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1.
1. The initial formation of creatine phosphate by creatine kinase was studied in the millisecond range and the effect of temperature on the transient and steady-state phases exploited. 2. At 25 degrees C and 35 degrees C there was no transient phase. This is in agreement with the results of Gutfreund [Engelborghs, Y., Marsh, A., and Gutfreund, H. (1975) Biochem. J. 151, 47--50]. 3. At 4 degrees C the time course of creatine phosphate formation was complex and consisted of three transient phases: a lag phase, a burst phase and a steady-state phase. Based on this result a reaction scheme for creatine kinase which includes three intermediates was proposed. Despite the completeness of the time course, the extraction of estimates for the rate constants was difficult and computer simulation and iterative methods had to be resorted to. 4. Attempts were made to provide evidence for the complex enzyme.ADP.metaphosphate.creatine on the creatine kinase reaction pathway [cf. Milner-White, E.J. and Watts, D.C. (1971) Biochem. J. 122, 727--740]. Under the conditions used these attempts were unsuccessful at times down to 2.5 ms, at 4 degrees C or 35 degrees C.  相似文献   

2.
The overall reaction catalyzed by the phosphotransferase arginine kinase was studied at normal and subzero temperatures. Ethylene glycol was used as the antifreeze and its effects on the Km values of substances, kcat and pH profiles were investigated in detail. a) The Km values for the substrate (2 mM for ATP and 0.6 mM for arginine) were little affected by the solvent composition or temperature of the reaction mixture. b) At concentration of ethylene glycol higher than 40% there was a sharp drop of enzyme activity. c) Ethylene glycol induces a large shift in the enzymic pK D) At -5 degrees C in 40% of solvent there was a break in the Arrhenius plot suggesting a change of the rate-limiting step. The relevance of these results to the reaction pathway of arginine kinase is discussed. In addition, controlled perturbations induced by cosolvent and temperature appear as useful tools for further kinetic investigations.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetics of the reaction catalyzed by arginine kinase have been determined at 9.5 and 23°C for in vivo leg muscle of Carcinus maenas (the common shore crab) using the noninvasive technique of 31P-NMR spectroscopy. Concentrations of mobile phosphorus metabolites were the same at both temperatures: 78.7 mM for arginine phosphate, 9.0 mM for adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and 2.6 mM for inorganic phosphate (Pi), as estimated from NMR resonance intensities and literature values for ATP concentration as assayed by traditional biochemical methods. Apparent unidirectional rate constants for formation of ATP from arginine phosphate and ADP were 0.09 s?1 at 9.5°C and 0.27 s?1 at 23°C. Pseudo-first-order rate constants for arginine phosphate generation from Arg and ATP were 0.38 and 1.10 s?1 at 9.5 and 23°C, respectively. In vivo Q10 for the arginine kinase reaction between 9.5 and 23°C was thus 2.2 for both directions. When the kinetic data are analyzed using the Arrhenius equation, activation energies of 126 kJ/mol for ATP formation and 105 kJ/mol for arginine phosphate formation are found. The measured chemical fluxes through arginine kinase in the forward reaction (arginine phosphate hydrolysis) were twice those in the reverse reaction, consistent with either compartmentation of substrates or participation of substrates in alternative metabolic pathways.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphorylation of NaI-treated bovine brain cortex microsomes by inorganic phosphate in the presence of Mg2+ and ouabain has been studied at 0 degrees C (pH 7.4) and 20 degrees C (pH 7.0). Nearly maximal (90%) and half-maximal phosphorylation are achieved at 20 degrees C within 2 min with 50--155 and 5.6--17 muM 32Pi, respectively, and at 0 degrees C within 75 s with 300--600 and 33--66 muM 32Pi, respectively. Maximal phosphorylation yields 146 pmol 32P - mg-1 protein. Without ouabain (20 degrees C, pH 7.0) less than 25% of the incorporation observed in the presence of ouabain is reached. Preincubation of the native microsomes with Mg2+ and K+, in order to decompose possibly present high-energy phosphoryl-bonds prior to ouabain treatment, does not affect the maximal phosphate incorporation. This indicates that the inorganic phosphate incorporation is not due to an exchange with high-energy phosphoryl-bonds, which might have been preserved in the microsomal preparations. Phosphorylation of the native microsomes by ATP in the presence of Mg2+ and Na+ reaches 90 and 50% maximal levels within 15--30 s at 0 degrees C and pH 7.4 at concentrations of [gamma-32P]ATP of 5--32 and 0.5--3.5 muM, respectively. The maximal phosphorylation level is 149 pmol 32P-mg-1 protein, equal to that of ouabain-treated microsomes phosphorylated by inorganic phosphate. Both inorganic phosphate and ATP phosphorylate on site per active enzyme subunit of 135 000 molecular weight. From the equilibrium constants for the phosphorylation of ouabain-treated microsomes by inorganic phosphate at 0 degrees C and 20 degrees C standard free-energy changes of --5.4 and --6.8 kcal/mol, respectively, are calculated. These values yield a standard enthalpy change of 14 kcal/mol and an entropy change of 70 cal/mol - degree K. This characterizes the reaction as a process driven by an entropy change. The intermediate formed by phosphorylation with Pi has maximal stability at acidic pH, as is the case for the intermediate formed with ATP. Solubilization in sodium dodecyl sulfate stabilizes the phosphoryl-bond in the pH range of 4--7. The non-solubilized preparation has optimal stability at pH 2--4, the level of which is equal to that of detergent-solubilized intermediate. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis of the microsomes at pH 3, following incorporation of 32Pi yields 11 protein bands, only one of which (mol. wt 100 000--106 000) carries the radioactive label. This protein has the same molecular weight as the protein, which is phosphorylated by ATP in the presence of Mg2+ and Na+.  相似文献   

5.
Arginine dihydrolase pathway in Lactobacillus buchneri: a review   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The arginine dihydrolase system was studied in homo- and hetero-fermentative lactic acid bacteria. This system is widely distributed in Betabacteria lactobacilli subgroup (group II in Bergey's Manual). It is generally absent in the Thermobacterium lactobacilli subgroup (group IA in Bergey's Manual) and also in the Streptobacterium subgroup (group IB in Bergey's Manual). It is present in some species of the genus Streptococcus (groups II, III and IV in Bergey's Manual). In Lactobacillus buchneri NCDO110 the 3 enzymes of the arginine dihydrolase pathway, arginine deiminase, ornithine transcarbamylase and carbamate kinase, were purified and characterized. Arginine deiminase was partially purified (68-fold); ornithine transcarbamylase was also partially purified (14-fold), while carbamate kinase was purified to homogeneity. The apparent molecular weight of the enzymes was 199,000, 162,000 and 97,000 for arginine deiminase, ornithine transcarbamylase and carbamate kinase respectively. For arginine deiminase, maximum enzymatic activity was observed at 50 degrees C and pH 6; for ornithine transcarbamylase it was observed at 35 degrees C and pH 8.5, and for carbamate kinase at 30 degrees C and pH 5.4. The activation energy of the reactions was determined. For arginine deiminase, delta G* values were: 8,700 cal mol-1 below 50 degrees C and 380 cal mol-1 above 50 degrees C; for ornithine transcarbamylase, the values were: 9,100 cal mol-1 below 35 degrees C and 4,300 cal mol-1 above 35 degrees C; for carbamate kinase, the activation energy was: 4,078 cal mol-1 for the reaction with Mn2+ and 3,059 cal mol-1 for the reaction with Mg2+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The pre-steady-state kinetics of phosphate formation from 5-enolpyruvylshikimate 3-phosphate catalysed by Escherichia coli chorismate synthase (EC 4.6.1.4) were studied by a rapid-acid-quench technique at 25 degrees C at pH 7.5. No pre-steady-state 'burst' or 'lag' phase was observed, showing that phosphate is released concomitant with the rate-limiting step of the enzyme. The implications of this result for the mechanism of action of chorismate synthase are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism of action of bovine pancreatic carboxypeptidase. Aalpha (peptidyl-L-amino acid hydrolase; EC 3.4.12.2) has been investigated by application of cryoenzymologic methods. Kinetic studies of the hydrolysis of the specific ester substrate O-(trans-p-chlorocinnamoyl)-L-beta-phenyllactate have been carried out with both the native and the Co2+-substituted enzyme in the 25 to --45 degrees C temperature range. In the --25 to --45 degrees C temperature range with enzyme in excess, a biphasic reaction is observed for substrate hydrolysis characterized by rate constants for the fast (kf) and the slow (ks) processes. In Arrhenius plots, ks extrapolates to kcat at 25 degrees C for both enzymes in aqueous solution, indicating that the same catalytic rate-limiting step is observed. The slow process is analyzed for both metal enzymes, as previously reported (Makinen, M. W., Yamamura, K., and Kaiser, E. T. (1976) Proc Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 3882-3886), to involve the deacylation of a mixed anhydride acyl-enzyme intermediate. Near --60 degrees C the acyl-enzyme intermediate of both metal enzymes can be stabilized for spectral characterization. The pH and temperature dependence of ks reveals a catalytic ionizing group with a metal ion-dependent shift in pKa and an enthalpy of ionization of 7.2 kcal/mol for the native enzyme and 6.2 kcal/mol for the Co2+ enzyme. These parameters identify the ionizing catalytic group as the metal-bound water molecule. Extrapolation of the pKa data to 25 degrees C indicates that this ionization coincides with that observed in the acidic limb of the pH profile of log(kcat/Km(app)) for substrate hydrolysis under steady state conditions. The results indicate that in the esterolytic reaction of carboxypeptidase. A deacylation of the mixed anhydride intermediate is catalyzed by a metal-bound hydroxide group.  相似文献   

8.
The complete time course of the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate catalyzed by the low molecular weight (acid) phosphotyrosyl protein phosphatase from bovine heart was elucidated and analyzed in detail. Burst titration kinetics were demonstrated for the first time with this class of enzyme. At pH 7.0, 4.5 degrees C, a transient pre-steady-state "burst" of p-nitrophenol was formed with a rate constant of 48 s-1. The burst was effectively stoichiometric and corresponded to a single enzyme active site/molecule. The burst was followed by a slow steady-state turnover of the phosphoenzyme intermediate with a rate constant of 1.2 s-1. Product inhibition studies indicated an ordered uni-bi kinetic scheme for the hydrolysis. Partition experiments conducted for several substrates revealed a constant product ratio. Vmax was constant for these substrates, and the overall rate of hydrolysis was increased greatly in the presence of alcohol acceptors. An enzyme-catalyzed 18O exchange between inorganic phosphate and water was detected and occurred with kcat = 4.47 x 10(-3) s-1 at pH 5.0, 37 degrees C. These results were all consistent with the existence of a phosphoenzyme intermediate in the catalytic pathway and with the breakdown of the intermediate being the rate-limiting step. The true Michaelis binding constant Ks = 6.0 mM, the apparent Km = 0.38 mM, and the rate constants for phosphorylation (k2 = 540 s-1) and dephosphorylation (k3 = 36.5 s-1) were determined under steady-state conditions with p-nitrophenyl phosphate at pH 5.0 and 37 degrees C in the presence of phosphate acceptors. The energies of activation for the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis at pH 5.0 and 7.0 were 13.6 and 14.1 kcal/mol, respectively. The activation energy for the enzyme-catalyzed medium 18O exchange between phosphate and water was 20.2 kcal/mol. Using the available equilibrium and rate constants, an energetic diagram was constructed for the enzyme-catalyzed reaction.  相似文献   

9.
31P NMR was applied to an examination of the freeze-tolerant larvae of the gall fly, Eurosta solidaginis. Resonances from sugar phosphates, inorganic phosphate, adenylates and arginine phosphate were identified. Two peaks of Pi were identified corresponding to intracellular and extracellular Pi. Anoxia produced an expected decrease in peak intensities of ATP and arginine phosphate while the peak of intracellular Pi was enhanced and shifted to indicate intracellular acidification during anoxia. Spectra of whole larvae were monitored over a temperature range from -30 degrees to +25 degrees C. No abrupt alterations in the spectra were seen at the point of extracellular freezing which occurs at about -8 degrees C but temperature had dramatic effects upon the peak intensities of ATP and arginine phosphate. A reversible increase/decrease in peak intensities, relative to Pi, was observed as temperature was raised/lowered. At 15 degrees and -20 degrees C, the beta peak of ATP was 64% and 2% of the peak intensity of Pi while that of arginine phosphate was 78% and 11%, respectively. This temperature effect was not an artifact of instrumentation (as model solutions containing Pi, ATP and arginine phosphate did not show this effect) or a result of changes in the total amounts of these compounds in the cell with temperature. Rather it is apparent that these molecules become restricted in their rotational movement as temperature is lowered perhaps via binding to subcellular components. Changes in the amounts of freely soluble ATP and arginine phosphate with temperature could have important implications for metabolism and its control. Analysis of the effect of temperature on the chemical shift of Pi was also used to determine pH in the intracellular and extracellular compartments. Temperature change had no effect on extracellular (hemolymph) pH which remained constant at 6.1-6.3. Intracellular pH varied with temperature, however, from pH 6.8 at 15 degrees C to pH 7.3 at -12 degrees C with a change, delta pH/delta 0, of -0.0185 degrees C consistent with alphastat regulation.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of pH, season, environmental and experimental temperatures on the activities and kinetic parameters of D-lactate dehydrogenase, pyruvate kinase and arginine kinase from the foot of the pulmonate snail Helix pomatia were analyzed. Both in phosphate and Tris buffers D-lactate dehydrogenase was the enzyme with the most acid maximum, arginine kinase that with the most alkaline, whilst pyruvate kinase occupied an intermediate position. Pyruvate kinase activity, measured at 20 degrees C, was positively correlated with the environmental temperature at the moment of collecting the animal, whereas neither arginine kinase nor D-lactate dehydrogenase showed such a relationship. A seasonal study based on approximately 100 specimens established that arginine kinase activity remained the same throughout the year. Pyruvate kinase activity was slightly lower, and D-lactate dehydrogenase activity significantly higher, in winter than in summer animals. Snails subjected in spring to a short warm-up period before enzyme extraction showed extreme variability and some extraordinarily high values of pyruvate kinase activity, suggesting that either season or elevated temperature may have an immediate effect on the activity of this enzyme. Individual variability of all three enzymes ranges from 300 to 400%. The activities of pyruvate kinase and D-lactate dehydrogenase are strongly correlated in summer, forming a "constant-proportion-group", whereas in winter, with D-lactate dehydrogenase activity increasing and pyruvate kinase activity decreasing these two enzymes become "uncoupled". The Km value of pyruvate kinase is independent of experimental temperature between 10 and 25 degrees C, whereas that of D-lactate dehydrogenase and arginine kinase increases about three-fold within this range. Thus the temperature relationship of a single enzymic reaction cannot be used as an arguemnt for or against the occurrence of temperature compensation of whole animal metabolism. The possibility of modulation of enzyme activity by environmental temperature is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
R R Matheson  H A Scheraga 《Biochemistry》1979,18(12):2446-2450
The steady-state kinetics of the reaction of ribonuclease A with cyclic cytidine 2',3'-phosphate as substrate are investigated as a function of temperature at pH 5 and ionic strength 0.1 M. The results suggest, but cannot prove, that a conformational change near 32 degrees C is involved in the rate-limiting step of the reaction mechanism. This conformational change is proposed to be the same one that was observed in studies of the free enzyme and of enzyme-inhibitor complexes near the same temperature.  相似文献   

12.
H K Baek  H E Van Wart 《Biochemistry》1989,28(14):5714-5719
The reaction of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) with H2O2 has been studied in 50% v/v methanol/water over the 25.0 to -36.0 degrees C temperature range by using the low-temperature stopped-flow technique. All reactions were carried out under pseudo-first-order conditions with [H2O2] much greater than [HRP]. Arrhenius plots for the pseudo-first-order rate constant kobs were linear over the 17.6 to -36.0 degrees C temperature range studied with an activation energy of 4.8 +/- 0.5 kcal/mol. Above 0 degrees C, kobs varies linearly with peroxide concentration. However, saturation kinetics are observed below -16.0 degrees C, indicating that there is at least one reversible elementary step in this reaction. Double-reciprocal plots at -26.0 degrees C at pH* 7.3 for the reaction give kappa max(obs) = 163 s-1 and KM = 0.190 mM. Rapid-scan optical studies carried out at -35.0 degrees C with [H2O2] much greater than KM reveal the presence of a transient intermediate referred to as compound 0 whose conversion to compound I is rate limiting. The Soret region of the optical spectrum of compound 0 resembles that of a "hyperporphyrin" with prominent bands near 330 and 410 nm. The temperature dependencies of kappa max(obs) and KM have been measured over the -16.0 to -26.0 degrees C range and give an activation energy for kappa max(obs) of 1.6 +/- 0.7 kcal/mol and an enthalpy of formation for compound 0 of 4.0 +/- 0.7 kcal/mol.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Mouse thymus thymidylate synthase has been purified to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity and compared with the enzyme from mouse tumour L1210 and Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells. The enzyme is a dimer composed of 35,000 mol. wt monomers. Mouse thymus and tumour enzymes exhibit allosteric properties reflected by cooperative binding of both dUMP and 5-fluoro-dUMP. Activation energy for the reaction, catalyzed by thymidylate synthase from mouse tumour but not from mouse thymus, lowers at temperatures above 34 degrees C, reflecting a change of rate-limiting step in dTMP formation. MgATP at millimolar concentrations inhibits mouse thymus enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
L C Kuo  A W Miller  S Lee  C Kozuma 《Biochemistry》1988,27(24):8823-8832
In the carbamoyl-transfer reaction catalyzed by ornithine transcarbamoylase, an arginine residue in the active site of the Escherichia coli enzyme has been suggested to bind the phosphate moiety of the substrate carbamoyl phosphate. With the application of site-specific mutagenesis, the most likely arginine residue among three candidates at the binding site of carbamoyl phosphate, Arg-57, has been replaced with a glycine. The resultant Gly-57 mutant enzyme is drastically inefficient in catalysis. In the synthesis of L-citrulline from carbamoyl phosphate and L-ornithine with the release of inorganic phosphate, the turnover rate of the mutant is 21,000-fold lower than that of the wild type. However, the mutation of Arg-57 affects only moderately the binding of carbamoyl phosphate; the dissociation constant of this substrate, measured under steady-state turnover condition, is increased from 0.046 to 3.2 mM by the mutation. On the other hand, ornithine binding is substantially affected as estimated by the change in the dissociation constant of its analogue L-norvaline. The dissociation constant of L-norvaline increases about 500-fold from 54 microM for the wild type to 25 mM for the mutant. Since Arg-57 is expected to be distal from the ornithine site and the amino acid (both ornithine and norvaline) binds only after carbamoyl phosphate in the wild-type reaction, the poor norvaline affinity to the mutant suggests that Arg-57 is involved in interactions essential for productive addition of the amino acid. This interpretation is supported by difference ultraviolet absorption spectra which show that the conformational changes induced in the wild type by carbamoyl phosphate upon binding are absent in the mutant. Furthermore, steady-state kinetic data reveal that the ordered binding mechanism of the wild-type enzyme is transformed into a random binding mechanism in the mutant. Thus, the presence of carbamoyl phosphate in the mutant active site is no longer a requisite for ornithine binding. In the 5-50 degrees C temperature range, transcarbamoylation catalyzed by either the wild type or the mutant observes the Arrhenius rate law with almost identical enthalpies of activation, 11 and 10 kcal/mol, respectively. The entropy of activation is -5.5 eu for the wild-type reaction and -29 eu for the mutant reaction, accounting for a loss of 6-7 kcal/mol in the rate-determining step of the enzymic reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Phosphate acetyltransferase (PTA) and acetate kinase (AK) of the hyperthermophilic eubacterium Thermotoga maritima have been purified 1,500- and 250-fold, respectively, to apparent homogeneity. PTA had an apparent molecular mass of 170 kDa and was composed of one subunit with a molecular mass of 34 kDa, suggesting a homotetramer (alpha4) structure. The N-terminal amino acid sequence showed significant identity to that of phosphate butyryltransferases from Clostridium acetobutylicum rather than to those of known phosphate acetyltransferases. The kinetic constants of the reversible enzyme reaction (acetyl-CoA + Pi -->/<-- acetyl phosphate + CoA) were determined at the pH optimum of pH 6.5. The apparent Km values for acetyl-CoA, Pi, acetyl phosphate, and coenzyme A (CoA) were 23, 110, 24, and 30 microM, respectively; the apparent Vmax values (at 55 degrees C) were 260 U/mg (acetyl phosphate formation) and 570 U/mg (acetyl-CoA formation). In addition to acetyl-CoA (100%), the enzyme accepted propionyl-CoA (60%) and butyryl-CoA (30%). The enzyme had a temperature optimum at 90 degrees C and was not inactivated by heat upon incubation at 80 degrees C for more than 2 h. AK had an apparent molecular mass of 90 kDa and consisted of one 44-kDa subunit, indicating a homodimer (alpha2) structure. The N-terminal amino acid sequence showed significant similarity to those of all known acetate kinases from eubacteria as well that of the archaeon Methanosarcina thermophila. The kinetic constants of the reversible enzyme reaction (acetyl phosphate + ADP -->/<-- acetate + ATP) were determined at the pH optimum of pH 7.0. The apparent Km values for acetyl phosphate, ADP, acetate, and ATP were 0.44, 3, 40, and 0.7 mM, respectively; the apparent Vmax values (at 50 degrees C) were 2,600 U/mg (acetate formation) and 1,800 U/mg (acetyl phosphate formation). AK phosphorylated propionate (54%) in addition to acetate (100%) and used GTP (100%), ITP (163%), UTP (56%), and CTP (21%) as phosphoryl donors in addition to ATP (100%). Divalent cations were required for activity, with Mn2+ and Mg2+ being most effective. The enzyme had a temperature optimum at 90 degrees C and was stabilized against heat inactivation by salts. In the presence of (NH4)2SO4 (1 M), which was most effective, the enzyme did not lose activity upon incubation at 100 degrees C for 3 h. The temperature optimum at 90 degrees C and the high thermostability of both PTA and AK are in accordance with their physiological function under hyperthermophilic conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Muscle tension rises with increasing temperature. The kinetics that govern the tension rise of maximally Ca(2+)-activated, skinned rabbit psoas fibers over a temperature range of 0-30 degrees C was characterized in laser temperature-jump experiments. The kinetic response is simple and can be readily interpreted in terms of a basic three-step mechanism of contraction, which includes a temperature-sensitive rapid preequilibrium(a) linked to a temperature-insensitive rate-limiting step and followed by a temperature-sensitive tension-generating step. These data and mechanism are compared and contrasted with the more complex length-jump Huxley-Simmons phases in which all states that generate tension or bear tension are perturbed. The rate of the Huxley-Simmons phase 4 is temperature sensitive at low temperatures but plateaus at high temperatures, indicating a change in rate-limiting step from a temperature-sensitive (phase 4a) to a temperature-insensitive reaction (phase 4b); the latter appears to correlate with the slow, temperature-insensitive temperature-jump relaxation. Phase 3 is absent in the temperature-jump, which excludes it from tension generation. We confirm that de novo tension generation occurs as an order-disorder transition during phase 2slow and the equivalent, temperature-sensitive temperature-jump relaxation.  相似文献   

18.
Substrate phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent-protein kinase A (protein kinase A, PKA) has been studied extensively. Phosphoryl transfer was found to be fast, whereas ADP release was found to be the slow, rate-limiting step. There is also evidence that ADP release may be preceded by a partially rate-limiting conformational change. However, the atomic details of the conformational change and the mode of ADP release are difficult to obtain experimentally. In this work, we studied ADP release from PKA by carrying out molecular dynamics simulations with different pulling forces applied to the ligand. The detailed ADP release pathway and the associated conformational changes were analyzed. The ADP release process was found to involve a swinging motion with the phosphate of ADP anchored to the Gly-rich loop, so that the more buried adenine base and ribose ring came out before the phosphate. In contrast to the common belief that a hinge-bending motion was responsible for the opening of the ligand-binding cleft, our simulations showed that the small lobe exhibited a large amplitude "rocking" motion when the ligand came out. The largest conformational change of the protein was observed at about the first quarter time point along the release pathway. Two prominent intermediate states were observed in the release process.  相似文献   

19.
A significant release of inorganic phosphate from ATP in the presence of the cAMP-dependent pig-brain histone kinase was detected. The high degree of homogeneity of the enzyme preparations used, identity of Michaelis constants (Km for ATP = 12 microM), the close values of cAMP activation constants (48 nM and 51 nM) for the phosphotransferase and ATPase activities, respectively, are all evidence that ATP decomposition is catalysed by the histone kinase under study. The ATPase activity observed supports the ping-pong bi-bi mechanism established earlier for the phosphotransferase reaction and can be regarded as due to decomposition of the phosphoryl enzyme. The transient and steady-state phases of the ATP hydrolysis were studied. The simplest reaction pathway can be described in terms of a three-step mechanism. The close values of the rate constant for the elementary stages of the ATPase reaction obtained in the nucleophile competition study and by computer simulation of the quenched-flow kinetics give further support for the mechanism proposed. The phosphoryl enzyme decomposition was shown to be a rate-limiting step under the experimental conditions used (pH 7.8-8.0).  相似文献   

20.
K A Johnson  E W Taylor 《Biochemistry》1978,17(17):3432-3442
The kinetics of the increase in protein fluorescence following the addition of ATP to subfragment-1 (SF-1) and acto-SF-1 have been reinvestigated. The concentration dependence of the rate obtained with SF-1 did not fit a hyperbola and at high ATP concentration, approximately 40% of the signal amplitude was lost due to a fast phase at the beginning of the transient (20 degrees C). At lower temperature (less than or equal to 10 degrees C) the fluorescence transient was biphasic, with a fast phase observed at high ATP concentration. These results indicate that there are two steps in the SF-1 pathway in which there is a change in protein fluorescence. Measurements of ATP binding and hydrolysis by chemical quench-flow methods indicate that the rate of ATP binding is correlated with the fast fluorescence step and hydrolysis is correlated with the slow fluorescence change. The SF-1 mechanism can thus be described as: (formula: see text) where M represents SF-1 and states of enhanced fluorescence are given by M (16%) and M (36% enhancement, relative to SF-1). Step 1 is a rapid equilibrium with K1 approximately 10(3) M-1. Tight binding of ATP occurs in step 2 and the loss of signal amplitude requires k2 greater than or approximately 1500--2000 s-1. The maximum observed fluorescence rate defines the rate of hydrolysis, k3 + k-3 = 125 s-1 (20 degrees C, 0.1 M KCl, pH 7.0). The steps in the mechanism correspond to the Bagshaw--Trentham scheme, with the important difference that the assignment of rate constant is altered. Formation of the acto-SF-1 complex gave a fluorescence enhancement of approximately 14% relative to SF-1. Dissociation of acto-SF-1 by ATP produced a 20--22% enhancement in fluorescence. There was no detectable fluorescence change during dissociation as evidenced by a lag in the fluorescence transient which corresponded to the kinetics of dissociation. The fluorescence change occurred at the same maximum rate as for SF-1 but there was no loss in signal amplitude at high ATP concentration. The kinetics of the fluorescence change corresponded to the rate of ATP hydrolysis, whereas tight ATP binding occurred at a much faster rate in approximate agreement with the rate of dissociation. Thus the fluorescence change in the acto-SF-1 pathway corresponds to step 3 in the SF-1 mechanism. The complete scheme can be described as follows: (formula: see text) where AM represents acto-SF-1. The tight binding step in the SF-1 pathway (k2) is sufficiently fast so that a similar step (k2') in the acto-SF-1 pathway could precede dissociation but the AM-ATP intermediate has not been detected. Following hydrolysis on the free SF-1, actin recombines with M.ADP.Pi or possibly with a second SF-1 product intermediate as proposed by Chock et al. (1976) and the fluorescence returns to the original AM level with product release.  相似文献   

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