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1.
The nucleotide analogue 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (FSBA) reacts irreversibly with rat liver cytosolic 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase kinase, causing a rapid loss of the AMP activation capacity and a slower inactivation of the catalytic activity. The rate constant for loss of AMP activation is about 10 times higher (kappa 1 = 0.112 min-1) than the rate constant of inactivation (kappa 2 = 0.0106 min-1). There is a good correspondence between the time-dependent inactivation of reductase kinase and the time-dependent incorporation of 5'-p-sulfonylbenzoyl[14C]adenosine ([14C]SBA). An average of 1.65 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit is bound when reductase kinase is completely inactivated. The time-dependent incorporation is consistent with the postulate that covalent reaction of 1 mol of SBA/mol of subunit causes complete loss of AMP activation, whereas reaction of another mole of SBA/mol of subunit would lead to total inactivation. Protection against inactivation by the reagent is provided by the addition of Mg2+, AMP, Mg-ATP, or Mg-AMP to the incubation mixtures. In contrast, addition of ATP, 2'-AMP, or 3'-AMP has no effect on the rate constants. Mg-ATP protects preferentially the catalytic site against inactivation, whereas Mg-AMP at low concentration protects preferentially the allosteric site. Mg-ADP affords less protection than Mg-AMP to the allosteric site when both nucleotides are present at a concentration of 50 microM with 7.5 mM Mg2+. Experiments done with [14C]FSBA in the presence of some protectants have shown that a close correlation exists between the pattern of protection observed and the binding of [14C]SBA. The postulate is that there exists a catalytic site and an allosteric site in the reductase kinase subunit and that Mg-AMP is the main allosteric activator of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Two soluble enzyme activities, 17 beta-estradiol dehydrogenase and 20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, copurified from the cytosol fraction of human term placenta, were identically inactivated by 6 beta-bromoacetoxyprogesterone. This affinity alkylating steroid binds at the enzyme-active site (Km = 866 microM; Vmax = 0.073 mumol/min/mg). Enzyme inactivation by four concentrations of 6 beta-bromoacetoxyprogesterone (molar ratio of steroid to enzyme, 71/1 to 287/1) causes irreversible and time-dependent loss of both the 17 beta- and 20 alpha-activities according to first order kinetics and affirms that the alkylating steroid is an active site-directed inhibitor (KI = 2.7 X 10(-3) M; k3 = 1.6 X 10(-3) s-1). Affinity radioalkylation studies using 6 beta-[2'-14C]bromoacetoxyprogesterone indicate that 2 mol of steroid are bound to each mole of inactivated enzyme dimer (Mr = 68,000). Amino acid analyses of the acid hydrolysate of radioalkylated enzyme show that 6 beta-bromoacetoxyprogesterone carboxymethylates cysteine (56%), histidine (22%), and lysine (8%) residues in the active site. These results are identical with those reported for 2-bromo[2'-14C]acetamidoestrone methyl ether radioalkylation of purified "17 beta-estradiol dehydrogenase." The parallel inactivation of 17 beta-estradiol dehydrogenase and 20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase by 6 beta-bromoacetoxyprogesterone further shows that both activities reside at a single enzyme-active site. The radioalkylation profile supports our proposed model of one enzyme-active site wherein the bound progestin and estrogen substrates are inverted, one relative to the other.  相似文献   

3.
γ-Aminobutyric acid-α-ketoglutarate transaminase from pig brain is irreversibly inactivated by 4-amino-5-halopentanoic acids. Protection from inactivation by the natural substrates, the pH dependence of inactivation and the incorporation of 1.7 moles of radioactive inhibitor per mole of enzyme from (S)-[U-14C]-4-amino-5-chloropentanoic acid suggest a covalent adduct at the active site of the enzyme. A mechanism-based inactivation is proposed.  相似文献   

4.
Glutathionyl S-[4-(succinimidyl)benzophenone] (GS-Succ-BP), an analogue of the product of glutathione and electrophilic substrate, acts as a photoaffinity label of dimeric rat liver glutathione S-transferase (GST), isoenzyme 1-1. A time-dependent loss of enzyme activity is observed upon irradiation of the enzyme with long wavelength UV light in the presence of the reagent. The initial rate of inactivation exhibits nonlinear dependence on the concentration of the reagent, characterized by an apparent dissociation constant of the enzyme-reagent complex (K(R)) of 99 +/- 2 microM and k(max) of 0.082 +/- 0.005 min(-1). Protection against this inactivation is provided by the electrophilic substrate (ethacrynic acid), electrophilic substrate analogue (dinitrophenol), and product analogues (S-hexylglutathione and p-nitrobenzylglutathione) but not by steroids (Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione and 17beta-estradiol-3, 17-disulfate). These results suggest that GS-Succ-BP binds and reacts with the enzyme within the xenobiotic substrate binding site, and this reaction site is distinct from the substrate and nonsubstrate steroid binding sites of the enzyme. About 1 mol of reagent is incorporated into 1 mol of enzyme dimer when the enzyme is completely inactivated. Met-208 is the only amino acid target of the reagent, and modification of this residue in one enzyme subunit of the GST 1-1 dimer completely abolishes the enzyme activity of both subunits. In order to evaluate the role of subunit interactions in the Alpha class glutathione S-transferases, inactive GS-Succ-BP-modified GST 1-1 was mixed with unlabeled, active GST 2-2. The enzyme subunits were dissociated in dilute trifluoroacetic acid and then renatured at pH 7.8 and separated by chromatofocusing into GST 1-1, 1-2, and 2-2. The specific activities of the heterodimer toward several substrates indicate that the loss of catalytic activity in the unmodified subunit of the modified GST 1-1 is the indirect result of the interaction between the two enzyme subunits and that this subunit interaction is absent in the heterodimer GST 1-2.  相似文献   

5.
Yeast phosphoglycerate kinase is irreversibly inactivated upon incubation with 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)-benzoyl]-1-N6-ethenoadenosine (5'-FSB epsilon A), an analogue to the nucleotide substrate. Marked protection against inactivation occurs with MgATP, ATP, MgADP, ADP, and 3-phosphoglycerate, suggesting that a part of the catalytic center is modified. The time dependence of the inactivation is characterized by a nonlinear kinetic profile. Curve fitting of various models for ligand binding to the enzyme suggested a two-site model. Modification of one of the sites appears to protect the catalytically essential site from modification. Stoichiometric studies show that the relationship between moles of 5'-FSB epsilon A incorporated per mole of enzyme and the residual enzymatic activity also shows nonlinear behavior. An extrapolated value of 1.5 mol of bound label/mol of enzyme corresponds to complete inactivation. The apparent overall pseudo first-order rate constant for the reaction between phosphoglycerate kinase and 5'-FSB epsilon A, as well as the separate rate constants for the modification, exhibit saturation behavior with respect to the concentration of 5'-FSB epsilon A, indicative of a rapid reversible binding of the reagent to the enzyme prior to modification.  相似文献   

6.
The synthesis of 8-thiocyano-ATP (CNS8-ATP) is described. At 37 degrees C the ATP analogue inactivates Na,K-ATPase, hexokinase, and pyruvate kinase. In all three cases, inactivation can be prevented by the addition of ATP, thus indicating that CNS8-ATP is recognized within the ATP binding site of the above enzymes. Incubation of the inactivated enzymes with dithiothreitol restores the catalytic activities. Therefore, it is likely that in these enzymes a mixed disulfide (E-S-S8-ATP) is formed between a sulfhydryl in the ATP binding site (E-SH) and the ATP analogue: [formula: see text] From the pseudo-first-order inactivation kinetics, a KD = 2.7 microM with k2 = 0.142 min-1 is calculated for the hexokinase and a KD = 40 microM with k2 = 0.347 min-1 is calculated for the pyruvate kinase interactions with the ATP analogue. At 4 degrees C, Na,K-ATPase recognizes CNS8-ATP with a KD = 8.3 microM. At 37 degrees C, the enzyme becomes inactivated by the ATP analogue in a biphasic manner. Inactivation results in the incorporation of [alpha-32P]8-CNS8-ATP into the catalytic alpha-subunit of the enzyme. Limited tryptic digestion in the presence of 150 mM KCl results in the formation of a radioactive peptide of Mr = 56,000, known to bear the purine binding domain of Na,K-ATPase. The results described in this article verify CNS8-ATP as a sulfhydryl-reactive ATP analogue and characterize this new ATP analogue as a useful tool for structure/function studies on ATP-recognizing enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase [ATP:oxaloacetate carboxy-lyase (transphosphorylating), EC 4.1.1.49] is completely inactivated by the 2',3'-dialdehyde derivative of ATP (oATP) in the presence of Mn2+. The dependence of the pseudo-first-order rate constant on reagent concentration indicates the formation of a reversible complex with the enzyme (Kd = 60 +/- 17 microM) prior to covalent modification. The maximum inactivation rate constant at pH 7.5 and 30 degrees C is 0.200 +/- 0.045 min-1. ATP or ADP plus phosphoenolpyruvate effectively protect the enzyme against inactivation. oATP is a competitive inhibitor toward ADP, suggesting that oATP interacts with the enzyme at the substrate binding site. The partially inactivated enzyme shows an unaltered Km but a decreased V as compared with native phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Analysis of the inactivation rate at different H+ concentrations allowed estimation of a pKa of 8.1 for the reactive amino acid residue in the enzyme. Complete inactivation of the carboxykinase can be correlated with the incorporation of about one mole of [8-14C]oATP per mole of enzyme subunit. The results indicate that oATP can be used as an affinity label for yeast phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase.  相似文献   

8.
3 beta,20 alpha-Hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase was purified to homogeneity from fetal lamb erythrocytes. The Mr 35,000 enzyme utilizes NADPH and reduces progesterone to 4-pregnen-20 alpha-ol-3-one [Km = 30.8 microM and Vmax = 0.7 nmol min-1 (nmol of enzyme)-1] and 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone to 5 alpha-androstane-3 beta, 17 beta-diol [Km = 74 microM and Vmax = 1.3 nmol min-1 (nmol of enzyme)-1]. 5 alpha-Dihydrotestosterone competitively inhibits (Ki = 102 microM) 20 alpha-reductase activity, suggesting that both substrates may be reduced at the same active site. 16 alpha-(Bromoacetoxy)progesterone competitively inhibits 3 beta- and 20 alpha-reductase activities and also causes time-dependent and irreversible losses of both 3 beta-reductase and 20 alpha-reductase activities with the same pseudo-first order kinetic t1/2 value of 75 min. Progesterone and 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone protect the enzyme against loss of the two reductase activities presumably by competing with the affinity alkylating steroid for the active site of 3 beta,20 alpha-hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase. 16 alpha-(Bromo[2'-14C]acetoxy) progesterone radiolabels the active site of 3 beta,20 alpha-hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase wherein 1 mol of steroid completely inactivates 1 mol of enzyme with complete loss of both reductase activities. Hydrolysis of the 14C-labeled enzyme with 6 N HCl at 110 degrees C and analysis of the amino acid hydrolysate identified predominantly N pi-(carboxy[2'-14C]methyl)histidine [His(pi-CM)].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Y Lee  F S Esch  M A DeLuca 《Biochemistry》1981,20(5):1253-1256
Firefly luciferase is 80-90% inactivated within 3 h upon incubation with the adenine nucleotide analogue p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl-5'-adenosine (FSBA). Although 4 mol of 14C-FSBA/mol of enzyme is irreversibly bound during inactivation, only 1 mol of 14C-FSBA appears to be specifically directed to an adenine nucleotide binding site on the enzyme. The other 3 mol of 14C-FSBA is bound to the protein nonspecifically. The major radioactive peptide in a tryptic digest os labeled luciferase was isolated and shown to have the following amino acid sequence: *Lys-Gly-Glx-Asx-Ser-Lys, where *Lys is the radioactive derivative of the lysine residue that was sulfonylated during the inactivation.  相似文献   

10.
In order to identify the essential reactive amino acid residues of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase, the reaction of the enzyme with its substrate analogue bromopyruvate was investigated. Incubation of the enzyme with bromopyruvate resulted in a time-dependent loss of enzyme activity. The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order and saturation kinetics with a Kinact of 28 microM and a maximum rate constant of 0.31 min-1. The inactivation was prevented by preincubation of the enzyme with the substrates shikimate 3-phosphate, 5-enolpyruvylshikimate 3-phosphate or by the combination of shikimate 3-phosphate plus glyphosate (N-phosphonomethylglycine), an inhibitor of the enzyme. Addition of sodium [3H]borohydride to the reaction mixture had no effect on the rate of inactivation but resulted in the incorporation of 3H label to the modified enzyme. Upon 90% inactivation, approximately 1 mol of bromo[14C]pyruvate was incorporated per mole of enzyme modified in the absence or presence of sodium borohydride. When the enzyme was incubated with bromopyruvate in the presence of sodium [3H]borohydride, approximately 1 mol of 3H label was found to be associated per mole of the modified enzyme. Tryptic digestion of these labeled proteins followed by reverse phase chromatographic separation resulted in the isolation of three radioactive peptides. Analyses of these three peptides indicated that bromopyruvate inactivated the enzyme by modifying Cys-408 and Lys-411, which are conserved in all enzyme sequences studied to date.  相似文献   

11.
The substrate analogue 3-bromo-2-ketoglutarate reacts with pig heart NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase to yield partially inactive enzyme. Following 65% inactivation, no further inactivation was observed. Concomitant with this inactivation, incorporation of 1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme dimer was measured. The dependence of the inactivation rate on bromoketoglutarate concentration is consistent with reversible binding of reagent (KI = 360 microM) prior to irreversible reaction. Manganous isocitrate reduces the rate of inactivation by 80% but does not provide complete protection even at saturating concentrations. Complete protection is obtained with NADP+ or the NADP+-alpha-ketoglutarate adduct. By modification with [14C]bromoketoglutarate or by NaB3H4 reduction of modified enzyme, a single major radiolabeled tryptic peptide was obtained by high performance liquid chromatography with the sequence: Asp-Leu-Ala-Gly-X-Ile-His-Gly-Leu-Ser-Asn-Val-Lys. Evidence in the following paper (Bailey, J.M., Colman, R.F. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12620-12626) indicates that X is glutamic acid. Enzyme modified at the coenzyme site by 2-(bromo-2,3-dioxobutylthio)-1,N(6)-ethenoadenosine 2',5'-biphosphate in the presence of manganous isocitrate is not further inactivated by bromoketoglutarate. Bromoketoglutarate-modified enzyme exhibits a stoichiometry of binding isocitrate and NADPH equal to 1 mol/mol of enzyme dimer, half that of native enzyme. These results indicate that bromoketoglutarate modifies a residue in the nicotinamide region of the coenzyme site proximal to the substrate site and that reaction at one catalytic site of the enzyme dimer decreases the activity of the other site.  相似文献   

12.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (ATP:oxaloacetate carboxy-lyase (transphosphorylating), EC 4.1.1.49) is completely inactivated by phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione in borate buffer at pH 8.4, with pseudo-first-order kinetics and a second-order rate constant of 144 min-1 X M-1 and 21.6 min-1 X M-1, respectively. Phosphoenolpyruvate, ADP and Mn2+ (alone or in combination) protect the enzyme against inactivation, suggesting that the modification occurs at or near to the substrate-binding site. Almost complete restoration of activity was obtained when a sample of 2,3-butanedione-inactivated enzyme was freed of excess modifier and borate ions, suggesting that only arginyl groups are modified. The changes in the rate of inactivation in the presence of substrates and Mn2+ were used to determine the dissociation constants for enzyme-ligand complexes, and values of 23 +/- 3 microM, 168 +/- 44 microM and 244 +/- 54 microM were found for the dissociation constants for the enzyme-Mn2+, enzyme-ADP and enzyme-phosphoenolpyruvate complexes, respectively. Based on kinetic data, it is shown that 1 mol of reagent must combine per enzyme active unit in order to inactivate the enzyme. Complete inactivation of the carboxykinase can be correlated with the incorporation of 3-4 mol [7-14C]phenylglyoxal per mol of enzyme subunit. Assuming a stoichiometry of 1:1 between phenylglyoxal incorporation and arginine modification, our results suggest that the modification of only two of the three to four reactive arginine residues per phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase subunit is responsible for inactivation.  相似文献   

13.
R M Katusz  B Bono  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1992,31(37):8984-8990
Incubation of S-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)glutathione (S-BDB-G), a reactive analogue of glutathione, with the 1-1 isoenzyme of rat liver glutathione S-transferase at pH 6.5 and 25 degrees C results in a time-dependent inactivation of the enzyme. k(obs) exhibits a nonlinear dependence on S-BDB-G from 50 to 1200 microM, with a kmax of 0.111 min-1 and KI = 185 microM. The addition of 5 mM S-hexylglutathione, a competitive inhibitor with respect to glutathione, gives almost complete protection against inactivation by S-BDB-G. About 1.2 mol of [3H]S-BDB-G/mol of enzyme subunit is incorporated when the enzyme is 85% inactivated, whereas 0.33 mol of reagent/mol of subunit is incorporated in the presence of S-hexylglutathione when the enzyme has lost only 17% of its original activity. Modified enzyme, prepared by incubating glutathione S-transferase with [3H]S-BDB-G in the absence or in the presence of S-hexylglutathione, was reduced with sodium borohydride, reacted with N-ethylmaleimide, and digested with alpha-chymotrypsin. Analysis of the chymotryptic digests, fractionated by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography, revealed Cys111 as the amino acid whose reaction with S-BDB-G correlates with enzyme inactivation. It is concluded that Cys111 lies within or near the hydrophobic substrate binding site of glutathione S-transferase, isoenzyme 1-1.  相似文献   

14.
Rat liver glutathione S-transferase, isozyme 1-1, catalyzes the glutathione-dependent isomerization of Delta(5)-androstene-3,17-dione and also binds steroid sulfates at a nonsubstrate inhibitory steroid site. 17beta-Iodoacetoxy-estradiol-3-sulfate, a reactive steroid analogue, produces a time-dependent inactivation of this glutathione S-transferase to a limit of 60% residual activity. The rate constant for inactivation (k(obs)) exhibits a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration with K(I) = 71 microm and k(max) = 0.0133 min(-1). Complete protection against inactivation is provided by 17beta-estradiol-3,17-disulfate, whereas Delta5-androstene-3,17-dione and S-methylglutathione have little effect on k(obs). These results indicate that 17beta-iodoacetoxy-estradiol-3-sulfate reacts as an affinity label of the nonsubstrate steroid site rather than of the substrate sites occupied by Delta5-androstene-3,17-dione or glutathione. Loss of activity occurs concomitant with incorporation of about 1 mol 14C-labeled reagent/mol enzyme dimer when the enzyme is maximally inactivated. Isolation of the labeled peptide from the chymotryptic digest shows that Cys(17) is the only enzymic amino acid modified. Covalent modification of Cys(17) by 17beta-iodoacetoxy-estradiol-3-sulfate on subunit A prevents reaction of the steroid analogue with subunit B. These results and examination of the crystal structure of the enzyme suggest that the interaction between the two subunits of glutathione S-transferase 1-1, and the electrostatic attraction between the 3-sulfate of the reagent and Arg(14) of subunit B, are important in binding steroid sulfates at the nonsubstrate steroid binding site and in determining the specificity of this affinity label.  相似文献   

15.
Calcium-activated phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase fromEscheria coli is not inactivated by a number of sulfhydryl-directed reagents [5,5′-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate), iodoacetate, N-ethylmaleimide, N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide or N-(iodoacetyl)-N′-(5-sulfo-l-naphthylethylenediamine)], unlike phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase from other organisms. On the other hand, the enzyme is rapidly inactivated by the arginyl-directed reagents 2,3-butanedione and 1-pyrenylglyoxal. The substrates, ADP plus PEP in the presence of Mn2+, protect the enzyme against inactivation by the diones. Quantitation of pyrenylglyoxal incorporation indicates that complete inactivation correlates with the binding of one inactivator molecule per mole of enzyme. Chemical modification by pyridoxal 5′-phosphate also produces inactivation of the enzyme, and the labeled protein shows a difference spectrum with a peak at 325 nm, characteristic of a pyridoxyl derivative of lysine. The inactivation by this reagent is also prevented by the substrates. Binding stoichiometries of 1.25 and 0.30mol of reagent incorporated per mole of enzyme were found in the absence and presence of substrates, respectively. The results suggest the presence of functional arginyl and lysyl residues in or near the active site of the enzyme, and indicate lack of reactive functional sulfhydryl groups.  相似文献   

16.
The kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis by F1 of the photoreactive nucleotide analogue 2-azido-ATP were determined (Vmax, 105 U/mg F1; Km, 250 microM, in the presence of 1.0 mM SO2-3). In the absence of an activating anion, a non-linear relationship in a Lineweaver-Burk plot was found for the hydrolysis of 2-azido-ATP. The 2-azido-analogues of ATP and ADP proved to be good photoaffinity labels causing notable inactivation of the F1-ATPase activity upon irradiation at 360 nm. This inhibition was also used to demonstrate high-affinity binding of these analogues to a catalytic binding site on the F1. High-affinity binding proved to be an Mg2+-requiring process, occurring with both 2-azido-ATP and 2-azido-ADP but hardly or not occurring with 8-azido-AT(D)P. Covalent binding of 2-nitreno-ATP upon irradiation of F1 containing tightly bound [beta-32P]2-azido-ATP results in a proportional inhibition of ATPase activity, extrapolating to 0.92 mol of covalently bound label per mol of F1 needed for the complete inactivation of the enzyme. When the F1 was irradiated in the presence of excess [beta-32P]2-azido-AT(D)P, 3-4 mol of label were bound when the enzyme was fully inactivated. In all cases, all or most of the radioactivity was found on the beta subunits.  相似文献   

17.
B Foucaud  J F Biellmann 《Biochimie》1982,64(10):941-947
Yeast alcohol dehydrogenase is very rapidly and irreversibly inactivated by 3-chloroacetyl pyridine adenine dinucleotide, a reactive NAD+-analogue (Biellmann et al., 1974, FEBS Lett. 40, 29-32). Kinetic investigations with this compound, and structurally related compounds, show that this inactivation, against which NAD+ provides a complete protection, corresponds to an affinity label. The incorporation of the coenzyme analogue correlates linearly with the enzyme inactivation, the total inactivation corresponding to one mole of inactivator per coenzyme binding site. The pH-dependence of the inactivation rates of the enzyme by this coenzyme analogue and by its reduced form reflects exactly the pH variation of their respective dissociation constants. In spite of a good stability of the label in the non denatured inactivated enzyme, no modified amino-acid residue could be identified. Considering the affinity of this analogue for yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and the strict steric requirements of this enzyme towards its ligands, the nature of the inactivation reaction as well as different possibilities of the loss of the label in the inactivated enzyme are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Estradiol 17 beta-dehydrogenase and 20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, oxidoreductase activities copurified from the cytosol of human-term placenta as a homogeneous protein (native enzyme), were reactivated at equal rates to 100% activity following complete inactivation in the presence of cofactor (NADPH) with the affinity alkylator estrone 3-(bromoacetate). Reactivation was accomplished by base-catalyzed hydrolysis of steroidal ester-amino acid linkages in the enzyme active site. The rate of enzyme reactivation was pH dependent. In identical studies without NADPH, only 12% of the original enzyme activity was restored. Completely reactivated enzyme was repurified by dialysis. Enzyme in control mixtures (control enzyme) that contained estrone in place of alkylator was treated the same as the reactivated enzyme. Reactivated enzyme exhibited a 6.0-fold lower affinity for common substrates, a 1.8-fold lesser affinity for NAD+ and NADH, and the same affinity for NADP+ and NADPH compared to control enzyme. In incubations that included NADPH, the reactivated enzyme maintained full activity during a 20-h second exposure to estrone 3-(bromoacetate), but in identical incubations without NADPH, the reactivated enzyme was rapidly inactivated at the same rate as the control and native enzymes. The control and reactivated enzymes were inactivated at equal rates by 16 alpha-(bromoacetoxy)estradiol 3-(methyl ether) in the presence or absence of cofactor (NADP+) and exhibited similar Kitz and Wilson inhibition constants for this affinity alkylator. Estrone 3-(bromo[2'-14C]acetate) incubated with native enzyme and NADPH produced radiolabeled 3-(carboxymethyl)histidine and S-(carboxymethyl)cysteine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
It has been proposed that the active centre of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase contains an arginine-recognition site, which is considered to be essential for the function of the catalytic subunit of the kinase [Matsuo, Huang & Huang (1978) Biochem. J.173, 441-447]. The catalytic subunit can be inactivated by 3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-1-ethylcarbodi-imide and glycine ethyl ester at pH6.5. The enzyme can be protected from inactivation by preincubation with histone, a protein substrate of the enzyme. On the other hand, ATP, which also serves as a protein kinase substrate, does not afford protection. Polyarginine, a competitive inhibitor of protein kinase, which is known from kinetic studies to interact specifically with the arginine-recognition site, partially protects the catalytic subunit from inactivation by 3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-1-ethylcarbodi-imide. These results lead to the conclusion that the site of modification by carbodi-imide/glycine ethyl ester is most likely located at the arginine-recognition site of the active centre. A value of 1.7+/-0.2 (mean+/-s.d.) mol of carboxy groups per mol of catalytic subunit has been obtained for the number of essential carboxy groups for the function of protein kinase; a complete chemical modification of these essential carboxy groups results in total loss of catalytic activity. Finally, we have identified the essential carboxy group in the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase as being derived from glutamate residues. This is achieved by a three-step procedure involving an extensive proteolytic digestion of the [1-(14)C]glycine ethyl ester-modified enzyme and two successive high-voltage electrophoreses of the hydrolysate. It is concluded that 1.7mol of glutamyl carboxy groups per mol of catalytic subunit may be considered a component of the arginine-recognition site in the active centre of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

20.
Myo-inositol monophosphate phosphatase (IMPP) is a key enzyme in the phosphoinositide cell-signaling system. This study found that incubating the IMPP from a porcine brain with pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (PLP) resulted in a time-dependent enzymatic inactivation. Spectral evidence showed that the inactivation proceeds via the formation of a Schiff's base with the amino groups of the enzyme. After the sodium borohydride reduction of the inactivated enzyme, it was observed that 1.8 mol phosphopyridoxyl residues per mole of the enzyme dimer were incorporated. The substrate, myo-inositol-1-phosphate, protected the enzyme against inactivation by PLP. After tryptic digestion of the enzyme modified with PLP, a radioactive peptide absorbing at 210 nm was isolated by reverse-phase HPLC. Amino acid sequencing of the peptide identified a portion of the PLP-binding site as being the region containing the sequence L-Q-V-S-Q-Q-E-D-I-T-X, where X indicates that phenylthiohydantoin amino acid could not be assigned. However, the result of amino acid composition of the peptide indicated that the missing residue could be designated as a phosphopyridoxyl lysine. This suggests that the catalytic function of IMPP is modulated by the binding of PLP to a specific lysyl residue at or near its substrate-binding site of the protein.  相似文献   

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