Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Vanillate monooxygenase

Class of enzymes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

In enzymology, a vanillate monooxygenase (EC 1.14.13.82) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction

Thumb + O2 + NADH + H+ Thumb + NAD+ + H2O + formaldehyde
Remove ads

The 4 substrates of this enzyme are vanillate, O2, NADH, and H+, whereas its 4 products are 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate, NAD+, H2O, and formaldehyde.

This enzyme belongs to the family of oxidoreductases, specifically those acting on paired donors, with O2 as oxidant and incorporation or reduction of oxygen. The oxygen incorporated need not be derived from O2 with NADH or NADPH as one donor, and incorporation of one atom o oxygen into the other donor. The systematic name of this enzyme class is vanillate:oxygen oxidoreductase (demethylating). Other names in common use include 4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzoate demethylase, and vanillate demethylase. This enzyme participates in 2,4-dichlorobenzoate degradation.

Remove ads

References

Loading content...
Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads