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1750751 
Journal Article 
Review 
Tungsten in biological systems 
Kletzin, A; Adams, MW 
1996 
Yes 
FEMS Microbiology Reviews
ISSN: 0168-6445
EISSN: 1574-6976 
18 
5-63 
English 
Tungsten (atomic number 74) and the chemically analogous and very similar metal molybdenum (atomic number 42) are minor yet equally abundant elements on this planet. The essential role of molybdenum in biology has been known for decades and molybdoenzymes are ubiquitous. Yet, it is only recently that a biological role for tungsten has been established in prokaryotes, although not as yet in eukaryotes. The best characterized organisms with regard to their metabolism of tungsten are certain species of hyperthermophilic archaea (Pyrococcus furiosus and Thermococcus litoralis), methanogens (Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum and Mb. wolfei), Gram-positive bacteria (Clostridium thermoaceticum, C. formicoaceticum and Eubacterium acidaminophilum), Gram-negative anaerobes (Desulfovibrio gigas and Pelobacter acetylenicus) and Gram-negative aerobes (Methylobacterium sp. RXM). Of these, only the hyperthermophilic archaea appear to be obligately tungsten-dependent. Four different types of tungstoenzyme have been purified: formate dehydrogenase, formyl methanufuran dehydrogenase, acetylene hydratase, and a class of phylogenetically related oxidoreductases that catalyze the reversible oxidation of aldehydes. These are carboxylic reductase, and three ferredoxin-dependent oxidoreductases which oxidize various aldehydes, formaldehyde and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. All tungstoenzymes catalyze redox tungsten in these enzymes is bound by a pterin moiety similar to that found in molybdoenzymes. The first crystal structure of a tungsten- or pterin-containing enzyme, that of aldehyde ferredoxin oxidoreductase from P. furiosus, has revealed a catalytic site with one W atom coordinated to two pterin molecules which are themselves bridged by a magnesium ion. The geochemical, ecological, biochemical and phylogenetic basis for W- vs. Mo-dependent organisms is discussed. 
tungsten; molybdenum; oxidoreductases; hyperthermophiles; methanogenesis; acetogenesis 
IRIS
• Formaldehyde [archived]
     Reproductive and Developmental Effects
          Screened
               Title/abstract
                    Not formaldehyde
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          WOS
          PubMed
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          2014
               HERO_Formaldehyde_InflammationReactiveOxygenSpecies_pid_31_uid_5713Sorting091214
               HERO_Formaldehyde_InflammationReactiveOxygenSpecies_pid_31_uid_5713
                    Screened (Title/Abstract)
                         Not specific to Formaldehyde Exposure (other chemicals)
          2015
               FA DevRepro 072115
                    Not FA-Exposure Criteria
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• IRIS Formaldehyde (Inhalation) [Final 2024]
     Literature Indexing
          PubMed
          WoS
     Literature Identification
          Reproductive and Developmental Effects
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          Inflammation and Immune-Related Mechanistic Studies
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