| Official Name |
| Cellobiose dehydrogenase (acceptor).
|
| Alternative Name(s) |
| CBOR. |
| CDH. |
| Cellobiose dehydrogenase. |
| Cellobiose dehydrogenase (quinone). |
| Cellobiose oxidase. |
| Cellobiose oxidoreductase. |
| Cellobiose-quinone oxidoreductase. |
| Reaction catalysed |
| Cellobiose + acceptor <=> cellobiono-1,5-lactone + reduced acceptor |
| Cofactor(s) |
| FAD; Heme.
|
| Comment(s) |
- 2,6-dichloroindophenol can act as acceptor.
- Also acts, more slowly, on cello-oligosaccharides, lactose and
D-glucosyl-1,4-beta-D-mannose.
- Includes EC 1.1.5.1, which is now known to be a proteolytic product
of this enzyme.
- The enzyme from the white rot fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium is
unusual in having two redoxin domains, one containing a flavin and
the other a protoheme group.
- It transfers reducing equivalents from cellobiose to two types of
redox acceptor: two-electron oxidants, including redox dyes,
benzoquinones and molecular oxygen and one-electron oxidants,
including semiquinone species, Fe(2+) complexes and the model
acceptor cytochrome c.
|
| Cross-references |
| BRENDA | 1.1.99.18 |
| PUMA2 | 1.1.99.18 |
| PRIAM enzyme-specific profiles | 1.1.99.18 |
| KEGG Ligand Database for Enzyme Nomenclature | 1.1.99.18 |
| IUBMB Enzyme Nomenclature | 1.1.99.18 |
| IntEnz | 1.1.99.18 |
| MEDLINE | Find literature relating to 1.1.99.18 |
| MetaCyc | 1.1.99.18 |
| UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot |
|