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1.
A low-molecular-weight human liver acid phosphatase was purified 2580-fold to homogenity by a procedure involving ammonium sulfate fractionation, acid treatment, and SP-Sephadex ion-exchange chromatography with ion-affinity elution. The purified enzyme contains a single polypeptide chain and has a molecular weight of 14,400 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition of this enzyme (E) is reported. A pH dependence study using p-nitrophenyl phosphate as a substrate (S) revealed the effect of substrate ionization (pKa 5.2) and the participation of a group in the ES complex having a pKa value of 7.8. The enzyme is readily inactivated by sulfhydryl reagents such as heavy metal ions. Alkylation of the enzyme with iodoacetic acid and iodoacetamide causes complete inactivation of the enzyme and this inactivation is prevented by the presence of phosphate ion. The enzyme is also inactivated by treatment with diethyl pyrocarbonate; protection against this reagent is afforded by phosphate ion. The substrate specificity of this enzyme is unusual for an acid phosphatase. Of the many alkyl and aryl phosphomonoesters tested, the only possibly physiological substrate hydrolyzed by this enzyme was flavin mononucleotide, which exhibits a V which is 3-fold larger at pH 5.0 and 6-fold larger at pH 7.0 than that for p-nitrophenyl phosphate. However, the enzyme also catalyzes the hydrolysis of acetyl phosphate at pH 5.0 with a velocity eight times larger than that reported for an acyl phosphatase from human erythrocytes.  相似文献   

2.
Analyzing the pattern of oligonucleotide formation induced by HP-RNase cleavage shows that the enzyme does not act randomly and follows a more endonucleolytic pattern when compared to RNase A. The enzyme prefers the binding and cleavage of longer substrate molecules, especially when the phosphodiester bond that is broken is 8-11 nucleotides away from at least one of the ends of the substrate molecule. This more endonucleolytic pattern is more appropriate for an enzyme with a regulatory role. Deleting two positive charges on the N-terminus (Arg4 and Lys6) modifies this pattern of external/internal phosphodiester bond cleavage preference, and produces a more exonucleolytic enzyme. These residues may reinforce the strength of a non-catalytic secondary phosphate binding (p2) or, alternatively, constitute a new non-catalytic phosphate binding subsite (p3).  相似文献   

3.
A 3-phosphoglycerate phosphatase activity of about 2 micromoles per minute per milligram chlorophyll is associated with the thylakoid membranes of spinach chloroplasts. The Km for 3-phosphoglycerate is 3 millimolar. The enzyme can be solubilized from thylakoid membranes by treatment with 0.33 molar MgCl2 or sodium deoxycholate. The activity is not stimulated by sulfhydryl reagents or the addition of 10 millimolar MgCl2. The enzymic activity is insensitive to ethylenediaminetetraacetate. The pH optimum is broad, between 5.5 to 7.5. Although the substrate specificity is broad, 3-phosphoglycerate is the best substrate of those tested at neutral pH. However, p-nitrophenyl phosphate was a more effective substrate at pH 5.5. The enzyme exhibits the general characteristics of an acid phosphatase.  相似文献   

4.
A phytase (EC 3.1.3.8) from Pseudomonas syringae MOK1 was purified to apparent homogeneity in two steps employing cation and an anion exchange chromatography. The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 45 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. The optimal activity occurred at pH 5.5 and 40°C. The Michaelis constant (K m ) and maximum reaction rate (Vmax) for sodium phytate were 0.38 mM and 769 U/mg of protein, respectively. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by Cu2+, Cd2+, Mn2+, and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA). It showed a high substrate specificity for sodium phytate with little or no activity on other phosphate conjugates. The enzyme efficiently released orthophosphate from wheat bran and soybean meal.Received: 9 September 2002 / Accepted: 6 December 2002  相似文献   

5.
Summary The AMP deaminase has been purified 450–500 fold from 20,000 g supernatants from trout gill. The procedure comprised cellulose phosphate and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The gill appeared to contain different isoenzymes as indicated by different chromatographic behaviour on cellulose phosphate and different heat stabilities. The two major isoenzymes were compared with respect to their pH optima and the effect of temperature, ATP and inorganic phosphate. The pH optimum is about pH 6.7 at low substrate concentration. A second optimum is found in phosphate buffer. The substrate saturation curve is hyperbolic, even in the absence of KCl or ATP. ATP is an activator of the enzyme in the absence of KCl, but is without effect in the presence of monovalent cations. Among the monovalent cations tested, Na+ is the most potent activator followed by K+ and NH 4 + . Inorganic phosphate is an inhibitor of gill AMP deaminase increasing the affinity for its substrate but having no effect on the maximal velocity or the Hill coefficient. The inhibition by phosphate is partially reversed by ATP. ADP and GTP are competitive inhibitors of the enzyme. In addition, the enzyme showed negative cooperativity in the presence of ATP or GTP.  相似文献   

6.
Sucrose‐phosphate synthase (SPS) activity measured under limiting substrate and in the presence of inorganic phosphate as an allosteric inhibitor (Vlim activity) from the leaves of Prosopis juliflora was earlier observed to respond rapidly and reversibly to light/dark transitions ( Sinha et al. 1997b,c ). The experiments therefore, were conducted to study the potential regulation of the enzyme by a mechanism of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation. The desalted extract of the enzyme prepared from irradiated leaves showed a time‐dependent spontaneous inactivation of the Vlim activity when the extract was preincubated and an additional inactivation when incubated with ATP. The spontaneous inactivation is not inhibited by phosphatase inhibitors but the ATP‐dependent inactivation was abolished when either 5′‐p‐fluorosulphonylbenzoadenosine (FSBA) or glucose‐6‐phosphate (G6P), (both reported as inhibitors for the SPS‐protein kinase from spinach) was included during preincubation. FSBA also prevented the dark inactivation of SPS in the leaves of P. juliflora when fed through the transpiration stream. The activity of SPS measured under the Vmax condition remained relatively unaffected by ATP or FSBA. The desalted extract prepared from darkened leaves on the other hand, when preincubated at 25°C showed a time‐dependent increase in the Vlim activity and the activation state of the enzyme. The spontaneous activation observed during preincubation appears to be due to the dephosphorylation of the enzyme and is strongly inhibited by okadaic acid, a potent protein phosphatase inhibitor. Alternately, feeding okadaic acid to excised leaves in the dark also blocked the subsequent light activation of Vlim activity. These results are consistent with the assumption that the light/dark regulation of Vlim activity observed in the leaves of P. juliflora was mediated through a dephosphorylation/phosphorylation mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
Isotopic exchange kinetics at equilibrium for E. coli native aspartate transcarbamylase at pH 7.8, 30 °C, are consistent with an ordered BiBi substrate binding mechanism. Carbamyl phosphate binds before l-Asp, and carbamyl-aspartate is released before inorganic phosphate. The rate of [14C]Asp C-Asp exchange is much faster than [32P]carbamyl phosphate Pi exchange. Phosphate, and perhaps carbamyl phosphate, appears to bind at a separate modifier site and prevent dissociation of active-site bound Pi or carbamyl phosphate. Initial velocity studies in the range of 0–40 °C reveal a biphasic Arrhenius plot for native enzyme: Ea (>15 °C) = 6.3 kcal/ mole and Ea (<15 °C) = 22.1 kcal/mole. Catalytic subunits show a monophasic plot with Ea ? 20.2 kcal/mole. This, with other data, suggests that with native enzyme a conformational change accompanying aspartate association contributes significantly to rate limitation at t > 15 °C, but that catalytic steps become definitively slower below 15 °C. Model kinetics are derived to show that this change in mechanism at low temperature can force an ordered substrate binding system to produce exchange-rate patterns consistent with a random binding system with all exchange rates equal. The nonlinear Arrhenius plot also has important consequences for current theories of catalytic and regulatory mechanisms for this enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Yeast glutathione reductase catalyzes a pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase reaction using either NADPH or NADH as the electron donor and thionicotinamideadenine dinucleotide phosphate as the electron acceptor. Competitive substrate inhibition of the transhydrogenase reaction by NADPH (Ki = 11 μM) is observed when NADPH is the electron donor. Competitive substrate inhibition by thionicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate (Ki = 58 μM) is observed with NADH as the electron donor. The turnover numbers of the two transhydrogenase reactions are similar and are equal to about 1% of the turnover number for the NADPH-dependent reduction of oxidized glutathione catalyzed by the enzyme. The transhydrogenase kinetics are analyzed in terms of a pingpong mechanism. It is concluded that the substrate inhibition results from formation of abortive complexes of NADPH with the reduced form of the enzyme and of thionicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate with the oxidized form of the enzyme. With NADPH as the electron donor, the apparent Michaelis constant for thionicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate is sensitive to the ionic composition of the assay medium. The data are interpreted to support the existence of a general pyridine nucleotide-binding site at the active site of the enzyme and separate from the binding site for oxidized glutathione.  相似文献   

9.
Aryl sulfatase A (aryl sulfate sulfohydrolase EC 3.1.6.1) has been purified > 10,000-fold from rabbit liver; by disc gel electrophoresis the enzyme appears homogeneous. Various properties of the enzyme have been determined and comparisons are made with other aryl sulfatases. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis indicates that the enzyme is made up of monomers of molecular weight ~ 70,000. At pH 7.4 the enzyme exists as a dimer whereas a tetrameric form predominates at pH 4.8.The enzyme exhibits the anomalous kinetics often observed with aryl sulfatase A from mammalian tissues (the enzyme is modified to an inactive form while degrading substrate and the inactive form can be reactivated by sulfate ion). The enzyme activity has been studied under a variety of reaction conditions. Two pH optima are observed and neither enzyme concentration or changes in ionic strength appear to have an effect on the relative magnitudes of the optima. Aryl sulfatase A is competitively inhibited by potassium sulfate, potassium phosphate, and sodium sulfite (Ki = 2.9 × 10?3 M, 3.4 × 10?5 M, and 1.1 × 10?6 M, respectively). Kinetic constants for some substituted phenyl sulfate esters have been determined. The variation in V is not consistent with a reaction mechanism involving a rate-limiting breakdown of a common intermediate.The inactive (modified) form of the enzyme has been isolated from reaction mixtures containing aryl sulfatase A and substrate. A procedure is presented for determining the relative amount of modified and native enzyme in these preparations. In the presence of substrate, sulfate displaces the equilibrium between native and modified enzyme in favor of native enzyme. In the absence of substrate neither sulfate or phosphate have an effect on the equilibrium. A study is made of the temperature dependence of the process in which the modified enzyme is converted back to native enzyme. The relatively small entropy of activation for the conversion of the modified to the native form (ΔS3 = ?8 cal/mole deg) does not seem to be consistent with a major modification of protein conformation.  相似文献   

10.
Masola B  Zvinavashe E 《Amino acids》2003,24(4):427-434
Summary.  The effects of ammonium and other ions on phosphate dependent glutaminase (PDG) activity in intact rat enterocyte mitochondria were investigated. Sulphate and bicarbonate activated the enzyme in absence and presence of added phosphate. In presence of 10 mM phosphate, ammonium at concentrations <1 mM inhibited the enzyme. This inhibition was reversed by increased concentration of phosphate or sulphate. The inhibition of PDG by ammonium in presence of 10 mM phosphate was biphasic with respect to glutamine concentration, its effect being through a lowering of Vmax at glutamine concentration of ≤5 mM, and increased Km for substrate concentration above 5 mM. The activation of the enzyme by bicarbonate was through an increase in Vmax. Ammonium and bicarbonate ions may therefore be important physiological regulators of PDG. It is suggested that phosphate and other polyvalent ions may function by preventing product inhibition of the enzyme through promotion of PDG dimer formation. The dimerized enzyme may have a high affinity for glutamine and reduced sensitivity to inhibition by ammonium ions. Received August 10, 2001 Accepted April 1, 2002 Published online August 30, 2002 Acknowledgement This work was supported by University of Zimbabwe research grant to Dr. B. Masola. Authors' address: Dr. Bubuya Masola, Department of Biochemistry, University of Zimbabwe, P O Box MP167, Mount Pleasant, Harare, Zimbabwe, E-mail: masolab@yahoo.co.uk  相似文献   

11.
A periplasmatic phytate-degrading enzyme from Pantoea agglomerans isolated from soil was purified about 470-fold to apparent homogeneity with a recovery of 16% referred to the phytate-degrading activity in the crude extract. It behaved as a monomeric protein with a molecular mass of about 42 kDa. The purified enzyme exhibited a single pH optimum at 4.5. Optimum temperature for the degradation of phytate was 60°C. The kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis of sodium phytate were determined to be KM = 0.34 mmol/l and kcat = 21 s-1 at pH 4.5 and 37°C. The enzyme exhibited a narrow substrate selectivity. Only phytate and glucose-1-phosphate were identified as good substrates. Since this Pantoea enzyme has a strong preference for glucose-1-phosphate over phytate, under physiological conditions glucose-1-phosphate is its most likely substrate. The maximum amount of phosphate released from phytate by the purified enzyme suggests myo-inositol pentakisphosphate as the final product of enzymatic phytate degradation.  相似文献   

12.
An acid phosphatase from Trichoderma harzianum was purified in a single step using a phenyl-Sepharose chromatography column. A typical procedure showed 22-fold purification with 56% yield. The purified enzyme showed as a single band on SDS-PAGE with an apparent molecular weight of 57.8 kDa. The pH optimum was 4.8 and maximum activity was obtained at 55°C. The enzyme retained 60% of its activity after incubation at 55°C for 60 min. The K m and V max values for p-nitrophenyl phosphate (p-NPP) as a substrate were 165 nM and 237 nM min?1, respectively. The enzyme was partially inhibited by inorganic phosphate and strongly inhibited by tungstate. Broad substrate specificity was observed with significant activities for p-NPP, ATP, ADP, AMP, fructose 6-phosphate, glucose 1-phosphate and phenyl phosphate.  相似文献   

13.
A specific alkaline phosphatase (ALPase) from the integument of white pupae has been purified 500-fold. The purification procedure included solubilization with Triton X-100, butanol extraction, fractionation with ammonium sulfate, and chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose, Sephadex G-200, and Sepharose 6B. Two peaks with enzyme activity were observed. The major peak had a molecular weight of approximately 180,000, while the minor peak, which had identical kinetic parameters and substrate specificity as those of the major one, was eluted in a high molecular weight form (about 900,000), probably cross-linked with chitin, since the enzyme was separated from the chitin only by lysozyme treatment. The enzyme hydrolyzes only tyrosine phosphate and β-glycerophosphate, with apparent Kms of 0.35 mM and 0.22 mM, respectively, but not serine phosphate, threonine phosphate, ATP, and AMP. The optimum pH was in the alkaline range, with a peak at pH 9.4. The divalent cations Mn2+, Mg2+, and Ba2+ had stimulatory actions, while Cu2+ exerted a very strong inhibitory action on the enzyme activity. The ALPase was inhibited by L-tyrosine in a dose-dependent fashion. At a concentration of 2 mM, L-tyrosine totally inhibited the enzyme activity, while L-phenylalanine inactivated the enzyme about 25%. The accumulated evidence that ALPase is involved in the sclerotization process of insect integument is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
1. Threonine aldolase was purified about 200-fold in 10% yield from Clostridium pasteurianum and its properties were examined. The final preparation gave three bands after ionophoresis on polyacrylamide gel. 2. The purified enzyme was shown to produce glycine and acetaldehyde in stoicheiometric amounts from threonine. The reverse reaction was demonstrated qualitatively. 3. The enzyme has a broad pH optimum at 6.5–7.0. 4. The enzyme is highly specific for l-threonine. 5. The enzyme is completely inhibited by 1mm concentrations of hydroxylamine and semicarbazide. Activity is decreased to 20% of the original by treatment with cysteine plus mercaptoethanol; most of the loss is regained on incubation with pyridoxal phosphate. It is concluded that pyridoxal phosphate is a prosthetic group. 6. The relationship between velocity and substrate concentration is atypical but indicates a Km value of 0.42mm. 7. The enzyme was demonstrated in several other strictly anaerobic bacteria.  相似文献   

15.
A steady-state kinetic analysis of plastid phosphofructokinase at pH 8.2 is consistent with the enzyme having a sequential reaction mechanism. Cytosolic phosphofructokinase probably has a similar mechanism. At pH 7.0 plastid phosphofructokinase shows cooperative binding of fructose 6-phosphate and is inhibited by higher concentrations of ATP. In contrast cytosolic phosphofructokinase shows normal kinetics at both pH 8.2 and 7.0 with respect to fructose 6-phosphate and is not inhibited by ATP. In the case of plastid phosphofructokinase the affinity for fructose 6-phosphate increases as the pH is raised from 7 to 8.2 whereas cytosolic phosphofructokinase is affected in an opposite manner. Phosphate is the principal activator of plastid phosphofructokinase since the cooperative kinetics toward fructose 6-phosphate are shifted toward Michaelis-Menten kinetics by 1 mm sodium phosphate and this concentration of phosphate relieves the inhibition by ATP. Both isoenzymes are inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate, 2-phosphoglycerate, and 3-phosphoglycerate at pH 7.2. Plastid phosphofructokinase is most strongly inhibited by phosphoenol pyruvate with the I0.5 value varying from 0.08 to 0.5 μm depending on substrate concentrations; phosphate reverses this inhibition. In contrast cytosolic phosphofructokinase is much less inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate with an I0.5 approximately 1000-fold higher. Cytosolic phosphofructokinase is powerfully inhibited by 3-phosphoglycerate with an I0.5 value of 60 μm and this appears to be the principal regulator of this isoenzyme. The two isoenzymes of phosphofructokinase in the endosperm appear, therefore, to be regulated differently. Plastid phosphofructokinase is inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate and ATP and is activated by phosphate; whereas the cytosolic enzyme is inhibited principally by 3-phosphoglycerate and this inhibition is only partially relieved by phosphate. Some of the differences reported previously for phosphofructokinases from different plant tissues may, therefore, be due to varying ratios of the cytosolic and plastid isoenzymes.  相似文献   

16.
A sensitive non-radioactive method for determination of the stereospecificity of the C-4′ hydrogen transfer on the coenzymes (pyridoxal phosphate, PLP; and pyridoxamine phosphate, PMP) of aminotransferases has been developed. Aminotransferase of unknown stereospecificity in its PLP form was incubated in 2H2O with a substrate amino acid resulted in PMP labeled with deuterium at C-4′ in the pro-S or pro-R configuration according to the stereospecificity of the aminotransferase tested. The [4′-2H]PMP was isolated from the enzyme protein and divided into two portions. The first portion was incubated in aqueous buffer with apo-aspartate aminotransferase (a reference si-face specific enzyme), and the other was incubated with apo-branched-chain amino acid aminotransferase (a reference re-face specific enzyme) in the presence of a substrate 2-oxo acid. The 2H at C-4′ is retained with the PLP if the aminotransferase in question transfers C-4′ hydrogen on the opposite face of the coenzyme compared with the reference aminotransferase, but the 2H is removed if the test and reference aminotransferases catalyze hydrogen transfer on the same face. PLP formed in the final reactions was analyzed by LC–MS/MS for the presence or absence of 2H. The method was highly sensitive that for the aminotransferase with ca. 50 kDa subunit molecular weight, only 2 mg of the enzyme was sufficient for the whole test. With this method, the use of radioactive substances could be avoided without compromising the sensitivity of the assay.  相似文献   

17.
The kinetic mechanism of NADP-dependent malic enzyme purified from maize leaves was studied in the physiological direction. Product inhibition and substrate analogues studies with 3 aminopyridine dinucleotide phosphate and tartrate indicate that the enzyme reaction follows a sequential ordered Bi-Ter kinetic mechanism. NADP is the leading substrate followed by l-malate and the products are released in the order of CO2, pyruvate and NADPH. The enzyme also catalyzes a slow, magnesium-dependent decarboxylation of oxaloacetate and reduction of pyruvate and oxaloacetate in the presence of NADPH to produce l-lactate and l-malate, respectively.  相似文献   

18.
Purified rabbit liver fructose diphosphatase has been found to catalyze the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate, PNPP. It has been established that the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate is due to fructose diphosphatase through studies of the chromatographic properties of the enzyme, its temperature sensitivity, dependence on divalent cations and its inhibition by fructose diphosphate. The Km for PNPP is 6 × 10−3M at pH 9.2, 5 × 10−4M at pH 7.5. This substrate should facilitate studies of the kinetics and mechanism of action of fructose diphosphatase and the comparison of this enzyme with other alkaline phosphatases.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

An extracellular alkaline phosphatase from Penidllium chrysogenum was purified to homogeneity using DEAE ion-exchange chromatography and size exclusion chromatography. SDS-PAGE of the purified enzyme indicated a molecular weight of 58,000. The mobility of the native enzyme on a Superose 12 column suggests that the active form of the enzyme is a monomer. The enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphate from a variety of substrates including p-Miitrophenyl phosphate, α-naphthyl phosphate and the anti-tumor compound etoposide phosphate. The apparent Km for the substrate p-nitrophenyl phosphate is 1.3 mM and the enzyme is inhibited by inorganic phosphate. The pH optimum of the enzyme is 9.0 with a broad optimal temperature range between 40 and 50 °C. The isoelectric point of the enzyme is approximately 5.5. The enzyme is a glycoprotein; digestion with endoglycosidase H indicates that the protein consists primarily of N-inked carbohydrates. Enzymatic activity is enhanced by the addition of divalent cations such as Mg++ and Mn++ and inhibited by addition of a chelator such as EDTA suggesting a metal ion requirement. The enzyme was found to be an inexpensive catalyst for the conversion of etoposide phosphate to etoposide in the manufacture of this anti-tumor compound.  相似文献   

20.
[14C]Dihydroxyacetone phosphate labeled in either the C-1 or C-3 position was enzymatically synthesized, isolated, and utilized as a substrate for crystalline methylglyoxal synthase purified from Proteus vulgaris. After reaction with the enzyme, the methyl carbon of methylglyoxal3 was identified as CHI3 by the iodoform reaction. The labeling pattern revealed that C-1 is dephosphorylated and reduced to the methyl group, while C-3 is oxidized to the aldehyde. Methylglyoxal was found to be noncompetitive with respect to dihydroxyacetone phosphate, while inorganic phosphate was competitive and transformed the dihydroxyacetone phosphate saturation kinetics from hyperbolic to sigmoidal. The enzyme was inactivated by freezing, and phosphate stabilized the enzyme toward both cold- and heat-induced denaturation. The phosphate moiety of the substrate appears to be required for binding, since the synthase is competitively inhibited by a variety of phosphorylated compounds but not by their nonphosphorylated counterparts. Based on these observations, and the ability of bromo- and iodoacetol phosphates to act as active-site reagents, a mechanism is proposed in which the enzyme first catalyzes the keto-enol tautomerization to the hydrogen-bonded enol which facilitates the internal oxidation-reduction and phosphoester cleavage with CO bond breakage.  相似文献   

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