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1.
The subcellular distribution and kinetic properties of carbonic anhydrase were examined in red blood cells and gills of the lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, a primitive agnathan, and rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, a modern teleost, in relation to the evolution of rapid Cl/HCO 3 exchange in the membrane of red blood cells. In the lamprey, which either lacks or has minimal red cell Cl/HCO 3 exchange, there has been no compensatory incorporation of carbonic anhydrase into the membrane fraction of either the red cell or the gill. Carbonic anhydrase activity in red cells is exclusively cytoplasmic, and the single isozyme displays kinetic properties typical of the type I, slow turnover, isozyme. In the red blood cells of the trout, however, which possess high amounts of the band-3 Cl/HCO 3 exchange protein, the single carbonic anhydrase isozyme appears to be kinetically similar to the type II, fast turnover, isozyme. It thus appears that the type I isozyme present in the red blood cells of primitive aquatic vertebrates was replaced in modern teleosts by the kinetically more efficient type II isozyme only after the incorporation and expression of a significant amount of the band-3 exchange protein in the membrane of the red cell.Abbreviations BCIP 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate - CA carbonic anhydrase - DTT dithiothreitol - EDTA ethylenediaminetetra-acetate - E 0 total concentration of free enzyme - i fractional inhibition of enzyme activity - IU international units - K 1 inhibition constant - K M Michaelis constant - NBT nitro blue tetrazolium - NCP nitrocellulose paper - RBC red blood cell - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - V max maximal velocity of reaction  相似文献   

2.
Mass-spectrometric measurements of 18O exchange from 13C18O2 were used to follow changes in the intracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity of cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang, wild type and the ca-1 mutant during adaptation to air. With intact cells as well as with crude homogenates total intracellular CA activity in wild-type cells increased six to tenfold within 4 h after transferring cells from 5% CO2 (high inorganic carbon, Ci) to ambient air (air adapted). After that time the activity slowly declined to a level similar to that observed with cells which had been continuously grown in air (low-Ci grown). In the ca-1 mutant, total CA was induced to a similar extent during 4 h of adaptation; however, absolute activities were two to three times lower in ca-1 than in the wild type regardless of the CO2 supply. When crude extracts from wild-type cells were separated into soluble and insoluble fractions, each fraction contained about half of the internal CA activity. Within 4 h of adaptation, both forms of CA activity were simultaneously enhanced by nine to tenfold, reaching levels similar to those found in low-Cigrown cells. In contrast, in the ca-1 mutant the soluble CA activity was only enhanced by about eightfold while the level of insoluble CA was very low even in low-Ci cells. After isolation of intact chloroplasts from wild-type cells and further subfractionation, around 70–80% of total chloroplastic CA activity was found to be in the insoluble fraction while 17–20% remained in the soluble fraction. Both chloroplastic CA activities were inducible within the first 4 h of adaptation to air, with each of them being eight to ten times higher than in high-Ci algae. After that time their activities were similar to the corresponding CA values in low-Ci-grown cells. In contrast, plastids from high-Ci cells of the ca-1 mutant showed 40% less insoluble-CA activity compared to the wild type and this insoluble-CA activity was not increased at all by transferring algae to air. In addition, no soluble-CA activity was detected in chloroplasts from high-Ci and air-adapted ca-1 cells. These results indicate the presence of three intracellular CA activities in high-Ci air-adapted and low-Ci cells of the wild type and that two of them are associated with the chloroplasts. All three activities are completely induced within the first 4 h of adaptation to air in wild-type cells. In contrast, it was not possible to induce any of the chloroplastic CA activities in the ca-1 mutant. The possibility that the soluble chloroplastic CA represents a pyrenoid-located CA is discussed.This work is dedicated to Professor A. Wild on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

3.
The prokaryotic algal symbiont of ascidians, Prochloron sp., was found to exhibit carbonic anhydrase activity which is largely associated with the cell surface. This extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was inhibited, while the intracellular activity was not affected, by chloride or bromide. Acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide inhibited carbonic anhydrase activity with I50 values of 7×10-4 and 3×10-4M, respectively. These I50 values are similar to those observed for intracellular carbonic anhydrases of Synechococcus sp. PCC7942, Chlamydomonas reinhardii and spinach.Abbreviations AZA acetazolamide - CA carbonic anhydrase - chl chlorophyll - EZA ethozyzolamide - I50 concentration of an inhibitor required to cause 50% inhibition - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - U unit  相似文献   

4.
Using mass-spectrometric measurements of 18O exchange from 13C18O2 intracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity was investigated in the unicellular green algae Dunaliella tertiolecta and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii which were either grown on air enriched with 5% CO2 (high-Ci cells) or on air (low-Ci cells). In D. tertiolecta high- and low-Ci cells had detectable levels of internal CA activity when measured under in-vivo conditions and this activity could be split up into three distinct forms. One CA was not associated with the chloroplasts, while two isozymes were found to be located within the plastids. The activities of all intracellular CAs were always about twofold higher in low than in high-Ci cells of D. tertiolecta and the chloroplastic enzymes were completely induced within 4 h of adaptation to air. One of the chloroplastic CAs was found to be soluble the other was insoluble. In addition to the physical differences, MgSO4 in vitro caused a more than twofold stimulation of the soluble activity while the insoluble form of CA remained rather unaffected. In C. reinhardtii, MgSO4 increased the soluble CA activity by 346% and the concentration of MgSO4 required for half-maximum stimulation was between 10 and 15 mM. Again, the insoluble CA activity was not affected by MgSO4. Furthermore, the soluble isoenzyme was considerably more sensitive to ethoxyzolamide, a potent inhibitor of CA, than the insoluble enzyme. The concentration of inhibitor causing 50% inhibition of soluble CA activity was 110 and 85 μM ethoxyzolamide for D. tertiolecta and C. reinhardtii, respectively. From these data we conclude that the two chloroplast-associated CAs are distinct enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
By measuring 18O exchange from doubly labeled CO2 (13C18O18O), intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was studied with protoplasts and chloroplasts isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown either on air (low inorganic carbon [Ci]) or air enriched with 5% CO2 (high Ci). Intact low Ci protoplasts had a 10-fold higher carbonic anhydrase activity than did high Ci protoplasts. Application of dextran-bound inhibitor and quaternary ammonium sulfanilamide, both known as membrane impermeable inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase, had no influence on the catalysis of 18O exchange, indicating that cross-contamination with extracellular carbonic anhydrase was not responsible for the observed activity. This intracellular in vivo activity from protoplasts was inhibited by acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide. Intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was partly associated with intact chloroplasts isolated from high and low Ci cells, and the latter had a sixfold greater rate of catalysis. The presence of dextran-bound inhibitor had no effect on chloroplast-associated carbonic anhydrase, whereas 150 micromolar ethoxyzolamide caused a 61 to 67% inhibition of activity. These results indicate that chloroplastic carbonic anhydrase was located within the plastid and that it was relatively insensitive to ethoxyzolamide. Carbonic anhydrase activity in crude homogenates of protoplasts and chloroplasts was about six times higher in the low Ci than in high Ci preparations. Further separation into soluble and insoluble fractions together with inhibitor studies revealed that there are at least two different forms of intracellular carbonic anhydrase. One enzyme, which was rather insoluble and relatively insensitive to ethoxyzolamide, is likely an intrachloroplastic carbonic anhydrase. The second carbonic anhydrase, which was soluble and sensitive to ethoxyzolamide, is most probably located in an extrachloroplastic compartment.  相似文献   

6.
The activity and subcellular distribution of carbonic anhydrase in a coccolithophorid alga, CCMP 299, was examined. The enzyme could not be detected in crude cell homogenates but was present at high specific activity (27.5 unit·mg?1 protein) in chloroplasts (density, 1.14 g·cm?3) isolated in a sucrose gradient. The carbonic anhydrase activity was sensitive to known inhibitors. Inhibition at 50% (I50) was obtained with concentrations of 4.60 mM and 2.65 mM for acetazolamide and NaN3, respectively. These levels are more consistent with patterns of inhibition previously observed for chloroplastic (as compared to periplasmic) carbonic anhydrase. In this organism, carbonic anhydrase was localized in the chloroplast stroma. These findings are discussed in terms of the relationship among dissolved inorganic carbon interconversions, photosynthesis, and calcification.  相似文献   

7.
The carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) of Rhodospirillum rubrum has been purified to apparent homogeneity and some of its properties have been determined. The enzyme was cytoplasmic and was found only in photosynthetically grown cells. It had a molecular weight of about 28,000, and was apparently composed of two equal subunits. The amino acid composition was similar to that of other reported carbonic anhydrases except that the R. rubrum enzyme contained no arginine. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was 6.2 and the pH optimum was 7.5. It required Zn(II) for stability and enzymatic activity. The K m(CO2) was 80 mM. Typical carbonic anhydrase inhibition patterns were found with the R. rubrum enzyme. Strong acetazolamide and sulfanilamide inhibition confirmed the importance of Zn(II) for enzymatic activity as did the anionic inhibitors iodide, and azide. Other inhibitors indicated that histidine, sulfhydryl, lysine and serine residues were important for enzymatic activity.Abbreviation CA carbonic anhydrase In memory of R. Y. Stanier  相似文献   

8.
The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) in pea (Pisum sativum L., cv. Little Marvel) was studied immunologically using antibodies to specific subunits of mammalian PDC. Pea mitochondria and chloroplasts were both found to contain PDC, but distinct differences were noted in the subunit relative molecular mass (Mr) values of the individual enzymes in the mitochondrial and chloroplast PDC complexes. In particular, the mitochondrial E3 enzyme (dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase; EC 1.8.1.4) has a high subunit Mr value of 67 000, while the chloroplast E3 enzyme has a subunit Mr value of 52 000, similar in size to the prokaryotic, yeast ad mammalian E3 enzymes. In addition, component X (not previously noted in plant PDC) was also found to be present in two distinct forms in pea mitochondrial and chloroplast complexes. As in the case of E3, mitochondrial component X has a higher subunit Mr value (67 000) than component X from chloroplasts (48 000), which is similar in size to its mammalian counterpart. The subunit Mr value of E2 (dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase; EC 2.3.1.12) in both mitochondria and chloroplasts (50 000) is lower than that of mammalian E2 (74 000) but similar to that of yeast E2 (58 000), and is consistent with the presence of only a single lipoyl domain. Neither mitochondria nor chloroplasts showed any appreciable cross-reactivity with antiserum to mammalian E1 (pyruvate dehydrogenase; EC 1.2.4.1). However, mitochondria cross-reacted strongly with antiserum to yeast E1, giving a single band (Mr 41 000) which is thought to be E1a. Chloroplasts showed no cross-reactivity with yeast E1, indicating that the mitochondrial E1a subunit and its chloroplast equivalent are antigenically distinct polypeptides.Abbreviations E1 pyruvate dehydrogenase - E2 dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase - E3 dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase - Mr relative molecular mass - PDC pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate The financial support of the Agricultural and Food Research Council is gratefully acknowledged. We thank Steve Hill (Department of Botany, University of Edinburgh, UK) for advice on mitochondrial isolation, and James Neagle (Department of Biochemistry, University of Glasgow) and Ailsa Carmichael for helpful discussion.  相似文献   

9.
Two distinct dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenases (E3s, EC 1.8.1.4) have been detected in pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Little Marvel) leaf extracts and purified to at or near homogeneity. The major enzyme, a homodimer with an apparent subunit Mr value 56 000 (80–90% of overall activity), corresponded to the mitochondrial isoform studied previously, as confirmed by electrospray mass spectrometry and N-terminal sequence analysis. The minor activity (10–20%), which also behaved as a homodimer, copurified with chloroplasts, and displayed a lower subunit Mr value of 52 000 which was close to the Mr value of 52 614±9.89 Da determined by electrospray mass spectrometry. The plastidic enzyme was also present at low levels in root extracts where it represented only 1–2% of total E3 activity. The specific activity of the chloroplast enzyme was three-to fourfold lower than its mitochondrial counterpart. In addition, it displayed a markedly higher affinity for NAD+ and was more sensitive to product inhibition by NADH. It exhibited no activity with NADP+ as cofactor nor was it inhibited by the presence of high concentrations of NADP+ or NADPH. Antibodies to the mitochondrial enzyme displayed little or no cross-reactivity with its plastidic counterpart and available amino acid sequence data were also suggestive of only limited sequence similarity between the two enzymes. In view of the dual location of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex (PDC) in plant mitochondria and chloroplasts, it is likely that the distinct chloroplastic E3 is an integral component of plastidic PDC, thus representing the first component of this complex to be isolated and characterised to date.Abbreviations E1 pyruvate dehydrogenase - E2 dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase - E3 dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase - PDC pyruvate dehydrogenase complex - OGDC 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex - GDC glycine decarboxylase complex - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - TDP thiamine diphosphate - Mr relative molecular mass J.G.L. is grateful to the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), U.K. for continuing financial support. M.C. is the holder of a BBSRC-funded earmarked Ph.D. studentship.  相似文献   

10.
Phaseolin, the major seed storage protein of Phaseolus vulgaris L., is degraded in the cotyledons in the first 7–10 d following seed germination. We assayed cotyledon extracts for protease activity by using [3H]phaseolin as a substrate and then fractionated the digestion mixtures by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in order to identify the cleavage products. The cotyledons of 4-d-old seedlings contain an endopeptidase which cleaves the polypeptides of [3H]phaseolin (apparent molecular weights=51 000, 48 000, 46 000 and 43 000) into three discrete clusters of proteolytic fragments (M rs=27 000, 25 000 and 23 000). Endopeptidase activity is not detected in the cotyledons until the protein content of these organs starts to decline, shortly after the first day of seedling growth. Endopeptidase activity increases to a maximum level in the cotyledons of 5-d-old seedlings and then declines to a minimum value by day 10. The enzyme was purified 335-fold by ammonium-sulfate precipitation, organomercurial-agarose chromatography, gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatography. The endopeptidase constitutes 0.3% of the protein content in the cotyledons of 4-d-old seedlings. It is a cysteine protease with a single polypeptide chain (M r=30 000). Optimum hydrolysis of [3H]phaseolin occurs at pH 5. The enzyme is irreversibly inactivated at pH values above 7 and at temperatures above 45° C. The endopeptidase attacks only a limited number of peptide bonds in [3H]phaseolin, without causing any appreciable change in the native molecular weight of the storage protein. The endopeptidase is also able to hydrolyze the bean-seed lectin, phytohemagglutinin. Thus, this enzyme may play a general role in degrading cotyledon proteins of P. vulgaris following seed germination.Abbreviations Da dalton - DTT dithiothreitol - M r apparent molecular weight - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PHA phytohemagglutinin - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

11.
The effect of CO2 concentration on the rate of photorespiratory ammonium excretion and on glutamine synthetase (GS) and carbonic anhydrase (CA) isoenzymes activities has been studied in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cw-15 mutant (lacking cell wall) and in the high CO2-requiring double mutant cia-3/cw-15 (lacking cell wall and chloroplastic carbonic anhydrase). In cw-15 cells, both the extracellular (CAext) and chloroplastic (CAchl) CA activities increased after transferring cells from media bubbled with 5% CO2 in air (v/v, high-Ci cells) to 0.03% CO2 (low-Ci cells), whereas in cia-3/cw-15 cells only the CAext was induced after adaptation to low-Ci conditions and the CAchl activity was negligible. During adaptation to low-Ci conditions in the presence of 1 mM of l-methionine-D,L-sulfoximine (MSX), a specific inhibitor of GS activity, both mutant strains excreted photorespiratory ammonium into nitrogen free medium. In addition, the ammonium excretion rate by cw-15 in the presence of MSX was lower in cells grown and kept at 5% CO2 than in high-Ci cells adapted to 0.03% CO2. The double mutant cia-3/cw-15 excreted photorespiratory ammonium at a higher rate than did cw-15. Total GS activity (GS-1 plus GS-2) increased during adaptation to 0.03% CO2 in both strains of C. reinhardtii. However, only the activity GS-2, which is located in the chloroplast, increased during the adaptation to low CO2, whereas the cytosolic GS-1 levels remained similar in high and low-Ci cells. We conclude that: (1) cia-3/cw-15 cells lack chloroplastic CA activity; (2) in C. reinhardtii photorespiratory ammonium is refixed in the chloroplasts through the GS-2/GOGAT cycle; and (3) chloroplastic GS-2 concentration changes in response to the variation of environmental CO2 concentration.  相似文献   

12.
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13; GAPDH) from the cyanobacteriumAnacystis nidulans was activated up to five-fold by reduced glutathione (GSH) in the physiological concentration range (0.1–2 mM GSH). Non-physiological reductants, like dithiothreitol (DTT) and -mercaptoethanol, also activated the enzyme. Oxidized glutathione (GSSG) had no effect on the cyanobacterial GAPDH but treatment with H2O2 led to a rapid, reversible deactivation of both untreated and GSH-treated enzyme preparations. GSH reversed the inhibition induced by H2O2. An oligomeric form of the enzyme (apparentM r440,000) was dissociated by GSH into a lower-M r, more active enzyme form (M r200,000). The enzyme was shown to obey regular Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The activation of GAPDH by GSH was associated with a decrease inK m and an increase inV max values of the enzyme for 3-phosphoglycerate. GSH had virtually no effect on a GAPDH preparation isolated from corn chloroplasts and studied for comparison.Abbreviations GAPDH glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase - GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidized glutathione - DTT dithiothreitol  相似文献   

13.
Carbonic anhydrase activity of intactCommelina communis L. leaves was measured using mass spectrometry, by following the18O-exchange kinetics between18O-enriched carbon dioxide and water. A gas-diffusion model (Gerster, 1971, Planta97, 155–172) was used to interpret the18O-exchange kinetics and to determine two constants, one (k) related to the hydration of CO2 and the other (ke), related to the diffusion of CO2. Both constants were determined inCommelina communis L. leaves after stripping the lower epidermis to remove any stomatal influence. The hydration constant (k) was 17200 +2200 ·min–1 (mean±SD, 12 experiments), i.e., about 8 600 times the uncatalyzed hydration of CO2 in pure water, and was specifically inhibited by ethoxyzolamide, a powerful inhibitor of carbonic anhydrases, half-inhibition occurring around 10–5 Methoxyzolamide. The diffusion constant (ke) was 1.18±0.28·min–1 (mean±SD, 12 experiments) and was only slightly inhibited (about 20%) by ethoxyzolamide. Carbonic anhydrase activity of stripped leaves was not affected by the leaf water status (up to 50% relative water deficits), was strongly inhibited by monovalent anions such as Cl or NO 3 , and decreased by about 50% when the photon flux density during growth was increased from 100 to 500 mol photons·m–2·s–1. By studying the effect of ethoxyzolamide (10–4 M) on photosynthetic O2 exchange, measured using18O2 and mass spectrometry, we found that inhibition of carbonic anhydrase activity by 92–95% had little effect on the response curves of net O2 evolution to increased CO2 concentrations. Ethoxyzolamide had no effect on the photosynthetic electron-transport rate, measured as gross O2 photosynthesis at high CO2 concentration (>350 l·–1), but was found to increase both gross O2 photosynthesis and O2 uptake at lower CO2 levels. The chloroplastic CO2 concentration calculated from O2-exchange data was not significantly modified by ethoxyzolamide. We conclude from these results that, under normal conditions of photosynthesis, most of the carbonic anhydrase activity is not involved in CO2 assimilation. Measurement of carbonic anhydrase activity using18O-isotope exchange therefore provides a suitable model to study the in-vivo regulation of this chloroplastic enzyme in plants submitted to various environmental conditions.Abbreviations CA carbonic anhydrase - Ccc chloroplastic CO2 concentration - Ce external CO2 concentration - EZA ethoxyzolamide - k CO2 hydration rate constant - ke CO2 diffusion rate constan - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - Rubisco ribulose-1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase - RWD relative water deficit The authors wish to thank P. Carrier for technical assistance with mass-spectrometric experiments and Dr. P. Thibault for helpful suggestions and comments. Dr. A. Vavasseur is gratefully acknowledged for supplyingCommelima communis. cultures. P.C., P.T. and A.V. are all from the CEA, Département de Physiologie Végétale et Ecosystèmes, Cadarache, France.  相似文献   

14.
Mesophyll protoplasts of pea required only 74.1 μM CO2 for maximal photosynthesis, unlike chloroplasts, which required up to 588 μM CO2. Such a markedly low requirement for CO2 could be because of an internal carbon source and/or a CO2 concentrating mechanism in mesophyll protoplasts. Ethoxyzolamide (EZA), an inhibitor of internal carbonic anhydrase (CA) suppressed photosynthesis by mesophyll protoplasts at low CO2 (7.41 μM) but had no significant effect at high CO2 (741 μM). However, acetazolamide, another inhibitor of CA, did not exert as much dramatic effect as EZA. Three photorespiratory inhibitors, aminoacetonitrile or glycine hydroxamate (GHA) or aminooxyacetate inhibited markedly photosynthesis at low CO2 but not at high CO2. Inhibitors of glycolysis or tricarboxylic acid cycle (NaF, sodium malonate) or phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (3,3‐dichloro‐2‐dihydroxy phosphinoyl‐methyl‐2‐propenoate) had no significant effect on photosynthesis. The CO2 requirement of protoplast photosynthesis and the sensitivity of photosynthesis to EZA were much higher at low oxygen (65 nmol ml?1) than that at normal oxygen (212 nmol ml?1). In contrast, the inhibitory effect of photorespiratory inhibitors on protoplast photosynthesis was similar in both normal and low oxygen medium. The marked elevation of glycine/serine ratio at low O2 or in presence of GHA confirmed the suppression of photorespiratory decarboxylation by GHA. While demonstrating interesting difference between the response of protoplasts and chloroplasts to CO2, we suggest that photorespiration could be a significant source of CO2 for photosynthesis in mesophyll protoplasts at limiting CO2 and at atmospheric levels of oxygen. Obviously, carbonic anhydrase is essential to concentrate or retain CO2 in mesophyll cells.  相似文献   

15.
S. K. Goers  R. A. Jensen 《Planta》1984,162(2):109-116
Two isoenzymes of chorismate mutase (EC 5.4.99.5) were isolated and partially purified from leaves of diploid (2n=24) Nicotiana silvestris Speg. et Comes and from isogenic cells in a suspension culture originally established from haploid tissue. An isoenzyme denoted CM-1 (M r=52,000) accounted for the major fraction of total activity recovered from suspension-cultured cells, while isoenzyme CM-2 (M r=65,000) represented the major fraction of activity recovered from green leaf tissue. The ratio of isoenzyme levels from these two sources differed more than 20-fold. The subcellular location of isoenzyme CM-1 is known to be in the chloroplasts of green leaves or in proplastids of cultured cells, while isoenzyme CM-2 is located in the cytosol. Both isoenzymes were stable during partial purification, possessed broad pH optima for catalysis between 6.0 and 8.0, and were active without denaturation at temperatures at least as high as 45° C. Thiol reagents were unnecessary for either stability or activity of both isoenzymes. The affinity of isoenzyme CM-2 for substrate (K m=0.24 mM) was almost an order of magnitude better than that of CM-1. The kinetic behavior of isoenzyme CM-1 was influenced by pH, while that of isoenzyme CM-2 was not. At pH 7.2, hyperbolic substrate-saturation curves (K m=1.7 mM) were obtained for isoenzyme CM-1. At pH 6.1, however, isoenzyme CM-1 displayed relatively weak positive cooperativity, Hill plots yielding an n value of 1.2 At pH 6.1 the half-saturation ([S]0.5) value was 2.5 mM.Abbreviations DEAE diethylaminoethyl - M r molecular weight  相似文献   

16.
We have isolated and characterised a cDNA clone encoding the cytosolic form of carbonic anhydrase in the leaves of Flaveria bidentis, a C4 dicotyledonous plant. The deduced amino acid sequence is similar to the carbonic anhydrase found in the chloroplasts of C3 dicotyledonous plants. Western blot analysis of crude leaf extracts of F. bidentis indicates that the leader sequence (equivalent to the transit peptide of the chloroplastic form of CA found in C3 plants) is not removed following translation of mRNA.  相似文献   

17.
Work using a full-length cDNA clone has revealed that the plastid-located glutamine synthetase (GS) of Phaseolus vulgaris is encoded by a single nuclear gene. Nucleotide sequencing has shown that this cDNA is more closely related to a cDNA encoding the plastidic GS of Pisum sativum than to cDNAs encoding three different cytosolic GS subunits of P. vulgaris. The plastid GS subunits are initially synthesized as higher M r (47000) precursors containing an N-terminal presequence of about 50 amino acids which is structurally similar to the presequences of other nuclear-encoded chloroplast proteins. The precursor has been synthesized in vitro and is imported by isolated pea chloroplasts and processed to two polypeptides of the same size as native P. vulgaris chloroplast GS subunits (M r 42000). Experiments with fusion proteins show that the N-terminal 68 amino acids of this precursor allow the cytosolic GS subunit also to be imported and processed by isolated chloroplasts. Polyadenylated mRNA specifically related to the plastidic GS gene is most highly abundant in chloroplast-containing organs (leaves and stems) but is also detectable in roots and nodules.  相似文献   

18.
Soluble carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) inducible by low levels of CO2 was purified from the unicellular green alga Chlorella sorokiniana grown at alkaline pH. The purified CA had a specific activity of 2,300 units (mg protein)−1. The molecular mass of the CA was found to be 100 kDa by non-dissociating (native)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and 50 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The 50-kDa subunit was recognized by concanavalin A. These results suggest that the protein has a dimeric form with two 50-kDa subunits that are glycosylated in an asparagine-linked manner. The native CA was revealed by isoelectric focusing to be a very acidic protein with an isoelectric point of 4.2. About 60% of the CA activity was inhibited by 0.5 M NaCl. The enzyme was inactivated over 95% by preincubation with 50 mM dithiothreitol but not with 1 mM dithiothreitol. After partial amino acid sequence analysis, a cDNA clone of the CA was isolated and characterized. The cloned cDNA fragment encoded a 348-amino-acid polypeptide (36,709 Da) including an NH2-terminal hydrophobic signal peptide composed of 35 amino acids (3,725 Da). Conserved regions of sequences found in animal CAs, in the periplasmic (pCA) and the intracellular CAs of Chlamydomonas, and in the plasma-membrane-bound CA of Dunaliella (Dca) were also found in this Chlorella CA. The signal sequence was significantly homologous to the pCA and the Dca. The internal signal sequence between the large and the small subunits reported for pCA was not found in this Chlorella CA. The soluble CA of this alga was an α-type CA with salt-sensitive, periplasm-locating and acidic properties and very different from pCA and Dca with their salt-sensitive/neutral and salt-resistant/acidic properties, respectively. Received: 25 May 1998 / Accepted: 9 July 1998  相似文献   

19.
Summary The activity of carbonic anhydrase (CA), which catalyses the equilibrium CO2H++HCO 3 - , was investigated in various tissues implicated in the excretion of CO2 by Birgus latro. Carbonic anhydrase was detected in the water-soluble fraction of gill tissue but also occurred in association with lipids (membrane bound). This is consistent with a CO2 excretory role and an ion regulation function for the gills. In the lungs (branchial chamber lining) CA activity was found in the membrane bound fraction but was not detected in the soluble fraction, suggesting that the lung CA is not important for ion regulation. The specific CA activity of gill tissue homogenate (A=1.8±0.7·mg-1) was higher than that measured for lung homogenates (A=0.4±0.2·mg-1), but when the whole organ was considered the total CA activity in the lungs was not significantly different from total CA activity in the gills. In comparison to aquatic and amphibious crustaceans the specific activity of carbonic anhydrase in the lungs was high (25% cf. gill activity). This CA activity in the lungs could be correlated with significant CO2 excretion by the lungs. CA may be retained in the branchial tissue as an adjunct to ion reabsorption by the gills.  相似文献   

20.
The activities of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase and of carbonic anhydrase were studied in cell-free extracts of two symbiotic Chlorella strains isolated from Paramecium bursaria and from Spongilla sp., and of two nonsymbiotic strains of Chlorella (Chlorella fusca and Chlorella vulgaris) cultivated at varied CO2-concentrations. The symbiotic Chlorella of Paramecium bursaria differs distinctly from the other Chlorella strains by a higher activity of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, which is independent of the actual CO2-concentration, and by a lack of carbonic anhydrase activity. These properties are discussed with respect to their ecological significance.Abbreviations CA carbonic anhydrase - Pbi Paramecium bursaria isolate - RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate Dedicated to Prof. Dr. André Pirson on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

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