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The acceptor specificity of flavins and flavoproteins. III. Flavoproteins
Authors:Malcolm Dixon
Institution:

Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Great Britain

Abstract:1. The specificity of flavoproteins towards acceptors has been rather neglected, but an attempt is here made to construct a comparative table of acceptor specificities of those flavoprotein enzymes for which data exist.

2. The acceptor specificity of reduced flavin groups, when combined with apoenzyme proteins, is quite different from that of the same flavin groups in the free state (see Part II). Free flavins react very rapidly with a wide range of acceptors, but the same groups combined as flavoproteins have a severely restricted range of action.

3. There are remarkable differences between different flavoproteins. Nearly every flavoprotein fails altogether to react with at least one, and often several, of the acceptors, giving a specificity pattern which is different in each case. There seems to be no general acceptor for flavoproteins.

4. The effect of combination of a flavin with a particular apoenzyme is to inhibit specifically the reaction of the flavin with particular acceptors with which it would react very rapidly in the absence of the apoenzyme.

5. Each apoenzyme produces its own distinctive pattern of inhibitions. The degree of inhibition is often very high; the table shows over 50 cases of specific inhibitions that are essentially complete. Some of these are very difficult to explain.

6. There is no obvious parallelism between any acceptor and any other in its pattern of reactivity with a series of different flavoproteins.

7. In a few cases combination with apoenzyme specifically accelerates the reaction of the flavin with particular acceptors, so that the flavoprotein is oxidized faster than the free flavin.

8. Possible correlations are discussed between the effects of apoenzymes on the reactivity of flavins with acceptors and a number of special known features of different apoenzymes, but no adequate explanation of the differences in specificity has emerged.

9. In view of the interesting nature of the effects, a plea is made for a more intensive study of the acceptor side of flavoprotein specificity.

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