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Mixed-function oxidase is the name of a family of oxidaseenzymes that catalyze a reaction in which each of the two atoms of oxygen in O2 is used for a different function in the reaction.[1]
The name "mixed-function oxidase" indicates that the enzyme oxidizes two different substrates simultaneously. Desaturation of fatty acyl-CoA in vertebrates is an example of the mixed-function oxidase reaction. In the process, saturated fatty acyl-CoA and NADPH are oxidized by molecular oxygen (O2) to produce monounsaturated fatty acyl-CoA, NADP+ and 2 molecules of water.
Reaction
The mixed-function oxidase reaction proceeds as follows:
AH + BH2 + O2 --> AOH + B + H2O (H2O as catalyst.)
Medical significance
High levels of mixed-function oxidase activity have been studied for their activation effects in human colon carcinoma cell lines,[2] to study the susceptibility to certain cancers. The research has been successful in mice but remains inconclusive in humans.[3]
^Kellerman G, Jett JR, Luyten-Kellermann M, Moses HL, Variation of microsomal mixed function oxidase(s) and human lung cancer, Cancer (Impact Factor: 5.2). 06/2006; 45(6):1438 - 1442. DOI: 10.1002/1097-0142(19800315)45:6