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1.
R S Ehrlich  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1975,14(22):5008-5016
The binding of TPNH to native and chemically modified pig heart TPN-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase was studied by the techniques of ultrafiltration and fluorescence enhancement. A single site (per peptide chain) was found for TPNH with a dissociation constant (KD = 1.45 muM) that is quantitatively comparable to the Michaelis constant. The oxidized coenzyme, TPN+, weakens the binding of TPNH. The substrate manganous isocitrate also inhibits the binding of TPNH and, reciprocally, TPNH inhibits the binding of manganous isocitrate, suggesting that binding to the reduced coenzyme and substrate sites is mutually exclusive. Ultrafiltration experiments with carbonyl [14C]TPN+ revealed the existence of two sites with a dissociation constant (49 muM) more than ten times higher than the Michaelis constant. This observation excludes a random mechanism for isocitrate dehydrogenase or a sequential mechanism in which TPN+ binds first. Four chemically modified isocitrate dehydrogenases have been prepared: enzyme inactivated by reaction of a single methionyl residue with iodoacetate, by modification of a glutamyl residue by glycinamide (in the presence of a water soluble carbodiimide), by reaction of four cysteines successively with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) and potassium cyanide, or by addition of two cysteine residues to N-ethylmaleimide. These enzymes were tested for their ability to bind TPN+, TPNH, and manganous isocitrate. In the cases of the cysteinyl and glutamyl-modified enzymes, inactivation appears to be due primarily to loss of the ability to bind the substrate manganous isocitrate. In constrast, the methionyl residue may participate in the coenzyme binding site or, more likely, may be involved in a step in catalysis subsequent to binding.  相似文献   

2.
Crystalline ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (3-phospho-D-glycerate carboxy-lyase (dimerizing), EC 4.1.1.39) isolated from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaf homogenates is irreversibly inactivated by incubation with potassium cyanate at pH 7.4. The rate of inactivation is pseudo first-order and linearly dependent on reagent concentration. In the presence of ribulosebisphosphate or high levels of CO2 and Mg2+ the rate constant for inactivation is reduced, suggesting that chemical modification occurs in the active site region of the enzyme. In contrast, neither the effector NADPH nor the activator Mg2+ alone significantly affect the rate of inactivation by cyanate; however, NADPH markedly enhances the protective effect of CO2 and Mg2+. Incubation of the carboxylase with potassium [14C] cyanate in the absence or presence of ribulosebisphosphate revealed that the substrate specifically reduces cyanate incorporation into the large catalytic subunits of the enzyme. Analysis of acid hydrolysates of the radioactive carboxylase indicated that the reagent carbamylates both NH2-terminal groups and lysyl residues in the large and small subunits. Comparison of the substrate-protected enzyme with the inactivated carboxylase revealed that ribulosebisphosphate preferentially reduces lysyl modification within the large subunit. The data here presented indicate that inactivation of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase by cyanate or its reactive tautomer, isocyanic acid, results from the modification of lysyl residues within the catalytic subunit, presumably at the activator and substrate CO2 binding sites on the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Pig heart TPN-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase is inactivated by reaction with 5,5′-dithiobis (2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB). The dependence of the rate constant for inactivation on the reagent concentration is nonlinear, and can be analyzed in terms of the existence of two mechanisms for reaction with the enzyme, one involving reversible binding prior to inactivation and the other a bimolecular reaction. Cyanide reacts with the inactive modified enzyme to yield thiocyano-isocitrate dehydrogenase without increasing the catalytic activity; this result suggests that inactivation by DTNB is not due to steric hindrance by the bulky thionitrobenzoate group bound to the enzyme. The inactive thiocyano enzyme binds manganous ion normally. In contrast to its effect on native enzyme, however, isocitrate does not strengthen the binding of Mn2+ to the thiocyano enzyme; the tightened binding of manganous-isocitrate may be critical for the catalytic activity of the enzyme. Protection against inactivation by DTNB is provided by isocitrate plus the activator, manganous ion, or the competitive inhibitor, calcium ion. The concerted inhibitors oxalacetate and glyoxylate, when present together with Mn2+ and TPN, also protect against loss of activity. A marked decrease in the inactivation rate constant to a finite limiting value is caused by saturating concentrations of TPNH and Mn2+, indicating that these ligands do not bind directly at the sites attacked by DTNB. The number of cysteine residues which react with DTNB concomitant with inactivation depends on the ligands present in the reaction mixture. In all cases, the equivalent of one -SH reacts without affecting activity. In the presence of Mn2+ and α-ketoglutarate, which do not appreciably affect the inactivation rate, loss of activity is proportional to reaction with two -SH groups. These results suggest that the integrity of a maximum of two cysteine residues is essential for the function of the pig heart isocitrate dehydrogenase, and that at least one cysteine residue may be located within the manganous-isocitrate binding site.  相似文献   

4.
The pH dependence of the maximum velocity of the reaction catalyzed by diphosphopyridine nucleotide (DPN) dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase indicates the requirement for the basic form of an ionizable group in the enzyme-substrate complex with a pK of 6.6. This pK is unaltered from 10 to 33 degrees C, suggesting the ionization of a carboxyl rather than an imidazolium ion. The enzyme is inactivated upon incubation with 1-cyclohexyl-3-(2-morpholinoethyl)carbodiimide in the presence of glycinamide or glycine ethyl ester. This inactivation is dependent on pH and the rate constant (k) increases as the pH is decreased in the range 7.3 to 6.25. A plot of 1/(H+) vs. 1/k suggests that the enzyme is inactivated as a result of the modification of a single ionizable group in this pH range. The coenzyme DPN and substrate alpha-ketoglutarate do not affect the rate of inactivation. In contrast, manganous ion (2 mM) and isocitrate (60 mM) produce a sevenfold decrease in the rate constant. The allosteric activator ADP (1 mM) does not itself influence the rate of inactivation; however, it reduces the concentration of Mn2+ (1 mM) and isocitrate (20 mM) required to produce the same decrease in the inactivation constant. These observations imply that the modification occurs at the substrate-binding site. Experiments employing [1-14C]glycine ethyl ester show a net incorporation of 2 mol of glycine ethyl ester per subunit (40 000), concomitant with the complete inactivation of the enzyme. The radioactive modified enzyme, after removal of excess reagent by dialysis, was exhaustively digested with proteolytic enzymes. High voltage electrophoretic analyses of the hydrolysate at pH 6.4 and 3.5 yield two major radioactive spots with approximately equal intensity, which correspond to gamma-glutamylglycine and beta-aspartylglycine, the ultimate products of reaction with glutamic and aspartic acids, respectively. Modification in the presence of manganous ion and isocitrate results in significant reduction in the incorporation of radioactivity into the two dipeptides. These results suggest that carbodiimide attacks one glutamyl and one aspartyl residue per subunit of the enzyme and that the integrity of these residues is crucial for the enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

5.
The substrate analogue 3-bromo-2-ketoglutarate reacts with pig heart NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase to yield partially inactive enzyme. Following 65% inactivation, no further inactivation was observed. Concomitant with this inactivation, incorporation of 1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme dimer was measured. The dependence of the inactivation rate on bromoketoglutarate concentration is consistent with reversible binding of reagent (KI = 360 microM) prior to irreversible reaction. Manganous isocitrate reduces the rate of inactivation by 80% but does not provide complete protection even at saturating concentrations. Complete protection is obtained with NADP+ or the NADP+-alpha-ketoglutarate adduct. By modification with [14C]bromoketoglutarate or by NaB3H4 reduction of modified enzyme, a single major radiolabeled tryptic peptide was obtained by high performance liquid chromatography with the sequence: Asp-Leu-Ala-Gly-X-Ile-His-Gly-Leu-Ser-Asn-Val-Lys. Evidence in the following paper (Bailey, J.M., Colman, R.F. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12620-12626) indicates that X is glutamic acid. Enzyme modified at the coenzyme site by 2-(bromo-2,3-dioxobutylthio)-1,N(6)-ethenoadenosine 2',5'-biphosphate in the presence of manganous isocitrate is not further inactivated by bromoketoglutarate. Bromoketoglutarate-modified enzyme exhibits a stoichiometry of binding isocitrate and NADPH equal to 1 mol/mol of enzyme dimer, half that of native enzyme. These results indicate that bromoketoglutarate modifies a residue in the nicotinamide region of the coenzyme site proximal to the substrate site and that reaction at one catalytic site of the enzyme dimer decreases the activity of the other site.  相似文献   

6.
A temperature-dependent conformational change of the active DPN-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase was observed. When initial reaction kinetic data were examined between 35 and 5 degrees, the Hill number (n) varied from 2 at higher to n approaching unity at lower temperatures, with an inflection point at 17 degrees. The presence of manganous isocitrate in the incubation media shifted the transition temperature for enzyme inactivation by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) from 8-16 degrees. These temperature-dependent transitions were paralleled by progressive changes in sedimentation velocities from s20, w of 10.4 at 25 degrees to 7.3 at 10 degrees as measured by active band centrifugation. The linear Arrhenius plot for apparent V max and the constancy of S0.5 for the substrate manganous isocitrate between 35 and 5 degrees suggest that this temperature-dependent conformational change may not be solely related to manganous isocitrate. Further indications of equilibria between different species of enzyme in solution and effects of substrates and cofactors on conformation came from studies of specific activity of enzyme diluted into buffers at 3 and 25 degrees. Dilution to concentrations between 10 and 25 mum enzyme resulted in relatively rapid protein concentration-dependent inactivation which could be prevented and fully reversed by manganous isocitrate. No further substantial inactivation was found subsequent to this phase at 25 degrees. Lowering the temperature of the dilution buffer to 3 degrees favored formation of enzyme species exhibiting a further time and pH-dependent loss of activity which became independent of protein concentration below 7 mum enzyme. The rate of cold inactivation was reduced by raising the ionic strength of the buffer and its progress could be arrested by manganous isocitrate; however, the substrate did not restore the original activity.  相似文献   

7.
Pig heart NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase is 65% inactivated by 3-bromo-2-ketoglutarate (Ehrlich, R.S., and Colman, R.F., 1987, J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12,614-12,619) and 90% inactivated by 2-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutylthio)-1,N6- ethenoadenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate (2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP) (Bailey, J.M., and Colman, R.F., 1987, J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12,620-12,626). Both inactivation reactions result in enzyme with an incorporation of 1.0 mol reagent/mol enzyme dimer and both modified enzymes bind only 1.0 mol manganous isocitrate or NADPH/mol enzyme dimer as compared to 2.0 mol manganous isocitrate or NADPH/mol enzyme dimer for unmodified enzyme. The inactivation reactions, which occur at or near the nucleotide binding site, are mutually exclusive. Reaction with either affinity reagent led to the isolation of the same modified triskaidekapeptide, DLAGXIHGLSNVK. We have isolated from isocitrate dehydrogenase a peptide, DLAGCIHGLSNVK, that had been modified by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) with no loss of enzymatic activity. We now show that enzyme modified by NEM in the presence of isocitrate plus Mn2+ retains full catalytic activity but is not inactivated by either of the affinity reagents; thus, all three reagents appear to react at the same site. The analysis of HPLC tryptic maps of isocitrate dehydrogenase treated under denaturing conditions with iodo[3H]acetic acid or [3H]NEM demonstrates that both bromoketoglutarate and 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP react with the cysteine residue of DLAGCIHGLSNVK. We conclude that the cysteine of this triskaidekapeptide is close to the coenzyme binding site but is not essential for catalytic function.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of carbamylation with potassium cyanate, and methylation with methyl p-nitrobenzene sulphonate on the mesentericopeptidase activity are studies. The treatment with potassium cyanate causes the enzyme to lose its activity towards ester substrates and casein. The specific reagent N-trans-cinnamoylimidazole does not acylate the active site in the carbamylated enzyme. The pH dependence of the rate of inactivation indicates that an ionizing group of pK = 7.3, probably the protonated imidazole group of the active site histidine, is involved in the reaction. The competitive inhibitor boric acid protects mesentericopeptidase against inactivation with potassium cyanate. These suggest that the active site residues are modified in the unprotected enzyme. Sixty per cent of the enzyme activity toward N-acetyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester was restored after treatment of the carbamylated mesentericopeptidase with 1 M hydroxylamine hydrochloride. Circular dichroism spectra show that the carbamylation does not change markedly the native protein conformation.  相似文献   

9.
Pig heart NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase is inactivated by reaction with iodoacetate at pH 6.0. Loss of activity can be attributed to the formation of 1-2 mol of carboxymethyl-cysteine per peptide chain. The rate of inactivation is markedly decreased by the combined addition of Mn2+ and isocitrate, but not by alpha-ketoglutarate, the coenzyme NAD or the allosteric activator ADP. The substrate concentration dependence of the decreased rate of inactivation yields a dissociation constant of 1.6 mM for the enzyme-manganous-dibasic isocitrate complex, a value that is 50 times higher than the Km for this substrate. This result suggests that in protecting the enzyme against iodoacetate, isocitrate may bind to a region distinct from the catalytic site. Isocitrate and Mn2+ also prevent thermal denaturation, with an affinity for the enzyme close to that observed for the iodoacetate-sensitive site. The alkylatable cysteine residues may contribute to a manganous-isocitrate binding site which is responsible for stabilizing an active conformation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Catalytic reaction of the 2', 3'-dialdehyde analog of TPN (oTPN) with pig heart TPN-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase in the presence of the substrate manganous isocitrate results in the formation of the dialdehyde derivative of TPNH (oTPNH). In the absence of the substrate, modification by oTPN leads to a progressive inactivation of the enzyme. The dependence of the pseudo-first order rate constants on the reagent concentration indicates the formation of a reversible complex with the enzyme prior to covalent modification (kmax = 5.5 X 10(-2) min-1; K1 = 290 microM). Reaction of [14C]oTPN with the enzyme results in the incorporation of 2 mol of oTPN/mol of peptide chain. No appreciable protection against either inactivation or incorporation by the natural ligands TPN and TPNH was obtained, suggesting different modes of binding of the analog in the presence and absence of the substrate isocitrate. Enzymatically synthesized oTPNH has been isolated and demonstrated to act as an affinity label for a TPNH-binding site of isocitrate dehydrogenase. The inactivation process exhibits saturation kinetics (kmax = 2.67 X 10(-3) min-1; K1 = 33 microM). Protection against activity loss, as well as a decrease in incorporation from 2 to 1 eq of [14C]oTPNH bound/peptide chain was observed in the presence of 1 mM TPNH. From the TPNH concentration dependence of the inactivation rate by oTPNH, a dissociation constant of 3.4 microM is calculated for TPNH, indicating binding of the analog to a specific TPNH-binding site on the enzyme. Although dialdehyde derivatives are frequently assumed to form Schiff bases with proteins, the evidence presented suggests the formation of morpholino derivatives as the products of the covalent reaction of isocitrate dehydrogenase with the dialdehyde derivatives of TPN and TPNH. The new reagent, oTPNH, may serve as an affinity label for other dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

11.
Incubation of pig heart NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase with ethoxyformic anhydride (diethylpyrocarbonate) at pH 6.2 results in a 9-fold greater rate of loss of dehydrogenase than of oxalosuccinate decarboxylase activity. The rate constants for loss of dehydrogenase and decarboxylase activities depend on the basic form of ionizable groups with pK values of 5.67 and 7.05, respectively, suggesting that inactivation of the two catalytic functions results from reaction with different amino acid residues. The rate of loss of dehydrogenase activity is decreased only slightly in the presence of manganous isocitrate, but is reduced up to 10-fold by addition of the coenzymes or coenzyme analogues, such as 2'-phosphoadenosine 5'-diphosphoribose (Rib-P2-Ado-P). Enzyme modified at pH 5.8 fails to bind NADPH, but exhibits manganese-enhanced isocitrate binding typical of native enzyme, indicating that reaction takes place in the region of the nucleotide binding site. Dissociation constants for enzyme . coenzyme-analogue complexes have been calculated from the decrease in the rate of inactivation as a function of analogue concentration. In the presence of isocitrate, activating metals (Mn2+, Mg2+, Zn2+) decrease the Kd value for enzyme . Rib-P2-Ado-P, while the inhibitor Ca2+ increases Kd. The strengthened binding of nucleotide produced by activating metal-isocitrate complexes may be essential for the catalytic reaction, reflecting an optimal orientation of NADP+ to facilitate hydride transfer. Measurements of ethoxyformyl-histidine formation at 240 nm and of incorporation of [14C]ethoxy groups in the presence and absence of Rib-P2-Ado-P indicate that loss of activity may be related to modification of approximately one histidine. The critical histidine appears to be located in the nucleotide binding site in a region distal from the substrate binding site.  相似文献   

12.
R S Ehrlich  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1976,15(18):4034-4041
The interaction of manganous ions with pig heart triphosphopyridine nucleotide (TPN) specific isocitrate dehydrogenase has been studied by kinetic experiments and by direct ultrafiltration measurements of manganous ion binding. At low metal ion concentrations, a lag is observed in the time-dependent production of reduced triphosphopyridine nucleotide (TPNH) that can be eliminated by adding 20 muM TPNH to the initial reaction mixture. A plot of 1/upsilon vs. 1/ (Mn2+) obtained at relatively high TPNH concentrations (20 muM) is linear and yields of Km value of 2 muM for metal ion, which is comparable to the direct binding constant measured in the presence of isocitrate. A similar plot at low TPNH concentrations (2 muM) reveals a biphasic relationship: at high metal concentrations the points are collinear with those obtained at high levels of TPNH, but at low metal concentrations that line is characterized by a Km of 19 muM for Mn2+. A difference in the deuterium oxide solvent isotope effect on Vmax observed with 20 muM TPNH as compared with 2 muM TPNH suggests that at high TPNH concentrations or high manganous ion concentrations the rate-limiting step is the dehydrogenation of isocitrate, while at low manganous ion concentrations and low TPNH concentrations, the slow step is the decarboxylation of enzyme-bound oxalosuccinate. Evidence to support this hypothesis is provided by the sensitivity to isocitrate concentration of the Km for total manganese measured in the presence of 20 muM TPNH that contrasts with the relative insensitivity to isocitrate of the Km measured at 2 muM TPNH and low manganous ion concentration. Direct measurements of oxalosuccinate decarboxylation reveal that the Vmax and the Km for manganous ion are influenced by the presence of oxidized or reduced TPN with the Km being lowest (5-7 muM) in the presence of TPNH. The dependence of the Km for manganous ion on the presence of substrate, TPN, and TPNH, is responsible for the variation with conditions in the rate-determining step. The enzyme binds only 1 mol of metal ion and 1 mol of isocitrate/mol of protein under all conditions. The pH dependence of the binding of free manganous ion, free isocitrate, and manganous-isocitrate complex indicates differences in the interaction of these species with isocitrate dehydrogenase. These results can be described in terms of two functions for manganous ion in the reactions catalyzed by isocitrate dehydrogenase, each of which requires a distinct binding site for metal ion: in the dehydrogenation step, Mn2+ facilitates the binding of the substrate isocitrate, and in the decarboxylation step it may stabilize the enolate of alpha-ketoglutarate which is generated.  相似文献   

13.
P Pasta  G Mazzola  G Carrea 《Biochemistry》1987,26(5):1247-1251
Diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivated the tetrameric 3 alpha,20 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase with second-order rate constants of 1.63 M-1 s-1 at pH 6 and 25 degrees C or 190 M-1 s-1 at pH 9.4 and 25 degrees C. The activity was slowly and partially restored by incubation with hydroxylamine (81% reactivation after 28 h with 0.1 M hydroxylamine, pH 9, 25 degrees C). NADH protected the enzyme against inactivation with a Kd (10 microM) very close to the Km (7 microM) for the coenzyme. The ultraviolet difference spectrum of inactivated vs. native enzyme indicated that a single histidyl residue per enzyme subunit was modified by diethyl pyrocarbonate, with a second-order rate constant of 1.8 M-1 s-1 at pH 6 and 25 degrees C. The histidyl residue, however, was not essential for activity because in the presence of NADH it was modified without enzyme inactivation and modification of inactivated enzyme was rapidly reversed by hydroxylamine without concomitant reactivation. Progesterone, in the presence of NAD+, protected the histidyl residue against modification, and this suggests that the residue is located in or near the steroid binding site of the enzyme. Diethyl pyrocarbonate also modified, with unusually high reaction rate, one lysyl residue per enzyme subunit, as demonstrated by dinitrophenylation experiments carried out on the treated enzyme. The correlation between inactivation and modification of lysyl residues at different pHs and the protection by NADH against both inactivation and modification of lysyl residues indicate that this residue is essential for activity and is located in or near the NADH binding site of the enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase from Cephalosporium acremonium CW-19 has been inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate following a first-order process giving a second-order rate constant of 3.0 m-1. s-1 at pH 6.5 and 25 degrees C. The pH-inactivation rate data indicated the participation of a group with a pK value of 6.9. Quantifying the increase in absorbance at 240 nm showed that six histidine residues per subunit were modified during total inactivation, only one of which was essential for catalysis, and substrate protection analysis would seem to indicate its location at the substrate binding site. The enzyme was not inactivated by 5, 5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate), N-ethylmaleimide or iodoacetate, which would point to the absence of an essential reactive cysteine residue at the active site. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate reversibly inactivated the enzyme at pH 7.7 and 5 degrees C, with enzyme activity declining to an equilibrium value within 15 min. The remaining activity depended on the modifier concentration up to about 2 mm. The kinetic analysis of inactivation and reactivation rate data is consistent with a reversible two-step inactivation mechanism with formation of a noncovalent enzyme-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate complex prior to Schiff base formation with a probable lysyl residue of the enzyme. The analysis of substrate protection shows the essential residue(s) to be at the active site of the enzyme and probably to be involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
The 2',3'-dialdehyde nicotinamide ribose derivatives of NAD (oNAD) and NADH (oNADH) have been prepared enzymatically from the corresponding 2',3'-dialdehyde analogs of NADP and NADPH. Pig heart NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase requires NAD as coenzyme but binds NADPH, as well as NADH, ADP, and ATP, at regulatory sites. Incubation of 1-3 mM oNAD or oNADH with this isocitrate dehydrogenase causes a time-dependent decrease in activity to a limiting value 40% that of the initial enzyme, suggesting that reaction does not occur at the catalytic coenzyme site. Upon varying the concentration of oNAD or oNADH from 0.2 to 3 mM, the inactivation rate constants increase in a nonlinear manner, consistent with reversible binding of oNAD and oNADH to the enzyme prior to covalent reaction. Inactivation is accompanied by incorporation of radioactive reagent with extrapolation to 0.54 mol [14C]oNAD or 0.45 mol [14C]oNADH/mol average enzyme subunit (or about 2 mol reagent/mol enzyme tetramer) when the enzyme is maximally inactivated; this value corresponds to the number of reversible binding sites for each of the natural ligands of isocitrate dehydrogenase. The protection against oNAD or oNADH inactivation by NADH, NADPH, and ADP (but not by isocitrate, NAD, or NADP) indicates that reaction occurs in the region of a nucleotide regulatory site. In contrast to the effects of oNAD and oNADH, oNADP and oNADPH cause total inactivation of the NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase, concomitant with incorporation, respectively, of about 3.5 mol [14C]oNADP or 1.3 mol [14C]oNADPH/mol average subunit. Reaction rates exhibit a linear dependence on [oNADP] or [oNADPH] and protection by natural ligands against inactivation is not striking. These results imply that oNADP and oNADPH are acting in this case as general chemical modifiers and indicate the importance of the free adenosine 2'-OH of oNAD and oNADH for specific labeling of the NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase. The new availability of 2',3'-dialdehyde nicotinamide ribose derivatives of NAD, NADH, NADP, and NADPH may allow selection of the appropriate reactive coenzyme analog for affinity labeling of a variety of dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

16.
D Garland  H G Nimmo 《FEBS letters》1984,165(2):259-264
NADP+ can protect active isocitrate dehydrogenase against attack by several proteases. Inactive phosphorylated isocitrate dehydrogenase is much less susceptible to proteolysis than the active enzyme, and it is not protected by NADP+. The results suggest that binding of NADP+ to, or phosphorylation of, active isocitrate dehydrogenase induces similar conformational states. Fluorescence titration experiments show that NADPH can bind to active but not to inactive isocitrate dehydrogenase. It is suggested that the phosphorylation of isocitrate dehydrogenase may occur close to its coenzyme binding site.  相似文献   

17.
NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase was rapidly inactivated in the presence of mercurous chloride. Titration of malate dehydrogenase by 5,5'-dithiobis (2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) in a solution of 8 M urea revealed 18 SH groups per molecule of the enzyme. Eight sulphydryl groups reacted with DTNB in native malate dehydrogenase and their modification was not accompanied by a loss of the enzyme activity. The interaction of p-chloromercury benzoate (PCMB) with malate dehydrogenase resulted in a 70% decrease in the enzyme activity. The binding of the thiol reagents by the malate dehydrogenase molecule appreciably increased the Michaelis constant value for the substrate. In the presence of magnesium ions, NADP and malate did not affect the process of malate dehydrogenase modification by DTNB and did not protect the enzyme from the inactivation by PCMB. It is suggested from the data obtained that the sulphyryl groups are involved in maintaining the active conformation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
Diphosphopyridine nucleotide-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase from bovine heart was inactivated at neutral pH by bromoacetate and diethyl pyrocarbonate and by photooxidation in the presence of methylene blue or rose bengal. Inactivation by diethyl pyrocarbonate was reversed by hydroxylamine. Loss of activity by photooxidation at pH 7.07 was accompanied by progressive destruction of histidine with time; loss of 83% of the enzyme activity was accompanied by modification of 1.1 histidyl residues per enzyme subunit. The pH-rate profiles of inactivation by photooxidation and by diethyl pyrocarbonate modification showed an inflection point around pH 6.6, in accord with the pKa for a histidyl residue of a protein. Partial protection against inactivation by photooxidation or diethyl pyrocarbonate was obtained with substrate (manganous isocitrate or magnesium isocitrate) or ADP; the combination of substrate and ADP was more effective than the components singly. As demonstrated by differential enzyme activity assays between pH 6.4 and pH 7.5 with and without 0.67 mm ADP, modification of the reactive histidyl residue of the enzyme caused a preferential loss of the positive modulation of activity by ADP. The latter was particularly apparent when substrate partially protected the enzyme against inactivation by rose bengal-induced photooxidation.  相似文献   

19.
A divalent metal ion, such as Mn2+, is required for the catalytic reaction and allosteric regulation of pig heart NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase. The enzyme is irreversibly inactivated and cleaved by Fe2+ in the presence of O2 and ascorbate at pH 7.0. Mn2+ prevents both inactivation and cleavage. Nucleotide ligands, such as NAD, NADPH, and ADP, neither prevent nor promote inactivation or cleavage of the enzyme by Fe2+. The NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase is composed of three distinct subunits in the ratio 2alpha:1beta:1gamma. The results indicate that the oxidative inactivation and cleavage are specific and involve the 40 kDa alpha subunit of the enzyme. A pair of major peptides is generated during Fe2+ inactivation: 29.5 + 10.5 kDa, as determined by SDS-PAGE. Amino-terminal sequencing reveals that these peptides arise by cleavage of the Val262-His263 bond of the alpha subunit. No fragments are produced when enzyme is incubated with Fe2+ and ascorbate under denaturing conditions in the presence of 6 M urea, indicating that the native structure is required for the specific cleavage. These results suggest that His263 of the alpha subunit may be a ligand of the divalent metal ion needed for the reaction catalyzed by isocitrate dehydrogenase. Isocitrate enhances the inactivation of enzyme caused by Fe2+ in the presence of oxygen, but prevents the cleavage, suggesting that inactivation occurs by a different mechanism when metal ion is bound to the enzyme in the presence of isocitrate: oxidation of cysteine may be responsible for the rapid inactivation in this case. Affinity cleavage caused by Fe2+ implicates alpha as the catalytic subunit of the multisubunit porcine NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

20.
Equilibrium binding studies demonstrate that purified Escherichia coli isocitrate dehydrogenase binds isocitrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, NADP, and NADPH at 1:1 ratios of substrate to enzyme monomer. The phosphorylated enzyme, which is completely inactive, is unable to bind isocitrate but retains the ability to bind NADP and NADPH. Replacement of serine 113, which is the site of phosphorylation, by aspartate results in an inactive enzyme that is unable to bind isocitrate. Replacement of the same serine with other amino acids (lysine, threonine, cysteine, tyrosine, and alanine) produces active enzymes that bind both substrates. Hence, the negative charge of an aspartate or a phosphorylated serine at site 113 inactivates the enzyme by preventing the binding of isocitrate.  相似文献   

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