- Source: Tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenase
In enzymology, a tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenase (EC 1.97.1.8) is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction. This is a member of reductive dehalogenase enzyme family.
trichloroethene + chloride + acceptor
⇌
{\displaystyle \rightleftharpoons }
tetrachloroethene + reduced acceptor
The 3 substrates of this enzyme are trichloroethene, chloride, and acceptor, whereas its two products are tetrachloroethene and reduced acceptor.
This enzyme belongs to the family of oxidoreductases. The systematic name of this enzyme class is acceptor:trichloroethene oxidoreductase (chlorinating). This enzyme is also called tetrachloroethene reductase. This enzyme participates in tetrachloroethene degradation.
Note that the physiologically relevant reaction actually occurs in the reverse direction from that shown above. In other words, in the bacterial species where this enzyme is found, tetrachloroethene is reductively dechlorinated to trichloroethene and chloride.
This enzyme is one member of a family of enzymes including trichloroethene dehalogenase and vinyl chloride dehalogenase. The other members of this family do not have their own EC numbers at present.
Reductive dehalogenases are key enzymes for anaerobic respiratory process, termed organohalide respiration.
References
Further reading
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Vitamin B12
- Tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenase
- Reductive dehalogenases
- Dehalogenase
- Reductive dechlorination
- Vitamin B12
- List of EC numbers (EC 1)
- Dehalobacter restrictus
- Dehalococcoides
- Dehalogenimonas lykanthroporepellens
- Desulfitobacterium dehalogenans