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1.
These studies provide information about the mechanism of the light/dark-mediated regulation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase (EC 2.7.9.1) in leaves. It is shown that inactivation is due to a phosphorylation of the enzyme from the beta-phosphate of ADP, and that activation occurs by phosphorolysis to remove the enzyme phosphate group. During ADP plus ATP-dependent inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase in chloroplast extracts, 32P was incorporated into the enzyme from [beta-32P]ADP. Approximately 1 mol of phosphate was incorporated per mol of monomeric enzyme subunit inactivated. There was very little incorporation of label from ADP or ATP labeled variously in other positions with 32P or from the nucleotides labeled with 3H in the purine ring. Purified pyruvate, Pi dikinase was also labeled from [beta-32P]ADP during inactivation. In this system, phosphorylation of the enzyme required the addition of the "regulatory protein" shown previously to be essential for catalyzing inactivation and activation. During orthophosphate-dependent reactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase, it was shown that the enzyme loses 32P label and that pyrophosphate is produced. The significance of these findings in relation to regulation of the enzyme in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Pyruvate, Pi dikinase in extracts of chloroplasts from mesophyll cells of Zea mays is inactivated by incubation with ADP plus ATP. This inactivation was associated with phosphorylation of a threonine residue on a 100 kDa polypeptide, the major polypeptide of the mesophyll chloroplast stroma, which was identified as the subunit of pyruvate, Pi dikinase. The phosphate originated from the beta-position of ADP as indicated by the labelling of the enzyme during inactivation in the presence of [beta-32P]ADP. During inactivation of the enzyme up to 1 mole of phosphate was incorporated per mole of pyruvate, Pi dikinase subunit inactivated. 32P label was lost from the protein during the Pi-dependent reactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase.  相似文献   

3.
Pyruvate,Pi dikinase regulatory protein (PDRP) has been highly purified from maize leaves, and its role in catalyzing both ADP-mediated inactivation (due to phosphorylation of a threonine residue) and Pi-mediated activation (due to dephosphorylation by phosphorolysis) of pyruvate,Pi dikinase has been confirmed. These reactions account for the dark/light-mediated regulation of pyruvate,Pi dikinase observed in the leaves of C4 plants. During purification to apparent homogeneity the ratio of these two activities remained constant. The molecular weight of the native PDRP was about 180,000 at pH 8.3 and 90,000 at pH 7.5. Its monomeric molecular weight was 45,000. It was confirmed that inactive pyruvate,Pi dikinase free of a phosphate group on a catalytic histidine was the preferred substrate for activation. Michaelis constants for orthophosphate and the above form of active pyruvate,Pi dikinase were determined, as well as the mechanism of inhibition of the PDRP-catalyzed reaction by ATP, ADP, AMP, and PPi. For the inactivation reaction, Km values were 1.2 microM for the active pyruvate,Pi dikinase and 52 microM for ADP. CDP and GDP but not UDP could substitute for ADP. The inactivation reaction is inhibited by inactive pyruvate,Pi dikinase competitively with respect to both active pyruvate,Pi dikinase and ADP. Both the activation and inactivation reactions catalyzed by PDRP have a broad pH optimum between 7.8 and 8.3. The results are discussed in terms of the likely mechanism of dark/light regulation of pyruvate,Pi dikinase in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
In experiments designed to test the reversibility of ADP-dependent inactivation and Pi-dependent activation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase , it was found that the preferred substrate for Pi dependent activation is the catalytically non-phosphorylated form of pyruvate, Pi dikinase . Only the second of the two partial reactions catalysed by pyruvate, Pi dikinase is inhibited when pyruvate, Pi dikinase is inactivated by ADP-dependent phosphorylation. Neither ADP-dependent inactivation nor Pi-dependent activation reactions were found to be reversible.  相似文献   

5.
The active site(s) of the bifunctional regulatory protein of pyruvate,orthophosphate dikinase catalyze(s) the Pi-dependent activation (dephosphorylation) and ADP-dependent inactivation (phosphorylation) of maize leaf dikinase. The chemical modification studies of the regulatory protein active sites presented in this paper are interpreted as showing the two sites to be physically distinct. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and 2-nitro-5-thiocyanatobenzoate (NTCB) selectively inhibit the dikinase activating site, which is protected by the nonprotein substrate, Pi. Phenylglyoxal blocks both the activation and inactivation sites; the former is protected selectively by Pi and the latter by both the nonprotein substrate, ADP, and Pi. The Pi that protects the inactivation site is distinct from the activation substrate. Inhibition studies show Pi to be a parabolic competitive inhibitor of the ADP-dependent inactivation of dikinase, implying that besides substrate Pi, a second phosphate also binds to the regulatory protein. The above chemical modifications are not mutually exclusive; neither NTCB, 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate), nor pyridoxal 5'-phosphate blocks subsequent modification of the activation site by phenylglyoxal. Similarly, prior modification with NTCB does not affect modification by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate.  相似文献   

6.
In vitro phosphorylation of maize leaf phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1  
Budde RJ  Chollet R 《Plant physiology》1986,82(4):1107-1114
Autoradiography of total soluble maize (Zea mays) leaf proteins incubated with 32P-labeled adenylates and separated by denaturing electrophoresis revealed that many polypeptides were phosphorylated in vitro by endogenous protein kinase(s). The most intense band was at 94 to 100 kilodaltons and was observed when using either [γ-32P]ATP or [β-32P]ADP as the phosphate donor. This band was comprised of the subunits of both pyruvate, Pi dikinase (PPDK) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase). PPDK activity was previously shown to be dark/light-regulated via a novel ADP-dependent phosphorylation/Pi-dependent dephosphorylation of a threonyl residue. The identity of the acid-stable 94 to 100 kilodalton band phosphorylated by ATP was established unequivocally as PEPCase by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. The phosphorylated amino acid was a serine residue, as determined by two-dimensional thin-layer electrophoresis. While the in vitro phosphorylation of PEPCase from illuminated maize leaves by an endogenous protein kinase resulted in a partial inactivation (~25%) of the enzyme when assayed at pH 7 and subsaturating levels of PEP, effector modulation by l-malate and glucose-6-phosphate was relatively unaffected. Changes in the aggregation state of maize PEPCase (homotetrameric native structure) were studied by nondenaturing electrophoresis and immunoblotting. Enzyme from leaves of illuminated plants dissociated upon dilution, whereas the protein from darkened tissue did not dissociate, thus indicating a physical difference between the enzyme from light- versus dark-adapted maize plants.  相似文献   

7.
The protein substrate specificity of the maize (Zea mays) leaf ADP: protein phosphotransferase (regulatory protein, RP) was studied in terms of its relative ability to inactivate/phosphorylate pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase from Zea mays and the non-sulphur purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum. The dimeric bacterial dikinase was inactivated by the maize leaf RP via phosphorylation, with a stoichiometry of approximately 1 mol of phosphate incorporated/mol of 92.7-kDa protomer. Inactivation required both ADP and ATP, with ADP being the specific donor for regulatory phosphorylation. The requirements for inactivation/phosphorylation in this heterologous system were identical with those previously established for the tetrameric maize leaf dikinase. The ADP-dependent maize leaf RP did not phosphorylate alternative protein substrates such as casein or phosvitin, and its activity was not affected by cyclic nucleotides, Ca2+ or calmodulin. The regulation of the maize leaf ADP: protein phosphotransferase was studied in terms of changes in adenylate energy charge and pyruvate concentration. The change in adenylate energy charge necessary to substantially inhibit phosphorylation of maize leaf dikinase was not suggestive of it being a physiological modulator of phosphotransferase activity. Pyruvate was a potent competitive inhibitor of regulatory phosphorylation (Ki = 80 microM), consistent with its interaction with the catalytic phosphorylated intermediate of dikinase, the true protein substrate for ADP-dependent phosphorylation/inactivation.  相似文献   

8.
N F Phillips  H G Wood 《Biochemistry》1986,25(7):1644-1649
The pyrophosphoryl form of pyruvate, phosphate dikinase was prepared by incubation with adenosine 5'-[gamma-32P]triphosphate and isolated by gel chromatography. Previously a phosphorylated moiety had been isolated from the enzyme and was shown to be bound through a phosphoramidate linkage to the 3' nitrogen of a histidine residue [Spronk, A. M., Yoshida, H., & Wood, H. G. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 73, 4415]. This histidine residue has been considered to be the pyrophosphoryl and phosphoryl carrier between the three subsites of this enzyme. Previous attempts to isolate the putative [32P]pyrophosphohistidine have been unsuccessful due to the lability of the [32P]pyrophosphoryl-enzyme. By stabilization of the [32P]pyrophosphoryl-enzyme with diazomethane, it has been possible to isolate a [32P]-pyrophosphohistidine from the hydrolysates. To our knowledge this work constitutes the first direct demonstration of a pyrophosphorylated histidyl residue in an enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
The regulatory site peptide sequence of phosphorylated inactive pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase from maize leaf tissue was determined by automated Edman degradation analysis of 32P-labeled peptides purified by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography. The overlapping phosphopeptides were products of a digestion of the [beta-32P]ADP-inactivated dikinase with either trypsin or Pronase E. The sequence is Thr-Glu-Arg-Gly-Gly-Met-Thr(P)-Ser-His-Ala-Ala-Val-Val-Ala-Arg. The phosphothreonine residue, which appeared as either an anomalous proline or an unidentifiable phenylthiohydantoin derivative during sequencing, was verified by two-dimensional phosphoamino acid analysis of the phosphopeptides and by resequencing the tryptic peptide after dephosphorylation with exogenous alkaline phosphatase. This sequence, starting at position 4, is completely homologous to the previously published sequence of the tryptic dodecapeptide harboring the catalytically essential (phospho)histidyl residue in the active-site domain of the dikinase from the nonphotosynthetic bacterium, Bacteroides symbiosus (Goss, N.H., Evans, C.T., and Wood, H.G. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 5805-5809). These comparative results indicate that the regulatory phosphothreonine causing complete inactivation of maize leaf dikinase is separated from the critical active-site (phospho)histidine by just one intervening residue in the primary sequence.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphonoacetaldehyde (Pald) is formed in a variety of biosynthetic pathways leading to natural phosphonates and is an intermediate in the degradation pathway of the natural product 2-aminoethylphosphonate. To facilitate the investigation of the enzymes catalyzing these pathways, a method for the synthesis of radiolabeled Pald was developed. The enzyme pyruvate phosphate dikinase was used to prepare phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) from pyruvate, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and orthophosphate. Then PEP was converted to phosphonopyruvate (Ppyr) with PEP mutase and then to Pald with Ppyr decarboxylase. By using [beta-32P]ATP or [2-14C]pyruvate as precursor, [32P]Pald or [1-14C]Pald was obtained, respectively. The utilization of the synthetic, radiolabeled Pald as a probe of enzyme mechanism was demonstrated with the enzyme phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase (trivial name phosphonatase). The single turnover time course for the formation and consumption of radiolabeled covalent enzyme species evidenced a kinetically competent covalent intermediate.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetic mechanism of pyruvate phosphate dikinase (PPDK) from Bacteroides symbiosus was investigated with several different kinetic diagnostics. Initial velocity patterns were intersecting for AMP/PPi and ATP/Pi substrate pairs and parallel for all other substrate pairs. PPDK was shown to catalyze [14C]pyruvate in equilibrium phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) exchange in the absence of cosubstrates, [14C]AMP in equilibrium ATP exchange in the presence of Pi/PPi but not in their absence, and [32P]Pi in equilibrium PPi exchange in the presence of ATP/AMP but not in their absence. The enzyme was also shown, by using [alpha beta-18O, beta, beta-18O2]ATP and [beta gamma-18O, gamma, gamma, gamma-18O3]ATP and 31P NMR techniques, to catalyze exchange in ATP between the alpha beta-bridge oxygen and the alpha-P nonbridge oxygen and also between the beta gamma-bridge oxygen and the beta-P nonbridge oxygen. The exchanges were catalyzed by PPDK in the presence of Pi but not in its absence. These results were interpreted to support a bi(ATP,Pi) bi(AMP,PPi) uni(pyruvate) uni(PEP) mechanism. AMP and Pi binding order was examined by carrying out dead-end inhibition studies. The dead-end inhibitor adenosine 5'-monophosphorothioate (AMPS) was found to be competitive vs AMP, noncompetitive vs PPi, and uncompetitive vs PEP. The dead-end inhibitor imidodiphosphate (PNP) was found to be competitive vs PPi, uncompetitive vs AMP, and uncompetitive vs PEP. These results showed that AMP binds before PPi. The ATP and Pi binding order was studied by carrying out inhibition, positional isotope exchange, and alternate substrate studies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
In maize leaves, pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) is deactivated in the dark and reactivated in the light. Studies in vitro using purified PPDK and a partially purified regulatory protein from maize confirmed previous reports correlating deactivation/reactivation with the reversible phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of a threonyl residue. By monitoring the stability of the exogenous 32P-labeled adenylate substrates during deactivation, we have firmly established ADP as the specific phosphate donor. In isolated maize leaf mesophyll protoplasts preilluminated with 32Pi, we observed a three- to fivefold higher PPDK activity in situ in the light, and a corresponding three- to fivefold higher level of phosphorylation of the 94-kDa PPDK protomer in the dark. HPLC-based phosphoamino acid analysis of PPDK purified from maize leaves of both light- and dark-adapted plants revealed the presence of P-serine. The inactive enzyme from dark-adapted plants (inactivated in vivo) also contained P-threonine. Total phosphate content of PPDK purified from leaves of light-adapted plants was approximately 0.5 mol/mol protomer, and 1.5 mol/mol protomer from leaves of dark-adapted plants. Since the difference between enzyme purified from light-adapted (active PPDK) and dark-adapted (inactive PPDK) plants is the presence of P-threonine in the latter, this suggests an inactivation stoichiometry in vivo of 1 mol P-threonine/mol 94-kDa protomer. These complementary studies with maize leaf PPDK in vitro, in situ, and in vivo provide convincing evidence for the dark/light regulation of this key C4-photosynthesis enzyme by reversible phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
Studies were conducted to determine whether protein phosphorylation may be a mechanism for regulation of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS), shown previously to be light-dark regulated by some type of covalent modification. Radioactive phosphate was incorporated into the 120-kDa subunit of SPS during labeling of excised leaves with [32P]Pi, as shown by immunoprecipitation and denaturing gel electrophoresis of the enzyme. Conditions which activated the enzyme (illumination of leaves or mannose treatment of leaf discs in darkness) reduced the incorporation of radiolabel into SPS in the in vivo system. The partially purified SPS protein could also be phosphorylated in vitro using [gamma-32P]ATP. In the in vitro system, the incorporation of radiolabel into the 120-kDa subunit of SPS was dependent on time and magnesium concentration, and was closely paralleled by inactivation of the enzyme. These results provide the first evidence to establish protein phosphorylation as a mechanism for the covalent regulation of SPS activity.  相似文献   

14.
Active pyruvate, P1 dikinase in leaf or chloroplast extractsisolated from illuminated leaves was inactivated by incubatingwith ADP. With chloroplast extracts neither ATP nor AMP alonewas effective. Half the maximum rate of inactivation was observedwith about 55 µM ADP. The following evidence supportedthe view that ADP-mediated inactivation had a co-requirementfor low concentrations of ATP [Buchanan (1980) Ann. Rev. PlantPhysiol. 31: 341], adding hexokinase and glucose prevented inactivationby ADP [Feldhaus et al. (1975) Eur. J. Biochem. 57: 197], whenGDP and UDP were added in place of ADP they mediated rapid inactivationonly when ATP was also provided; GTP was not effective. ATPwas apparently optimally effective at about 1 µM or less.The rate of inactivation was approximately proportional to thesquare of extract concentration suggesting dependancy on a factorin the extracts in addition to active enzyme. The involvementof one or more heat labile protein factors was confirmed bytrypsin treatment of extracts. Pyruvate, P1 dikinase inactivatedby treatment with ADP was reactivated by incubating with P1,a property common to the inactive enzyme extracted from darkenedleaves. Thiol/disulphide interconversion was apparently notcritical in the regulation of pyruvate, P1 dikinase. 3Present address: Department of Agricultural Chemistry, Facultyof Agriculture, Nagoya University, Chikusa, Nagoya 464, Japan. (Received September 22, 1980; Accepted December 6, 1980)  相似文献   

15.
The control of pyruvate dehydrogenase activity by inactivation and activation was studied in intact mitochondria isolated from rabbit heart. Pyruvate dehydrogenase could be completely inactivated by incubating mitochondria with ATP, oligomycin, and NaF. This loss in dehydrogenase activity was correlated with the incorporation of 32P from [gamma-32P]ATP into mitochondrial protein(s) and with a decrease in the mitochondrial oxidation of pyruvate. ATP may be supplied exogenously, generated from endogenous ADP during oxidative phosphorylation, or formed from exogenous ADP in carbonyl cyanid p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone-uncoupled mitochondria. With coupled mitochondria the concentration of added ATP required to half-inactivate the dehydrogenase was 0.24 mM. With uncoupled mitochondria the apparent Km was decreased to 60 muM ATP. Inactivation of pyruvate dehydrogenase by exogenous ATP was sensitive to atractyloside, suggesting that pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase acts internally to the atractyloside-sensitive barrier. The divalent cation ionophore, A23187, enhanced the loss of dehydrogenase activity. Pyruvate dehydrogenase activity is regulated additionally by pyruvate, inorganic phosphate, and ADP. Pyruvate, in the presence of rotenone, strongly inhibited inactivation. This suggests that pyruvate facilitates its own oxidation and that increases in pyruvate dehydrogenase activity by substrate may provide a modulating influence on the utilization of pyruvate via the tricarboxylate cycle. Inorganic phosphate protected the dehydrogenase from inactivation by ATP. ADP added to the incubation mixture together with ATP inhibited the inactivation of pyruvate dehydrogenase. This protection may result from a direct action on pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase, as ADP competes with ATP, and an indirect action, in that ADP competes with ATP for the translocase. It is suggested that the intramitochondrial [ATP]:[ADP] ratio effects the kinase activity directly, whereas the cytosolic [ATP]:[ADP] ratio acts indirectly. Mg2+ enhances the rate of reactivation of the inactivated pyruvate dehydrogenase presumably by accelerating the rate of dephosphorylation of the enzyme. Maximal activation is obtained with the addition of 0.5 mM Mg2+..  相似文献   

16.
Whole leaf and mesophyll cell concentrations of pyruvate, phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), ATP, and ADP were determined in Zea mays during the reversible light activation of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase in vivo. Mesophyll cell levels of the four metabolites were estimated by extrapolation from values in freeze-quenched leaf samples that were fractionated by differential filtration through nylon mesh nets (adapted from M Stitt, HW Heldt [1985] Planta 164: 179-188). During the 3 minutes required for complete light activation of dikinase, pyruvate levels in the mesophyll cell decreased (from 166 ± 15 to 64 ± 10 nanomoles per milligram of chlorophyll [nmol/mg Chl]) while PEP levels increased (from 31 ± 4 to 68 ± 4 nmol/mg Chl, with a transient burst of 133 ± 16 nmol/mg Chl at 1 minute). Mesophyll cell levels of ATP increased (from 22 ± 4 to 48 ± 3 nmol/mg Chl) and ADP levels decreased (from 16 ± 4 to 7 ± 6 nmol/mg Chl) during the first minute of illumination. Upon darkening of the leaf and inactivation of dikinase, pyruvate levels initially increased in the mesophyll (from 160 ± 30 to a maximum of 625 ± 40 nmol/mg Chl), and then slowly decreased to about the initial value in the light over an hour. PEP levels dropped (from 176 ± 5 to 47 ± 3 nmol/mg Chl) in the first 3 minutes and remained low for the remainder of the dark period. Mesophyll levels of ATP and ADP rapidly decreased and increased, respectively, about twofold upon darkening. The trends observed for these metabolite levels in the mesophyll cell during the light/dark regulation of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase activity suggest that pyruvate and PEP do not play a major role in vivo in regulating the extent of light activation (dephosphorylation) or dark inactivation (ADP-dependent threonyl phosphorylation) of dikinase by its bifunctional regulatory protein. While the changes in ADP levels appear qualitatively consistent with a regulatory role for this metabolite in the light activation and dark inactivation of dikinase, they are not of a sufficient magnitude to account completely for the tenfold change in enzyme activity observed in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of oxygen and temperature on the inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase was studied in Zea mays. O2 was required for inactivation of both pyruvate, Pi dikinase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase in the dark in vivo. The rate of inactivation under 2% O2 was only slightly lower than that at 21% O2. The in vitro inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase, while dependent on adenine nucleotides (ADP + ATP), did not require O2.

The postillumination inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase in leaves was strongly dependent on temperature. As temperature was decreased in the dark, there was a lag period of increasing length (e.g. at 17°C there was a lag of about 25 minutes) before inactivation proceeded. Following the lag period, the rate of inactivation decreased with decreasing temperature. The half-time for dark inactivation was about 7 minutes at 32°C and 45 minutes at 17°C. The inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase in vitro following extraction from illuminated leaves was also strongly dependent on temperature, but occurred without a lag period. In contrast, NADP-malate dehydrogenase was rapidly inactivated in leaves (half-time of approximately 3 minutes) during the postillumination period without a lag, and there was little effect of temperature between 10 and 32°C. The results are discussed in relation to known differences in the mechanism of activation/inactivation of the two enzymes.

  相似文献   

18.
The bifunctional enzyme 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase appears to be the only enzyme catalyzing the formation and hydrolysis of Fru-2,6-P2. The enzyme as we isolate it, contains a trace of tightly bound Fru-6-P. In this condition, it exhibited an ATPase activity comparable to its kinase activity. Inorganic phosphate stimulated all of its activities, by increasing the affinity for all substrates and increasing the Vmax of ATP and Fru-2,6-P2 hydrolysis. The enzyme catalyzed ADP/ATP and Fru-6-P/Fru-2,6-P2 exchanges at rates comparable to net reaction rates. It was phosphorylated by both [gamma-32P]ATP and [2-32P] Fru-2,6-P2, and the label from either donor was chased by either unlabeled donor, showing that the bound phosphate is hydrolyzed if not transferred to an acceptor ligand. The rate of labeling of the enzyme by [2-32P]Fru-2,6-P2 was 2 orders of magnitude greater than the maximal velocity of the bisphosphatase and therefore sufficiently fast to be a step in the hydrolysis. Both inorganic phosphate and Fru-6-P increased the rate and steady state of enzyme phosphorylation by ATP. Fru-2,6-P2 inhibited the ATPase and kinase reactions and Fru-6-P inhibited the Fru-2,6 bisphosphatase reaction while ATP and ADP had no effect. Removal of the trace of Fru-6-P by Glu-6-P isomerase and Glu-6-P dehydrogenase reduced enzyme phosphorylation by ATP to very low levels, greatly inhibited the ATPase, and rendered it insensitive to Pi, but did not affect ADP/ATP exchange. (alpha + beta)Methylfructofuranoside-6-P did not increase the rate or steady state labeling by ATP. These results suggest that labeling of the enzyme by ATP involved the production of [2-32P]Fru-2,6-P2 from the trace Fru-6-P. The 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase, fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase, and ATP/ADP exchange were all inhibited by diethylpyrocarbonate, suggesting the involvement of histidine residues in all three reactions. These results can be most readily explained in terms of two catalytic sites, a kinase site whose phosphorylation by ATP is negligible (or whose E-P is labile) and a Fru-2,6 bisphosphatase site which is readily phosphorylated by Fru-2,6-P2.  相似文献   

19.
W D Frasch  B R Selman 《Biochemistry》1982,21(15):3636-3643
The reaction mechanism and substrate specificity of soluble chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1) from spinach were determined by using the purified isomers of chromium-nucleotide complexes either as substrates for the enzyme or as inhibitors of the Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity. The isolation of CrADP( [32P]Pi) formed upon the addition of the enzyme to [32P]Pi and lambda-bidentate CrADP and the observation that the lambda-bidentate CrADP epimer was 20-fold more effective in inhibiting the Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity than was the delta epimer suggest that the substrate of phosphorylation catalyzed by CF1 is the lambda-bidentate metal ADP epimer. Tridentate CrATP was hydrolyzed by soluble CF1 to CrADP(Pi) at an initial rate of 3.2 mumol (mg of CF1)-1 min-1, indicating that the tridentate metal ATP is the substrate for ATP hydrolysis. From these results a mechanism for the phosphorylation of ADP catalyzed by coupling factor 1 is proposed whereby the bidentate metal ADP isomer associates with the enzyme, phosphate inserts into the coordination sphere of the metal, and the oxygen of the beta-phosphate of ADP attacks the inorganic phosphate by an SN2 type reaction. The resulting product is the tridentate ATP ligand.  相似文献   

20.
Techniques are described for studying the labeling of ADP and ATP bound to the ATP synthase complex of beef heart submitochondrial particles catalyzing oxidative phosphorylation. These suffice for measurements of bound nucleotides during the time required for a single turnover, during steady state net ATP synthesis, or under quasiequilibrium conditions of ATP formation and hydrolysis. Results show that the "tightly bound" ATP associated with isolated submitochondrial particles does not become labeled by medium [32P]Pi rapidly enough to qualify as an intermediate in ATP synthesis. In contrast to chloroplast preparations, little or no bound [32P]Pi committed to ATP formation is present on particles during steady state synthesis. Also, highly active particles synthesizing ATP from [32P]Pi and filtered after EDTA addition have no detectable bound [32P]ATP even though several ATPs have been made per synthase complex. However, under quasiequilibrium conditions membrane-bound ADP and ATP are present whose labeling characteristics qualify them as intermediates in ATP synthesis. In addition, a hexokinase-accessibility approach shows the presence of a steady level of bound ATP. Lack of detection of bound intermediates under other conditions is regarded as reflecting the ready reversibility of oxidative phosphorylation, with consequent facile cleavage of bound ATP and release of bound Pi.  相似文献   

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