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The Expression of Catechol Oxidase Activity During the Hydroxylation of P-coumaric Acid by Spinach-beet Phenolase

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Journal Biochem J
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1972 May 1
PMID 4346745
Citations 5
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Abstract

1. The conditions under which oxygen consumption in excess of that required for the hydroxylation of p-coumaric acid to caffeic acid, catalysed by spinach-beet phenolase, can be suppressed, have been examined. 2. With dimethyltetrahydropteridine as electron donor, oxygen uptake was exactly equivalent to the caffeic acid produced, provided that p-coumaric acid was in excess, but with excess of reductant, oxygen uptake caused by the further oxidation of caffeic acid was also observed. 3. With equal concentrations of ascorbate and p-coumaric acid, equivalent oxygen uptake and caffeic acid production was found only in the first stages of the reaction, whereas with NADH substituted for ascorbate, oxygen uptake was in excess throughout. 4. When ascorbate was used, the period of the reaction over which this equivalence was found was decreased at high reaction rates and not observed at all with aged enzyme preparations; equivalence was restored by adding bovine serum albumin to these aged preparations. 5. Equivalence between oxygen consumption and caffeic acid production was observed with NADH, if small quantities of dimethyltetrahydropteridine were also added. 6. It is concluded that hydroxylation proceeds without the concomitant production of caffeic acid only if the enzyme is stabilized for hydroxylation by p-coumaric acid and the reductant, and is protected from attack by o-quinones.

Citing Articles

Characteristics of a 4-hydroxycinnamate hydroxylase purified from sorghum leaves.

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PMID: 16659475 PMC: 542016. DOI: 10.1104/pp.57.2.320.


Transformations of a large aggregate of hydroxycinnamate hydroxylase to lower molecular weight forms by sulfhydryl agents in green leaves of sorghum.

Stafford H Plant Physiol. 1975; 55(2):145-9.

PMID: 16659039 PMC: 541572. DOI: 10.1104/pp.55.2.145.


Activation of 4-hydroxycinnamate hydroxylase in extracts from sorghum.

Stafford H Plant Physiol. 1974; 54(5):686-9.

PMID: 16658952 PMC: 366582. DOI: 10.1104/pp.54.5.686.


The effect of greening of sorghum leaves on the molecular weight of a complex containing 4-hydroxycinnamic Acid hydroxylase activity.

Stafford H, Bliss M Plant Physiol. 1973; 52(5):453-8.

PMID: 16658582 PMC: 366522. DOI: 10.1104/pp.52.5.453.


Kinetic studies on the hydroxylation of p-coumaric acid to caffeic acid by spinach-beet phenolase.

McIntyre R, Vaughan P Biochem J. 1975; 149(2):447-61.

PMID: 170916 PMC: 1165638. DOI: 10.1042/bj1490447.

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