-4 ionized hydroxyl, The inactivation reaction appears to be a general feature of copper-containing amine oxidases, It may be part of an autoregulatory process in vivo, possibly relevant to cell adhesion and redox signaling. (C) 2000 Academic Press.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.