Hydroxylamine oxidoreductase
Template:Infobox enzyme Hydroxylamine oxidoreductase (HAO) is an enzyme found in the prokaryotic genus Nitrosomonas. It plays a critically important role in the biogeochemical nitrogen cycle as part of the metabolism of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria.
The substrate is hydroxylamine (), a chemical produced biologically by the enzyme Ammonia monooxygenase. The products of the catalyzed reaction are debated, but recent work shows compelling evidence for the production of nitric oxide.[1]
Structural studies
Crystallographic methods show that HAO (PDB code: Template:PDB link) is a cross-linked trimer of polypeptides containing 24 heme cofactors.[2][3]
Reactivity
For many decades the enzyme was thought to catalyze the following reaction:[4]
Recent work in the field, however, reveals that this enzyme catalyzes an entirely different reaction:[1]
Subsequent oxidation of the nitric oxide to nitrite caused by reaction with oxygen accounts for the reactivity previous described by Hooper et al.
Environmental Impact
Nitric oxide, the product of HAO catalysis, is a potent greenhouse gas.[5] Additionally, the oxidized product of nitric oxide in the presence of oxygen is nitrite - a common pollutant in agricultural run-off.
References
Template:Nitrogenous donor oxidoreductases Template:Enzymes Template:Portal bar