4.6 Article

Purification and characterization of recombinant human liver glycolate oxidase

Journal

ARCHIVES OF BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
Volume 465, Issue 2, Pages 410-416

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.abb.2007.06.021

Keywords

dichlorophenol indophenol; enzyme kinetics; flavoprotein; glycolate; glyoxylate; flavooxydase; 1-2-hydroxy acid

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Glycolate oxidase, an FMN-dependent peroxisomal oxidase, plays an important role in plants, related to photorespiration, and in animals, where it can contribute to the production of oxalate with formation of kidney stones. The best studied plant glycolate oxidase is that of spinach; it has been expressed as a recombinant enzyme, and its crystal structure is known. With respect to animals, the enzyme purified from pig liver has been characterized in detail in terms of activity and inhibition, the enzyme from human liver in less detail. We describe here the purification and initial characterization of the recombinant human glycolate oxidase. Its substrate specificity and the inhibitory effects of a number of anions are in agreement with the properties expected from previous work on glycolate oxidases from diverse sources. The recombinant enzyme presents an inhibition by excess glycolate and by excess DCIP, which has not been documented before. These inhibitions suggest that glycolate binds to the active site of the reduced enzyme, and that DCIP also has affinity for the oxidized enzyme. Glycolate oxidase belongs to a family of L-2-hydroxy-acid-oxidizing flavoenzymes, with strongly conserved active-site residues. A comparison of some of the present results with studies dealing with other family members suggests that residues outside the active site influence the binding of a number of ligands, in particular sulfite. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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