Significance of Absence in Humans
Humans do have a gene for urate oxidase, but it is nonfunctional. Thus uric acid is the end product of catabolism of purines in humans. Excessive concentration of uric acid in the blood stream leads to gout.
Urate oxidase is found in all organisms, from bacteria to mammals, and plays different metabolic roles, depending on its host organism. It was lost in early primate evolution, and so is absent in humans.
It has been proposed that the loss of urate oxidase protein expression has been advantageous to hominids, since uric acid is a powerful antioxidant and scavenger of singlet oxygen and radicals. Its presence provides the body with protection from oxidative damage, thus prolonging life and decreasing age-specific cancer rates. However, this is highly unlikely as proteins are capable of being activated only when concentrations exceed a certain amount. Adequate uric acid levels could still be maintained to protect the body while preventing evolutionarily disadvantageous conditions like gout.
Urate oxidase is formulated as a protein drug (rasburicase) for the treatment of acute hyperuricemia in patients receiving chemotherapy. A PEGylated form of urate oxidase is in clinical development for treatment of chronic hyperuricemia in patients with "treatment-failure gout".
Read more about this topic: Urate Oxidase
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