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Vladimir I. Tishkov1, Michail D. Shelomov2, Anastaiya A. Pometun3, Svyatoslav S. Savin4, Denis L. Atroshenko5

Physiological role of D-amino acids and bioanalytical potential of D-amino acid oxidases

Abstract

Abstract. D-amino acid oxidase (DAAO) plays an important role in the functioning of both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. DAAO is increasingly being used in practice, including for the determination of D-amino acids in complex samples, including human tissues and fluids. There are generally two types of DAAO in all organisms. The first type is an enzyme highly specific for D-aspartate and has its own name D-aspartate oxidase (DASPO). DAAO of the second type is characterized by a wide spectrum of substrate specificity, with preference for one or another D-amino acid varying from source to source. The activity of DAAO with a large number of substrates greatly complicates the selective determination of a particular D-amino acid. The problem is often solved by choosing an enzyme that, under the conditions of analysis, has low or no activity with other D-amino acids present in the sample. For the convenience of selecting a particular enzyme, we have collected and analyzed literature data on the catalytic parameters of known DAAOs with the most important D-amino acids. In addition, similar data are presented for novel recombinant DAAOs from the methylotrophic yeast Ogataea parapolymorpha DL-1. Analysis of the data shows that, with the D-amino acid series, the new OpaDASPO and OpaDAAO have the highest catalytic parameters.
Key words: D-amino acid oxidase, physiological role, catalytic parameters, substrate specificity, Ogataea parapolymorpha DL-1
Moscow University Chemistry Bulletin.
2023, Vol. 64, No. 2, P. 72
   

Copyright (C) Chemistry Dept., Moscow State University, 2002
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