首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Hydroxylaminobenzene mutase is the enzyme that converts intermediates formed during initial steps in the degradation of nitrobenzene to a novel ring-fission lower pathway in Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes JS45. The mutase catalyzes a rearrangement of hydroxylaminobenzene to 2-aminophenol. The mechanism of the reactions and the properties of the enzymes are unknown. In crude extracts, the hydroxylaminobenzene mutase was stable at SDS concentrations as high as 2%. A procedure including Hitrap-SP, Hitrap-Q and Cu(II)-chelating chromatography was used to partially purify the enzyme from an Escherichia coli clone. The partially purified enzyme was eluted in the void volume of a Superose-12 gel-filtration column even in the presence of 0.05% SDS in 25 mM Tris/HCl buffer, which indicated that it was highly associated. When the enzymatic conversion of hydroxylaminobenzene to 2-aminophenol was carried out in 18O-labeled water, the product did not contain 18O, as determined by GC-MS. The results indicate that the reaction proceeded by intramolecular transfer of the hydroxy group from the nitrogen to the C-2 position of the ring. The mechanism is clearly different from the intermolecular transfer of the hydroxy group in the non-enzymatic Bamberger rearrangement of hydroxylaminobenzene to 4-aminophenol and in the enzymatic hydroxymutation of chorismate to isochorismate.  相似文献   

2.
Degradation of nitrobenzene by a Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes.   总被引:30,自引:3,他引:27       下载免费PDF全文
A Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes able to use nitrobenzene as the sole source of carbon, nitrogen, and energy was isolated from soil and groundwater contaminated with nitrobenzene. The range of aromatic substrates able to support growth was limited to nitrobenzene, hydroxylaminobenzene, and 2-aminophenol. Washed suspensions of nitrobenzene-grown cells removed nitrobenzene from culture fluids with the concomitant release of ammonia. Nitrobenzene, nitrosobenzene, hydroxylaminobenzene, and 2-aminophenol stimulated oxygen uptake in resting cells and in extracts of nitrobenzene-grown cells. Under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, crude extracts converted nitrobenzene to 2-aminophenol with oxidation of 2 mol of NADPH. Ring cleavage, which required ferrous iron, produced a transient yellow product with a maximum A380. In the presence of NAD, the product disappeared and NADH was produced. In the absence of NAD, the ring fission product was spontaneously converted to picolinic acid, which was not further metabolized. These results indicate that the catabolic pathway involves the reduction of nitrobenzene to nitrosobenzene and then to hydroxylaminobenzene; each of these steps requires 1 mol of NADPH. An enzyme-mediated Bamberger-like rearrangement converts hydroxylaminobenzene to 2-aminophenol, which then undergoes meta ring cleavage to 2-aminomuconic semialdehyde. The mechanism for release of ammonia and subsequent metabolism are under investigation.  相似文献   

3.
The peroxisomal acyl/alkyl dihydroxyacetone-phosphate reductase (EC 1.1.1.101) was solubilized and purified 5500-fold from guinea pig liver. The enzyme could be solubilized by detergents only at high ionic strengths in presence of the cosubstrate NADPH. Peroxisomes, isolated from liver by a Nycodenz step density gradient centrifugation, were first treated with 0.2% Triton X-100 to remove the soluble and a large fraction of the membrane-bound proteins. The enzyme was solubilized from the resulting residue by 0.05% Triton X-100, 1 M KCl, 0.3 mM NADPH, and 2 mM dithiothreitol in Tris-HCl buffer (10 mM) at pH 7.5. The enzyme was further purified after precipitating it by dialyzing out the KCl and then resolubilized with 0.8% octyl glucoside in 1 M KCl (plus NADPH and dithiothreitol). The second solubilized enzyme was purified to homogeneity (370-fold from peroxisomes) by gel filtration in a Sepharose CL-6B column followed by affinity chromatography on an NADPH-agarose gel matrix. NADPH-agarose was prepared by reacting periodate-oxidized NADP+ to adipic acid dihydrazide-agarose and then reducing the immobilized NADP+ with NaBH4. On sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the purified enzyme showed a single homogeneous band with an apparent molecular weight of 60,000. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was estimated to be 75,000 by size exclusion chromatography. Amino acid analysis of the purified protein showed that hydrophobic amino acid comprised 27% of the molecule. The Km value of the purified enzyme for hexadecyldihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) was 21 microM, and the Vmax value in the presence of 0.07 mM NADPH was 67 mumol/min/mg. The turnover number (Kcat), after correcting for the isotope effect of the cosubstrate NADP3H, was calculated to be 6,000 mol/min/mol of enzyme, assuming the enzyme has a molecular weight of 60,000. The purified enzyme also used palmitoyldihydroxyactone phosphate as a substrate (Km = 15.4 microM, and Vmax = 75 mumol/min/mg). Palmitoyl-DHAP competitively inhibited the reduction of hexadecyl-DHAP, indicating that the same enzyme catalyzes the reduction of both acyl-DHAP and alkyl-DHAP. NADH can substitute for NADPH, but the Km of the enzyme for NADH (1.7 mM) is much higher than that for NADPH (20 microM). The purified enzyme is competitively (against NADPH) inhibited by NADP+ and palmitoyl-CoA. The enzyme is stable on storage at 4 degrees C in the presence of NADPH and dithiothreitol.  相似文献   

4.
Z He  J C Spain 《Applied microbiology》1997,63(12):4839-4843
Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes JS45 utilizes nitrobenzene as the sole source of nitrogen, carbon, and energy. Previous studies have shown that degradation of nitrobenzene involves the reduction of nitrobenzene to nitrosobenzene and hydroxylaminobenzene, followed by rearrangement to 2-aminophenol, which then undergoes meta ring cleavage to 2-aminomuconic semialdehyde. In the present paper, we report the enzymatic reactions responsible for the release of ammonia after ring cleavage. 2-Aminomuconic semialdehyde was oxidized to 2-aminomuconate in the presence of NAD by enzymes in crude extracts. 2-Aminomuconate was subsequently deaminated stoichiometrically to 4-oxalocrotonic acid. No cofactors are required for the deamination. Two enzymes, 2-aminomuconic semialdehyde dehydrogenase and a novel 2-aminomuconate deaminase, distinguished by partial purification of the crude extracts, catalyzed the two reactions. 4-Oxalocrotonic acid was further degraded to pyruvate and acetaldehyde. The key enzyme, 2-aminomuconate deaminase, catalyzed the hydrolytic deamination that released ammonia, which served as the nitrogen source for growth of the organism.  相似文献   

5.
Previous studies have shown that the biodegradation of nitrobenzene by Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes JS45 proceeds by the reduction of nitrobenzene through nitrosobenzene and hydroxylaminobenzene, followed by rearrangement to 2-aminophenol, which then undergoes meta ring cleavage. We report here the isolation of a Comamonas sp. that uses an oxidative pathway for the complete mineralization of nitrobenzene. The isolate, designated strain JS765, uses nitrobenzene as a sole source of carbon, nitrogen, and energy. Nitrobenzene-grown cells oxidized nitrobenzene, with the stoichiometric release of nitrite. Extracts of nitrobenzene-grown JS765 showed high levels of catechol 2,3-dioxygenase activity that were not abolished by heating the cell extracts to 60(deg)C for 10 min. The ring cleavage product had an absorbance maximum at 375 nm, consistent with that of 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde. Both NAD-dependent dehydrogenase and NAD-independent hydrolase activities towards 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde were induced in extracts of nitrobenzene-grown cells. Catechol accumulated in the reaction mixture when cells preincubated with 3-chlorocatechol were incubated with nitrobenzene. Conversion of nitrobenzene to catechol by induced cells in the presence of 3-chlorocatechol and (sup18)O(inf2) demonstrated the simultaneous incorporation of two atoms of oxygen, which indicated that the initial reaction was dioxygenation. The results indicate that the catabolic pathway involves an initial dioxygenase attack on nitrobenzene with the release of nitrite and formation of catechol, which is subsequently degraded by a meta cleavage pathway.  相似文献   

6.
D-Galacturonic acid reductase, a key enzyme in ascorbate biosynthesis, was purified to homogeneity from Euglena gracilis. The enzyme was a monomer with a molecular mass of 38-39 kDa, as judged by SDS-PAGE and gel filtration. Apparently it utilized NADPH with a Km value of 62.5+/-4.5 microM and uronic acids, such as D-galacturonic acid (Km=3.79+/-0.5 mM) and D-glucuronic acid (Km=4.67+/-0.6 mM). It failed to catalyze the reverse reaction with L-galactonic acid and NADP(+). The optimal pH for the reduction of D-galacturonic acid was 7.2. The enzyme was activated 45.6% by 0.1 mM H(2)O(2), suggesting that enzyme activity is regulated by cellular redox status. No feedback regulation of the enzyme activity by L-galactono-1,4-lactone or ascorbate was observed. N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis revealed that the enzyme is closely related to the malate dehydrogenase families.  相似文献   

7.
delta 1-Pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase (L-proline:NAD(P)+ 5-oxidoreductase, EC 1.5.1.2) has been purified from rat lens and biochemically characterized. Purification steps included ammonium sulfate fractionation, affinity chromatography on Amicon Matrex Orange A, and gel filtration with Sephadex G-200. These steps were carried out at ambient temperature (22 degrees C) in 20 mM sodium phosphate/potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.5) containing 10% glycerol, 7 mM mercaptoethanol and 0.5 mM EDTA. The enzyme, purified to apparent homogeneity, displayed a molecular weight of 240 000 by gel chromatography and 30 000 by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This suggests that the enzyme is composed of eight subunits. The purified enzyme displays a pH optimum between 6.5 and 7.1 and is inhibited by heavy metal ions and p-chloromercuribenzoate. Kinetic studies indicated Km values of 0.62 mM and 0.051 mM for DL-pyrroline-5-carboxylate as substrate when NADH and NADPH respectively were employed as cofactors. The Km values for the cofactors NADH and NADPH with DL-pyrroline-5-carboxylate as substrate were 0.37 mM and 0.006 mM, respectively. With L-pyrroline-5-carboxylate as substrate, Km values of 0.21 mM and 0.022 mM were obtained for NADH and NADPH, respectively. Enzyme activity is potentially inhibited by NADP+ and ATP, suggesting that delta 1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase may be regulated by the energy level and redox state of the lens.  相似文献   

8.
L Xun  C S Orser 《Journal of bacteriology》1991,173(14):4447-4453
A pentachlorophenol (PCP) hydroxylase which catalyzed the conversion of PCP to 2,3,5,6-tetrachlorohydroquinone and released iodide from triiodophenol in the presence of NADPH and oxygen was identified. The enzyme was purified by protamine sulfate precipitation, ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydrophobic chromatography, anion-exchange chromatography, gel filtration chromatography, and crystallization. The enzyme was a monomer with a molecular weight of 63,000. Under certain conditions, dimer and multimer conformations were also observed. The pI of the enzyme was pH 4.3. The optimal conditions for activity were a pH of 7.5 to 8.5 and a temperature of 40 degrees C. Each enzyme molecule contained one flavin adenine dinucleotide molecule. The Km for PCP was 30 microM and the Vmax was 16 mumol/min/mg of protein. The enzymatic reaction required 2 mol of NADPH per mol of halogenated substrate. On the basis of the data we present, it is likely that PCP hydroxylase is a flavoprotein monooxygenase. The addition of flavins to the reaction mixture did not stimulate the enzymatic reaction; however, we identified the photodegradation of triiodophenol and tribromophenol, but not PCP, by flavin mononucleotide or riboflavin and light.  相似文献   

9.
Biliverdin reductase was purified from pig spleen soluble fraction to a purity of more than 90% as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme was a monomer protein with a molecular weight of about 34,000. Its isoelectric point was at 6.1-6.2. The enzyme was strictly specific to biliverdin and no other oxiodoreductase activities could be detected in the purified enzyme preparation. The purified enzyme could utilize both NADPH and NADH as electron donors for the reduction of biliverdin. However, there were considerable differences in the kinetic properties of the NADPH-dependent and the NADH-dependent biliverdin reductase activities: Km for NADPH was below 5 microM while that for NADH was 1.5-2 mM; the pH optimum of the reaction with NADPH was 8.5 whereas that of the reaction with NADH was 6.9; Km for biliverdin in the NADPH system was 0.3 microM whereas that in the NADH system was 1-2 microM. In addition, both the NADPH-dependent and NADH-dependent activities were inhibited by excess biliverdin, but this inhibition was far more pronounced in the NADPH system than in the NADH system. IX alpha-biliverdin was the most effective substrate among the four biliverdin isomers, and the dimethylester of IX alpha-biliverdin could not serve as a substrate. Biliverdin reductase was also purified about 300-fold from rat liver soluble fraction. The hepatic enzyme was also a monomer protein with a molecular weight of 34,000 and showed properties quite similar to those of the splenic enzyme as regards the biliverdin reductase reaction. The isoelectric point of the hepatic enzyme, however, was about 5.4. It was assumed that NADPH rather than NADH is the physiological electron donor in the intracellular reduction of IX alpha-biliverdin. The stimulatory effects of bovine and human serum albumins on the biliverdin reductase reactions were also examined.  相似文献   

10.
A nitrophenol oxygenase which stoichiometrically converted ortho-nitrophenol (ONP) to catechol and nitrite was isolated from Pseudomonas putida B2 and purified. The substrate specificity of the enzyme was broad and included several halogen- and alkyl-substituted ONPs. The oxygenase consisted of a single polypeptide chain with a molecular weight of 58,000 (determined by gel filtration) or 65,000 (determined on a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel). The enzymatic reaction was NADPH dependent, and one molecule of oxygen was consumed per molecule of ONP converted. Enzymatic activity was stimulated by magnesium or manganese ions, whereas the addition of flavin adenine dinucleotide, flavin mononucleotide, or reducing agents had no effect. The apparent Kms for ONP and NADPH were 8 and 140 microM, respectively. 2,4-Dinitrophenol competitively (Ki = 0.5 microM) inhibited ONP turnover. The optimal pH for enzyme stability and activity was in the range of 7.5 to 8.0. At 40 degrees C, the enzyme was totally inactivated within 2 min; however, in the presence of 1 mM ONP, 40% of the activity was recovered, even after 10 min. Enzymatic activity was best preserved at -20 degrees C in the presence of 50% glycerol.  相似文献   

11.
Rat kidney was shown to contain two NADPH-linked aldehyde reductases (alcohol:NADP+) oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.2) with different substrate affinities. The high-Km aldehyde reductase, which was purified to apparent homogeneity, had a molecular weight of 32 000 as determined by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration, and of 37 000 by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The purified enzyme reduced various aliphatic aldehydes of different carbon-chain lengths besides many chemicals containing aldehyde groups. The Km values for n-hexadecanal and n-octadecanal were 8 microM and 4 microM, respectively. Bovine serum albumin (1.8 mM) stimulated the reduction of n-hexadecanal and n-octadecanal, and increased the Vmax values by about 15-fold without changing the Km values. The kidney enzyme was not distinguishable from the brain and liver high-Km aldehyde reductases in mobility on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, immunological properties, peptide maps or substrate specificity.  相似文献   

12.
The reduction of N5,N10-methylenetrahydromethanopterin (CH2 = H4MPT) to N5-methyltetrahydromethanopterin (CH3-H4MPT) is an intermediate step in methanogenesis from CO2 and H2. The reaction is catalyzed by CH2 = H4MPT reductase. The enzyme from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (strain Marburg) was found to be specific for reduced coenzyme F420 as electron donor; neither NADH or NADPH nor reduced viologen dyes could substitute for the reduced 5-deazaflavin. The reductase was purified over 100-fold to apparent homogeneity. Sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed only one protein band at the 36-kDa position. The apparent molecular mass of the native enzyme was determined by gel filtration to be in the order of 150 kDa. The purified enzyme was colourless. It did not contain flavin or iron. The ultraviolet visible spectrum was almost identical to that of albumin, suggesting the absence of a chromophoric prosthetic group. Reciprocal plots of the enzyme activity versus the substrate concentration at different constant concentrations of the second substrate yielded straight lines intersecting at one point on the abscissa to the left of the vertical axis. This intersecting pattern is characteristic of a ternary complex catalytic mechanism. The Km for CH2 = H4MPT and for the reduced coenzyme F420 were determined to be 0.3 mM and 3 microM, respectively. Vmax was 6000 mumol.min-1.mg protein-1 (kcat = 3600 s-1). The CH2 = H4MPT reductase was stable in the presence of air; at 4 C less than 10% activity was lost within 24 h.  相似文献   

13.
Soluble formate dehydrogenase from Methanobacterium formicicum was purified 71-fold with a yield of 35%. Purification was performed anaerobically in the presence of 10 mM sodium azide which stabilized the enzyme. The purified enzyme reduced, with formate, 50 mumol of methyl viologen per min per mg of protein and 8.2 mumol of coenzyme F420 per min per mg of protein. The apparent Km for 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin, a hydrolytic derivative of coenzyme F420, was 10-fold greater (63 microM) than for coenzyme F420 (6 microM). The purified enzyme also reduced flavin mononucleotide (Km = 13 microM) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (Km = 25 microM) with formate, but did not reduce NAD+ or NADP+. The reduction of NADP+ with formate required formate dehydrogenase, coenzyme F420, and coenzyme F420:NADP+ oxidoreductase. The formate dehydrogenase had an optimal pH of 7.9 when assayed with the physiological electron acceptor coenzyme F420. The optimal reaction rate occurred at 55 degrees C. The molecular weight was 288,000 as determined by gel filtration. The purified formate dehydrogenase was strongly inhibited by cyanide (Ki = 6 microM), azide (Ki = 39 microM), alpha,alpha-dipyridyl, and 1,10-phenanthroline. Denaturation of the purified formate dehydrogenase with sodium dodecyl sulfate under aerobic conditions revealed a fluorescent compound. Maximal excitation occurred at 385 nm, with minor peaks at 277 and 302 nm. Maximal fluorescence emission occurred at 455 nm.  相似文献   

14.
An enzyme which catalyzes the reduction of methylglyoxal to lactaldehyde has been isolated and purified from goat liver to apparent homogeneity. NADH was found to be a better substrate than NADPH for methylglyoxal reduction. Stoichiometrically equivalent amounts of lactaldehyde and NAD are formed from methylglyoxal and NADH. Enzyme activity was located only in the soluble supernatant fractions of liver cells. Of the various carbonyl compounds tested, methylglyoxal was found to be the best substrate. The pH optimum of the enzyme was found to be 6.5, and Km for methylglyoxal was 0.4 mM. The molecular weight of the enzyme was found to be 89000 by gel filtration on a Sephadex G-200 column. Electrophoresis on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel revealed that the enzyme is composed of two subunits. The enzyme is highly sensitive to sulfhydryl group reagents. The inactivation by p-chloromercuribenzoate could be substantially protected by methylglyoxal in combination with NADH, indicating a possible involvement of one or more sulfhydryl group(s) at the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
A cytosolic aldo-keto reductase was purified from Saccharomyces cerevisiae ATCC 26602 to homogeneity by affinity chromatography, chromatofocusing, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. The relative molecular weights of the aldo-keto reductase as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and size exclusion chromatography were 36,800 and 35,000, respectively, indicating that the enzyme is monomeric. Amino acid composition and N-terminal sequence analysis revealed that the enzyme is closely related to the aldose reductases of xylose-fermenting yeasts and mammalian tissues. The enzyme was apparently immunologically unrelated to the aldose reductases of other xylose-fermenting yeasts. The aldo-keto reductase is NADPH specific and catalyzes the reduction of a variety of aldehydes. The best substrate for the enzyme is the aromatic aldehyde p-nitrobenzaldehyde (Km = 46 microM; kcat/Km = 52,100 s-1 M-1), whereas among the aldoses, DL-glyceraldehyde was the preferred substrate (Km = 1.44 mM; kcat/Km = 1,790 s-1 M-1). The enzyme failed to catalyze the reduction of menadione and p-benzoquinone, substrates for carbonyl reductase. The enzyme was inhibited only slightly by 2 mM sodium valproate and was activated by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The optimum pH of the enzyme is 5. These data indicate that the S. cerevisiae aldo-keto reductase is a monomeric NADPH-specific reductase with strong similarities to the aldose reductases.  相似文献   

16.
The NADPH oxidase is a multicomponent enzyme system that produces the reduced oxygen species essential for bacterial killing by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). Study of the oxidase has typically been carried out in cell-free systems in which Km values of 20-150 microM NADPH have been reported. However, when compared with affinities reported for other flavoprotein dehydrogenases and when considering the cellular concentration of NADPH/NADP+ of approximately 35 microM, the reported affinity of the oxidase for NADPH appears low. To investigate this apparent discrepancy we have studied the kinetics of NADPH oxidase activation in situ in human PMN permeabilized with Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin. alpha-Toxin permeabilization of human PMN did not initiate NADPH oxidase activation at physiologic concentrations of NADPH. If permeabilized cells were stimulated with 1 microM formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine, 10 microM guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate), 0.5 mM Ca2+, 5 micrograms/ml cytochalasin B in the presence of varying concentrations of NADPH, we were able to demonstrate activation of the oxidase complex as shown by superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of cytochrome c. In this system we determined that the Km for oxidase activation was 4-7 microM NADPH, a 4-10-fold decrease from reported values. The oxidase was the enzyme being studied as shown by the absence of enzymatic activity in patients with chronic granulomatous disease. In addition, if the enzyme was initially activated in permeabilized cells, the cells homogenized, and the Km for the oxidase determined in a cell-free system, the observed Km reverted to previously reported values (36 microM). These results indicate that NADPH oxidase, studied in situ, has a significantly higher substrate affinity than that observed in isolated membranes and, moreover, indicate that substrate affinity is optimal for catalysis at reported concentrations of cytosolic NADPH.  相似文献   

17.
An NAD+-linked 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase was purified to homogeneity from a fungus, Cylindrocarpon radicicola ATCC 11011 by ion exchange, gel filtration, and hydrophobic chromatographies. The purified preparation of the dehydrogenase showed an apparent molecular weight of 58,600 by gel filtration and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. SDS-gel electrophoresis gave Mr = 26,000 for the identical subunits of the protein. The amino-terminal residue of the enzyme protein was determined to be glycine. The enzyme catalyzed the oxidation of 17 beta-hydroxysteroids to the ketosteroids with the reduction of NAD+, which was a specific hydrogen acceptor, and also catalyzed the reduction of 17-ketosteroids with the consumption of NADH. The optimum pH of the dehydrogenase reaction was 10 and that of the reductase reaction was 7.0. The enzyme had a high specific activity for the oxidation of testosterone (Vmax = 85 mumol/min/mg; Km for the steroid = 9.5 microM; Km for NAD+ = 198 microM at pH 10.0) and for the reduction of androstenedione (Vmax = 1.8 mumol/min/mg; Km for the steroid = 24 microM; Km for NADH = 6.8 microM at pH 7.0). In the purified enzyme preparation, no activity of 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, delta 5-3-ketosteroid-4,5-isomerase, or steroid ring A-delta-dehydrogenase was detected. Among several steroids tested, only 17 beta-hydroxysteroids such as testosterone, estradiol-17 beta, and 11 beta-hydroxytestosterone, were oxidized, indicating that the enzyme has a high specificity for the substrate steroid. The stereospecificity of hydrogen transfer by the enzyme in dehydrogenation was examined with [17 alpha-3H]testosterone.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
2,5-Diketo-D-gluconate reductase, a novel enzyme that catalyzes the stereospecific NADPH-dependent reduction of 2,5-diketo-D-gluconate to 2-keto-L-gulonate, has been purified to homogeneity by sequential anion exchange, Cibacron blue F3GA affinity, and gel permeation chromatography from Corynebacterium sp. ATCC 31090. Molecular weight of the native form, determined by gel permeation chromatography, is 35,000 +/- 2,000. The subunit molecular weight, determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is 34,000; thus, the enzyme is active as a monomer. A pI value of 4.4 is measured for the enzyme. Amino- and carboxyl-terminal sequences are consistent with that predicted by the DNA sequence of the reductase gene. At 25 degrees C, pH 6.4, the turnover number is 500 min-1, and the apparent Km values for 2,5-diketo-D-gluconate and NADPH are 26 mM and 10 microM, respectively. The enzyme is specific for NADPH, but the sugar binding site will also accept 5-keto-D-fructose and dihydroxyacetone as substrates. The enzyme is active over a broad pH range (pH 5-8) for the reduction of 2,5-diketo-D-gluconate; a sharp optimum at pH 9.2 is observed for the oxidation of 2-keto-L-gulonate. A Keq value of 5.6 X 10(-13) M indicates that reduction of substrate by NADPH is highly preferred. An activation energy of 12.3 kcal mol-1 is measured. Enzyme turnover is slow relative to dehydration of the gem-diol at C-5 of the substrate.  相似文献   

20.
The major inducible trimethylamine oxide reductase was purified from Salmonella typhimurium LT2. The molecular weights of the native enzyme were estimated to be 332,000 by gel filtration and 170,000 by nondenaturing disc gel electrophoresis. In sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis, the enzyme formed a single band of molecular weight 84,000. The isoelectric point was 4.28. Maximum activity was at pH 5.65 and 45 degrees C. Reduced flavin mononucleotide, but not reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide, served as an electron donor. The Km for trimethylamine oxide was 0.89 mM and Vmax was 1,450 U/mg of protein. The enzyme reduced chlorate with a Km of 2.2 mM and a Vmax of 350 U/mg of protein.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号