Abstract

Cu,Zn SOD, but not Mn SOD, catalyzes the oxidation of 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid (3-HA) under aerobic conditions. In the absence of O2, the Cu(II) of the enzyme is reduced by 3-HA. One plausible mechanism involves the reduction of the active site Cu(II) to Cu(I), which is then reoxidized by the O−2 generated by autoxidation of the anthranilyl or other radicals on the pathway to cinnabarinate. We may call this the superoxide reductase, or SOR, mechanism. Another possibility invokes direct reoxidation of the active site Cu(I) by the anthranilyl, or other organic radicals, or by the peroxyl radicals generated by addition of O2 to these organic radicals. Such oxidations catalyzed by Cu,Zn SOD could account for the deleterious effects of the mutant Cu,Zn SODs associated with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and of the overproduction or overadministration of wild-type Cu,Zn SOD.

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