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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Copenhagen : International Union of Crystallography (IUCr)
    Acta crystallographica 57 (2001), S. 1709-1711 
    ISSN: 1399-0047
    Source: Crystallography Journals Online : IUCR Backfile Archive 1948-2001
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Uroporphyrinogen-III decarboxylase from Nicotiana tabacum is a plastidial enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of chlorophyll and haem. Sedimentation equilibrium with protein producing diffracting crystals clearly indicates that the enzyme is a homodimer under similar ionic strength conditions to those found in the chloroplast stroma. Additionally, dynamic light scattering reveals an ionic strength dependence for this oligomerization state. Crystals were obtained in the hexagonal space group P622 with one molecule per asymmetric unit and diffracted to 2.3 Å resolution using synchrotron radiation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    FEMS microbiology letters 226 (2003), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1574-6968
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Coproporphyrinogen-III oxidase (CPO) catalyses the conversion of coproporphyrinogen-III to protoporphyrinogen-IX in the haem biosynthetic pathway, and its deficient activity is associated with human hereditary coproporphyria. The 47% sequence identity between the oxygen-dependent CPO from Escherichia coli and its human counterpart makes the bacterial enzyme a good model system for structural studies of this disease. Therefore, we overexpressed and purified to homogeneity the oxygen-dependent CPO from E. coli and its selenomethionine derivative fused with a His6-tag. Both preparations showed a specific activity of 37 500 U mg−1, had a subunit molecular mass of 35 kDa and behaved as a compact shaped dimer. First crystallisation trials produced plate-shaped diffracting crystals.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Hydrocarbons are abundant in anoxic environments and pose biochemical challenges to their anaerobic degradation by microorganisms. Within the framework of the Priority Program 1319, investigations funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft on the anaerobic microbial degradation of hydrocarbons ranged from isolation and enrichment of hitherto unknown hydrocarbon-degrading anaerobic microorganisms, discovery of novel reactions, detailed studies of enzyme mechanisms and structures to process-oriented in situ studies. Selected highlights from this program are collected in this synopsis, with more detailed information provided by theme-focused reviews of the special topic issue on 'Anaerobic biodegradation of hydrocarbons' [this issue, pp. 1-244]. The interdisciplinary character of the program, involving microbiologists, biochemists, organic chemists and environmental scientists, is best exemplified by the studies on alkyl-/arylalkylsuccinate synthases. Here, research topics ranged from in-depth mechanistic studies of archetypical toluene-activating benzylsuccinate synthase, substrate-specific phylogenetic clustering of alkyl-/arylalkylsuccinate synthases (toluene plus xylenes, p-cymene, p-cresol, 2-methylnaphthalene, n-alkanes), stereochemical and co-metabolic insights into n-alkane-activating (methylalkyl) succinate synthases to the discovery of bacterial groups previously unknown to possess alkyl-/arylalkylsuccinate synthases by means of functional gene markers and in situ field studies enabled by state-of-the-art stable isotope probing and fractionation approaches. Other topics are Mo-cofactor-dependent dehydrogenases performing O-2-independent hydroxylation of hydrocarbons and alkyl side chains (ethylbenzene, p-cymene, cholesterol, n-hexadecane), degradation of p-alkylated benzoates and toluenes, glycyl radical-bearing 4-hydroxyphenylacetate decarboxylase, novel types of carboxylation reactions (for acetophenone, acetone, and potentially also benzene and naphthalene), W-cofactor-containing enzymes for reductive dearomatization of benzoyl-CoA (class II benzoyl-CoA reductase) in obligate anaerobes and addition of water to acetylene, fermentative formation of cyclohexanecarboxylate from benzoate, and methanogenic degradation of hydrocarbons.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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