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  2. Flavin adenine dinucleotide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavin_adenine_dinucleotide

    FAD formation can also occur through the reduction and dehydration of flavin-N(5)-oxide. [8] Based on the oxidation state, flavins take specific colors when in aqueous solution. flavin-N(5)-oxide (superoxidized) is yellow-orange, FAD (fully oxidized) is yellow, FADH (half reduced) is either blue or red based on the pH, and the fully reduced ...

  3. Flavin group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavin_group

    The flavin group is capable of undergoing oxidation-reduction reactions, and can accept either one electron in a two-step process or two electrons at once. Reduction is made with the addition of hydrogen atoms to specific nitrogen atoms on the isoalloxazine ring system: Equilibrium between the oxidized (left) and totally reduced (right) forms ...

  4. Flavoprotein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavoprotein

    About 5-10% of flavoproteins have a covalently linked FAD. [2] Based on the available structural data, FAD-binding sites can be divided into more than 200 different types. [3] 90 flavoproteins are encoded in the human genome; about 84% require FAD and around 16% require FMN, whereas 5 proteins require both. [4]

  5. Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acyl-CoA_dehydrogenase

    Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) is a required co-factor in addition to the presence of an active site glutamate in order for the enzyme to function. The following reaction is the oxidation of the fatty acid by FAD to afford an α,β-unsaturated fatty acid thioester of coenzyme A:

  6. Dehydrogenase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dehydrogenase

    Oxidoreductases, enzymes that catalyze oxidation-reduction reactions, constitute Class EC 1 of the IUBMB classification of enzyme-catalyzed reactions. [2] Any of these may be called dehydrogenases, especially those in which NAD + is the electron acceptor (oxidant), but reductase is also used when the physiological emphasis on reduction of the substrate, and oxidase is used only when O 2 is the ...

  7. Riboflavin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riboflavin

    It is a starting compound in the synthesis of the coenzymes flavin mononucleotide (FMN, also known as riboflavin-5'-phosphate) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). FAD is the more abundant form of flavin, reported to bind to 75% of the number of flavin-dependent protein encoded genes in the all-species genome (the flavoproteome) [ 6 ] [ 7 ...

  8. Flavin-containing monooxygenase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavin-containing_mono...

    The cofactor NADPH binds to the oxidized state of the FAD prosthetic group, reducing it to FADH 2. Molecular oxygen binds to the formed NADP +-FADH 2-enzyme complex and is reduced, resulting in 4a-hydroperoxyflavin (4a-HPF or FADH-OOH).

  9. Ferredoxin—NADP(+) reductase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferredoxin—NADP(+)_reductase

    The glutamate residue is highly conserved because it both stabilizes the semiquinone form of FAD and is a proton donor/acceptor in the reaction. [5] The rate limiting step of the electron transfer reaction is the release of the first oxidized ferredoxin molecule after the reduction of FAD with one electron. [3]