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  2. Polyphenol oxidase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyphenol_oxidase

    Polyphenol oxidase is an enzyme found throughout the plant and animal kingdoms, [31] including most fruits and vegetables. [32] PPO has importance to the food industry because it catalyzes enzymatic browning when tissue is damaged from bruising, compression or indentations, making the produce less marketable and causing economic loss.

  3. Bioadhesive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioadhesive

    Proteins in the oothecal foam of the mantis are cross-linked covalently by small molecules related to L-DOPA via a tanning reaction that is catalysed by catechol oxidase or polyphenol oxidase enzymes. [citation needed] L-DOPA is a tyrosine residue that bears an additional hydroxyl group.

  4. Bathymodiolus childressi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bathymodiolus_childressi

    It is attracted to water that has been altered by this species of mussel, [3] but the nature of the attractant was not discovered yet. [3] This snail also feeds on periphyton of methanotrophic bacteria that grow on the shells of Bathymodiolus childressi, [3] living on the decomposing periostracum of the mussels [3] and on byssal fibres of those ...

  5. Catechol oxidase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catechol_oxidase

    While the active site of both tyrosinase and catechol oxidase contain the di-copper center, variations in each enzyme’s respective structure result in differing activity. In catechol oxidase, a phenylalanine side-chain (Phe261) is above one of the copper centers and prevents the substrate from coordinating with both copper ions in the active ...

  6. L-DOPA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-DOPA

    l-DOPA, also known as l-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine and used medically as levodopa, is made and used as part of the normal biology of some plants [2] and animals, including humans. Humans, as well as a portion of the other animals that utilize l -DOPA, make it via biosynthesis from the amino acid l -tyrosine .

  7. Mytilus trossulus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mytilus_trossulus

    Mytilus trossulus, the Pacific blue mussel, bay mussel or foolish mussel, is a medium-sized edible marine bivalve mollusc in the family Mytilidae.. Mytilus trossulus is one of the three principal, closely related taxa in the Mytilus edulis complex of blue mussels, which collectively are widely distributed on the temperate to subarctic coasts the Northern Hemisphere, and often are dominant ...

  8. Multicopper oxidase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multicopper_oxidase

    Laccase EC 1.10.3.2 (urishiol oxidase), a 3-domain enzyme found in fungi and plants, which oxidizes different phenols and diamines. CueO is a laccase found in Escherichia coli that is involved in copper-resistance. [4] Ascorbate oxidase EC 1.10.3.3, a 3-domain enzyme found in higher plants.

  9. Byssus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byssus

    A mussel (genus Mytilus), attached to a rock by its byssus Illustration of the byssus of Dreissena polymorpha, the freshwater zebra mussel. A byssus (/ ˈ b ɪ s ə s /) is a bundle of filaments secreted by many species of bivalve mollusc that function to attach the mollusc to a solid surface.