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Phenylalanine hydroxylase has biopterin cofactor. 1st reaction is a hydroxylation reaction by phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH), a non-heme-iron containing homotetrameric enzyme.Requires O2, FeII, and biopterin.Pterins have a pteridine ring (similar to flavins). Fe2 also required for activity
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1. Mechanism of biopetrin-dependent enzymes
2. Phenylalanine hydroxylase has biopterin cofactor
1st reaction is a hydroxylation reaction by phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH), a non-heme-iron containing homotetrameric enzyme.
Requires O2, FeII, and biopterin.
Pterins have a pteridine ring (similar to flavins)
3. Tetrahydrobiopterin
4. Reaction Catalyzed by Phenylalanine Hydroxylase
6. Overall the reaction is considered a mixed function oxidation because one O atom of the O2 is reduced to water while the other is incorporated into the amino acid product.
7. Phenylalanine Hydroxylase includes a non-heme iron atom at its active site.
X-ray crystallographic analysis has shown that the following are ligands to the iron atom His nitrogen, Glu oxygen, and water oxygen atoms.
8. Mechanism of the Reaction Catalyzed by Tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent Monooxygenases
9. What is NIH mechanism rearrangement where a hydrogen atom on an aromatic ring undergoes an intramolecular migration primarily during a hydroxylation reaction. This process is also known as a 1,2-hydride shift. These shifts are often studied and observed by isotopic labelling. An example of an NIH shift is shown below:
10. Mechanism of NIH
11. In this example, a hydrogen atom has been isotopically labeled using deuterium (shown in red). As the hydroxylase adds a hydroxyl (the -OH group), the labeled site shifts one position around the aromatic ring relative to the stationary methyl group (-CH3).
12. Several hydroxylase enzymes are believed to incorporate an NIH shift in their mechanism, including tetrahydrobiopterin- dependent hydroxylases.
The name NIH shift arises from the U.S. National Institutes of Health from where studies first reported observing this transformation.