| Literature DB >> 20038499 |
Enrico Garattini1, Maddalena Fratelli, Mineko Terao.
Abstract
Aldehyde oxidases (EC 1.2.3.1) are a small group of structurally conserved cytosolic proteins represented in both the animal and plant kingdoms. In vertebrates, aldehyde oxidases constitute the small sub-family of molybdo-flavoenzymes, along with the evolutionarily and structurally related protein, xanthine oxidoreductase. These enzymes require a molybdo-pterin cofactor (molybdenum cofactor, MoCo) and flavin adenine dinucleotide for their catalytic activity. Aldehyde oxidases have broad substrate specificity and catalyse the hydroxylation of N-heterocycles and the oxidation of aldehydes to the corresponding acid. In humans, a single aldehyde oxidase gene ( AOX1 ) and two pseudogenes clustering on a short stretch of chromosome 2q are known. In other mammals, a variable number of structurally conserved aldehyde oxidase genes has been described. Four genes ( Aox1 , Aox3 , Aox4 and Aox3l1 ), coding for an equivalent number of catalytically active enzymes, are present in the mouse and rat genomes. Although human AOX1 and its homologous proteins are best known as drug metabolising enzymes, the physiological substrate(s) and function(s) are as yet unknown. The present paper provides an update of the available information on the evolutionary history, tissue- and cell-specific distribution and function of mammalian aldehyde oxidases.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 20038499 PMCID: PMC3525200 DOI: 10.1186/1479-7364-4-2-119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
Vertebrate aldehyde oxidase nomenclature.
| Organism | Gene and corresponding protein | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Common name | Specific name | Abbrev. | Gene symbol | Our original symbol | Accession no. |
| Human | Hs | ||||
| Chimpanzee | Pt | ||||
| Orangutan | Pp | ||||
| Rhesus | Mam | ||||
| Rhesus | Mam | ||||
| Rhesus | Mam | ||||
| Macaque | Mf | ||||
| Rabbit | Oc | ||||
| Mouse | Mm | ||||
| Mouse | Mm | ||||
| Mouse | Mm | ||||
| Mouse | Mm | ||||
| Rat | Rn | ||||
| Rat | Rn | Aox3 | Aoh1 | ||
| Rat | Rn | ||||
| Rat | Rn | ||||
| Dog | Cf | ||||
| Dog | Cf | ||||
| Cow | Bt | ||||
| Cow | Bt | ||||
| Cow | Bt | ||||
| Opossum | Md | ||||
| Opossum | Md | ||||
| Opossum | Md | ||||
| Opossum | Md | ||||
| Chicken | Gg | ||||
| Chicken | Gg | ||||
| Zebra finch | Tg | ||||
| Fugu | Tr | ||||
| Pufferfish | Tn | ||||
| Zebrafish | Dr | ||||
The table lists the proteins mentioned in this paper. The names of the different organisms are shown on the left. The accession numbers of the proteins or predicted translation products of the corresponding genes present in the GenBank or Ensembl databases are indicated in the rightmost column. The official or proposed gene symbol ('Gene symbol') along with the acronym originally suggested in our previous references ('Our original symbol') are also indicated.
*At present, it is unclear whether Macaca mulatta AOX4 is a functional gene or a pseudogene.
Figure 1Phylogeny of eukaryotic aldehyde oxidases. A rooted dendrogram was obtained by the Phylip method after CLUSTAL-W computer-aided alignment of the indicated proteins. Poere AOX1 = Poecilia reticulata (guppy) AOX1; Coeel AOX1/AOX2 = Caenorhabditis elegans AOX1 and AOX2; Drome AOX1/AOX2/AOX3/AOX4 = Drosophila melanogaster AOX1, AOX2, AOX3 and AOX4; Arath AOX1/AOX2/AOX3/AOX4 = Arabidopsis thaliana AOX1, AOX2, AOX3 and AOX4; Lyces AOX1/AOX2/AOX3 = Lycopersicon esculentum (tomato) AOX1, AOX2 and AOX3; Zeama AOX1/AOX2 = Zea mays AOX1 and AOX2; Xenla AOX1 = Xenopus laevis AOX1; Gorgo AOX1 = Gorilla gorilla AOX1. All other abbreviations are as in Table 1. At present, it is unclear whether Macaca mulatta AOX4 is a functional gene product.
Figure 2Aldehyde oxidase genes in vertebrates. The figure contains a schematic representation of the aldehyde oxidase genes in selected vertebrates for which complete or almost complete genomic sequence data are available. Orthologous genes are indicated with the same shadowing. The direction of transcription is indicated by arrows. Pseudogenes are crossed through and asterisked. The exons identified in the pseudogenes are also shown. The chromosomal location is indicated on the right (ND, not determined). Whenever the structure of the gene is predicted solely on the basis of the genomic sequence, and the corresponding cDNAs have not been characterised, the GenBank locus number (LOC) is indicated. At present, it is unclear whether Macaca mulatta AOX4 is a functional gene or a pseudogene.