Phenylalanine hydroxylase

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predicted 3D structure of phenylalanine hydroxylase
phenylalanine hydroxylase
Identifiers
Symbol PAH
HUGO 8582
Entrez 5053
OMIM 261600
RefSeq NM_000277
UniProt P00439
Other data
EC number 1.14.16.1
Locus Chr. 12 q22-q24.2

Phenylalanine hydroxylase (EC 1.14.16.1) is an enzyme which catalyses the reaction causing the addition of an hydroxyl group to the end of the 6-carbon aromatic ring of phenylalanine, such that it becomes tyrosine:

Phenylalanine hydroxylase is the rate-limiting enzyme of the metabolic pathway which degrades excess phenylalanine.

The other substrates in the reaction are molecular oxygen and tetrahydrobiopterin. Tetrahydrobiopterin is a member of the group of redox biochemicals known as pteridines. PAH is the gene that encodes for phenylalanine hydroxylase.

[edit] Clinical significance

Mutations in phenylalanine hydroxylase which result in lower activity are the cause of the disease phenylketonuria, or PKU.

[edit] Related enzymes

Phenylalanine hydroxylase is closely related to two other enzymes:

The three enzymes are homologous, that is, are thought to have evolved from the same ancient hydroxylase.

[edit] Structure

Phenylalanine hydroxylase is a tetramer composed of two dimers, that is, composed of two complexes of two subunits each. Each subunit is in turn composed of three domains, a regulatory domain, a catalytic domain, and a tetramerization domain.

  • The regulatory domain is composed of the approximately 115 amino acids nearest the amino terminal of the subunit.
  • The catalytic domain is composed of the next approximately 300 amino acids, and is responsible for all of the catalytic activity of the enzyme.
  • The tetramerization domain consists of the remaining amino acids and through the formation of a coiled-coil arrangement of amino acids, holds the tetrameric structure of the holoenzyme together with a leucine zipper.

Phenylalanine hydroxylase contains one bound iron atom per subunit which is necessary for catalytic activity.

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