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    Free Radic Biol Med. 2001 Dec 1;31(11):1323-33.

    Molecular and kinetic study of catalase-1, a durable large catalase of Neurospora crassa.

    Díaz A, Rangel P, Montes de Oca Y, Lledías F, Hansberg W.

    Instituto de Fisiología Celular, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México, México, D.F., Mexico.

    Catalase-1 (Cat-1), one of the two monofunctional catalases of Neurospora crassa, increases during asexual spore formation to constitute 0.6% of total protein in conidia. Cat-1 was purified 170-fold with a yield of 48% from conidiating cultures. Like most monofunctional catalases, Cat-1 is a homotetramer, resistant to inactivation by solvents, fully active over a pH range of 4-12, and inactivated by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. Unlike most monofunctional catalases, Cat-1 consists of 88 kDa monomers that are glycosylated with alpha-glucose and/or alpha-mannose, is unusually stable, and is not inactivated or inhibited by hydrogen peroxide. Cat-1 was more resistant than other catalases to heat inactivation and to high concentrations of salt and denaturants. Cat-1 exhibited unusual kinetics: at molar concentrations of hydrogen peroxide the apparent V was 10 times higher than at millimolar concentrations. Inactivation of Cat-1 activity with azide and hydroxylamine was according to first order kinetics, while cyanide at micromolar concentrations was a reversible competitive inhibitor.

    PMID: 11728803 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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