Haem peroxidase


Haem peroxidases are haem-containing enzymes that use hydrogen peroxide as the electron acceptor to catalyse a number of oxidative reactions. Most haem peroxidases follow the reaction scheme:
In this mechanism, the enzyme reacts with one equivalent of H2O2 to give R'. This is a two-electron oxidation/reduction reaction in which H2O2 is reduced to water and the enzyme is oxidized. One oxidizing equivalent resides on iron, giving the oxyferryl intermediate, and in many peroxidases the porphyrin is oxidized to the porphyrin pi-cation radical. Compound I then oxidizes an organic substrate to give a substrate radical and Compound II, which can then oxidize a second substrate molecule.
Haem peroxidases include two superfamilies: one found in bacteria, fungi, and plants, and the second found in animals. The first one can be viewed as consisting of 3 major classes:
The crystal structures of a number of these proteins show that they share the same architecture - two all-alpha domains between which the haem group is embedded.
Another family of haem peroxidases is the DyP-type peroxidase family.