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. 1996 Aug 23;273(5278):1078-84.
doi: 10.1126/science.273.5278.1078.

A crosslinked cofactor in lysyl oxidase: redox function for amino acid side chains

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A crosslinked cofactor in lysyl oxidase: redox function for amino acid side chains

S X Wang et al. Science. .

Abstract

A previously unknown redox cofactor has been identified in the active site of lysyl oxidase from the bovine aorta. Edman sequencing, mass spectrometry, ultraviolet-visible spectra, and resonance Raman studies showed that this cofactor is a quinone. Its structure is derived from the crosslinking of the epsilon-amino group of a peptidyl lysine with the modified side chain of a tyrosyl residue, and it has been designated lysine tyrosylquinone. This quinone appears to be the only example of a mammalian cofactor formed from the crosslinking of two amino acid side chains. This discovery expands the range of known quino-cofactor structures and has implications for the mechanism of their biogenesis.

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