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1.
Vanadate was used as a substrate analogue to modify and subsequently localize active site serine residues of isocitrate lyase from Escherichia coli. Irradiation of the enzyme on ice with UV light in the presence of vanadate resulted in inactivation. Inactivation was prevented by the substrates glyoxylate or Ds-isocitrate and to a much lesser extent by succinate. Reduction of photoinactivated isocitrate lyase by NaBH4 partially restored enzyme activity. The photomodified enzyme was labeled by reduction with NaB[3H]4 in the presence and absence of the substrates succinate plus glyoxylate. Highly differential labeling of serine residues 319 and 321 in the absence of substrates suggests their importance in the action of isocitrate lyase. These residues are highly conserved in all five known sequences of this enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The cleavage of Ds-isocitrate catalyzed by isocitrate lyase from Linum usitatissimum results in the ordered release of succinate and glyoxylate. The glyoxylate analog 3-bromopyruvate irreversibly inactivates the flax enzyme in a process exhibiting saturation kinetics and protection by glyoxylate or isocitrate or the competitive inhibitor l-tartrate. Succinate provides considerably less protection. Results with 3-bromopyruvate suggest that this reagent modifies plant and prokaryotic isocitrate lyases differently. Treatment of the tetrameric 264,000-dalton flax enzyme with carboxypeptidase A results in a release of one histidine/subunit which is concordant with loss of activity. The only N-terminal residue is methionine. Treatment of flax enzyme with diethylpyrocarbonate at pH 6.5 selectively modifies two histidines per 67,000-dalton subunit. The reaction of one histidine residue is abolished by the binding of l-tartrate and the modification of one is coincident with inactivation. The carboxy-terminal and active-site modifications establish that one histidine residue/monomer is essential in the flax enzyme and considerably extend information heretofore available only for fungal and bacterial isocitrate lyase.  相似文献   

4.
Escherichia coli isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1.) can be phosphorylated in vitro by an ATP-dependent reaction. The enzyme becomes phosphorylated by an endogenous kinase when partially purified sonic extracts are incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP. Treatment of isocitrate lyase with diethyl pyrocarbonate, a histidine-modifying reagent, blocked incorporation of [32P]phosphate from [gamma-32P]ATP. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was altered by treatment with phosphoramidate, a histidine phosphorylating agent, which suggests that isocitrate lyase can be phosphorylated at a histidine residue(s). Immunoprecipitated 32P-labeled isocitrate lyase was subjected to alkaline hydrolysis, mixed with chemically synthesized phosphohistidine standards, and analyzed by anion exchange chromatography. Characterization of the phosphoamino acid was based on the demonstration that the 32P-labeled product from alkali-hydrolyzed isocitrate lyase comigrated with synthetic 1-phosphohistidine. In addition, loss of catalytic activity after treatment with potato acid phosphatase indicates that catalytically active isocitrate lyase is the phosphorylated form of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
The inactivation of phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus at pH6 by diethyl pyrocarbonate parallelled the N-ethoxyformylation of a single histidine residue in the enzyme. The inactivation arose from a decrease in the maximum velocity of the enzymic reaction with no effect on the Km value. The inactivation did not apparently alter the ability of the enzyme to bind to a substrate-based affinity gel. The native enzyme contained only one reactive histidine residue. Removal of the two zinc atoms from the enzyme increased the number of reactive histidine residues to five, whereas in the totally denatured enzyme nearly eight such residues were available for reaction with diethyl pyrocarbonate. The enzyme thus appears to contain one histidine residue that is essential for catalytic activity and four that may be involved in co-ordinating the zinc atoms in the structure.  相似文献   

6.
Evidence for an essential histidine in neutral endopeptidase 24.11   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
R C Bateman  L B Hersh 《Biochemistry》1987,26(14):4237-4242
Rat kidney neutral endopeptidase 24.11, "enkephalinase", was rapidly inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate under mildly acidic conditions. The pH dependence of inactivation revealed the modification of an essential residue with a pKa of 6.1. The reaction of the unprotonated group with diethyl pyrocarbonate exhibited a second-order rate constant of 11.6 M-1 s-1 and was accompanied by an increase in absorbance at 240 nm. Treatment of the inactivated enzyme with 50 mM hydroxylamine completely restored enzyme activity. These findings indicate histidine modification by diethyl pyrocarbonate. Comparison of the rate of inactivation with the increase in absorbance at 240 nm revealed a single histidine residue essential for catalysis. The presence of this histidine at the active site was indicated by (a) the protection of enzyme from inactivation provided by substrate and (b) the protection by the specific inhibitor phosphoramidon of one histidine residue from modification as determined spectrally. The dependence of the kinetic parameter Vmax/Km upon pH revealed two essential residues with pKa values of 5.9 and 7.3. It is proposed that the residue having a kinetic pKa of 5.9 is the histidine modified by diethyl pyrocarbonate and that this residue participates in general acid/base catalysis during substrate hydrolysis by neutral endopeptidase 24.11.  相似文献   

7.
Uridine phosphorylase from Escherichia coli is inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate at pH 7.1 and 10 degrees C with a second-order rate constant of 840 M-1.min-1. The rate of inactivation increases with pH, suggesting participation of an amino acid residue with pK 6.6. Hydroxylamine added to the inactivated enzyme restores the activity. Three histidine residues per enzyme subunit are modified by diethyl pyrocarbonate. Kinetic and statistical analyses of the residual enzymic activity, as well as the number of modified histidine residues, indicate that, among the three modifiable residues, only one is essential for enzyme activity. The reactivity of this histidine residue exceeded 10-fold the reactivity of the other two residues. Uridine, though at high concentration, protects the enzyme against inactivation and the very reactive histidine residue against modification. Thus it may be concluded that uridine phosphorylase contains only one histidine residue in each of its six subunits that is essential for enzyme activity.  相似文献   

8.
During growth on succinate, Acinetobacter calcoaceticus contains two forms of the enzyme isocitrate dehydrogenase. Addition of acetate to a lag-phase culture grown on succinate causes a dramatic increase in activity of form II of isocitrate dehydrogenase and in isocitrate lyase. Form II of isocitrate dehydrogenase may be responsible for the partition of isocitrate between the TCA cycle and the glyoxylate by-pass. This report describes the phosphorylation of the enzyme isocitrate lyase from A. calcoaceticus. This phosphorylation may be a regulatory mechanism for the glyoxylate by-pass.  相似文献   

9.
1. The enzymes citrate lyase and isocitrate lyase catalyse similar reactions in the cleavage of citrate to acetate plus oxaloacetate and of isocitrate to succinate plus glyoxylate, respectively. 2. Nevertheless, the mechanism of action of each enzyme appears to be different from each other. Citrate lyase is an acyl carrier protein-containing enzyme complex whereas isocitrate lyase is not. The active form of citrate lyase is an acetyl-S-enzyme but that of isocitrate lyase is not a corresponding succinyl-S-enzyme. 3. In contrast to citrate lyase, the isocitrate enzyme is not inhibited by hydroxylamine nor does it acquire label if treated with appropriately labelled radioactive substrate. 4. Isotopic exchange experiments performed in H18-2O with isocitrate as a substrate produced no labelling in the product succinate. This was shown by mass-spectrometric analysis. 5. The conclusion drawn from these results is that no activation of succinate takes place on the enzyme through transient formation of succinic anhydride or a covalently-linked succinyl-enzyme, derived from this anhydride.  相似文献   

10.
The succinate analog itaconic acid was observed to be a competitive inhibitor of the glyoxylate cycle specific enzyme isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1) in cell-free extracts of Tetrahymena pyriformis. Itaconic acid also inhibited net in vivo glycogen synthesis from glyoxylate cycle-dependent precursors such as acetate but not from glyoxylate cycle-independent precursors such as fructose. The effect of itaconic acid on the incorporation of 14C into glycogen from various 14C-labeled precursors was also consistent with inhibition of isocitrate lyase by this compound. Another analog of succinate which shares a common metabolic fate with itaconic acid, mesaconic acid, had no effect on isocitrate lyase activity in vitro or on 14C-labeled precursor incorporation into glycogen in vivo. In addition, itaconic acid did not affect gluconeogenesis from lactate in isolated perfused rat livers, a system lacking the enzyme isocitrate lyase. These results are taken as evidence that itaconic acid is an inhibitor of glyoxylate cycle-dependent glyconeogenesis Tetrahymena pyriformis via specific competitive inhibition of isocitrate lyase activity.  相似文献   

11.
1. Diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivated l-lactate oxidase from Mycobacterium smegmatis. 2. Two histidine residues underwent ethoxycarbonylation when the enzyme was treated with sufficient reagent to abolish more than 90% of the enzyme activity, but analyses of the inactivation showed that the modification of one histidine residue was sufficient to cause the loss of enzyme activity. The rates of enzyme inactivation and histidine modification were the same. 3. Substrate and competitive inhibitors decreased the maximum extent of inactivation to a 50% loss of enzyme activity and modification was decreased from 1.9 to 0.75–1.2 histidine residues modified/molecule of FMN. 4. Treatment of the enzyme with diethyl [14C]pyrocarbonate (labelled in the carbonyl groups) confirmed that only histidine residues were modified under the conditions used and that deacylation of the ethoxycarbonylhistidine residues by hydroxylamine was concomitant with the removal of the 14C label and the re-activation of the enzyme. 5. No evidence was found for modification of tryptophan, tyrosine or cysteine residues, and no difference was detected between the conformation and subunit structure of the modified and native enzyme. 6. Modification of the enzyme with diethyl pyrocarbonate did not alter the following properties: the binding of competitive inhibitors, bisulphite and substrate or the chemical reduction of the flavin group to the semiquinone or fully reduced states. The normal reduction of the flavin by lactate was, however, abolished.  相似文献   

12.
Kinetic analysis of inactivation of isocitrate lyase from Pseudomonas indigofera by 3-bromopyruvate established that enzyme binds this compound prior to alkylation and that substrate, Ds-isocitrate, competes for the same site on the enzyme. The rate of inactivation was increased by EDTA which is a promoter of catalysis in the presence of activated (reduced) enzyme and substrate. The combination of products, glyoxylate plus succinate, also protected against inactivation. Glyoxylate plus itaconate, phosphoenolpyruvate, or maleate also protected. However, each of the latter three compounds or glyoxylate or succinate alone provided little or no protection. Pyruvate, a competitive inhibitor with respect to glyoxylate in the condensation reaction, also failed to protect. However, two dicarboxylates, meso-tartrate and oxalate, that are also competitive inhibitors with respect to glyoxylate provide some protection against inactivation by BrP perhaps by bridging across cationic sites that facilitate glyoxylate and succinate binding. These and other results imply that alkylation by 3-bromopyruvate occurs at the succinate part of the active site. A mechanism which includes a catalytic role for the cysteine residue at the active site is presented and discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Ribonuclease (RNase) T2 from Aspergillus oryzae was modified by diethyl pyrocarbonate and iodoacetic acid. RNase T2 was rapidly inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate above pH 6.0 and by incorporation of a carboxymethyl group. No inactivation occurred in the presence of 3'AMP. 1H-NMR titration and photo-chemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization experiments demonstrated that two histidine residues were involved in the active site of RNase T2. Furthermore, analysis of inactive carboxymethylated RNase T2 showed that both His53 and His115 were partially modified to yield a total of one mole of N tau-carboxymethylhistidine/mole enzyme. The results indicate that the two histidine residues in the active site of RNase T2 are essential for catalysis and that modification of either His53 or His115 inactivates the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Alkylation of isocitrate lyase from Escherichia coli by 3-bromopyruvate   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The inactivation of tetrameric isocitrate lyase from Escherichia coli by 3-bromopyruvate, exhibiting saturation kinetics, is accompanied by the loss of one sulfhydryl per subunit. The substrates glyoxylate and isocitrate protect against inactivation whereas the substrate succinate does not. The modification by 3-bromopyruvate (equimolar to subunits) imparts striking resistance to digestion of isocitrate lyase by trypsin, chymotrypsin, and V8 protease as well as a major decrease in the intensity of tryptophan fluorescence. After alkylation, the sequence Gly-His-Met-Gly-Gly-Lys is found following the modified Cys residue in the tryptic peptide representing positions 196-201. Thus Cys195 is alkylated by 3-bromopyruvate.  相似文献   

15.
Inhibition of isocitrate lyase from Pseudomonas indigofera by itaconate   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effect of the inhibitor itaconate on the activity of purified isocitrate lyase from Pseudomonas indigofera was examined for the reaction in both directions. Itaconate was found to equilibrate very slowly with its enzyme-bound form, so that a rapid change in itaconate concentration produced a gradual change in reaction velocity which eventually reached a new steady state. Kinetic studies of this relaxation phenomenon indicated that itaconate inhibited by binding the enzyme only after prior binding of glyoxylate, thus mimicking the kinetic behavior of succinate. On the basis of these studies, the dissociation constants for itaconate and glyoxylate from their respective enzyme-bound forms were calculated. More than half of the isocitrate lyase was complexed by glyoxylate during cleavage of saturating isocitrate. The rate constant for release of itaconate from the enzyme was calculated to be about 0.2 min?1. Direct binding of [14C]itaconate and [14C]succinate to isocitrate lyase at pH 6.8 was measured. Some binding of both ligands was found in the absence of glyoxylate, which was stimulated by the presence of 1 mm glyoxylate. These results suggest that there are up to three or more binding sites per active subunit, but that only one of these is catalytic.  相似文献   

16.
Inhibition patterns have been studied to shed light on the current controversy involving the kinetic mechanism for isocitrate lyase fromEscherichia coli. A new coupled enzymatic assay for the product succinate has been developed, enabling the determination that glyoxylate, the other product, is a linear competitive inhibitor of isocitrate cleavage. This and other evidence suggest that the kinetic mechanism is steady-state, ordered uni-bi, and that succinate and glyoxylate are sequentially released from the enzyme after cleavage of isocitrate.  相似文献   

17.
Alkaline phosphatase from Megalobatrachus japonicus was inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEP). The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics with a second-order rate constant of 176 M(-1) x min(-1) at pH 6.2 and 25 degrees C. The loss of enzyme activity was accompanied with an increase in absorbance at 242 nm and the inactivated enzyme was re-activated by hydroxylamine, indicating the modification of histidine residues. This conclusion was also confirmed by the pH profiles of inactivation, which showed the involvement of a residue with pK(a) of 6.6. The presence of glycerol 3-phosphate, AMP and phosphate protected the enzyme against inactivation. The results revealed that the histidine residues modified by DEP were located at the active site. Spectrophotometric quantification of modified residues showed that modification of two histidine residues per active site led to complete inactivation, but kinetic stoichiometry indicated that one molecule of modifier reacted with one active site during inactivation, probably suggesting that two essential histidine residues per active site are necessary for complete activity whereas modification of a single histidine residue per active site is enough to result in inactivation.  相似文献   

18.
The gene for isocitrate lyase from Escherichia coli has recently been cloned and sequenced. However, knowledge of this enzyme from E. coli is limited. Because of the possible role of 3-phosphoglycerate as a metabolic inhibitor of isocitrate lyase in E. coli, a detailed analysis of this compound as an inhibitor is reported in this paper. Kinetic data suggest that 3-phosphoglycerate is an analog of isocitrate (or glyoxylate) and also that it competes with succinate, or succinate analogs, by interfering with their binding to the enzyme. This could be due to the steric bulk of the phosphate moiety of 3-phosphoglycerate extending in the direction of and over the succinate-binding site. The interaction of other substrate analogs, including glycolate, oxalate, phosphoenolpyruvate, and cis-aconitate, with isocitrate lyase from E. coli is also characterized.  相似文献   

19.
Methylamine metabolism in a pseudomonas species   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
The mechanism by which a nonphotosynthetic bacterium Pseudomonas sp. (Shaw Strain MA) grows on the one-carbon source, methylamine, was investigated by comparing enzyme levels of cells grown on methylamine, to cells grown on acetate or succinate. Cells grown on methylamine have elevated levels of the enzymes serine hydroxymethyl transferase, serine dehydratase, malic enzyme, glycerate dehydrogenase and malate lyase (CoA acetylating ATP-cleaving). These enzymes, in conjunction with a constitutive glyoxylate transaminase, can account for the net conversion of two one-carbon units into acetyl CoA. Cells grown on acetate or methylamine, but not succinate, contain the enzyme isocitrate lyase; while cells grown on acetate or succinate, but not methylamine, contain significant levels of malate synthetase. These findings suggest that the acetyl CoA derived from one-carbon units in methylamine grown cells, condenses with oxalacetate to yield citrate and then isocitrate, followed by cleavage to succinate and glyoxylate. Thus, growth on methylamine is accomplished by the net synthesis of succinate from two molecules of methyamine and two molecules of CO2.  相似文献   

20.
Chemical modification of amino acid residues with phenylglyoxal, N-ethylmaleimide and diethyl pyrocarbonate indicated that at least one residue each of arginine, cysteine and histidine were essential for the activity of sheep liver serine hydroxymethyltransferase. The second-order rate constants for inactivation were calculated to be 0.016 mM-1 X min-1 for phenylglyoxal, 0.52 mM-1 X min-1 for N-ethylmaleimide and 0.06 mM-1 X min-1 for diethyl pyrocarbonate. Different rates of modification of these residues in the presence and in the absence of substrates and the cofactor pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as well as the spectra of the modified protein suggested that these residues might occur at the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

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