Copper protein

Copper proteins are proteins that contain one or more copper ions as prosthetic groups. The metal centres in the copper proteins can be classified into several types:[1]

See also

References

  1. Holm, Richard H.; Kennepohl, Pierre; Solomon, Edward I. (1996), "Structural and Functional Aspects of Metal Sites in Biology", Chemical Reviews, 96 (7): 2239–2314, doi:10.1021/cr9500390
  2. Klinman, Judith P. (1996), "Mechanisms Whereby Mononuclear Copper Proteins Functionalize Organic Substrates", Chemical Reviews, 96 (7): 2541–2562, doi:10.1021/cr950047g.
  3. Lewis, E. A. and Tolman, W. B., "Reactivity of Dioxygen-Copper Systems", Chemical Reviews 2004, 104, 1047-1076. doi:10.1021/cr020633r.
  4. Solomon, Edward I.; Sundaram, Uma M.; Machonkin, Timothy E. (1996), "Multicopper Oxidases and Oxygenases", Chemical Reviews, 96 (7): 2563–2606, doi:10.1021/cr950046o
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