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1.
Malic enzyme (S)-malate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (oxaloacetate-decarboxylating, EC 1.1.1.40) purified from the thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus, strain MT-4, catalyzed the metal-dependent decarboxylation of oxaloacetate at optimum pH 7.6 at a rate comparable to the decarboxylation of L-malate. The oxaloacetate decarboxylase activity was stimulated about 50% by NADP but only in the presence of MgCl2, and was strongly inhibited by L-malate and NADPH which abolished the NADP activation. In the presence of MnCl2 and in the absence of NADP, the Michaelis constant and Vm for oxaloacetate were 1.7 mM and 2.3 mumol.min-1.mg-1, respectively. When MgCl2 replaced MnCl2, the kinetic parameters for oxaloacetate remained substantially unvaried, whereas the Km and Vm values for L-malate have been found to vary depending on the metal ion. The enzyme carried out the reverse reaction (malate synthesis) at about 70% of the forward reaction, at pH 7.2 and in the presence of relatively high concentrations of bicarbonate and pyruvate. Sulfhydryl residues (three cysteine residues per subunit) have been shown to be essential for the enzymatic activity of the Sulfolobus solfataricus malic enzyme. 5,5'-Dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and N-ethylmaleimide caused the inactivation of the oxidative decarboxylase activity, but at different rates. The inactivation of the overall activity by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate was partially prevented by NADP singly or in combination with both L-malate and MnCl2, and strongly enhanced by the carboxylic acid substrates; NADP + malate + MnCl2 afforded total protection. The inactivation of the oxaloacetate decarboxylase activity by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate treatment was found to occur at a slower rate than that of the oxidative decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

2.
1. A high activity of NAD-linked "malic" enzyme was found in homogenates of flight muscle of different species of tse-tse fly (Glossina). The activity was the same as, or higher than, that of malate dehydrogenase and more than 20-fold that of NADP-linked "malic" enzyme. A similar enzyme was found in the flight muscle of all other insects investigated, but at much lower activities. 2. ACa2+-stimulated oxaloacetate decarboxylase activity was present in all insect flight-muscle preparations investigated, in constant proportion to the NAD-linked "malic" enzyme. 3. A partial purification of the NAD-linked "malic" enzyme from Glossina was effected by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, which separated the enzyme from malate dehydrogenase and NADP-linked "malic" enzyme, but not from oxaloacetate decarboxylase. 4. The intracellular localization of the NAD-linked "malic" enzyme was predominantly mitochondrial; latency studies suggested a localization in the mitochondrial matrix space. 5. Studies on the partially purified enzyme demonstrated that it had a pH optimum between 7.6 and 7.9. It required Mg2+ or Mn2+ for activity; Ca2+ was not effective. The maximum rate was the same with either cation, but the concentration of Mn2+ required was 100 times less than that of Mg2+. Acitivity with NADP was only 1-3% of that with NAD, unless very high (greater than 10mM) concentrations of Mn2+ were present. 6. It is suggested that the NAD-linked "malic" enzyme functions in the proline-oxidation pathway predominant in tse-tse fly flight muscle.  相似文献   

3.
Oxaloacetate decarboxylase (OXAD), the enzyme that catalyzes the decarboxylation of oxaloacetate to pyruvic acid and carbon dioxide, was purified 245-fold to homogeneity from Pseudomonas stutzeri. The three-step purification procedure comprised anion-exchange chromatography, metal-chelate affinity chromatography, and biomimetic-dye affinity chromatography. Estimates of molecular mass from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and native high-performance gel-filtration liquid chromatography were, respectively, 63 and 64 kDa, suggesting a monomeric protein. OXAD required for maximum activity divalent metal cations such as Mn2+ and Mg2+ but not monovalent cations. The enzyme is not inhibited by avidin, but is competitively inhibited by adenosine 5'-diphosphate, acetic acid, phosphoenolpyruvate, malic acid, and oxalic acid. Initial velocity, product inhibition, and dead-end inhibition studies suggested a rapid-equilibrium ordered kinetic mechanism with Mn2+ being added to the enzyme first followed by oxaloacetate, and carbon dioxide is released first followed by pyruvate. Inhibition data as well as pH-dependence profiles and kinetic parameters are reported and discussed in terms of the mechanism operating for oxaloacetate decarboxylation.  相似文献   

4.
The 13C primary kinetic isotope effect on the decarboxylation of malate by nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide malic enzyme from Crassula argentea is 1.0199 +/- 0.0006 with proteo L-malate-2-H and 1.0162 +/- 0.0003 with malate-2-d. The primary deuterium isotope effect is 1.45 +/- 0.10 on V/K and 1.93 +/- 0.13 on Vmax. This indicates a stepwise conversion of malate to pyruvate and CO2 with hydride transfer preceding decarboxylation, thereby suggesting a discrete oxaloacetate intermediate. This is in agreement with the stepwise nature of the chemical mechanism of other malic enzymes despite the Crassula enzyme's inability to reduce or decarboxylate oxaloacetate. Differences in morphology and allosteric regulation between enzymes suggest specialization of the Crassula malic enzyme for the physiology of crassulacean acid metabolism while maintaining the catalytic events found in malic enzymes from animal sources.  相似文献   

5.
The role of general acid-base catalysis in the enzymatic mechanism of NADP+-dependent malic enzyme was examined by detailed steady-state kinetic studies through site-directed mutagenesis of the Tyr(91) and Lys(162) residues in the putative catalytic site of the enzyme. Y91F and K162A mutants showed approx. 200- and 27000-fold decreases in k(cat) values respectively, which could be partially recovered with ammonium chloride. Neither mutant had an effect on the partial dehydrogenase activity of the enzyme. However, both Y91F and K162A mutants caused decreases in the k(cat) values of the partial decarboxylase activity of the enzyme by approx. 14- and 3250-fold respectively. The pH-log(k(cat)) profile of K162A was found to be different from the bell-shaped profile pattern of wild-type enzyme as it lacked a basic pK(a) value. Oxaloacetate, in the presence of NADPH, can be converted by malic enzyme into L-malate by reduction and into enolpyruvate by decarboxylation activities. Compared with wild-type, the K162A mutant preferred oxaloacetate reduction to decarboxylation. These results are consistent with the function of Lys(162) as a general acid that protonates the C-3 of enolpyruvate to form pyruvate. The Tyr(91) residue could form a hydrogen bond with Lys(162) to act as a catalytic dyad that contributes a proton to complete the enol-keto tautomerization.  相似文献   

6.
Acetylpyridine NADP replaced NADP in promoting the Mn2+ ion-requiring mitochondrial "malic" enzyme of Hymenolepis diminuta. Disrupted mitochondria displayed low levels of an apparent oxaloacetate-forming malate dehydrogenase activity when NAD or acetylpyridine NAD served as the coenzyme. Significant malate-dependent reduction of acetylpyridine NAD by H. diminuta mitochondria required Mn2+ ion and NADP, thereby indicating the tandem operation of "malic" enzyme and NADPH:NAD transhydrogenase. Incubation of mitochondrial preparations with oxaloacetate resulted in a non-enzymatic decarboxylation reaction. Coupling of malate oxidation with electron transport via the "malic" enzyme and transhydrogenase was demonstrated by polarographic assessment of mitochondrial reduced pyridine nucleotide oxidase activity.  相似文献   

7.
Human malic enzyme was studied by steady state kinetics, deuterium isotope effects, and 13C isotope effects with both the physiological dinucleotide cofactor and several alternate cofactors. The log V vs pH profile with NAD revealed two pK(a) values too close to be separately determined, but with an average value of 7.33. The log V/K vs pH profile with NAD revealed two pK(a) values at 7.4 and 5.6. Deuterium and 13C isotope effects indicate that the mechanism of human malic enzyme is stepwise with both NAD and epsilonNAD, but that hyperconjugation in the transition state for hydride transfer is detectable only with the former. With thioNAD and APAD, the isotope effects do not clearly indicate whether the mechanism is stepwise or concerted. The intrinsic 13C isotope effect for decarboxylation was calculated to be 1.0485 by measurement of the partition ratio of oxaloacetate in the presence of NADH and human malic enzyme (decarboxylation to pyruvate/reduction to malate = 2.33). The isotope effect and partitioning data suggest that the energy barrier for decarboxylation of oxaloacetate is not as high relative to the barrier for reduction of oxaloacetate as with the chicken liver enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Genetic regulation of malic enzyme activity in the mouse   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cytosolic malic enzyme catalyzes the NADP(+)-dependent oxidative decarboxylation of malate to pyruvate and CO2. Additionally, this enzyme produces large amounts of reducing equivalents (NADPH) required for de novo fatty acid synthesis and provides a precursor for oxaloacetate replacement in the mitochondria. Malic enzyme is considered a key lipogenic enzyme and changes in enzyme activity parallel changes in the lipogenic rate. As would be expected, the activity of malic enzyme responds to a variety of dietary and hormonal factors acting mainly on the rate of enzyme synthesis. In the mouse, the structural locus for malic enzyme (Mod-1) is located on chromosome 9. Two alleles reflecting differences in electrophoretic mobility have been identified. This report demonstrates that the amount of hepatic malic enzyme activity is strain-dependent and is regulated by a malic enzyme regulator locus (Mod1r) located on the proximal end of chromosome 12. Two alleles have been identified: Mod1ra, conferring high enzyme activity (C57BL/6J), and Mod1rb, conferring low enzyme activity (C57BL/KsJ). Biochemical studies have demonstrated differences in the apparent Km and Vmax and in specific activity on purification and immunoprecipitation, features that suggest changes in enzyme structure even though no differences were observed by electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing. These combined data suggest that differences in both enzyme quantity and structure may be involved in the genetic regulation of malic enzyme activity in mice.  相似文献   

9.
The biotin-containing oxaloacetate decarboxylase from Klebsiella aerogenes catalyzed the Na+-dependent decarboxylation of oxaloacetate to pyruvate and bicarbonate (or CO2) but not the reversal of this reaction, not even in the presence of an oxaloacetate trapping system. The enzyme catalyzed an avidin-sensitive isotopic exchange between [1-14C]pyruvate and oxaloacetate, which indicated the intermediate formation of a carboxybiotin enzyme. Sodium ions were not required for this partial reaction, but promoted the second partial reaction, the decarboxylation of the carboxybiotin enzyme, thus accounting for the Na+ requirement of the overall reaction. Therefore, the 14CO2-enzyme which was formed upon incubation of the decarboxylase with [4-15C]oxaloacetate, could only be isolated if Na+ ions were excluded. Preincubation of the decarboxylase with avidin also prevented its labelling with 14CO2. The isolated 14CO2-labelled oxaloacetate decarboxylase revealed the following properties. It was slowly decarboxylated at neutral pH and rapidly upon acidification. The 14CO2 residues of the 14CO2-enzyme could be transferred to pyruvate yielding [4-14C]oxaloacetate. In the presence of Na+ this 14CO2 transfer was repressed by the simultaneous decarboxylation of the 14CO2-enzyme. However, Na+ alone was insufficient as a cofactor for the decarboxylation of the isolated 14CO2-enzyme, since this required pyruvate in addition to Na+. It is therefore concluded that the decarboxylation of oxaloacetate proceeds over a CO2-enzyme--pyruvate complex and that free CO2-enzyme is an abortive reaction intermediate. The activation energy of the enzymic decarboxylation of oxaloacetate changed with temperature and was about 113 kJ below 11 degrees C, 60 kJ between 11 degrees C and 31 degrees C and 36 kJ between 31--45 degrees C.  相似文献   

10.
Malate dehydrogenase may interfere with the assay of NAD malic enzyme, as NADH is formed during the conversion of malate to oxaloacetate. During the present study, two additional effects of malate dehydrogenase were investigated; they are evident only if the malate dehydrogenase reaction is allowed to reach equilibrium prior to initiating the malic enzyme reaction. One of these (Outlaw, Manchester 1980 Plant Physiol 65: 1136-1138) might cause an underestimation of NAD reduction by malic enzyme due to the oxidation of NADH during reversal of the malate dehydrogenase reaction. A second effect may result in overestimation of malic enzyme activity, as Mn2+-catalyzed oxaloacetate decarboxylation causes continuing net NADH formation via malate dehydrogenase. These effects were studied by assaying the activity of a partially purified preparation of Amaranthus retroflexus NAD malic enzyme in the presence or absence of purified NAD malate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

11.
The activity of oxaloacetate decarboxylase was revealed in leaves of a C4 plant, maize (Zea mays L.). This activity was unrelated to decarboxylase activities of other enzymes, e.g., NAD-malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.38) or NADP-malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.40), and was located in chloroplasts (83.1%). Using a four-step purification procedure, an electrophoretically pure enzyme preparation of oxaloacetate decarboxylase was obtained from maize leaves. The specific activity of the enzyme was 3.150 EU/mg protein, the factor of purification was 40.4, and the yield was 11.0%. The enzyme exhibited Michaelis–Menten kinetics with K m for oxaloacetate 30 ± 5 M and pH optimum 7.1 ± 0.5. The metabolite-mediated regulation of oxaloacetate decarboxylase activity has been investigated. It is found that sodium chloride (1.0 mM) activates the enzyme, whereas ATP inhibits the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

12.
Mitochondria from bundle sheath cells of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase-type C4 species Urochloa panicoides were shown to have metabolic properties consistent with a role in C4 photosynthesis predicted from earlier studies. The rate of O2 uptake in response to added malate plus ADP was at least five times the activity observed with NADH, glycine, or succinate. With malate plus ADP the O2 uptake rate averaged about 150 nmol O2 min-1 mg-1 protein, equivalent to about 0.6 mumol min-1 mg-1 of extracted chlorophyll. About half of this activity was apparently phosphorylation-linked with ADP/O2 ratios of about 4. Studies with electron transport inhibitors suggested that about 65% of this malate oxidation is cytochrome oxidase-terminated with a minor component mediated via the alternative oxidase. These mitochondria supported rapid rates of pyruvate production from malate and this activity was also stimulated by ADP but blocked by inhibitors of electron transport. Adding oxaloacetate increased pyruvate production but inhibited O2 uptake. The results were consistent with the notion that in this subgroup of C4 species mitochondrial-located NAD malic enzyme contributes substantially to total C4 acid decarboxylation. This enzyme is apparently also the primary source of NADH necessary to generate the ATP required for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase-mediated oxaloacetate decarboxylation.  相似文献   

13.
In human liver, almost 90% of malic enzyme activity is located within the extramitochondrial compartment, and only approximately 10% in the mitochondrial fraction. Extramitochondrial malic enzyme has been isolated from the post-mitochondrial supernatant of human liver by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, ADP-Sepharose-4B and Sephacryl S-300 to apparent homogeneity, as judged from polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The specific activity of the purified enzyme was 56 mumol.min-1.mg protein-1, which corresponds to about 10,000-fold purification. The molecular mass of the native enzyme determined by gel filtration is 251 kDa. SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed one polypeptide band of molecular mass 63 kDa. Thus, it appears that the native protein is a tetramer composed of identical-molecular-mass subunits. The isoelectric point of the isolated enzyme was 5.65. The enzyme was shown to carboxylate pyruvate with at least the same rate as the forward reaction. The optimum pH for the carboxylation reaction was at pH 7.25 and that for the NADP-linked decarboxylation reaction varied with malate concentration. The Km values determined at pH 7.2 for malate and NADP were 120 microM and 9.2 microM, respectively. The Km values for pyruvate, NADPH and bicarbonate were 5.9 mM, 5.3 microM and 27.9 mM, respectively. The enzyme converted malate to pyruvate (at optimum pH 6.4) in the presence of 10 mM NAD at approximately 40% of the maximum rate with NADP. The Km values for malate and NAD were 0.96 mM and 4.6 mM, respectively. NAD-dependent decarboxylation reaction was not reversible. The purified human liver malic enzyme catalyzed decarboxylation of oxaloacetate and NADPH-linked reduction of pyruvate at about 1.3% and 5.4% of the maximum rate of NADP-linked oxidative decarboxylation of malate, respectively. The results indicate that malic enzyme from human liver exhibits similar properties to the enzyme from animal liver.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Michel Neuburger  Roland Douce 《BBA》1980,589(2):176-189
Mitochondria isolated from spinach leaves oxidized malate by both a NAD+-linked malic enzyme and malate dehydrogenase. In the presence of sodium arsenite the accumulation of oxaloacetate and pyruvate during malate oxidation was strongly dependent on the malate concentration, the pH in the reaction medium and the metabolic state condition.Bicarbonate, especially at alkaline pH, inhibited the decarboxylation of malate by the NAD+-linked malic enzyme in vitro and in vivo. Analysis of the reaction products showed that with 15 mM bicarbonate, spinach leaf mitochondria excreted almost exclusively oxaloacetate.The inhibition by oxaloacetate of malate oxidation by spinach leaf mitochondria was strongly dependent on malate concentration, the pH in the reaction medium and on the metabolic state condition.The data were interpreted as indicating that: (a) the concentration of oxaloacetate on both sides of the inner mitochondrial membrane governed the efflux and influx of oxaloacetate; (b) the NAD+/NADH ratio played an important role in regulating malate oxidation in plant mitochondria; (c) both enzymes (malate dehydrogenase and NAD+-linked malic enzyme) were competing at the level of the pyridine nucleotide pool, and (d) the NAD+-linked malic enzyme provided NADH for the reversal of the reaction catalyzed by the malate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

16.
S K Ng  M Wong    I R Hamilton 《Journal of bacteriology》1982,150(3):1252-1258
Oxaloacetate decarboxylase was purified to 136-fold from the oral anaerobe Veillonella parvula. The purified enzyme was substantially free of contaminating enzymes or proteins. Maximum activity of the enzyme was exhibited at pH 7.0 for both carboxylation and decarboxylation. At this pH, the Km values for oxaloacetate and Mg2+ were at 0.06 and 0.17 mM, respectively, whereas the Km values for pyruvate, CO2, and Mg2+ were 3.3, 1.74, and 1.85 mM, respectively. Hyperbolic kinetics were observed with all of the aforementioned compounds. The Keq' was 2.13 X 10(-3) mM-1 favoring the decarboxylation of oxaloacetate. In the carboxylation step, avidin, acetyl coenzyme A, biotin, and coenzyme A were not required. ADP and NADH had no effect on either the carboxylation or decarboxylation step, but ATP inhibited the carboxylation step competitively and the decarboxylation step noncompetitively. These types of inhibition fitted well with the overall lactate metabolism of the non-carbohydrate-fermenting anaerobe.  相似文献   

17.
The membrane-bound beta-subunit of oxaloacetate decarboxylase from Klebsiella pneumoniae catalyzes the decarboxylation of carboxybiotin, which is coupled to Na(+) translocation and consumes a periplasmically derived proton. Upon site-directed mutagenesis of 20 polar and/or conserved residues within putative membrane-integral regions, the specific oxaloacetate decarboxylase activities were reduced to various extents, but only the enzyme with a Y229F mutation was completely inactive. We propose that Y229 is part of the network by which the proton of S382 is delivered to carboxybiotin, where it is consumed upon catalyzing the immediate decarboxylation of this acid-labile compound. Unlike S382 or D203, Y229 appears to be not involved in Na(+) binding, because in the Y229F orY229A mutants, the beta-subunit was protected from tryptic digestion by 50 mM NaCl like in the wild-type enzyme. Oxaloacetate decarboxylase with a betaC291E mutation was unstable in the absence of Na(+) and dissociated into an alpha-gamma subcomplex and the beta-subunit. The enzyme could only be isolated in the presence of 0. 5 M NaCl. These results are consistent with the notion that the beta-subunit changes its conformation upon Na(+) binding.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanism of oxaloacetate decarboxylase of Klebsiella aerogenes was investigated by enzyme kinetic methods. The activity of the decarboxylase was strictly dependent on the presence of Na+ or Li+ ions. For Li+ the Km was about 17 times higher and the Vmax about 4 times lower than for Na+. No activity was detectable at Na+ concentrations less than 5 microM. The curve for initial velocity versus Na+ concentration was hyperbolic. Initial velocity patterns with oxaloacetate or Na+ as the varied substrate at various fixed concentrations of the cosubstrate produced a pattern of parallel lines which is characteristic for a ping-pong mechanism. Product inhibition by pyruvate was competitive versus oxaloacetate and noncompetitive versus Na+. Oxalate, a dead-end inhibitor, was competitive versus oxaloacetate and uncompetitive versus Na+. The inhibition patterns are not consistent with a ping-pong mechanism comprising a single catalytic site but are analogous to kinetic patterns observed with the related biotin enzyme transcarboxylase, for which a catalytic mechanism at two different and independent sites has been demonstrated. The kinetic and other data support an oxaloacetate decarboxylase mechanism at two different sites of the enzyme with the intermediate formation of a carboxybiotin-enzyme complex. The first site is the carboxyltransferase which is localized on the alpha chain and the second site is the carboxybiotin-enzyme decarboxylase which is probably localized on the beta and/or gamma subunit. Binding studies with oxalate indicated that this is bound with high affinity to the alpha chain. The affinity was not affected by Na+ or by complex formation with the beta and gamma subunits. Oxalate protected the decarboxylase from heat inactivation but not from tryptic hydrolysis. The carboxybiotin-enzyme intermediate prepared from oxaloacetate decarboxylase with high specific activity was rapidly decarboxylated in the presence of Na+ ions alone. The effect of pyruvate on this reaction, noted previously, probably results from inhomogeneity of the enzyme preparation used which contained a considerable amount of free alpha subunits.  相似文献   

19.
20.
We report here a new mode of coupling between the chemical and vectorial reaction explored for the oxaloacetate decarboxylase Na+ pump from Klebsiella pneumoniae. The membrane-bound beta-subunit is responsible for the decarboxylation of carboxybiotin and the coupled translocation of Na+ ions across the membrane. The biotin prosthetic group which is attached to the alpha-subunit becomes carboxylated by carboxyltransfer from oxaloacetate. The two conserved aspartic acid residues within putative membrane-spanning domains of the beta-subunit (Asp149 and Asp203) were exchanged by site-directed mutagenesis. Mutants D149Q and D149E retained oxaloacetate decarboxylase and Na+ transport activities. Mutants D203N and D203E, however, had lost these two activities, but retained the ability to form the carboxybiotin enzyme. Direct participation of Asp203 in the catalysis of the decarboxylation reaction is therefore indicated. In addition, all previous and present data on the enzyme support a model in which the same aspartic acid residue provides a binding site for the metal ion catalysing its movement across the membrane. The model predicts that asp203 in its dissociated form binds Na+ and promotes its translocation, while the protonated residue transfers the proton to the acid-labile carboxybiotin which initiates its decarboxylation. Strong support for the model comes from the observation that Na+ transport by oxaloacetate decarboxylation is accompanied by H+ transport in the opposite direction. The inhibition of oxaloacetate decarboxylation by high Na+ concentrations in a pH-dependent manner is also in agreement with the model.  相似文献   

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