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1.
A method was developed for the purification of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from darkened maize leaves so that the enzyme retained its sensitivity to inhibition by malate. The procedure depended on the prevention of proteolysis by the inclusion of chymostatin in the buffers used during the purification. The purified enzyme was indistinguishable from that in crude extracts as judged by native polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis followed by immunoblotting, and Superose 6 gel filtration. Gel-filtration studies showed that the purified enzyme and the enzyme in extracts of darkened or illuminated leaves showed a concentration-dependent dissociation of tetrameric into dimeric forms. Purified phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and enzyme in crude extracts from darkened leaves were equally sensitive to inhibition by malate (Ki approx. 0.30 mM) under conditions where it existed in the tetrameric or dimeric forms, but the enzyme in crude extracts from illuminated leaves was less sensitive to malate inhibition (Ki approx. 0.95 mM) whether it was present as a tetramer or as a dimer. It is concluded that changes in the oligomerization state of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase are not directly involved in its regulation by light.  相似文献   

2.
Using size-exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography, it is shown that phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Crassula argentea, a crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant, exists primarily in the form of a tetramer of a 100-kDa subunit at night and as a dimer of the same subunit during the day. The tetrameric enzyme from night leaves is not inhibited by malate, while the dimeric form from day leaves can be completely inhibited by malate. The purified day, or dimer, form of the enzyme can be converted to the tetramer by concentration and exposure to Mg2+. When thus converted, the tetramer is insensitive to malate inhibition, and is more strongly activated by glucose 6-phosphate than the dimer. The purified night, or tetramer, form is converted to the dimer by incubation for 60 min at pH 8.2. This enzyme may also be converted to the dimer by adding 1.5 mM malate to the elution buffer, but preincubation for 15 min with phosphoenolpyruvate prevents disaggregation when chromatographed with buffer containing malate. Preincubation with 1mM EDTA and subsequent chromatography with buffer containing malate shows a progressive dissociation of the tetrameric form with increasing time of preincubation. The implications of these observations for the diurnal regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in CAM metabolism are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The molecular weights of different aggregational states of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase purified from the leaves of Zea mays have been determined by measurement of the molecular diameter using a Malvern dynamic light scattering spectrometer. Using these data to identify the monomer, dimer, tetramer, and larger aggregate(s) the effect of pH and various ligands on the aggregational equilibria of this enzyme have been determined. At neutral pH the enzyme favored the tetrameric form. At both low and high pH the tetramer dissociated, followed by aggregation to a "large" inactive form. The order of dissociation at least at low pH appeared to be two-step: from tetramer to dimers followed by dimer to monomers. The monomers then aggregate to a large aggregate, which is inactive. The presence of EDTA at pH 8 protected the enzyme against both inactivation and large aggregate formation. Dilution of the enzyme at pH 7 at room temperature results in driving the equilibrium from tetramer to dimer. The presence of malate with EDTA stabilizes the dimer as the predominant form at low protein concentrations. The presence of the substrate phosphoenolpyruvate alone and with magnesium and bicarbonate induced formation of the tetramer, and decreased the dissociation constant (Kd) of the tetrameric form. The inhibitor malate, however, induced dissociation of the tetramer as evidenced by an increase in the Kd of the tetramer.  相似文献   

4.
Vance CP  Stade S 《Plant physiology》1984,75(1):261-264
A nonphotosynthetic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was partially purified from the cytosol of root nodules of alfalfa. The enzyme was purified 86-fold by ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE-cellulose, hydroxylapatite chromatography, and reactive agarose with a final yield of 32%. The enzyme exhibited a pH optimum of 7.5 with apparent Km values for phosphoenolpyruvate and magnesium of 210 and 100 micromolar, respectively. Two isozymes were resolved by nondenaturing polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis. Subsequent electrophoresis of these isozymes in a second dimension by sodium dodecyl sulfate slab gel electrophoresis yielded identical protein patterns for the isozymes with one major protein band at molecular weight 97,000. Malate and AMP were slightly inhibitory (about 20%) to the partially purified enzyme. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase comprised approximately 1 to 2% of the total soluble protein in actively N2-fixing alfalfa nodules.  相似文献   

5.
The phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) is made of several proteins. Two of them are designated general proteins because they are required for the transport and phosphorylation of all sugars of the PTS. These two proteins are found in the soluble fraction of cellular extracts and are termed HPr and enzyme I (EI). We reported in this work the purification and the characterization of these two proteins from Streptococcus salivarius ATCC 25975. HPr was purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, molecular sieving on Ultrogel AcA44, and carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis in the presence of urea revealed a single band with a molecular weight of 6700. The protein contained no tryptophan and had a pI of 4.8. The purification scheme of EI was as follows: DEAE-cellulose chromatography, hydroxylapatite chromatography, DEAE-Sephadex A-50 chromatography, preparative electrophoresis, and molecular sieving on Ultrogel AcA34. The five-step purification for EI produced a 199-fold purified preparation with a specific activity of 530 mumol of HPr phosphorylated per minute per milligram of protein at 37 degrees C. The fraction obtained after filtration on Ultrogel AcA34 gave one band (68 000) on sodium dodecyl sulfate - polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight of the native enzyme determined by gel filtration at 4 degrees C was 135 000, suggesting that it was a dimer. Enzyme I had a pI of 4.2, a pH optimum of 6.7, a Km for HPr of about 27 microM, a Km for phosphoenolpyruvate of 0.48 mM, and kinetics that were consistent with a Ping-Pong mechanism. Evidence had been obtained which indicated that S. salivarius enzyme I was antigenically very similar to enzyme I from various strains of Streptococcus mutans, but not to the enzyme from Bacillus subtilis, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus faecalis, and Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

6.
Diurnal regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from crassula   总被引:13,自引:10,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Wu MX  Wedding RT 《Plant physiology》1985,77(3):667-675
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase appears to be located in or associated with the chloroplasts of Crassula. As has been found with this enzyme in other CAM plants, a crude extract of leaves gathered during darkness and rapidly assayed for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPc) activity is relatively insensitive to inhibition by malate. After illumination begins, the PEPc activity becomes progressively more sensitive to malate. This enzyme also shows a diurnal change in activation by glucose-6-phosphate, with the enzyme from dark leaves more strongly activated than that from leaves in the light.

When the enzyme is partially purified in the presence of malate, the characteristic sensitivity of the day leaf enzyme is largely retained. Partial purification of the enzyme from dark leaves results in a small increase in sensitivity to malate inhibition.

Partially purified enzyme is found by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis to have two bands of PEPc activity. In enzymes from dark leaves, the slower moving band predominates, but in the light, the faster moving band is preponderant. Both of these bands are shown by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to be composed of the same subunit of 103,000 daltons.

The enzyme partially purified from night leaves has a pH optimum of 5.6, and is relatively insensitive to malate inhibition over the range from pH 4.5 to 8. The enzyme from day leaves has a pH optimum of 6.6 and is strongly inhibited by malate at pH values below 7, but becomes insensitive at higher pH values.

Gel filtration of partially purified PEPc showed two activity peaks, one corresponding approximately to a dimer of the single subunit, and the other twice as large. The larger protein was relatively insensitive to malate inhibition, the smaller was strongly inhibited by malate.

Kinetic studies showed that malate is a mixed type inhibitor of the sensitive, day, enzyme, increasing Km for phosphoenolpyruvate and reducing Vmax. With the insensitive, night, enzyme, malate is a K type inhibitor, reducing the Km for phosphoenolpyruvate, but having little effect on Vmax. The inhibition of the insensitive enzyme by malate appears to be hysteretic, taking several minutes to be expressed during assay, probably indicating a change in the conformation or aggregation state of the enzyme.

Activation by glucose-6-phosphate is of the mixed type for the day form of the enzyme, causing both a decreased Km for phosphoenolpyruvate and an increased Vmax, but the night, or insensitive, form shows only an increase in Vmax in response to glucose-6-phosphate.

  相似文献   

7.
Wu MX  Wedding RT 《Plant physiology》1987,84(4):1080-1083
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in Crassulacean acid metabolism plants during the day exists in dimeric form the activity of which is strongly inhibited by malate. Enzyme purified from Crassula leaves collected during the day and stored at −70°C for 49 days shows a steady progression of change from dimer to tetramer, and this change in oligomeric state is accompanied by a decrease in the sensitivity of the enzyme to inhibition by malate. At 10 minutes preincubation of enzyme after 11 days storage—which is composed of an equilibrium mixture of dimer and tetramer—with malate causes most of the enzyme to be converted to dimer and increases the sensitivity of the enzyme to malate inhibition during assay. Preincubation with phosphoenolpyruvate shifts the equilibrium toward the tetrameric form and reduces the maximal inhibition produced by 5 millimolar malate to less than 20%. However, none of the treatments used resulted in shifting the oligomerization equilibrium completely in either direction. Thus the question of whether some covalent modification of the enzyme, such as phosphorylation, is required to permit complete changes in equilibrium remains open.  相似文献   

8.
A mutant Escherichia coli (Ppcc-) which was unable to grow on glucose as a sole carbon source was isolated. This mutant had very low levels of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity (approximately 5% of the wild type). Goat immunoglobulin G prepared against wild-type phosphoenolypyruvate carboxylase cross-reacted with the Ppcc- enzyme. The amount of enzyme protein in the mutant cells was similar to that found in wild-type cells, but it had greatly diminished specific activity. The catalytically less active mutant enzyme retained the ability to interact with fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, but did not exhibit stabilization of the tetrameric form by aspartate. The pI of the mutant protein was lower (4.9) than that of the wild-type protein (5.1). After electrophoresis and immunoblotting of the partially purified protein, several immunostaining bands were seen in addition to the main enzyme band. A novel method for showing that these bands represented proteolytic fragments of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase was developed.  相似文献   

9.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (orthophosphate:oxaloacetate carboxylase (phosphorylating), EC 4.1.1.31) from plant cells of soybean nodules was studied to assess its role in providing carbon skeletons for aspartate and asparagine synthesis. The enzyme was purified 119-fold by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation and DEAE-cellulose, BioGel A-1.5m, and hydroxyapatite chromatography. Five activity bands were resolved with discontinuous polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A small quantity of enzyme from the most active band was separated from the others by preparative electrophoresis. The apparent Michaelis constants of this enzyme for phosphoenolpyruvate and HCO3- were 9.4.10(-2) and 4.1.10(-1) mM, respectively. A series of metabolite tested at 1 mM had no significant effect on enzyme activity. These experiments indicate that the major factors directly controlling phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity in vivo are phosphoenolpypyruvate and HCO3- concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
A purification procedure which yields a near homogenous preparation of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase from the leaves of Zea mays is reported. The enzyme had a final specific activity of 33.3 micromoles per minute per milligram protein. Size exclusion high performance liquid chromatography and dynamic laser-light scattering spectroscopy showed that PEP carboxylase exists in an equilibrium of aggregates. Enzyme predominantly in the dimeric configuration is less active (when assayed at sub-optimal Mg-PEP concentrations, less than 0.4 millimolar) than when in its tetrameric arrangement. The difference in activity diminishes and disappears as the concentration of the substrate Mg-PEP increases. The substrate drives the equilibrium toward the tetramer, while malate, an inhibitor of PEP carboxylase, shifts the equilibrium toward the dimer. It thus appears that the quaternary structure (oligomeric state) of maize PEP carboxylase can be regulated by the naturally occurring effector molecules Mg-PEP and malate which in turn can control the enzyme's activity.  相似文献   

11.
Stomatal phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase EC 4.1.1.31), extracted from abaxial epidermal peels of Vicia faba L. cv. Frühe Weiβkeimige, was partially purified by ammoniumsulfate precipitation, and molecular sieve (Sepharosc S-400) and ion exchange (DEAE-Sepharose) chromatography. The partially purified enzyme, essentially free of a PEPCase isoform existing in mesophyll and epidermal cells, had a specific activity of 300 nkat mg-1 protein at 25°C. Western immunoblot analysis revealed that the stomatal enzyme had two bands (M: of 110000 and 112000), crossreacting with PEPCase antibodies raised against PEPCase from Ka-lanchoe daigremontiana . The native molecular mass of the enzyme (467000) points to a tetrameric subunit structure. The temperature optimum was found to be 35°C; cold treatments of PEPCase before assaying were accompanied by inactivation. The energy of activation was calculated to 51 kJ mol-1. The kinetic behaviour of the enzyme at fixed MgCl2 concentrations is characterized by a pH optimum between pH 8.0–8.2 with or without 1 m M malate or 5 m M glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P), but a combination of both effectors resulted in a shift of the optimum to pH 7.6. The enzyme showed a pH sensitive inhibition by 1 m M malate and an activation by Glc-6-P. At low pH (6–7), Glc-6-P was able to compensate for the malate induced inhibition of the enzyme. Malate and Glc-6-P both affected Km(PEP), drastically and influenced Vmax at pH 7, but not at pH 8.3. The inhibition constant of malate was determined to be 1.2 m M at pH 7. From the Dixon plot, a competitive inhibition of malate was assumed under defined assay conditions.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of temperature on the kinetic parameters of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase purified from Crassula argentea was such that both the Vmax and Km(MgPEP) values tended upward over the range from 11 to 35 degrees C. The increased rate at low temperatures due to the low Km is at least partially offset by the increased Vmax at higher temperatures, potentially leading to a broad plateau of enzyme activity and a relatively small effect of temperature on the enzyme. The cooperativity was negative at 11 degrees C, but above 15 degrees C it became positive. The presence of 5 mM glucose-6-phosphate has relatively little effect on Vmax but it clearly reduces Km and overcomes any effect of temperature on this parameter in the range studied. Positive cooperativity is observed only at temperatures above 25 degrees C. The size of the native enzyme, as determined by dynamic light scattering, was strongly toward the tetrameric form. At a temperature of 40 degrees C and above, a considerable oligomerization takes place. No loss of activity can be observed in this range of temperature. In the presence of either glucose-6-phosphate or magnesium phosphoenolpyruvate, at temperatures under 25 degrees C, the equilibrium is displaced toward higher levels of aggregation. Maximal accumulation of lead malate occurred at 10 to 12 degrees C in vivo with reduction to about 25% at 35 degrees C. Glucose-6-phosphate followed a similar curve in response to temperature, but the overall difference was about 50%. The sum of phosphoenolpyruvate plus pyruvate is level at night temperatures below 25 degrees C, doubling at 35 degrees C. Calculated concentrations of malate, glucose-6-phosphate, and phosphoenolpyruvate plus pyruvate indicate that the concentrations present are equal to or greater than Ki, Ka, and Km values for these metabolites, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was purified 43-fold from Amaranthus viridis leaves by using a combination of ammonium-sulphate fractionation, chromatography on O-(diethylaminoethyl)-cellulose and hydroxylapatite, and filtration through Sepharose 6B. The purified enzyme had a specific activity of 17.1 mol·(mg protein)-1·min-1 and migrated as a single band of relative molecular weight 100000 on sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A homotetrameric structure was determined for the native enzyme. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Zea mays L. and A. viridis showed partial identity in Ouchterlony two-dimensional diffusion. Isoelectric focusing showed a band at pI 6.2. Km values for phosphoenolpyruvate and bicarbonate were 0.29 and 0.17 mM, respectively, at pH 8.0. The activation constant (Ka) for Mg2+ was 0.87 mM at the same pH. The carboxylase was activated by glucose-6-phosphate and inhibited by several organic acids of three to five carbon atoms. The kinetic and structural properties of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from A. viridis leaves are similar to those of the enzyme from Zea mays leaves.Abbreviations MW molecular weight - PEP (Case) phosphoenolpyruvate (carboxylase) - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Purified malate dehydrogenases from four species of non-sulphur purple phototrophic bacteria were examined for their heat-stability, amino acid composition and antigenic relationships. Malate dehydrogenase from Rhodospirillum rubrum, Rhodobacter capsulatus and Rhodomicrobium vannielii (which are all tetrameric proteins) had an unusually high glycine content, but the enzyme from Rhodocyclus purpureus (which is a dimer) did not. R. rubrum malate dehydrogenase was extremely heat-stable relative to the other enzymes, withstanding 65 degrees C for over 1 h with no loss of activity. By contrast, malate dehydrogenase from R. vannielii lost activity above 35 degrees C, and that from R. capsulatus above 40 degrees C. Amino acid compositional relatedness and immunological studies indicated that tetrameric phototrophic-bacterial malate dehydrogenases were highly related to one another, but only distantly related to the tetrameric enzyme from Bacillus. This suggests that, despite differences in their thermal properties, the tetrameric malate dehydrogenases of non-sulphur purple bacteria constitute a distinct biochemical class of this catalyst.  相似文献   

16.
alpha-Galactosidase A (alpha-D-galactoside galactohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.22) was purified from human placenta. The purified enzyme showed one major band on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and a single precipitin line on double immunodiffusion. Electrophoresis of the purified, S-carboxymethylated enzyme on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel showed one component with a molecular weight of about 65 000, but electrophoresis of the non-S-carboxymethylated enzyme showed two components, a major band with a molecular weight of 67 500 and a diffuse band with a molecular weight of 47 000. We suggest that the smaller diffuse component is a degradation product and that the enzyme is a dimer with a molecular weight of approximately 150 000 and a subunit of molecular weight of about 67 500. Antibody raised against the purified enzyme quantitatively precipitated alpha-galactosidase A, but not alpha-galactosidase in Fabry's disease fibroblasts. The alpha-galactosidase A is very heat labile and pH sensitive. It is most stable in concentrated solution at low temperature and at a pH of 5.0 to 6.0. When added to plasma at 37 degrees C, it has a half-life of only 17 min. This imposes a serious obstacle to its use in the treatment of Fabry's disease.  相似文献   

17.
Acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase from Euglena gracilis strain Z was isolated as a component of a multienzyme complex which includes phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and malate dehydrogenase. The multienzyme complex was shown to exist in crude extracts and was purified to a homogeneous protein with a molecular weight of 360,000 by gel filtration. The ratio of the activities of the constituent enzymes was acetyl-CoA carboxylase:phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase:malate dehydrogenase, 1:25:500. The complex is proposed to operate in conjunction with malic enzyme, which is present in Euglena, to facilitate the formation of substrates, malonyl-CoA, and NADPH, for fatty acid biosynthesis. The interaction of the enzymes may represent a means of control of acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity in organisms which do not possess an enzyme subject to allosteric regulation. The acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity from Euglena is unaffected by citrate and isocitrate.  相似文献   

18.
Umbilicus rupestris (pennywort) switches from C3 photosynthesis to an incomplete form of crassulacean acid metabolism (referred to as 'CAM-idling') when exposed to water stress (drought). This switch is accompanied by an increase in the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. This enzyme also shows several changes in properties, including a marked decrease in sensitivity to acid pH, a lower Km for phosphoenolpyruvate, very much decreased sensitivity to the allosteric inhibitor malate, and increased responsiveness to the allosteric effector glucose 6-phosphate. The Mr of the enzyme remains unchanged, at approx. 185 000. These changes in properties of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase are discussed in relation to the roles of the enzyme in C3 and in CAM plants.  相似文献   

19.
Pyrrolidonecarboxylate peptidase (EC 3.4.11.8) from Streptococcus faecium was purified by fractionation with streptomycin sulphate and ammonium sulphate, by chromatography on Sephadex G200 and DEAE-cellulose, and by preparative electrophoresis on Sephadex G25. The purified enzyme on acrylamide gel showed a strong protein band which contained enzyme activity and a very faint band which had no activity. The subunit molecular weight of the purified enzyme was estimated by acrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulphate to be 42,000 +/- 1,000. The enzyme showed optimum activity at pH 7.6 and was unstable in the absence of 2-mercaptoethanol. The sensitivity of the enzyme to alkylating agents (N-ethylmaleimide and iodoacetamide) suggested that free sulphydryl groups were essential for enzyme activity. The enzyme was rapidly inactivated above 45 degrees C. The values of the Michaelis constants (Km) obtained with various L-pyrrolidonecarboxylyl dipeptides were similar although there was a 10-fold range in the maximal rates of hydrolysis of these substrates. Inhibition studies showed that the substrate analogues 2-pyrrolidone and pyrrolidonecarboxylate are competitive inhibitors of the enzyme. The binding of substrates and inhibitors to the active site of the enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was purified to homogeneity with about 29% recovery from immature pods of chickpea using ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and gel filtration through Sephadex G-200. The purified enzyme with molecular weight of about 200,000 daltons was a tetramer of four identical subunits and exhibited maximum activity at pH 8.1. Mg2+ ions were specifically required for the enzyme activity. The enzyme showed typical hyperbolic kinetics with phosphoenolpyruvate with a Km of 0.74 millimolar, whereas sigmoidal response was observed with increasing concentrations of HCO3 with S0.5 value as 7.6 millimolar. The enzyme was activated by inorganic phosphate and phosphate esters like glucose-6-phosphate, α-glycerophosphate, 3-phosphoglyceric acid, and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, and inhibited by nucleotide triphosphates, organic acids, and divalent cations Ca2+ and Mn2+. Oxaloacetate and malate inhibited the enzyme noncompetitively. Glucose-6-phosphate reversed the inhibitory effects of oxaloacetate and malate.  相似文献   

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