Superoxide dismutases: active sites that save, but a protein that kills.
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| Abstract |    :  
                  Protection from oxidative damage is sufficiently important that biology has evolved three independent enzymes for hastening superoxide dismutation: the Cu- and Zn-containing superoxide dismutases (Cu,Zn-SODs), the SODs that are specific for Fe or Mn or function with either of the two (Fe-SODs, Mn-SODs or Fe/Mn-SODs), and the SODs that use Ni (Ni-SODs). Despite the overwhelming similarities between the active sites of Fe-SOD and Mn-SOD, the mechanisms and redox tuning of these two sites appear to incorporate crucial differences consistent with the differences between Fe3+/2+ and Mn3+/2+. Ni-SOD is revealed by spectroscopy to employ completely different ligation to that of the other SODs while nonetheless incorporating a device also found in Cu,Zn-SOD. Finally, the protein of human Cu,Zn-SOD appears to be an important contributor to the development of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, possibly because of its propensity for extended beta-sheet formation.  | 
        
| Year of Publication |    :  
                  2004 
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| Journal |    :  
                  Current opinion in chemical biology 
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| Volume |    :  
                  8 
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| Issue |    :  
                  2 
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| Number of Pages |    :  
                  162-8 
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| ISSN Number |    :  
                  1367-5931 
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| URL |    :  
                  https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1367593104000262 
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| DOI |    :  
                  10.1016/j.cbpa.2004.02.011 
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| Short Title |    :  
                  Curr Opin Chem Biol 
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