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Peroxide-Mediated Oxygenation of Organic Compounds by Fungal Peroxygenases

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox11010163

Keywords

unspecific peroxygenases; UPO; EC 1; 11; 2; 1; monooxygenases; peroxidases; hydroxylation; epoxidation; dealkylation

Funding

  1. German Ministry of Research (BMBF) [CEFOX 031B0831, JaBaS 031B118]
  2. Fraunhofer Gesellschaft [PZ-Syn 22-F241-03-FhG/005/001]
  3. European Union (EU) [SusBind H2020-BBI-JTI-2017]
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [SPP 1374]

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Unspecific peroxygenases are fascinating biocatalysts that efficiently transfer oxygen from peroxide to a wide range of organic substrates, combining peroxidase and monooxygenase activities. They have been studied for nearly 20 years and show great potential in biotechnology.
Unspecific peroxygenases (UPOs), whose sequences can be found in the genomes of thousands of filamentous fungi, many yeasts and certain fungus-like protists, are fascinating biocatalysts that transfer peroxide-borne oxygen (from H2O2 or R-OOH) with high efficiency to a wide range of organic substrates, including less or unactivated carbons and heteroatoms. A twice-proline-flanked cysteine (PCP motif) typically ligates the heme that forms the heart of the active site of UPOs and enables various types of relevant oxygenation reactions (hydroxylation, epoxidation, subsequent dealkylations, deacylation, or aromatization) together with less specific one-electron oxidations (e.g., phenoxy radical formation). In consequence, the substrate portfolio of a UPO enzyme always combines prototypical monooxygenase and peroxidase activities. Here, we briefly review nearly 20 years of peroxygenase research, considering basic mechanistic, molecular, phylogenetic, and biotechnological aspects.

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