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1.
N-Acetylneuraminate lyase [N-acetylneuraminic acid aldolase EC 4.1.3.3] from Escherichia coli was purified by protamine sulfate treatment, fractionation with ammonium sulfate, column chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA 44, and preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The purified enzyme preparation was homogeneous on analytical polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and was free from contaminating enzymes including NADH oxidase and NADH dehydrogenase. The enzyme catalyzed the cleavage of N-acetylneuraminic acid to N-acetylmannosamine and pyruvate in a reversible reaction. Both cleavage and synthesis of N-acetylneuraminic acid had the same pH optimum around 7.7. The enzyme was stable between pH 6.0 to 9.0, and was thermostable up to 60 degrees C. The thermal stability increased up to 75 degrees C in the presence of pyruvate. No metal ion was required for the enzyme activity, but heavy metal ions such as Ag+ and Hg2+ were potent inhibitors. Oxidizing agents such as N-bromosuccinimide, iodine, and hydrogen peroxide, and SH-inhibitors such as p-chloromercuribenzoic acid and mercuric chloride were also potent inhibitors. The Km values for N-acetylneuraminic acid and N-glycolylneuraminic acid were 3.6 mM and 4.3 mM, respectively. Pyruvate inhibited the cleavage reaction competitively; Ki was calculated to be 1.0 mM. In the condensation reaction, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylgalactosamine, glucosamine, and galactosamine could not replace N-acetylmannosamine as substrate, and phosphoenolpyruvate, lactate, beta-hydroxypyruvate, and other pyruvate derivatives could not replace pyruvate as substrate. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was estimated to be 98,000 by gel filtration methods. After denaturation in sodium dodecyl sulfate or in 6 M guanidine-HCl, the molecular weight was reduced to 33,000, indicating the existence of 3 identical subunits. The enzyme could be used for the enzymatic determination of sialic acid; reaction conditions were devised for determining the bound form of sialic acid by coupling neuraminidase from Arthrobacter ureafaciens, lactate dehydrogenase, and NADH.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of gossypol acetic acid, a potent male sterilent was studied on LDH from goat liver (LDH-A4), heart (LDH-B4) and testis (LDH-C4) in vitro. All the preparations of LDH were inhibited by gossypol when the reaction was carried out in pyruvate-lactate (direct) or lactate to pyruvate (reverse) directions. The IC50 of gossypol for the pyruvate oxidation by LDH isozymes varied between 16 and 42 microM in presence of 0.27 mM pyruvate and 0.15 mM NADH at 25 degrees C and pH 7.4 whereas for the lactate oxidation, IC50 was 125 microM in a system containing 3.3 mM lactic acid and 1.8 mM NAD at 25 degrees C and pH 9.0. Reciprocal plots due to Lineweaver-Burk showed that these isozymes are inhibited in a non-competitive manner with respect to pyruvate and lactate, and in a competitive fashion when NAD and NADH were varied as substrates. Ki values of LDH-A4, -B4 and -C4 isozymes in presence of gossypol were 20, 34 and 29 microM against pyruvate; 33, 43 and 45 microM against NADH; 85, 85 and 125 microM against lactate and 94, 108 and 83 microM against NAD respectively.  相似文献   

3.
Alanine dehydrogenase (L-alanine: NAD+ oxidoreductase, deaminating) was simply purified to homogeneity from a thermophile, Bacillus sphaericus DSM 462, by ammonium sulfate fractionation, red-Sepharose 4B chromatography and preparative slab gel electrophoresis. The enzyme had a molecular mass of about 230 kDa and consisted of six subunits with an identical molecular mass of 38 kDa. The enzyme was much more thermostable than that from a mesophile, B. sphaericus, and retained its full activity upon heating at 75 degrees C for at least 60 min and with incubation in pH 5.5-9.5 at 75 degrees C for 10 min. The enzyme can be stored without loss of its activity in a frozen state (-20 degrees C, at pH 7.2) for over 5 months. The optimum pH for the L-alanine deamination and pyruvate amination were around 10.5 and 8.2, respectively. The enzyme exclusively catalyzed the oxidative deamination of L-alanine in the presence of NAD+, but showed low amino acceptor specificity; hydroxypyruvate, oxaloacetate, 2-oxobutyrate and 3-fluoropyruvate are also aminated as well as pyruvate in the presence of NADH and ammonia. Initial velocity and product inhibition studies showed that the reductive amination proceeded through a sequential mechanism containing partially random binding. NADH binds first to the enzyme, and then pyruvate and ammonia bind in a random fashion. The products are sequentially released from the enzyme in the order L-alanine then NAD+. A dead-end inhibition by the formation of an abortive ternary complex which consists of the enzyme, NAD+ and pyruvate was included in the reaction. A possible role of the dead-end inhibition is to prevent the enzyme from functioning in the L-alanine synthesis. The Michaelis constants for the substrates were as follows: NADH, 0.10 mM; pyruvate, 0.50 mM; ammonia, 38.0 mM; L-alanine, 10.5 mM and NAD+, 0.26 mM.  相似文献   

4.
Lactate dehydrogenase enzyme present in quail seminal plasma has been characterized. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and subsequently with LDH specific staining of seminal plasma revealed a single isozyme in quail semen. Studies on substrate inhibition, pH for optimum activity and inhibitor (urea) indicated the isozyme present in the quail semen has catalytic properties like LDH-1 viz. H-type. Furthermore, unlike other mammalian species, electrophoretic and kinetic investigations did not support the existence of semen specific LDH-X isozyme in quail semen. The effect of exogenous lactate and pyruvate on sperm metabolic activity was also studied. The addition of 1 mM lactate or pyruvate to quail semen increased sperm metabolic activity. Our results suggested that both pyruvate and lactate could be used by quail spermatozoa to maintain their basic functions. Since the H-type isozyme is important for conversion of lactate to pyruvate under anaerobic conditions it was postulated that exogenous lactate being converted into pyruvate via LDH present in semen may be used by sperm mitochondria to generate ATP. During conversion of lactate to pyruvate NADH is being generated that may be useful for maintaining sperm mitochondrial membrane potential.  相似文献   

5.
The pyruvate carboxylase of Pseudonomas fluorescens was purified 160-fold from cells grown on glucose at 20 degrees C. The activity of this purified enzyme was not affected by acetyl-coenzyme A or L-aspartate, but was strongly inhibited by ADP, which was competitive towards ATP. Pyruvate gave a broken double reciprocal plot, from which two apparent Km values could be determined, namely 0-08 and 0-21 mM, from the lower and the higher concentration ranges, respectively. The apparent Km for HCO3 at pH 6-9, in the presence of the manganese ATP ion (MnATP2-), was 3-1 mM. The enzyme reaction had an optimum pH value of 7-1 or 9-0 depending on the use of MnATP2- or MgATP2-, respectively, as substrate. Free Mg2+ was an activator at pH values below 9-0. The enzyme was strongly activated by monovalent cations; NH4+ and K+ were the better activators, with apparent Ka values of 0-7 and 1-6 mM, respectively. Partially purified enzymes from cells grown on glucose at 1 or 20 degrees C had the same properties, including the thermal stability. In both cases 50% of the enzyme activity was lost after pre-incubation for 10 min at 46 degrees C. The molecular weight was estimated to be about 300000 daltons by gel filtration on Sephadex G-200. The regulatory properties and molecular weight are thus similar to those determined for the pyruvate carboxylases from Pseudomonas citronellolis and Azotobacter vinelandii.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
2-Aminoethylphosphonate aminotransferase has been purified to homogeneity with a yield of 15% from cell extracts of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated by gel filtration to be 65000 +/- 2000. Sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis yielded a molecular weight of 16500 +/- 1000, suggesting a tetrameric model for this protein. The absorption spectrum exhibits maxima at 280 nm, 335 nm and 415 nm which are characteristic of a pyridoxal-phosphate-dependent enzyme: 4 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate/mol of enzyme have been found. This aminotransferase catalyzes the transfer of the amino group of 2-aminoethylphosphonate (ciliatine) to pyruvate to give 2-phosphonoacetaldehyde and alanine. A pH optimum between 8.5-9 and an activity increasing from 30 degrees C to 50 degrees C have been observed. The reaction follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics with Km values of 3.85 mM and 3.5 mM for ciliatine and pyruvate respectively. This enzyme shows a very high specificity since ciliatine and pyruvate are the only amino donor and acceptor respectively. Methyl, ethyl and propylphosphonic acids are better competitors towards ciliatine than their alpha-amino derivatives. 3-Aminopropylphosphonate, the higher homologue of ciliatine, is recognized neither as a substrate nor as an inhibitor. The enzyme activity is significantly affected by carbonyl reagents and by HgCl2. Transamination of 2-aminoethylphosphonate is the first step of a double-step pathway which leads to the cleavage of its C-P bond.  相似文献   

8.
The mitochondrial NADP-dependent malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40) was purified about 300-fold from cod Gadus morhua heart to a specific activity of 48 units (mumol/min)/mg at 30 degrees C. The possibility of the reductive carboxylation of pyruvate to malate was studied by determination of the respective enzyme properties. The reverse reaction was found to proceed at about five times the velocity of the forward rate at a pH 6.5. The Km values determined at pH 7.0 for pyruvate, NADPH and bicarbonate in the carboxylation reaction were 4.1 mM, 15 microM and 13.5 mM, respectively. The Km values for malate, NADP and Mn2+ in the decarboxylation reaction were 0.1 mM, 25 microM and 5 microM, respectively. The enzyme showed substrate inhibition at high malate concentrations for the oxidative decarboxylation reaction at pH 7.0. Malate inhibition suggests a possible modulation of cod heart mitochondrial NADP-malic enzyme by its own substrate. High NADP-dependent malic enzyme activity found in mitochondria from cod heart supports the possibility of malate formation under conditions facilitating carboxylation of pyruvate.  相似文献   

9.
J Ike  P Sangan  M Gunasekaran 《Microbios》1992,69(279):119-127
The lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from Nocardia asteroides was purified to homogeneity by ammonium sulphate precipitation, gel filtration on Sephadex G-150 and DEAE-Sepharose column chromatography. The purified enzyme showed a single band in native condition which indicated its homogeneity. SDS-PAGE of the purified enzyme showed the presence of three bands which correspond to molecular weights of 60, 66 and 74 kDa. The pH and temperature optima of the purified enzyme were 9.5 and 50 degrees C, respectively. The metal ions Mn++, Fe++, Co++, Mg++ and Ca++, increased the purified LDH activity. On the other hand, enzyme activity was completely inhibited by CuCl2. Potassium chloride, ammonium sulphate and sodium chloride did not alter the enzyme activity. The purified enzyme exhibited a Km value of 1.6 x 10(-5) M for pyruvate.  相似文献   

10.
L-(+)-lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from Staphylococcus epidermidis ATCC 14990 was purified by affinity chromatography. The purified enzyme was specifically activated by fructose-1,6-diphosphate (FDP). The concentration of FDP required for 50% maximal activity was about 0.15 mM. The enzyme activity was inhibited by adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and oxamate. The inhibition by ADP appeared to be competitive with respect to reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH). The catalytic activity of the LDH for pyruvate reduction exhibited an optimum at pH 5.6. The enzyme is composed of four, probably identical, subunits. Sephadex gel filtration and sedimentation velocity at pH 5.6 Yielded molecular weights of about 130 000 and 126 000, respectively. The molecular weight at pH 6.5 and 7.0 was found to be only about 68 000. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecylsulfate and sedimentation velocity at pH 2.0 or 8.5 revealed monomeric subunits with an approximate molecular weight of 36000. The thermostability of the heat labile enzyme was increased in the presence of FDP, NADH and pyruvate. The purified LDH exhibited an anomalous type of kinetic behavior. Plots of initial velocity vs. different concentrations of pyruvate, NADH or FDP led to saturation curves with intermediary plateau regions. As a consequence of these plateau regions the Hill coefficient alternated between lower and higher n-values. Some distinguishing properties of the S. epidermidis LDH and other LDHs activated by FDP are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme LDH-5 (M4) was purified to homogeneity from the skeletal muscle of lizard Agama stellio stellio as a poikilothermic animal, using colchicine-Sepharose chromatography and heat inactivation. The purified enzyme showed a single band after SDS-PAGE, corresponding to a molecular weight of 36 kD. The K m values for pyruvate, NADH, lactate, and NAD+ were 0.020, 0.040, 8.1, and 0.02 mM, respectively. Pyruvate showed maximum activity at about 180 M, with a decline at higher concentrations. The enzyme was stable at 70°C for 30 min, but was rapidly inactivated at 90°C. The optimum pH for the forward reaction (pyruvate to lactate) was 7.5, and for the reverse reaction (lactate to pyruvate) was 9.2. Oxalate, glutamate, Cu2+, Co2+, Mn2+, and Mg2+ were inhibitory in both forward and reverse reactions.  相似文献   

13.
Lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) from Vibrio marinus MP-1 was purified 15-fold and ammonium activated. The optimum pH for pyruvate reduction was 7.4. Maximum lactate dehydrogenase activity occurred at 10 to 15 degrees C, and none occurred at 40 degrees C. The crude-extract enzyme was stable between 15 and 20 degrees C and lost 50% of its activity after 60 min at 45 degrees C. The partially purified enzyme was stable between 8 and 15 degrees C and lost 50% of its activity after 60 min at 30 degrees C. The thermal stability of lactate dehydrogenase was increased by mercaptoethanol, with 50% remaining activity at 42 degrees C.  相似文献   

14.
Lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) from Vibrio marinus MP-1 was purified 15-fold and ammonium activated. The optimum pH for pyruvate reduction was 7.4. Maximum lactate dehydrogenase activity occurred at 10 to 15 degrees C, and none occurred at 40 degrees C. The crude-extract enzyme was stable between 15 and 20 degrees C and lost 50% of its activity after 60 min at 45 degrees C. The partially purified enzyme was stable between 8 and 15 degrees C and lost 50% of its activity after 60 min at 30 degrees C. The thermal stability of lactate dehydrogenase was increased by mercaptoethanol, with 50% remaining activity at 42 degrees C.  相似文献   

15.
A Monascus pilosus strain was selected for production of intracellular alpha-galactosidase. Optimum conditions for mycelial growth and enzyme induction were determined. Galactose was one of the best enzyme inducers. The enzyme was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel filtration, and ion exchange chromatography and was demonstrated to be homogeneous by slab gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight of this enzyme, estimated by gel filtration, was about 150,000. The optimum conditions for the enzyme reaction was pH 4.5 to 5.0 at 55 degrees C. The purified enzyme was stable at 55 degrees C or below and in buffer at pH 3 to 8. The activity was inhibited by mercury, silver, and copper ions. The kinetics of this enzyme, with p-nitrophenyl-alpha-d-galactoside as substrate, was determined: K(m) was about 0.8 mM, and V(max) was 39 mumol/min per mg of protein. Enzymatic hydrolysis of melibiose, raffinose, and stachyose was analyzed by thin-layer chromatography.  相似文献   

16.
H Yang  R H Abeles 《Biochemistry》1987,26(13):4076-4081
4'-Phosphopantothenoylcysteine decarboxylase was purified 900-fold from Escherichia coli B with an overall yield of 6%. The enzyme migrates as a single band with a molecular weight of 35,000 +/- 3000 in 10% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions. The native enzyme has an apparent molecular weight of 146,000 +/- 9000 as determined by a gel exclusion column. At pH 7.6 and 25 degrees C, Km = 0.9 mM and Vmax = 600 nmol/(min X mg of protein). The pH optimum for Vmax is between 7.5 and 7.7. Hydroxylamine, phenylhydrazine, potassium cyanide, and sodium borohydride as well as pyridoxal phosphate and pyridoxal inactivated the enzyme. The enzyme contains covalently bound pyruvate as suggested by the isolation of [3H]lactate and pyruvate from [3H]NaBH4-reduced enzyme and native enzyme, respectively. One mole of [3H]lactate was isolated per 39,000 g of [3H]NaBH4-reduced and completely inactivated enzyme, and 1 mol of pyruvate was isolated per 31,000 +/- 4000 g of native enzyme. Mild base treatment released lactate and pyruvate from the reduced and the native enzymes, respectively, suggesting the pyruvate is attached to the enzyme by an ester bond. These findings are in accord with similar results obtained with the horse liver enzyme (R. Scandurra, personal communication). The presence of covalently bound pyruvate in the bacterial and mammalian enzymes suggests that pyruvate plays a major role in the mechanism of action.  相似文献   

17.
Microsomes possessing the lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity were isolated from white driving muscles of the skate (Raja clavata) using differential centrifugation. It was shown that the increase of the ionic strength after addition of 0.6 M KCl and alkalinization of the medium result in the solubilization of the LDH activity - by 50% and 80%, respectively. The Km values for pyruvate and NADH are 171 microM and 7.5 mM, respectively. Membrane-bound LDH, is not inhibited by pyruvate excess (up to 20 mM); the rate of the enzyme inactivation by trypsin is 3 times as low as that of the solubilized enzyme. The existence of two-membrane-bound LDH pools is postulated. The enzyme from the first pool is bound to the membrane by electrostatic whereas the second pool LDH - by hydrophobic forces.  相似文献   

18.
Properties and reaction mechanism of C4 leaf pyruvate,Pi dikinase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The properties and reaction mechanism of maize leaf pyruvate,Pi dikinase are described. Km values were determined for the forward reaction substrates, pyruvate, ATP, and Pi, at pH 7.4 and 8.0 and for reverse reaction substrates at pH 7.4. Enzyme activity was almost totally dependent on added monovalent cations in both directions. NH+4 was most effective, with Ka values of about 0.38 mM for the forward reaction and 2 mM for the reverse reaction. K+ also completely activated the enzyme in the forward direction (Ka = 8 mM) but only partially activated in the reverse direction. Na+ had little effect on either reaction. The pH optimum for the forward reaction was about 8.2; the reverse reaction optimum was about 6.9. Maximum activity for the reverse direction was about twice the maximum forward direction rate. From data on the requirements for the ATP-AMP exchange reaction, on the mechanism of inhibition of the forward reaction by PEP, AMP, and PPi, and from the kinetics of the interaction of varying certain substrate pairs, it was concluded that the maize leaf pyruvate,Pi dikinase reaction proceeded by the two-step Bi Bi Uni Uni mechanism. This differs from the mechanism of catalysis by the bacterial enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity of 13 cold-adapted strains, isolated from cold soils and showing GDH and/or LDH activity in spectrophotometric assays, were revealed by the use of electrophoresis on a nondenaturing acrylamide gel (zymogram). Psychrophilic strains were grown at 4 degrees C and 10 degrees C and the psychrotolerant strains at 4 degrees, 20 degrees and 28 degrees C. Incubation with the specific substrate and staining were done at 4, 28 or 37 degrees C. In the most cold-adapted strains, LDH and GDH production was high at 4 degrees C. In psychrotrophic strains, enzyme production and activity were greater at 20 or 28 degrees C than at lower temperatures. LDH remained active up to 37 degrees C while GDH activity was more thermolabile. GDH activity was NAD-dependent in some psychrophilic strains. In other strains, it was dependent on NAD(P) only or on both NAD and NAD(P). Two bands were seen for GDH or LDH activity in some strains. This method, which does not require a dialysis step, can be used to study the influence of temperature on enzyme production and activity, and the co-factor dependence. It detects phenotypic differences between isozymes, providing data for systematics.  相似文献   

20.
Purified cytoplasmic and membrane-bound lactate dehydrogenases (LDH) from white muscle of skate were characterized, Km for pyruvate and NADH for purified LDH were 150 +/- 16 and 29 +/- 7 microM, and for membrane-bound LDH were 185 +/- 22 and 7.5 +/- 1.5 microM, respectively. The membrane-bound enzyme was not inhibited by high pyruvate concentration (up to 20 mM) in contrast to purified LDH. Part of membrane-bound LDH was released by incubation in solutions with a high level of KCl (up to 1 M) or at alkaline pH. The inactivation rate during trypsin digestion for solubilized LDH was 2-3-fold higher than that for the membrane-bound enzyme.  相似文献   

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