首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Isozyme patterns of acid peroxidases and their dependence on plant age, cultivation conditions, and tissue type have been investigated by electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gel in four species of the genus Stachys. The most stable peroxidase patterns have been found in the plant roots. Acid peroxidases have been shown to be species-specific, which allows their use in taxonomic studies. Cultivation in vitro and in vivo produces different isozyme patterns in various tissues of plants of various ages.  相似文献   

2.
Over the years novel plant peroxidases have been isolated from palm trees leaves. Some molecular and catalytic properties of palm peroxidases have been studied. The substrate specificity of palm peroxidases is distinct from the specificity of other plant peroxidases. Palm peroxidases show extremely high stability under acidic and alkaline conditions and high thermal stability. Moreover, these enzymes are more stable with respect to hydrogen peroxide treatment than other peroxidases. Due to their extremely high stability, palm peroxidases have been used successfully in the development of new bioanalytical tests, the construction of improved biosensors, and in polymer synthesis.  相似文献   

3.
Class III peroxidases (PODs) have many functions in plant metabolism mainly dependent on their various physiological reducing substrates. Their involvement in plant differentiation and in the response against environmental stress is well known. Several evidences underline that ascorbate (ASC) levels affect POD reactions and, as a consequence, interfere with the metabolic pathways controlled by these isoenzymes. Ascorbate peroxidases (APXs), enzymes belonging to a different class of peroxidases (class I), are often present in the same cellular compartments in which PODs are also active. Since both APXs and PODs specifically utilise hydrogen peroxide as oxidising substrate they can compete, when co-present, for the same substrate. In this review, attention focuses on some of the physiological processes in which both ASC metabolism and PODs are involved. In particular, the scavenging of reactive oxygen species (ROS) during photosynthesis, cell elongation and wall stiffening as well as programmed cell death have been considered thoroughly. The relations between PODs and ASC metabolism have been discussed also in the attempt to outline their relevance for the correct plant development as well as for the perception/response of external stimuli allowing plants to cope with unfavourable conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Class Ⅲ secretable plant peroxidases occur as a large family of genes in plants with many functions and probable redundancy. In this review we are concentrating on the evidence we have on the catalysis of lignin polymerization by class Ⅲ plant peroxidases present in the apoplastic space in the xylem of trees. Some evidence exists on the specificity of peroxidase isozymes in lignin polymerization through substrate specificity studies, from antisense mutants in tobacco and poplar and from tissue and cell culture lines of Norway spruce (Picea abies) and Zinnia elegans. In addition, real time (RT-)PCR results have pointed out that many peroxidases have tissue specific expression patterns in Norway spruce. Through combining information on catalytic properties of the enzymes, on the expression patterns of the corresponding genes, and on the presence of monolignols and hydrogen peroxide in the apoplastic space, we can show that specific peroxidases catalyze lignin polymerization in the apoplastic space of Norway spruce xylem.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Relationships among 18 peroxidases amino acid sequences of animal, microbial and plant origin were examined using optimum alignment of all pairwise sequence combinations to generate a total distance matrix. The matrix was used to cluster the sequences with complete linkage (farthest neighbour) procedures. Specific distances were calculated from the total distances matrix. The patterns of specific distances for each sequence were compared to evaluate the relationships between sequences, check their significance and construct subgroups of related sequences. The results were compared with those from clustering and its resultant dendrogram; good agreement was achieved. The 18 sequences fell into two principal groups, plant peroxidases and animal/microbial peroxidases. Within the plant peroxidases four subgroups were detected; the animal/microbial peroxidases formed a fifth subgroup. Profiles were constructed for the subgroups from lists of matching amino acids generated by the alignment calculations. Superimposed lists were realigned to recognise conserved areas and elements. Individual subgroup profiles for the plant peroxidases were then combined into a single profile which in turn was combined with profiles from the animal/microbial peroxidases. The final profile suggested that numerous sequence features (motifs) were common to peroxidases of widely different function and origins.  相似文献   

6.
Artemisia annua is well-known for producing the antimalarial phytomolecule, artemisinin. The role of peroxidases has been hypothesized in artemisinin metabolism owing to the presence of an –O–O– linkage in this sesquiterpene lactone. Earlier, using a microarray, we identified differentially expressed genes, including peroxidases, in plant growth stages having contrasting artemisinin content. Here, three peroxidases—Aa547, having higher expression in low-artemisinin stage, and Aa540 and Aa528, having higher expression in high artemisinin stage, which could be associated with trichomes on the basis of their approximate gene expression pattern inferred from EST counts in UniGene—were selected for full-length cloning, tissue-specific expression profiling, and in silico analyses. The upstream genomic region of Aa547 was cloned and various cis-regulatory elements were identified. All the three candidates were predicted to be class III plant peroxidases. Further, this study aimed to check the responsiveness of the logically selected peroxidase genes to various abiotic stress factors. Taking cues from previous reports and the regulatory elements observed in the Aa547 promoter, hydration, salinity, temperature, salicylic acid, hydrogen peroxide, and methyl jasmonate, were selected to study their effect on the expression of the peroxidase genes through qRT-PCR. The peroxidases were found to be highly sensitive to the various factors but differed in their responses. Broadly, except for responses to high temperature and salicylic acid, the response of Aa547 to various factors was distinct from that of Aa540 and Aa528, which was in line with its distinctness from the other two peroxidases, considering the in planta artemisinin content and predicted structural features.  相似文献   

7.
The amino acid sequences of the 51% different horseradish peroxidase HRP C and turnip peroxidase TP 7 have previously been completed by us, but the three-dimensional structures are unknown. Recently the amino acid sequence and the crystal structure of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase have appeared. The three known apoperoxidases consist of 300 +/- 8 amino acid residues. The sequences have now been aligned and show 18% and 16% identity only, between the yeast peroxidase and plant peroxidase HRP C and TP 7, respectively. We show that different structural tests all support similar protein folds in plant peroxidases and yeast peroxidase and, therefore, a common evolutionary origin. The following tests support this thesis: (a) predicted helices in the plant peroxidases follow the complex pattern observed in the crystal structure of cytochrome c peroxidase; (b) their hydropathic profiles are similar and agree with observed buried and exposed peptide chain in cytochrome c peroxidase; (c) half-cystines which are distant in the amino acid sequence of plant peroxidases become spatial neighbours when fitted into the cytochrome c peroxidase model; (d) the two-domain structure proposed from limited proteolysis of apoperoxidase HRP C is observed in the crystal structure of cytochrome c peroxidase. The similarities and differences of the plant and yeast peroxidases and the reactive side chains of a plant peroxidase active site are described. The characteristics of Ca2+-binding sequences, derived from several superfamilies, are applied to predict the Ca2+-binding sequences in plant peroxidases.  相似文献   

8.
Members of the superfamily of plant, fungal, and bacterial peroxidases are known to be present in a wide variety of living organisms. Extensive searching within sequencing projects identified organisms containing sequences of this superfamily. Class I peroxidases, cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP), ascorbate peroxidase (APx), and catalase peroxidase (CP), are known to be present in bacteria, fungi, and plants, but have now been found in various protists. CcP sequences were detected in most mitochondria-possessing organisms except for green plants, which possess only ascorbate peroxidases. APx sequences had previously been observed only in green plants but were also found in chloroplastic protists, which acquired chloroplasts by secondary endosymbiosis. CP sequences that are known to be present in prokaryotes and in Ascomycetes were also detected in some Basidiomycetes and occasionally in some protists. Class II peroxidases are involved in lignin biodegradation and are found only in the Homobasidiomycetes. In fact class II peroxidases were identified in only three orders, although degenerate forms were found in different Pezizomycota orders. Class III peroxidases are specific for higher plants, and their evolution is thought to be related to the emergence of the land plants. We have found, however, that class III peroxidases are present in some green algae, which predate land colonization. The presence of peroxidases in all major phyla (except vertebrates) makes them powerful marker genes for understanding the early evolutionary events that led to the appearance of the ancestors of each eukaryotic group.  相似文献   

9.
Tognolli M  Penel C  Greppin H  Simon P 《Gene》2002,288(1-2):129-138
Higher plants possess a large set of the classical guaiacol peroxidases (class III peroxidases, E.C. 1.11.1.7). These enzymes have been implicated in a wide array of physiological processes such as H(2)O(2) detoxification, auxin catabolism and lignin biosynthesis and stress response (wounding, pathogen attack, etc.). During the last 10 years, molecular cloning has allowed the isolation and characterization of several genes encoding peroxidases in plants. The achievement of the large scale Arabidopsis genome sequencing, combined with the DNA complementary to RNA (cDNA) expressed sequence tags projects, provided the opportunity to draw up the first comprehensive list of peroxidases in a plant. By screening the available databases, we have identified 73 peroxidase genes throughout the Arabidopsis genome. The evolution of the peroxidase multigene family has been investigated by analyzing the gene structure (intron/exon) in correlation with the phylogenetic relationships between the isoperoxidases. An evolutionary pattern of extensive gene duplications can be inferred and is discussed. Using a cDNA array procedure, the expression pattern of 23 peroxidases was established in the different organs of the plant. All the tested peroxidases were expressed at various levels in roots, while several were also detected in stems, leaves and flowers. The specific functions of these genes remain to be determined.  相似文献   

10.
Peroxidases   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The family of human peroxidases described includes myeloperoxidase, eosinophil peroxidase, uterine peroxidase, lactoperoxidase, salivary peroxidase, thyroid peroxidase and prostaglandin H1/2 synthases. The chemical identity of the peroxidase compound I and II oxidation states for the different peroxidases are compared. The identities of the distal and proximal amino acids of the catalytic site of each peroxidase are also compared. The gene characteristics and chromosomal location of the human peroxidase family have been tabulated and their molecular evolution discussed. Myeloperoxidase polymorphism and the mutations identified so far that affect myeloperoxidase activity and modulate their susceptibility to disease is described. The mechanisms for hypohalous and hypothiocyanate formation by the various peroxidases have been compared. The cellular function of the peroxidases and their hypohalites have been described as well as their inflammatory effects. The peroxidase catalysed cooxidation of drugs and xenobiotics that results in oxygen activation by redox cycling has been included. Low-density lipoprotein oxidation (initiation of atherosclerosis), chemical carcinogenesis, idiosyncratic drug reactions (e.g. agranulocytosis), liver necrosis or teratogenicity initiated by the cooxidation of endogenous substrates, plasma amino acids, drugs and xenobiotics catalysed by peroxidases or peroxidase containing cells have also been compared. Finally, peroxidase inhibitors currently in use for treating various diseases are described.  相似文献   

11.
DyP peroxidases comprise a novel superfamily of heme-containing peroxidases, which is unrelated to the superfamilies of plant and animal peroxidases. These enzymes have so far been identified in the genomes of fungi, bacteria, as well as archaea, although their physiological function is still unclear. DyPs are bifunctional enzymes displaying not only oxidative activity but also hydrolytic activity. Moreover, these enzymes are able to oxidize a variety of organic compounds of which some are poorly converted by established peroxidases, including dyes, β-carotene, and aromatic sulfides. Interestingly, accumulating evidence shows that microbial DyP peroxidases play a key role in the degradation of lignin. Owing to their unique properties, these enzymes are potentially interesting for a variety of biocatalytic applications. In this review, we deal with the biochemical and structural features of DyP-type peroxidases as well as their promising biotechnological potential.  相似文献   

12.
Lignins are aromatic heteropolymers that arise from oxidative coupling of lignin precursors, including lignin monomers (p-coumaryl, coniferyl, and sinapyl alcohols), oligomers, and polymers. Whereas plant peroxidases have been shown to catalyze oxidative coupling of monolignols, the oxidation activity of well-studied plant peroxidases, such as horseradish peroxidase C (HRP-C) and AtPrx53, are quite low for sinapyl alcohol. This characteristic difference has led to controversy regarding the oxidation mechanism of sinapyl alcohol and lignin oligomers and polymers by plant peroxidases. The present study explored the oxidation activities of three plant peroxidases, AtPrx2, AtPrx25, and AtPrx71, which have been already shown to be involved in lignification in the Arabidopsis stem. Recombinant proteins of these peroxidases (rAtPrxs) were produced in Escherichia coli as inclusion bodies and successfully refolded to yield their active forms. rAtPrx2, rAtPrx25, and rAtPrx71 were found to oxidize two syringyl compounds (2,6-dimethoxyphenol and syringaldazine), which were employed here as model monolignol compounds, with higher specific activities than HRP-C and rAtPrx53. Interestingly, rAtPrx2 and rAtPrx71 oxidized syringyl compounds more efficiently than guaiacol. Moreover, assays with ferrocytochrome c as a substrate showed that AtPrx2, AtPrx25, and AtPrx71 possessed the ability to oxidize large molecules. This characteristic may originate in a protein radical. These results suggest that the plant peroxidases responsible for lignin polymerization are able to directly oxidize all lignin precursors.  相似文献   

13.
The plant multigenic family of thiol peroxidases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Thiol peroxidases are ubiquitous recently characterized heme-free peroxidases, which catalyze the reduction of peroxynitrites and of various peroxides by catalytic cysteine residues and thiol-containing proteins as reductants. In plants, five different classes can be distinguished, according to the number and the position of conserved catalytic cysteines. Four classes are defined as peroxiredoxins and were already identified by phylogenetic sequence analysis, 1-Cys, 2-Cys, type II, and type Q peroxiredoxins, and the fifth is represented by glutathione peroxidases, which were recently shown to possess a thioredoxin-dependent activity in plants. Since the discovery of peroxiredoxins in plants in 1996, a lot of work has been devoted to the biochemical and functional characterization of the different peroxiredoxin isoforms, but in contrast, few structural data are available. The analysis of the Arabidopsis thaliana genome indicates that at least 17 isoforms of thioredoxin-dependent peroxidases are expressed in various plant compartments. The role of these proteins is discussed in terms of electron donor and substrate specificities and in light of their expression and localization. These enzymes are expressed in many plant tissues and are involved notably in the protection of the photosynthetic apparatus, in the response to various biotic or abiotic stresses by fighting reactive oxygen or nitrogen species and lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

14.
Diverse expression profiles of 21 rice peroxidase genes   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Secretory class III plant peroxidases (POXs) catalyze the oxidation of various reductants, and are encoded by a large multigene family. In rice, 42 independent expressed sequence tags for POXs have been identified. By RNA gel blot analysis using specific probes, we show here that 21 rice POX genes are unique in their developmental, organ specific and external stimuli-responsive expression. This would suggest that encoded POX isoenzymes are involved in a broad range of physiological processes in rice plants, individually.  相似文献   

15.
In this article an effort has been made to review literature based on the role of peroxidases in the treatment and decolorization of a wide spectrum aromatic dyes from polluted water. Peroxidases can catalyze degradation/transformation of aromatic dyes either by precipitation or by opening the aromatic ring structure. Peroxidases from plant sources; horseradish, turnip, tomato, soybean, bitter gourd, white radish and Saccharum uvarum and microbial sources; lignin peroxidases, manganese peroxidases, vanadium haloperoxidases, versatile peroxidases, dye decolorizing peroxidases have been employed for the remediation of commercial dyes. Soluble and immobilized peroxidases have been successfully exploited in batch as well as in continuous processes for the treatment of synthetic dyes with complex aromatic molecular structures present in industrial effluents at large scale. However, recalcitrant dyes were also decolorized by the action of peroxidases in the presence of redox mediators.  相似文献   

16.
Covalent structure of soybean seed coat peroxidase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Peroxidase from soybean seed coat (SBP) is very stable at high temperature, extremes of pH, and in organic solvent. At the same time, it is highly reactive towards both organic and inorganic substrates, similar to horseradish peroxidase. SBP has a wide range of potential applications, and its structure is of particular interest for engineering purposes and as a model for stable heme peroxidases. The covalent structure of SBP has been determined by Edman sequencing and MALDI-TOF MS. SBP is a highly heterogeneous glycoprotein with MS determined masses from 39 to 41 kDa. The mature protein consists of 306 residues starting with pyrrolidone carboxylic acid. Seven glycosylation sites have been observed, although some sites were only partially glycosylated. No putative plant peroxidases were orthologous to SBP. However, SBP showed greater than 70% amino acid sequence identity to peroxidases from other legumes recruited in various defense responses.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The classical plant peroxidases are a well-studied group of heme-containing enzymes for which many different functions have been proposed. In the majority of plant species investigated they occur as distinctive isoenzymes which can be constitutive or induced in response to external factors such as wounding, stress and attack by pathogens. More than 70 peroxidase isoenzymes are predicted to occur in Arabidopsis thaliana alone, according to recent analysis of the complete peroxidase gene family of this model plant. Understanding this enzymatic diversity and its functional significance is a major focus of structural and mechanistic studies of plant peroxidases. The three-dimensional structures of plant peroxidases from Arabidopsis, barley, horseradish, peanut and soybean have now been determined by X-ray crystallography together with the structures of several catalytic intermediates and substrate complexes that are relevant to enzyme function. On this basis, specific roles for particular amino acid residues and structural motifs or regions have been proposed or in some cases, confirmed. Some of these have been investigated experimentally using site-directed mutagenesis and other techniques. An overview of recent developments will be presented that reflects our current understanding of structure and function in this important group of enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Actinomycetes secrete into their surroundings a suite of enzymes involved in the biodegradation of plant lignocellulose; these have been reported to include both hydrolytic and oxidative enzymes, including peroxidases. Reports of secreted peroxidases have been based upon observations of peroxidase-like activity associated with fractions that exhibit optical spectra reminiscent of heme peroxidases, such as the lignin peroxidases of wood-rotting fungi. Here we show that the appearance of the secreted pseudoperoxidase of the thermophilic actinomycete Thermomonospora fusca BD25 is also associated with the appearance of a heme-like spectrum. The species responsible for this spectrum is a metalloporphyrin; however, we show that this metalloporphyrin is not heme but zinc coproporphyrin. The same porphyrin was found in the growth medium of the actinomycete Streptomyces viridosporus T7A. We therefore propose that earlier reports of heme peroxidases secreted by actinomycetes were due to the incorrect assignment of optical spectra to heme groups rather than to non-iron-containing porphyrins and that lignin-degrading heme peroxidases are not secreted by actinomycetes. The porphyrin, an excretory product, is degraded during peroxidase assays. The low levels of secreted peroxidase activity are associated with a nonheme protein fraction previously shown to contain copper. We suggest that the role of the secreted copper-containing protein may be to bind and detoxify metals that can cause inhibition of heme biosynthesis and thus stimulate porphyrin excretion.  相似文献   

20.
A Taurog 《Biochimie》1999,81(5):557-562
Thyroid peroxidase is a member of a family of mammalian peroxidases that includes myeloperoxidase, lactoperoxidase, eosinophil peroxidase, and salivary peroxidase. Protein sequences showing a high degree of sequence similarity with mammalian peroxidases have recently been observed in several invertebrate species. A multiple sequence alignment prepared with five mammalian and six invertebrate peroxidases shows complete conservation of amino acid residues considered to be important in the formation of peroxidase compound 1. These include the distal and proximal histidines, a catalytic arginine residue, and an asparagine residue hydrogen bonded to the proximal histidine. TPO-2, an alternatively spliced form of TPO, lacks the essential asparagine (Asn 579). It is now possible to speak more broadly of the family of animal peroxidases, rather than mammalian peroxidases. The animal peroxidases comprise a group of homologous proteins that differ markedly from the plant/fungal/bacterial peroxidases in primary, secondary and tertiary structure, but which share with them a common function. Animal peroxidases probably arose independently of the plant/fungal/bacterial peroxidase superfamily and most likely belong to a different gene family. The relationship between animal and non-animal peroxidases probably represents an example of convergent evolution to a common enzymatic mechanism.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号