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1.
Kuczek M 《Bio Systems》2002,66(1-2):11-20
Potassium pyrophosphate was used instead of ATP as a model ligand for magnesium cation for the study of effector influence on the kinetics of pyruvate kinase muscle isozyme M(1). The pyruvate kinase activation by low concentration of pyrophosphate and inhibition by high concentration of pyrophosphate was considered to be the result of reversible reactions of magnesium cation with pyrophosphate, ADP, ATP, and PEP. The apparent K(m) and V(m) or in some cases the pseudo-first order reaction rate constant (instead of K(m) and V(m)) of pyruvate kinase at any given pyrophosphate concentration were analysed as a function of concentration of free magnesium cation and its complexes with all ligands present in an assay mixture. The functions of reaction parameters with respect to concentration of magnesium complexes indicate the coexistence in the reaction mixture of simple and mixed complexes of magnesium cation with substrates, pyrophosphate, and an enzyme-substrate complex. The parameters of the simulated reaction for the proposed interactions fit the measured experimental data. A simple model with nonallosteric feedback has been proposed. According to this model, mutual and simultaneous interactions of reaction products with substrates and with an enzyme result in the coexistence of simple and mixed, labile and inert complexes.  相似文献   

2.
Fo.F1-ATP synthase in inside-out coupled vesicles derived from Paracoccus denitrificans catalyzes Pi-dependent proton-translocating ATPase reaction if exposed to prior energization that relieves ADP.Mg2+ -induced inhibition (Zharova, T.V. and Vinogradov, A.D. (2004) J. Biol. Chem.,279, 12319-12324). Here we present evidence that the presence of medium ADP is required for the steady-state energetically self-sustained coupled ATP hydrolysis. The initial rapid ATPase activity is declined to a certain level if the reaction proceeds in the presence of the ADP-consuming, ATP-regenerating system (pyruvate kinase/phosphoenol pyruvate). The rate and extent of the enzyme de-activation are inversely proportional to the steady-state ADP concentration, which is altered by various amounts of pyruvate kinase at constant ATPase level. The half-maximal rate of stationary ATP hydrolysis is reached at an ADP concentration of 8 x 10(-6) M. The kinetic scheme is proposed explaining the requirement of the reaction products (ADP and Pi), the substrates of ATP synthesis, in the medium for proton-translocating ATP hydrolysis by P. denitrificans Fo.F1-ATP synthase.  相似文献   

3.
Plastidic pyruvate kinase (ATP: pyruvate phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.40) was purified to near homogeneity as judged by native PAGE with about 4% recovery from developing seeds of Brassica campestris using (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, gel filtration through Sepharose-CL-6B and affinity chromatography through reactive blue Sepharose-CL-6B. The purified enzyme having molecular mass of about 266 kDa was quite stable and showed a broad pH optimum between pH 6.8-7.8. Typical Michaelis-Menten kinetics was obtained for both the substrates with K(m) values of 0.13 and 0.14 mM for PEP and ADP, respectively. The enzyme could also utilize CDP, GDP or UDP as alternative nucleotide to ADP, but with lower Vmax and higher K(m). The enzyme had an absolute requirement for a divalent and a monovalent cation for activity and was inhibited by oxalate, fumarate, citrate, isocitrate and ATP, and activated by AMP, aspartate, 3-PGA, tryptophan and inorganic phosphate. ATP inhibited the enzyme competitively with respect to PEP and non-competitively with respect to ADP. Similarly, oxalate inhibition was also of competitive type with respect to PEP and non-competitive with respect to ADP. This inhibition by either ATP or oxalate was not due to chelation of Mg2+, as the inhibition was not relieved on increasing Mg2+ concentration even upto 30 mM. Initial velocity and product inhibition studies demonstrated the reaction mechanism to be compulsory ordered type. The enzyme seems to be regulated synergistically by ATP and citrate.  相似文献   

4.
Bao H  Kasten SA  Yan X  Roche TE 《Biochemistry》2004,43(42):13432-13441
Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 2 (PDK2) activity is enhanced by the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase core (E2 60mer) that binds PDK2 and a large number of its pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1) substrate. With E2-activated PDK2, K(+) at approximately 90 mM and Cl(-) at approximately 60 mM decreased the K(m) of PDK2 for ATP and competitive K(i) for ADP by approximately 3-fold and enhanced pyruvate inhibition. Comparing PDK2 catalysis +/- E2, E2 increased the K(m) of PDK2 for ATP by nearly 8-fold (from 5 to 39 microM), increased k(cat) by approximately 4-fold, and decreased the requirement for E1 by at least 400-fold. ATP binding, measured by a cold-trapping technique, occurred at two active sites with a K(d) of 5 microM, which equals the K(m) and K(d) of PDK2 for ATP measured in the absence of E2. During E2-aided catalysis, PDK2 had approximately 3 times more ADP than ATP bound at its active site, and the pyruvate analogue, dichloroacetate, led to 16-fold more ADP than ATP being bound (no added ADP). Pyruvate functioned as an uncompetitive inhibitor versus ATP, and inclusion of ADP transformed pyruvate inhibition to noncompetitive. At high pyruvate levels, pyruvate was a partial inhibitor but also induced substrate inhibition at high ATP levels. Our results indicate that, at physiological salt levels, ADP dissociation is a limiting step in E2-activated PDK2 catalysis, that PDK2.[ADP or ATP].pyruvate complexes form, and that PDK2.ATP.pyruvate.E1 reacts with PDK2.ADP.pyruvate accumulating.  相似文献   

5.
Regulation of heart muscle pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase   总被引:31,自引:25,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
1. The activity of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase was assayed by the incorporation of [(32)P]phosphate from [gamma-(32)P]ATP into the dehydrogenase complex. There was a very close correlation between this incorporation and the loss of pyruvate dehydrogenase activity with all preparations studied. 2. Nucleoside triphosphates other than ATP (at 100mum) and cyclic 3':5'-nucleotides (at 10mum) had no significant effect on kinase activity. 3. The K(m) for thiamin pyrophosphate in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction was 0.76mum. Sodium pyrophosphate, adenylyl imidodiphosphate, ADP and GTP were competitive inhibitors against thiamin pyrophosphate in the dehydrogenase reaction. 4. The K(m) for ATP of the intrinsic kinase assayed in three preparations of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase was in the range 13.9-25.4mum. Inhibition by ADP and adenylyl imidodiphosphate was predominantly competitive, but there was nevertheless a definite non-competitive element. Thiamin pyrophosphate and sodium pyrophosphate were uncompetitive inhibitors against ATP. It is suggested that ADP and adenylyl imidodiphosphate inhibit the kinase mainly by binding to the ATP site and that the adenosine moiety may be involved in this binding. It is suggested that thiamin pyrophosphate, sodium pyrophosphate, adenylyl imidodiphosphate and ADP may inhibit the kinase by binding through pyrophosphate or imidodiphosphate moieties at some site other than the ATP site. It is not known whether this is the coenzyme-binding site in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction. 5. The K(m) for pyruvate in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction was 35.5mum. 2-Oxobutyrate and 3-hydroxypyruvate but not glyoxylate were also substrates; all three compounds inhibited pyruvate oxidation. 6. In preparations of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase free of thiamin pyrophosphate, pyruvate inhibited the kinase reaction at all concentrations in the range 25-500mum. The inhibition was uncompetitive. In the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate (endogenous or added at 2 or 10mum) the kinase activity was enhanced by low concentrations of pyruvate (25-100mum) and inhibited by a high concentration (500mum). Activation of the kinase reaction was not seen when sodium pyrophosphate was substituted for thiamin pyrophosphate. 7. Under the conditions of the kinase assay, pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase forms (14)CO(2) from [1-(14)C]pyruvate in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate. Previous work suggests that the products may include acetoin. Acetoin activated the kinase reaction in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate but not with sodium pyrophosphate. It is suggested that acetoin formation may contribute to activation of the kinase reaction by low pyruvate concentrations in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate. 8. Pyruvate effected the conversion of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate into pyruvate dehydrogenase in rat heart mitochondria incubated with 5mm-2-oxoglutarate and 0.5mm-l-malate as respiratory substrates. It is suggested that this effect of pyruvate is due to inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase reaction in the mitochondrion. 9. Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity was inhibited by high concentrations of Mg(2+) (15mm) and by Ca(2+) (10nm-10mum) at low Mg(2+) (0.15mm) but not at high Mg(2+) (15mm).  相似文献   

6.
1. The reaction pathway for the carboxylation of pyruvate, catalysed by pig liver pyruvate carboxylase, was studied in the presence of saturating concentrations of K(+) and acetyl-CoA. 2. Free Mg(2+) binds to the enzyme in an equilibrium fashion and remains bound during all further catalytic cycles. MgATP(2-) binds next, followed by HCO(3) (-) and then pyruvate. Oxaloacetate is released before the random release, at equilibrium, of P(i) and MgADP(-). 3. This reaction pathway is compared with the double displacement (Ping Pong) mechanisms that have previously been described for pyruvate carboxylases from other sources. The reaction pathway proposed for the pig liver enzyme is superior in that it shows no kinetic inconsistencies and satisfactorily explains the low rate of the ATP[unk][(32)P]P(i) equilibrium exchange reaction. 4. Values are presented for the stability constants of the magnesium complexes of ATP, ADP, acetyl-CoA, P(i), pyruvate and oxaloacetate.  相似文献   

7.
1. The properties of phosphofructokinase after its slight purification from the mucosa of rat jejunum were studied. 2. The enzyme is inhibited by almost 100% by an excess of ATP (1.6mm), with 0.2mm-fructose 6-phosphate. AMP, ADP, P(i) and NH(4) (+) at 0.2, 0.76, 1.0 and 2mm respectively do not individually prevent the inhibition of phosphofructokinase activity by 1.6mm-ATP with 0.2mm-fructose 6-phosphate to any great extent, but all of them together completely prevent the inhibition of phosphofructokinase by ATP. 3. One of the effects of high concentrations of ATP on the enzyme was to increase enormously the apparent K(m) value for the other substrate fructose 6-phosphate, and this increase is largely counteracted by the presence of AMP, ADP, P(i) and NH(4) (+). At low concentrations of ATP the above effectors individually decrease the concentration of fructose 6-phosphate required for half-maximum velocity and when present together they decrease it further, in a more than additive way. 4. When fructose 6-phosphate is present at a saturating concentration (5mm), 0.3mm-NH(4) (+) increases the maximum velocity of the reaction 3.3-fold; with 0.5mm-fructose 6-phosphate, 4.5mm-NH(4) (+) is required for maximum effect. The other effectors do not change the maximum reaction velocity. 5. The results presented here suggest that NH(4) (+), AMP, ADP and P(i) synergistically decrease the inhibition of phosphofructokinase activity at high concentrations of ATP by decreasing the concentration of fructose 6-phosphate required for half-maximum velocity. Such synergism among the effectors and an observed, low ;energy charge' [(ATP+(1/2)ADP)/(AMP+ADP+ATP)] in conjunction with the possibility of a relatively high NH(4) (+) and fructose 6-phosphate concentration in this tissue, may keep the mucosal phosphofructokinase active and uninhibited by ATP under aerobic conditions, thus explaining the high rate of aerobic glycolysis and the lack of Pasteur effect in this tissue.  相似文献   

8.
1. The fixation of CO(2) by pyruvate carboxylase in isolated rat brain mitochondria was investigated. 2. In the presence of pyruvate, ATP, inorganic phosphate and magnesium, rat brain mitochondria fixed H(14)CO(3) (-) into tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates at a rate of about 250nmol/30min per mg of protein. 3. Citrate and malate were the main radioactive products with citrate containing most of the radioactivity fixed. The observed rates of H(14)CO(3) (-) fixation and citrate formation correlated with the measured activities of pyruvate carboxylase and citrate synthase in the mitochondria. 4. The carboxylation of pyruvate by the mitochondria had an apparent K(m) for pyruvate of about 0.5mm. 5. Pyruvate carboxylation was inhibited by ADP and dinitrophenol. 6. Malate, succinate, fumarate and oxaloacetate inhibited the carboxylation of pyruvate whereas glutamate stimulated it. 7. The results suggest that the metabolism of pyruvate via pyruvate carboxylase in brain mitochondria is regulated, in part, by the intramitochondrial concentrations of pyruvate, oxaloacetate and the ATP:ADP ratio.  相似文献   

9.
1. Pyruvate carboxylase from baker's yeast acts with either MgATP(2-) or MnATP(2-) as substrate. The optimum pH for the enzyme reaction is 8.0 with MgATP(2-) and 7.0 with MnATP(2-). 2. When the reaction velocity is plotted against MgATP(2-) (or MnATP(2-)) concentration slightly sigmoid curves are obtained, either in the presence or in the absence of acetyl-CoA (an allosteric activator). In the presence of excess of free Mg(2+) (or Mn(2+)) the curves turn into hyperbolae, whereas in the presence of excess of free ATP(4-) the apparent sigmoidicity of the curves increases. 3. The sigmoidicity of the plots of v against MgATP(2-) (or MnATP(2-)) concentration can be explained by the inhibitory effect of free ATP(4-), the concentration of which, in the experimental conditions employed, is significant and varies according to the total concentration of the ATP-magnesium chloride (or ATP-manganese chloride) mixture. Free ATP(4-) behaves as a negative modifier of yeast pyruvate carboxylase. 4. The effect of high concentrations of Mg(2+) (or Mn(2+)) on the kinetics of yeast pyruvate carboxylase can be explained as a deinhibition with respect to ATP(4-), instead of a direct enzyme activation. 5. At pH6.5 manganese chloride is more effective than magnesium chloride as enzyme activator even in the presence of a great excess (16-fold) of the latter. This is consistent with a significant contribution of the MnATP(2-) complex to the activity of yeast pyruvate carboxylase, in medium conditions resembling those existing inside the yeast cell (pH6.25-6.75; 12mm-magnesium chloride and 0.75mm-manganese chloride). 6. The physiological significance of the enzyme inhibition by free ATP(4-) is doubtful since the Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) concentrations reported to exist inside the yeast cell are sufficient to decrease ATP(4-) concentrations to ineffective values.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of Na+ and K+ ions on the elementary steps in the reaction of Na+-K+-dependent ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) were investigated in 0.5-600mM NaCL and 0-10mM KCL, at a fixed concentration (1mM) OF MgCL2, AT PH 8.5 and at 15 degrees. The data were analyzed on the basis of the reaction mechanism in which a phosphorylated intermediate, E ADP P (abbreviated as EP), is formed via two kinds of enzyme-substrate comples, E1ATP and E2ATP, and EP is in equilibrium with E2ATP, and is hydrolyzed to produce P1 and ADP. The following results were obtained: 1. The rate od E2ATP-formation, vf, increased with increase in the Na+ concentration, reached a maximum level, and then decreased with further increase in the Na+ concentration at various K+ concentrations. The value of vf was given as (see article). 2. The reciprocal of the equilibrium constants, K2, of the step E1ATPEQUILIBRIUM E ADP P in the presence of low concentrations of Na+ was larger than that in the presence of high concrntrations of Na+, indicating that the equilibrium shifted markedly toward E2ATP at low concentrations of Na+. The relation of K3 with Na concentration was rather complicated on varying the concentration of K+. However, generally speaking, it increased with increase in the K+ concentration. 3. The decomposition of EP was markedly activated by even low concentrations of K+, and inhibited by high concentrations of Na+. The inhibition by Na+ was partially suppressed by K+. The rate constant of EP-decomposition, vo/(EP), was given by (see article) where (vo/(EP) K+EQUALS0 was the value of vo/[EP] in the absence of K+.  相似文献   

11.
The ouabain-sensitive synthesis of [32P]ATP from [32P]Pi and ADP (vsyn) was measured in parallel with the ouabain-sensitive hydrolysis of [32P]ATP (vhy) at steady state, at varying concentrations of sodium, potassium, magnesium, inorganic phosphate, ADP, ATP and oligomycin, and at varying pH. Na+ was necessary for ATP synthesis, but vsyn was decreased by high sodium concentrations. Oligomycin, depending on the Na+ concentration, either decreased or did not affect vsyn. Potassium, at low concentrations (1-5 mM) increased vsyn at all magnesium and sodium concentrations tested, lower potassium concentrations being needed to activate vsyn at lower sodium concentrations. vsyn was optimal below pH 6.7, decreasing abruptly at higher values of pH. At pH 6.7, vsyn was a hyperbolic function of the concentration of inorganic phosphate. In the presence of potassium, half-maximal rate was obtained at [Pi] congruent to 40 mM, whereas a higher concentration was needed to obtain half-maximal rate in the absence of K+. In contrast, increasing the concentration of ADP caused a nonhyperbolic activation of vsyn, the pattern obtained in the presence of potassium being different from that obtained in its absence. Increasing the ATP concentration above 0.5 mM decreased vsyn. The data are used to elucidate (1) which reaction steps are involved in the ATP-synthesis catalysed by the Na+/K(+)-ATPase at steady state in the absence of ionic gradients and (2) the mechanism by which K+ ions stimulate the reaction.  相似文献   

12.
Blowfly (Phormia regina) flight muscle mitochondria oxidized pyruvate (+ proline) in the presence of either ADP (coupled respiration) or carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP-uncoupled respiration). There was an absolute requirement for ADP (Km = 8.0 μm) when pyruvate oxidation was stimulated by FCCP in the presence of oligomycin. This requirement for ADP was limited to the oxidation of pyruvate; uncoupled α-glycerolphosphate oxidation proceeded maximally even in the absence of added ADP. Atractylate inhibited uncoupled pyruvate oxidation whether added before (>99%) or after (95%) initiation of respiration with FCCP. In the presence of FCCP, oligomycin, and limiting concentrations of ADP (less than 110 μm), there was a shutoff in the uptake of oxygen. This inhibition of respiration was completely reversed by the addition of more ADP. Plots of net oxygen uptake as a function of the limiting ADP concentration were linear; the observed ADP/O ratio was 0.22 ± 0.025. An ADP/O ratio of 0.2 was predicted if phosphorylation occurred only at the succinyl-CoA synthetase step of the tricarboxylate cycle. Experiments performed in the presence of limiting concentrations of ADP, and designed to monitor changes in the mitochondrial content of ADP and ATP, demonstrated that the shutoff in oxygen uptake was not due to the presence of a high intramitochondrial concentration of ATP. Indeed, ATP, added to the medium prior to the addition of FCCP, inhibited uncoupled pyruvate oxidation; the apparent KI was 0.8 mm. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that it is the intramitochondrial ATP/ADP ratio that is one of the controlling factors in determining the rate of flux through the tricarboxylate cycle. Changes in the mitochondrial content of citrate, isocitrate, α-ketoglutarate, and malate during uncoupled pyruvate oxidation in the presence of a limiting concentration of ADP were consistent with the hypothesis that the mitochondrial NAD+-linked isocitric dehydrogenase is a major site for such control through the tricarboxylate cycle.  相似文献   

13.
1. Rat brain-cortex mitochondria were incubated in media containing 1, 5 or 100mm-K(+) in the presence of ADP, uncoupler (FCCP, carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoro-methoxyphenylhydrazone) or valinomycin while metabolizing pyruvate and malate, or acetylcarnitine and malate or glutamate and malate as substrates. Both the uptake of oxygen and disappearance of substrate were measured under these conditions. 2. With pyruvate and malate as substrate in the presence of both ADP and valinomycin, both the uptake of oxygen and disappearance of pyruvate increased markedly on increasing the K(+) content of the incubation medium from 5 to 100mm-K(+). However, in the presence of uncoupler (FCCP), although the oxygen uptake doubled little change was observed in the rate of disappearance of pyruvate on increasing the K(+) concentration. 3. Only small changes in uptake of substrate and oxygen were observed in the presence of ADP, uncoupler (FCCP) or valinomycin on increasing the K(+) concentration when acetylcarnitine+malate or glutamate+malate were used as substrates by brain mitochondria. 4. Further, increasing the K(+) concentration from 1 to 20mm when rat brain mitochondria were oxidizing a mixture of pyruvate and glutamate in the presence of malate and ADP caused a 30% increase in the respiration rate, 50% increase in the rate of disappearance of pyruvate and an 80% decrease in the rate of disappearance of glutamate. 5. Investigation of the redox state of the cytochromes and the nicotinamide nucleotides in various conditions with either pyruvate or acetylcarnitine as substrates suggested that the specific stimulation of metabolism of pyruvate by K(+) could not be explained by a general stimulation of the electron-transport system. 6. Low-amplitude high-energy swelling of rat brain mitochondria was investigated in both Na(+)- and K(+)-containing media. Swelling of brain mitochondria was much greater in the Na(+)-containing medium and in this medium, the addition of Mg(2+) caused a partial reversal of swelling together with an 85% decrease in the rate of utilization of pyruvate. However, in the K(+)-containing medium, the addition of Mg(2+), although also causing a reversal of swelling, did not affect the rate of disappearance of pyruvate. 7. Measurements of the ATP, NADH/NAD(+) and acetyl-CoA/CoA contents were made under various conditions and no evidence that K(+) concentrations affected these parameters was obtained. 8. The results are discussed in relationship to the physiological significance of the stimulation of pyruvate metabolism by K(+) in rat brain mitochondria. It is proposed that K(+) causes its effects by a direct stimulation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex.  相似文献   

14.
M U Tsao  T I Madley 《Microbios》1975,12(49):125-142
Pyruvate kinase (ATP:pyruvate phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.40), extracted from the mycelium of Neurospora crassa has been purified 560-fold by precipitation with ammonium sulphate, chromatography with DEAE-Sephadex, and gel filtration with Sephadex G-200. Potassium and magnesium are required for enzyme activity. Fructose, 1,6-diphosphate is the only physiological activator found for the enzyme. In decreasing order of potency, citrate, oxalacetate, calcium, and ATP are inhibitors. Phosphoenolpyruvate is cooperatively bound by the enzyme and the cooperatively is reduced by ATP and completely eliminated by fructose-1,6-diphosphate. Lowering of pH from 7-5 to 5-5 changes the Hill coefficient from 2-7 to 1-0. Substitution of ADP by other nucleotides reduces enzyme activity. Manganese can substitute for the cofactor magnesium, but the reaction velocity is then reduced. MgADP- is cooperatively bound by the enzyme and inhibition of the enzyme occurs only when either magnesium or ADP is in excess of the other beyond the optimum concentration. These kinetics properties of pyruvate kinase are compatible with the role of a regulator of glycolysis in Neurospora crassa.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetic properties of the [3H]ADP-ATP exchange reaction catalyzed by Na+, K+-dependent ATPase [EC 3.6.1,3] were investigated, using NaI-treated microsomes from bovine brain, and the following results were obtained. 1. The rates of the Na+-dependent exchange reaction in the steady state were measured in a solution containing 45 micronM free Mg2+, 100 mMNaCl, 80 micronM ATP, and 160 micronM ADP at pH 6.5 and 4-5 degrees. The rate and amount of decrease in phosphorylated intermediate on adding ADP, i.e., the amount of ADP-sensitive EP, were measured while varying one of the reaction parameters and fixing the others mentioned above. Plots of the exchange rate and the amount of ADP-sensitive EP against the logarithm of free Mg2+ concentration gave bell-shaped curves with maximum values at 50-60 micronM free Mg2+. Plots of the exchange rate and the amount of ADP-sensitive EP against pH also gave bell-shaped curves with maximum values at pH 6.9-7. They both increased with increase in the concentration of NaCl to maximum values at 150-200 mM NaCl, and then decreased rapidly with increase in the NaCl concentration above 200 mM. The dependences of the exchange rate and the amount of ADP-sensitive EP on the concentration of ADP followed the Michaelis-Menten equation, and the Michaelis constants Km, for both were 43 micronM. The dependence of the exchange rate on the ATP concentration also followed the Michaelis-Menten equation, and the Km value was 30 micronM. The amount of ADP-sensitive EP increased with increase in the ATP concentration, and reached a maximum value at about 5 micronM ATP. 2. The N+-dependent [3H]ADP-ATP exchange reaction was started by adding [3H]ADP to EP at low Mg2+-concentration. The reaction consisted of a rapid initial phase and a slow steady phase. The amount of [3H]ATP formed during the rapid initial phase, i.e. the size of the ATP burst, was equal to that of ADP-sensitive EP, and was proportional to the rate in the steady state. At high Mg2+ concentration, the rate of Na+-dependent exchange in the steady state was almost zero, and EP did not show any ADP sensitivity. However, rapid formation of [3H]ATP was observed in the pre-steady state, and the size of the ATP burst increased with increase in the KCl concentration. From these findings, we concluded that an enzyme-ATP complex (E2ATP) formed at low Mg2+ concentration is in equilibrium with EP + ADP, that the rate-limiting step for the exchange reaction is the release of ATP from the enzyme-ATP complex, that the ADP-insensitive EP (formula: see text) produced at high Mg2+ concentration is in equilibrium with the enzyme-ATP complex, and that the equilibrium shifts towards the enzyme-ATP complex on adding KCl. Actually, the ratio of the size of the ATP burst to the amount of EP was equal to the reciprocal of the equilibrium constant of step (formula: see text), determined by a method previously reported by us.  相似文献   

16.
1. A study was made of the hydrolysis, at pH9.0, of ATP and ADP catalysed by pig kidney alkaline phosphatase. Both of these nucleoside pyrophosphates are substrates for the enzyme; K(m) values are 4x10(-5)m for ATP and 6.3x10(-5)m for ADP. V(max.) for ADP is approximately double that of ATP. 2. Above 0.1mm approximately, both ATP and ADP are inhibitory, but the inhibition is reversible by the addition of Mg(2+) ions to form MgATP(2-) or MgADP(-) complexes. The complexes, besides being non-inhibitory, are also substrates for the enzyme with K(m) values identical with those of the respective free nucleotides. 3. Mg(2+) ions are inhibitory when present in excess of ATP or ADP. The degree of inhibition is greater with ATP as substrate, but with both ATP and ADP a mixed competitive-non-competitive type of inhibition is observed. 4. It is suggested that under normal conditions the enzyme is inhibited by cellular concentrations of ATP plus ADP but that an increase in the concentration of Mg(2+) ions stimulates activity by relieving nucleoside pyrophosphate inhibition. The properties may be of importance in the regulation of the transport of bivalent cations.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of temperature, pH, and free [Mg(2+)] on the apparent equilibrium constant of pyruvate kinase (phosphoenol transphosphorylase) (EC ) was investigated. The apparent equilibrium constant, K', for the biochemical reaction P-enolpyruvate + ADP = ATP + Pyr was defined as K' = [ATP][Pyr]/[ADP][P-enolpyruvate], where each reactant represents the sum of all the ionic and metal complexed species in M. The K' at pH 7.0, 1.0 mm free Mg(2+) and I of 0.25 m was 3.89 x 10(4) (n = 8) at 25 degrees C. The standard apparent enthalpy (DeltaH' degrees ) for the biochemical reaction was -4.31 kJmol(-1) in the direction of ATP formation. The corresponding standard apparent entropy (DeltaS' degrees ) was +73.4 J K(-1) mol(-1). The DeltaH degrees and DeltaS degrees values for the reference reaction, P-enolpyruvate(3-) + ADP(3-) + H(+) = ATP(4-) + Pyr(1-), were -6.43 kJmol(-1) and +180 J K(-1) mol(-1), respectively (5 to 38 degrees C). We examined further the mass action ratio in rat heart and skeletal muscle at rest and found that the pyruvate kinase reaction in vivo was close to equilibrium i.e. within a factor of about 3 to 6 of K' in the direction of ATP at the same pH, free [Mg(2+)], and T. We conclude that the pyruvate kinase reaction may be reversed under some conditions in vivo, a finding that challenges the long held dogma that the reaction is displaced far from equilibrium.  相似文献   

18.
Pyruvate kinase from bovine adrenal cortex was purified to an electrophoretically homogeneous state. The molecular weight of the native enzyme is about 230 000, that of one subunit is 57 000. The maximal values of the pyruvate kinase initial reaction rate were obtained in 50 mM imidazole-acetate buffer within the pH range of 6.8 to 7.0. The curve of the initial pyruvate kinase reaction rate versus phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and ADP concentrations is hyperbolic and obeys the Michaelis-Menten kinetics with Km for PEP and ADP of 0.055 X 10(-3) M and 0.25 X 10(-3) M, respectively. The enzyme is activated by Mn2+ and Co2+ by 43 and 38%, respectively. IDP, GDP, and UDP may be used as analogs of ADP. The enzyme is not activated by fructose-1.6-diphosphate and is inhibited by L-phenylalanine and ATP.  相似文献   

19.
Resealed human red blood cell ghosts were prepared to contain a range of ADP concentrations at fixed ATP concentrations and vice versa. ATP/ADP ratios ranging from approximately 0.2 to 50 were set and maintained (for up to 45 min) in this system. ATP and ADP concentrations were controlled by the addition of either a phosphoarginine- or phosphocreatine-based regenerating system. Ouabain-sensitive unidirectional Na efflux was determined in the presence and absence of 15 mM external K as a function of the nucleotide composition. Na/K exchange was found to increase to saturation with ATP (K 1/2 approximately equal to 250 microM), whereas Na/Na exchange (measured in K-free solutions) was a saturating function of ADP (K 1/2 approximately equal to 350 microM). The elevation of ATP from approximately 100 to 1,800 microM did not appreciably affect Na/Na exchange. In the presence of external Na and a saturating concentration of external K, increasing the ADP concentration at constant ATP was found to decrease ouabain-sensitive Na/K exchange. The decreased Na/K exchange that still remained when the ADP/ATP ratio was high was stimulated by removal of external Na. Assuming that under normal substrate conditions the reaction cycle of the Na/K pump is rate-limited by the conformational change associated with the release of occluded K [E2 X (K) X ATP----E1 X ATP + K], increasing ADP inhibits the rate of these transformations by competition with ATP for the E2(K) form. A less likely alternative is that inhibition is due to competition with ATP at the high-affinity site (E1). The acceleration of the Na/K pump that occurs upon removing external Na at high levels of ADP evidently results from a shift in the forward direction of the transformation of the intermediates involved with the release of occluded Na from E1P X (Na). Thus, the nucleotide composition and the Na gradient can modulate the rate at which the Na/K pump operates.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract: The effect of 3-hydroxybutyrate on pyruvate decarboxylation by neonatal rat brain mitochondria and synaptosomes was investigated. The rate of [1 -14C]pyruvate decarboxylation (1 mm final concentration) by brain synaptosomes derived from 8-day-old rats was inhibited by 10% in the presence of 2 mm -d ,l -3-hydroxybutyrate and by more than 20% in the presence of 20 mm -d ,l -3-hydroxybutyrate. The presence of 2 mm -l ,d -3-hydroxybutyrate did not affect the rate of [1-14T]pyruvate decarboxylation (1 mm final concentration) by brain mitochondria; however, at a concentration of 20 mm -d ,l -3-hydroxybutyrate, a marked inhibition was seen in preparations from both 8-day-old (35% inhibition) and 21-day-old (24% inhibition) but not in those from adult rats. Although the presence of 100 mm -K+ in the incubation medium stimulated the rate of pyruvate decarboxylation by approximately 50% compared with the rate in the presence of 1 mm -K+, the presence of 20 mm -d ,l -3-hydroxybutyrate still caused a marked inhibition in both media (1 and 100 mm -K+). The presence of 20 mm -d ,l -3-hydroxybutyrate during the incubation caused an approximately 20% decrease in the level of the active form of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in brain mitochondria from 8-day-old rats. The concentrations of ATP, ADP, NAD+, NADH, acetyl CoA, and CoA were measured in brain mitochondria from 8-day-old rats incubated in the presence of 1 mm -pyruvate alone or 1 mm -pyruvate plus 20 mm -d ,l -3-hydroxybutyrate. Neither the ATP/ADP nor the NADH/NAD+ ratio showed significant changes. The acetyl CoA/CoA ratio was significantly increased by more than twofold in the presence of 3-hydroxybutyrate. The possible mechanisms and physiological significance of 3-hydroxybutyrate inhibition of pyruvate decarboxylation in neonatal rat brain mitochondria are discussed.  相似文献   

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