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Title: Turnover capacity of Coprinus cinereus peroxidase for phenol and monosubstituted phenols

Journal Article · · Biotechnology Progress
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1021/bp980034z· OSTI ID:642293
;  [1]
  1. Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC (United States)

Coprinus cinereus peroxidase (CIP) and other peroxidases are susceptible to mechanism-based inactivation during the oxidation of phenolic substrates. The turnover capacity of CIP was quantified for phenol and 11 monosubstituted phenols under conditions in which enzyme inactivation by mechanisms involving hydrogen peroxide alone were minimized. Turnover capacities varied by nearly 2 orders of magnitude, depending on the substituent. On a mass basis, the enzyme consumption corresponding to the lowest turnover capacities is considerable and may influence the economic feasibility of proposed industrial applications of peroxidases. Within a range of substituent electronegativity values, molar turnover capacities correlated well (r{sup 2} = 0.89) with substituent effects quantified by radical {sigma} values and semiquantitatively with homolytic O-H bond dissociation energies of the phenolic substrates, suggesting that phenoxyl radical intermediates are probably involved in the suicide inactivation of CIP. The correlation range in each case did not include phenols with highly electron-withdrawing (nitro and cyano) substituents because they are not oxidized by CIP, nor phenols with highly electron-donating (hydroxy and amino) substituents because they led to virtually complete inactivation of the enzyme with minimal substrate removal.

OSTI ID:
642293
Journal Information:
Biotechnology Progress, Vol. 14, Issue 3; Other Information: PBD: May-Jun 1998
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English