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1.
A novel cytochrome c and a catalase-peroxidase with alkaline peroxidase activity were purified from the culture supernatant of Bacillus sp. No.13 and characterized. The cytochrome c exhibited absorption maxima at 408 nm (Soret band) in its oxidized state, and 550 (alpha-band), 521 (beta-band), and 415 (Soret band) nm in its reduced state. The native cytochrome c with a relative molecular mass of 15,000 was composed of two identical subunits. The cytochrome c showed over 50 times higher peroxidase activity than those of known c-type cytochromes from various sources. The optimum pH and temperature of the peroxidase activity were about 10.0 and 70 degrees C, respectively. The peroxidase activity is stable in the pH range of 6.0 to 10.8 (30 degrees C, 1-h treatment), and at temperatures up to 80 degrees C (pH 8.5, 20-min treatment). The heme content was determined to be 1 heme per subunit. The amino acid sequence of the cytochrome c showed high homology with those of the c-type cytochromes from Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus sp. PS3. The catalase-peroxidase showed high catalase activity and considerable peroxidase activity, the specific activities being 55,000 and 0.94 micromol/min/mg, respectively. The optimum pH and temperature of the peroxidase activity were in the range of 6.4 to 10.1 and 60 degrees C, respectively. The catalase-peroxidase showed a lower K(m) value (0.67 mM) as to H(2)O(2) than known catalase-peroxidases.  相似文献   

2.
从一株低度嗜盐、兼性嗜碱芽孢杆菌Bacillus sp.F26中纯化得到一种碱性过氧化氢酶,并对该酶进行了性质研究。纯化过程经硫酸铵沉淀、阴离子交换层析、凝胶过滤层析及疏水层析四步最终获得电泳纯的目标酶(纯化58.5倍)。该过氧化氢酶的分子量为140kD,由两个大小相同的亚基组成。天然酶分子在408nm处显示特征吸收峰(Soret band)。吡啶血色素光谱显示了酶分子以原卟啉Ⅸ(protoheme Ⅸ)作为辅基。计算获得酶的表观米氏常数为32.5mmol/L。该过氧化氢酶不受连二亚硫酸钠的还原作用影响,但被氰化物、叠氮化物和3.氨基.1,2,4-三唑(单功能过氧化氢酶的专一抑制剂)强烈抑制。以邻联茴香胺、邻苯二胺和二氨基联苯胺作为电子供体测定酶活时,该酶不显示过氧化物酶活性。同时,酶的N-端序列比对结果说明,该过氧化氢酶与单功能过氧化氢酶亚群有一定的相似性,而与双功能过氧化氢酶亚群及猛过氧化氢酶亚群均没有同源性。因此,本文将纯化的碱性过氧化氢酶定性为单功能过氧化氢酶。此外,该酶具有热敏感的特点,且酶活在pH5~9的范围内不受pH影响,此后,活性随着pH的升高而升高,并在pH 11处有明显的酶活高峰。20℃、pH 11条件下的酶活半衰期达49h。在pH 11的高碱条件下表现出最高活力和一定的稳定性,这在已报道的过氧化氢酶中还未见描述。同时,该酶也显示了良好的盐碱稳定性,0.5mol/L NaCl、pH 10.5条件下的酶活半衰期达90h。另一方面,本文所研究的过氧化氢酶是第一个来源于嗜碱微生物的同源二聚体单功能过氧化氢酶,也是第一个来源于天然碱湖的单功能过氧化氢酶,它能部分地反映出细胞抗氧化体系对相应环境的适应情况。  相似文献   

3.
Isolates of Burkholderia cenocepacia express a putative haem-binding protein (molecular mass 97 kDa) that displays intrinsic peroxidase activity. Its role has been re-evaluated, and we now show that it is a bifunctional catalase-peroxidase, with activity against tetramethylbenzidine (TMB), o-dianisidine, pyrogallol, and 2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulphonic) acid (ABTS). Both peroxidase and catalase activities are optimal at pH 5.5-6.0. The gene encoding this enzyme was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. We have named it katG because of its similarity to other katGs, including that from Burkholderia pseudomallei. It is substantially similar to a previously described catalase-peroxidase of B. cenocepacia (katA). MS analysis indicated that the initial katG translation product may be post-translationally modified in B. cenocepacia to give rise to the mature 97-kDa catalase-peroxidase.  相似文献   

4.
The bacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae synthesizes three different types of catalase: a catalase-peroxidase, a typical catalase and an atypical catalase, designated KpCP, KpT and KpA, respectively (Goldberg, I. and Hochman, A. (1989) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 268, 124-128). KpCP, but not the other two enzymes, in addition to the catalatic activity, catalyzes peroxidatic activities with artificial electron donors, as well as with NADH and NADPH. Both KpCP and KpT are tetramers, with heme IX as a prosthetic group, and they show a typical high-spin absorption spectrum which is converted to low-spin when a cyanide complex is formed. The addition of dithionite to KpCP causes a shift in the absorption maxima typical of ferrous heme IX. KpCP has a pH optimum of 6.3 for the catalatic activity and 5.2-5.7 for the peroxidatic activity, and relatively low 'Km' values: 6.5 mM and 0.65 H2O2 for the catalatic and peroxidatic activities, respectively. The activity of the catalase-peroxidase is inhibited by azide and cyanide, but not by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. KpT has wide pH optimum: 5-10.5 and a 'Km' of 50 mM H2O2, it is inhibited by incubation with 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole and by the acidic forms of cyanide and azide. A significant distinction between the typical catalase and the catalase-peroxidase is the stability of their proteins: KpT is more stable than KpCP to H2O2, temperature, pH and urea.  相似文献   

5.
A catalase-peroxidase from Mycobacterium sp. Pyr-1, a strain capable of growth on pyrene, was purified to homogeneity by anion exchange and hydroxyapatite column chromatography. The enzyme, like the M. tuberculosis T-catalase, reduced nitroblue tetrazolium in the presence of isoniazid (INH) and H2O2. It also oxidized 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine and other substrates of the catalase-peroxidase of M. tuberculosis in the presence of either tert-butyl hydroperoxide or H2O2. It had a UV/ visible absorption spectrum (Soret peak at 406 nm) similar to that of the catalase-peroxidase of M. tuberculosis (Soret peak at 408 nm) and identical to that of the catalase-peroxidase of M. smegmatis. After electrophoresis on non-denaturing gels the enzyme showed one single protein band with both catalase and peroxidase activity, which were lost after electrophoresis on SDS-PAGE. The enzyme was inhibited by sodium azide, glutathione, 2-mercaptoethanol, and isoniazid, but not by isonicotinic acid. The optimum enzyme activity was obtained at pH 4.5 and at 25 degrees C.  相似文献   

6.
A bacterial strain, Pseudomonad EF group 70B, containing a high catalase-like activity was found in process water (white water) from pulp using recycled fibers. The enzyme was purified and characterized, and found to be a hydroperoxidase. The active enzyme has an apparent molecular mass of about 153 kDa with two identical subunits and a pI value of 4.7. It has a rather sharp pH optimum for catalase activity at 6.0 but exhibits catalase, peroxidase and brominating activities over a broad pH range from 4 to 8. It was not inhibited by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. Peroxidase-like activity was found when adding o-dianisidine, pyrogallol, guaiacol and 4-aminoantipyrine. Brominating activity was noticed using monochlorodimedone as a substrate. The absorption spectrum exhibited a Soret band at 404 nm. Upon reduction with dithionite the Soret peak decreased and shifted to 436 nm. Pyridine hemochrome spectra indicated the presence of a protophorfyrin IX heme group and the enzyme was inhibited by the known heme ligands cyanide and azide. N-terminal amino acid analysis gave the sequence STEVKLPYAVAGGGTTILDAFPGE, which showed no homology with those of known catalases or peroxidases. It is concluded that the enzyme is a novel type of catalase-peroxidase or, more specifically, a bromoperoxidase-catalase, and that future developments of inhibitors of hydrogen peroxide-degrading activities in white water may be based on this enzyme and other catalase-peroxidases.  相似文献   

7.
A putative perA gene from Archaeoglobus fulgidus was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3), and the recombinant catalase-peroxidase was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme is a homodimer with a subunit molecular mass of 85 kDa. UV-visible spectroscopic analysis indicated the presence of protoheme IX as a prosthetic group (ferric heme), in a stoichiometry of 0.25 heme per subunit. Electron paramagnetic resonance analysis confirmed the presence of ferric heme and identified the proximal axial ligand as a histidine. The enzyme showed both catalase and peroxidase activity with pH optima of 6.0 and 4.5, respectively. Optimal temperatures of 70 degrees C and 80 degrees C were found for the catalase and peroxidase activity, respectively. The catalase activity strongly exceeded the peroxidase activity, with Vmax values of 9600 and 36 U mg(-1), respectively. Km values for H2O2 of 8.6 and 0.85 mM were found for catalase and peroxidase, respectively. Common heme inhibitors such as cyanide, azide, and hydroxylamine inhibited peroxidase activity. However, unlike all other catalase-peroxidases, the enzyme was also inhibited by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. Although the enzyme exhibited a high thermostability, rapid inactivation occurred in the presence of H2O2, with half-life values of less than 1 min. This is the first catalase-peroxidase characterized from a hyperthermophilic microorganism.  相似文献   

8.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis catalase-peroxidase (Mtb KatG) is a bifunctional enzyme that possesses both catalase and peroxidase activities and is responsible for the activation of the antituberculosis drug isoniazid. Mtb KatG contains an unusual adduct in its distal heme-pocket that consists of the covalently linked Trp107, Tyr229, and Met255. The KatG(Y229F) mutant lacks this adduct and has decreased steady-state catalase activity and enhanced peroxidase activity. In order to test a potential structural role of the adduct that supports catalase activity, we have used resonance Raman spectroscopy to probe the local heme environment of KatG(Y229F). In comparison to wild-type KatG, resting KatG(Y229F) contains a significant amount of 6-coordinate, low-spin heme and a more planar heme. Resonance Raman spectroscopy of the ferrous-CO complex of KatG(Y229F) suggest a non-linear Fe-CO binding geometry that is less tilted than in wild-type KatG. These data provide evidence that the Met-Tyr-Trp adduct imparts structural stability to the active site of KatG that seems to be important for sustaining catalase activity.  相似文献   

9.
The loop connecting the F and G helices of catalase-peroxidases contains a approximately 35 amino acid structure (the FG insertion) that is absent from monofunctional peroxidases. These two groups of enzymes share highly similar active sites, yet the monofunctional peroxidases lack appreciable catalase activity. Thus, the FG insertion may serve a role in catalase-peroxidase bifunctionality, despite its peripheral location relative to the active site. We produced a variant of Escherichia coli catalase-peroxidase (KatG) lacking its FG insertion (KatG(DeltaFG)). Absorption spectra indicated the heme environment of KatG(DeltaFG) was highly similar to wild-type KatG, but the variant retained only 0.2% catalase activity. In contrast, the deletion reduced peroxidase activity by only 50%. Kinetic parameters for the peroxidase and residual catalase activities of KatG(DeltaFG) as well as pH dependence studies suggested that the FG insertion supports hydrogen-bonded networks critical for reactions involving H2O2. The structure also appears to regulate access of electron donors to the active site.  相似文献   

10.
A new thermoalkaliphilic bacterium was isolated from a textile wastewater drain and identified as a new Bacillus sp. (Bacillus SF). Because of its high pH stability and thermostability, a catalase-peroxidase (CP) from this strain has potential for the treatment of textile bleaching effluents. The CP from Bacillus SF was purified to more than 70.3-fold homogeneity using fractionated ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydrophobic interaction, and anion-exchange and gel-filtration chromatography. The native CP had a molecular mass of 165 kDa and was composed of two identical subunits. The isoelectric point of the protein was at pH 6.0. Peptide mass mapping using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-mass spectrometry showed a homology between the CP from Bacillus SF and the CP from Bacillus stearothermophilus. The apparent Km value of the catalase activity for H2O2 was 2.6 mM and the k(cat) value was 11,475 s(-1). The enzyme showed high catalase activity and an appreciable peroxidase activity with guaiacol and o-dianisidine. The enzyme was stable at high pH, with a half-life of 104 h at pH 10 and 25 degrees C and 14 h at 50 degrees C. The enzyme was inhibited by azide and cyanide, in a competitive manner, but not by the catalase-specific inhibitor 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole.  相似文献   

11.
Rhodobacter capsulatus J1 has two hydroperoxidases: a catalase-peroxidase and a peroxidase. A mutant strain, AH18, that had no catalase-peroxidase was isolated. The growth rate under aerobic and photosynthetic conditions, respiration, superoxide dismutase and peroxidase activities, and pigment content of the mutant were similar to those of the wild type. AH18 was more susceptible to killing and to inhibition of nitrogenase by H2O2 but not by molecular oxygen. The incidences of spontaneous mutations were similar in both strains. Viable counts in aerobic but not anaerobic cultures of AH18 started to decline as soon as the cultures reached the stationary phase, and the rate of cell death was much higher in AH18 than in the wild type. It is inferred that the peroxidase provides protection against H2O2 in log-phase cells and that the catalase-peroxidase provides protection under the oxidative conditions that prevail in aging cultures. This protective function might be related to the dual activity of the latter as a catalase and a peroxidase or to its capacity to oxidize NADH, NADPH, and cytochrome c.  相似文献   

12.
Analysis of the peroxidatic mode of action of catalase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Catalase is an enzyme which can function either in the catabolism of hydrogen peroxide or in the peroxidatic oxidation of small substrates such as ethanol, methanol, or elemental mercury (Hg0). It has been reported that native catalase can peroxidatically oxidize larger organic molecules (e.g. L-dopa) and that catalase maintained at alkaline pH for various lengths of time demonstrates an increase in peroxidase activity using guaiacol as substrate. We have shown, by using two distinct methods of H2O2 introduction for measuring peroxidase activity, that native catalase shows no peroxidatic activity toward these larger organic molecules. We have also shown, through the use of these peroxidase assays and by enzyme absorption spectra, that the peroxidase activity attributed to catalase maintained at alkaline pH is a catalytic but not enzymatic activity associated with a hematin group attached to a denatured catalase monomer. Possible mechanisms for the catalytic and peroxidatic modes of action of catalase involving hydride-ion transfer are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of oxidant, pH and ligands on iron- and copper-catalyzed ascorbate oxidation have been examined. The formation of the catalyst-substrate complex is affected by pH, whereas oxidant affects its breakdown. With copper-ion catalysis, ligands inhibit competitively. With iron catalysis, on the other hand, for a series of aminopolycarboxylic ligands at neutral pH, formation of catalyst-substrate is favored by ligands which form more stable iron complexes. Decreased rates caused by changes in metal environment (ligand or pH) may result for competing activities (e.g., catalase activity competing with peroxidase activity). Evidence for a ternary complex (catalyst-substrate-oxidant) is presented.  相似文献   

14.
Catalase-peroxidases (KatGs) use a peroxidase scaffold to support robust catalase activity, an ability no other member of its superfamily possesses. Because catalase turnover requires H(2)O(2) oxidation, whereas peroxidase turnover requires oxidation of an exogenous electron donor, it has been anticipated that the latter should inhibit catalase activity. To the contrary, we report peroxidatic electron donors stimulated catalase activity up to 14-fold, particularly under conditions favorable to peroxidase activity (i.e., acidic pH and low H(2)O(2) concentrations). We observed a "low-" and "high-K(M)" component for catalase activity at pH 5.0. Electron donors increased the apparent k(cat) for the "low-K(M)" component. During stimulated catalase activity, less than 0.008 equivalents of oxidized donor accumulated for every H(2)O(2) consumed. Several classical peroxidatic electron donors were effective stimulators of catalase activity, but pyrogallol and ascorbate showed little effect. Stopped-flow evaluation showed that a Fe(III)-O(2)(-)-like intermediate dominated during donor-stimulated catalatic turnover, and this intermediate converted directly to the ferric state upon depletion of H(2)O(2). In this respect, the Fe(III)-O(2)(-) -like species was more prominent and persistent than in the absence of the donor. These results point toward a much more central role for peroxidase substrates in the unusual catalase mechanism of KatG.  相似文献   

15.
Three classes of heme proteins, commonly designated hydroperoxidases, are involved in the metabolism of hydrogen peroxide: catalases, peroxidases, and catalase-peroxidases. While catalases and peroxidases are widely spread in animals, plants, and microorganisms, catalase-peroxidases were characterized only in prokaryotes. We report here, for the first time, on a catalase-peroxidase in a eukaryotic organism. The enzyme was purified from the fungal wheat pathogen Septoria tritici, and is one of three different hydroperoxidases synthesized by this organism. The S. tritici catalase-peroxidase, designated StCP, is similar to the enzymes previously isolated from the bacteria Rhodobacter capsulatus, Escherichia coli, and Klebsiella pneumoniae, although it is significantly more sensitive to denaturing conditions. In addition to its catalatic activity StCP catalyzes peroxidatic activity with o-dianisidine, diaminobenzidine, pyrogallol, NADH, and NADPH as electron donors. The enzyme is a tetramer with identical subunits of 61,000 Da molecular weight. StCP shows a typical high-spin ferric heme spectrum with a Soret band at 405 nm and a peak at 632 nm, and binding of cyanide causes a shift of the Soret band to 421 nm, the appearance of a peak at 537 nm, and abolition of the peak at 632 nm. Reduction with dithionite results in a decrease in the intensity of the Soret band and its shift to 436 nm, and in the appearance of a peak at 552 nm. The pH optimum is 6-6.5 and 5.4 for the catalatic and peroxidatic activities, respectively. Fifty percent of the apparent maximal activity is reached at 3.4 mM and 0.26 mM for the catalatic and peroxidatic activities, respectively. The enzyme is inactivated by ethanol/chloroform, and is inhibited by KCN and NaN3, but not by the typical catalase inhibitor 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole.  相似文献   

16.
Catalase is a highly conserved heme-containing antioxidant enzyme known for its ability to degrade hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. In low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide, the enzyme also exhibits peroxidase activity. We report that mammalian catalase also possesses oxidase activity. This activity, which is detected in purified catalases, cell lysates, and intact cells, requires oxygen and utilizes electron donor substrates in the absence of hydrogen peroxide or any added cofactors. Using purified bovine catalase and 10-acetyl-3,7-dihydroxyphenoxazine as the substrate, the oxidase activity was found to be temperature-dependent and displays a pH optimum of 7-9. The Km for the substrate is 2.4 x 10(-4) m, and Vmax is 4.7 x 10(-5) m/s. Endogenous substrates, including the tryptophan precursor indole, the neurotransmitter precursor beta-phenylethylamine, and a variety of peroxidase and laccase substrates, as well as carcinogenic benzidines, were found to be oxidized by catalase or to inhibit this activity. Several dietary plant micronutrients that inhibit carcinogenesis, including indole-3-carbinol, indole-3-carboxaldehyde, ferulic acid, vanillic acid, and epigallocatechin-3-gallate, were effective inhibitors of the activity of catalase oxidase. Difference spectroscopy revealed that catalase oxidase/substrate interactions involve the heme-iron; the resulting spectra show time-dependent decreases in the ferric heme of the enzyme with corresponding increases in the formation of an oxyferryl intermediate, potentially reflecting a compound II-like intermediate. These data suggest a mechanism of oxidase activity involving the formation of an oxygen-bound, substrate-facilitated reductive intermediate. Our results describe a novel function for catalase potentially important in metabolism of endogenous substrates and in the action of carcinogens and chemopreventative agents.  相似文献   

17.
Catalase-peroxidases have a two-domain structure. The N-terminal domain contains the bifunctional active site, but the function of the C-terminal domain is unknown. We produced catalase-peroxidase containing only its N-terminal domain (KatG(Nterm)). Removal of the C-terminal domain did not result in unexpected changes in secondary structure as evaluated by CD, but KatG(Nterm) had neither catalase nor peroxidase activity. Partial recovery of both activities was achieved by incubating KatG(Nterm) with the separately expressed and isolated KatG C-terminal domain. Spectroscopic measurements revealed a shift in heme environment from a mixture of high-spin species (wtKatG) to exclusively hexacoordinate, low-spin (KatG(Nterm)). Moreover, a > 1000-fold lower kon for CN- binding was observed for KatG(Nterm). EPR spectra for KatG(Nterm) and the results of site-specific substitution of active site histidines suggested that the distal histidine was the sixth ligand. Thus, one important role for the C-terminal domain may be to support the architecture of the active site, preventing heme ligation by this catalytically essential residue.  相似文献   

18.
The katG gene coding for the only catalase-peroxidase in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 was deleted in this organism. Although the rate of H2O2 decomposition was about 30 times lower in the DeltakatG mutant than in the wild type, the strain had a normal phenotype and its doubling time as well as its resistance to H2O2 and methyl viologen were indistinguishable from those of the wild type. The residual H2O2-scavenging capacity was more than sufficient to deal with the rate of H2O2 production by the cell, estimated to be less than 1% of the maximum rate of photosynthetic electron transport in vivo. We propose that catalase-peroxidase has a protective role against environmental H2O2 generated by algae or bacteria in the ecosystem (for example, in mats). This protective role is most apparent at a high cell density of the cyanobacterium. The residual H2O2-scavenging activity in the DeltakatG mutant was a light-dependent peroxidase activity. However, neither glutathione peroxidase nor ascorbate peroxidase accounted for a significant part of this H2O2-scavenging activity. When a small thiol such as dithiothreitol was added to the medium, the rate of H2O2 decomposition in the DeltakatG mutant increased more than 10-fold, indicating that a thiol-specific peroxidase, for which thioredoxin may be the physiological electron donor, is present. Oxidized thioredoxin is likely to be reduced again by photosynthetic electron transport. Therefore, under laboratory conditions, there are only two enzymatic mechanisms for H2O2 decomposition present in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. One is catalyzed by a catalase-peroxidase, and the other is catalyzed by thiol-specific peroxidase.  相似文献   

19.
Caulobacter crescentus is an obligate aerobe which is exposed to high concentrations of photosynthetic oxygen and low levels of nutrients in its aquatic environment. Physiological studies of oxidative and starvation stresses in C. crescentus were undertaken through a study of lacZ fusion and null mutant strains constructed from the cloned 5' end of katG, encoding a catalase-peroxidase. The katG gene was shown to be solely responsible for catalase and peroxidase activity in C. crescentus. Like the katG of Escherichia coli, C. crescentus katG is induced by hydrogen peroxide and is important in sustaining the exponential growth rate. However, dramatic differences are seen in growth stage induction. E. coli KatE catalase and KatG catalase-peroxidase activities are induced 15- to 20-fold during exponential growth and then approximately halved in the stationary phase. In contrast, C. crescentus KatG activity is constant throughout exponential growth and is induced 50-fold in the stationary phase. Moreover, the survival of a C. crescentus katG null mutant is reduced by more than 3 orders of magnitude after 24 h in stationary phase and more than 6 orders of magnitude after 48 h, a phenotype not seen for E. coli katE and katG null mutants. These results indicate a major role for C. crescentus catalase-peroxidase in stationary-phase survival and raise questions about whether the peroxidatic activity as well as the protective catalatic activity of the dual-function enzyme is important in the response to starvation stress.  相似文献   

20.
An intracellular peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) from Streptomyces cyaneus was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme had a molecular weight of 185,000 and was composed of two subunits of equal size. It had an isoelectric point of 6.1. The enzyme had a peroxidase activity toward o-dianisidine with a Km of 17.8 microM and a pH optimum of 5.0. It also showed catalase activity with a Km of 2.07 mM H2O2 and a pH optimum of 8.0. The purified enzyme did not catalyze C alpha-C beta bond cleavage of 1,3-dihydroxy-2-(2-methoxyphenoxy)-1-(4-ethoxy-3-methoxyphenyl) propane, a nonphenolic dimeric lignin model compound. The spectrum of the peroxidase showed a soret band at 405 nm, which disappeared after reduction with sodium dithionite, indicating that the enzyme is a hemoprotein. Testing the effects of various inhibitors on the enzyme activity showed that it is a bifunctional enzyme having catalase and peroxidase activities.  相似文献   

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