What is sulfation and into which general type of reaction does it fall?
1 Answer
Dec 6, 2015
It's an enzyme-catalyzed sulfo-group transfer reaction. It's generally a biological group transfer reaction, but it might also be known as a "post-translational modification".
For instance, Tyrosylprotein sulfotransferase is an enzyme that transfers a sulfo group (not to be confused with a sulfate or sulfuryl group) from another compound onto Tyrosine. Basically:
The original oxygen is retained.
Here is a comparison of a sulfate group vs. a sulfo and sulfuryl:
The enzyme-catalyzed transfer reaction follows this mechanism.
Essentially, a sulfo group is transferred from the enzyme to a histidine (His, H) residue nearby, and it stays there until a nearby tyrosine (Tyr, Y) comes in to get it.