Hong-Duk YounEun‐Ja KimJung‐Hye RoeYung Chil HahSa-Ouk Kang
A novel type of superoxide dismutase (SOD) was purified to apparent homogeneity from the cytosolic fractions of Streptomyces sp. IMSNU-1 and Strep. coelicolor ATCC 10147 respectively. Both enzymes were composed of four identical subunits of 13.4 kDa, were stable at pH 4.0–8.0 and up to 70 °C, and were inhibited by cyanide and H2O2 but little inhibited by azide. The atomic absorption analyses revealed that both enzymes contain 0.74 g-atom of nickel per mol of subunit. Both enzymes were different from iron-containing SOD and manganese-containing SOD from Escherichia coli, and copper- and zinc-containing SODs from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and bovine erythrocytes, with respect to amino acid composition, N-terminal amino acid sequence and cross-reactivity against antibody. The absorption spectra of both enzymes were identical, exhibiting maxima at 276 and 378 nm, and a broad peak at 531 nm. The EPR spectra of both enzymes were almost identical with that of NiIII in a tetragonal symmetry of NiIII-oligopeptides especially containing histidine. The apoenzymes, lacking in nickel, had no ability to mediate the conversion of superoxide anion radical to hydrogen peroxide, strongly indicating that NiIII plays a main role in these enzymes.
Eun‐Ja KimHye‐Jung ChungBumsu SuhYung Chil HahJung‐Hye Roe
Jin‐Won LeeJung‐Hye RoeSa-Ouk Kang
Robert H. KretsingerVladimir N. UverskyEugene A. Permyakov
In‐Kwon KimYang-In YimYoung‐Min KimJin‐Won LeeHyung‐Soon YimSa-Ouk Kang
Astrid SchmidtMatthias GubeAndré SchmidtErika Kothe