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1.
Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and other aromatic aldehydes inactivate rhodanese. The inactivation reaches higher extents if the enzyme is in the sulfur-free form. The identification of the reactive residue as an amino group has been made by spectrophotometric determination of the 5'-phosphorylated pyridoxyl derivative of the enzyme. The inactivation increases with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate concentration and can be partially removed by adding thiosulfate or valine. Prolonged dialysis against phosphate buffer also leads to the enzyme reactivation. The absorption spectra of the pyridoxal phosphate - rhodanese complex show a peak at 410 nm related to the Schiff base and a shoulder in the 330 nm region which is probably due to the reaction between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and both the amino and thiol groups of the enzyme that appear reasonably close to each other. The relationship betweenloss of activity and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate binding to the enzyme shows that complete inactivation is achieved when four lysyl residues are linked to pyridoxal 5'-phosphate.  相似文献   

2.
N F Phillips  N H Goss  H G Wood 《Biochemistry》1983,22(10):2518-2523
Pyruvate, phosphate dikinase from Bacteroides symbiosus is strongly inhibited by low concentrations of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The inactivation follows pseudo-first-order kinetics over an inhibitor concentration range of 0.1-2 mM. The inactivation is highly specific since pyridoxine and pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate, analogues of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, which lack an aldehyde group, caused little or no inhibition even at high concentrations. The unreduced dikinase-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate complex displays an absorption maxima near 420 nm, typical for Schiff base formation. Following reduction of the Schiff base with sodium borohydride, N6-pyridoxyllysine was identified in the acid hydrolysate. When the enzyme was incubated in the presence of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and reducing agent, the ATP/AMP, Pi/PPi, and pyruvate/phosphoenolpyruvate isotopic exchange reactions were inhibited to approximately the same extent, suggesting that the modification of the lysyl moiety causes changes in the enzyme that affect the reactivity of the pivotal histidyl residue. Phosphorylation of the histidyl group appears to prevent the inhibitor from attacking the lysine residue. On the other hand, addition of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate to the pyrophosphorylated enzyme promotes release of the pyrophosphate and yields the free enzyme which is subject to inhibition.  相似文献   

3.
1. Pig M4 lactate dehydrogenase treated in the dark with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at pH8.5 and 25 degrees C loses activity gradually. The maximum inactivation was 66%, and this did not increase with concentrations of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate above 1 mM. 2. Inactivation may be reversed by dialysis or made permanent by reducing the enzyme with NaBH4. 3. Spectral evidence indicates modification of lysine residues, and 6-N-pyridoxyl-lysine is present in the hydrolsate of inactivated, reduced enzyme. 4. A second cycle of treatment with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and NaBH4 further decreases activity. After three cycles only 9% of the original activity remains. 5. Apparent Km values for lactate and NAD+ are unaltered in the partially inactivated enzyme. 6. These results suggest that the covalently modified enzyme is inactive; failure to achieve complete inactivation in a single treatment is due to the reversibility of Schiff-base formation and to the consequent presence of active non-covalently bonded enzyme-modifier complex in the equilibrium mixture. 7. Although several lysine residues per subunit are modified, only one appears to be essential for activity: pyruvate and NAD+ together (both 5mM) completely protect against inactivation, and there is a one-to-one relationship between enzyme protection and decreased lysine modification. 8. NAD+ or NADH alone gives only partial protection. Substrates give virtually none. 9. Pig H4 lactate dehydrogenase is also inactivated by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. 10. The possible role of the essential lysine residue is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Treatment of 1 microM wheat-germ aspartate transcarbamoylase with 1 mM-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate caused a rapid loss of activity, concomitant with the formation of a Schiff base. Complete loss of activity occurred within 10 min when the Schiff base was reduced with a 100-fold excess of NaBH4. Concomitantly, one amino group per chain was modified. No further residues were modified in the ensuing 30 min. The kinetics of inactivation were examined under conditions where the Schiff base was reduced before assay. Inactivation was apparently first-order. The pseudo-first-order rate constant, kapp., showed a hyperbolic dependence upon the concentration of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, suggesting that the enzyme first formed a non-covalent complex with the reagent, modification of a lysine then proceeding within this complex. Inactivation of the enzyme by pyridoxal was 20 times slower than that by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, indicating that the phosphate group was important in forming the initial complex. Partial protection against pyridoxal phosphate was provided by the leading substrate, carbamoyl phosphate, and nearly complete protection was provided by the bisubstrate analogue, N-phosphonoacetyl-L-aspartate, and the ligand-pair carbamoyl phosphate plus succinate. Steady-state kinetic studies, under conditions that minimized inactivation, showed that pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was also a competitive inhibitor with respect to the leading substrate, carbamoyl phosphate. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate therefore appears to be an active-site-directed reagent. A sample of the enzyme containing one reduced pyridoxyl group per chain was digested with trypsin, and the labelled peptide was isolated and shown to contain a single pyridoxyl-lysine residue. Partial sequencing around the labelled lysine showed little homology with the sequence surrounding lysine-84, an active-centre residue of the catalytic subunit of aspartate transcarbamoylase from Escherichia coli, whose reaction with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate shows many similarities to the results described in the present paper. Arguably the reactive lysine is conserved between the two enzymes whereas the residues immediately surrounding the lysine are not. The same conclusion has been drawn in a comparison of reactive histidine residues in the two enzymes [Cole & Yon (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7168-7174].  相似文献   

5.
1. Mouse C4 lactate dehydrogenase treated in the dark with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at pH8.7 and 25 degrees C loses activity gradually; 1mM-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate causes 83% inactivation, and higher concentrations of the reagent cause no further loss of activity. 2. The final extent of inactivation is very pH-dependent, greater inactivation occurring at the high pH values. 3. Inactivation may be fully reversed by addition of cysteine, or made permanent by reducing the enzyme with NaBH4. 4. The absorption spectrum of inactivated reduced enzyme indicates modification of lysine residues. Inactivation by 80% corresponds to modification of at least 1.8 mol of lysine/mol of enzyme subunit. 5. There is no loss of free thiol groups after inactivation with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and reduction of the enzyme. 6. NAD+ or NADH gives complete protection against inactivation. protection studies with coenzyme fragments indicate that the AMP moiety is largely responsible for the protective effect. Lactate (10 mM) gives no protection in the absence of added nucleotides, but greatly enhances the protection given by ADP-ribose (1 mM). Thus ADP-ribose is able to trigger the binding of lactate. 7. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate also acts as a non-covalent inhibitor of mouse C4 lactate dehydrogenase. The inhibition is non-competitive with respect to both NAD+ and lactate. 8. Km values for the enzyme at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C, with the non-varied substrate saturating, are 0.3 mM-lactate and 5 microM-NAD+. 9. These results are discussed and compared with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate modification of other lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes and related dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

6.
5-Enolpyruvyl shikimate 3-phosphate synthase catalyzes the reversible condensation of phosphoenolpyruvate and shikimate 3-phosphate to yield 5-enolpyruvyl shikimate 3-phosphate and inorganic phosphate. The enzyme is a target for the nonselective herbicide glyphosate (N-phosphonomethylglycine). In order to determine the role of lysine residues in the mechanism of action of this enzyme as well as in its inhibition by glyphosate, chemical modification studies with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate were undertaken. Incubation of the enzyme with the reagent in the absence of light resulted in a time-dependent loss of enzyme activity. The inactivation followed pseudo first-order and saturation kinetics with Kinact of 45 microM and a maximum rate constant of 1.1 min-1. The inactivation rate increased with increase in pH, with a titratable pK of 7.6. Activity of the inactive enzyme was restored by addition of amino thiol compounds. Reaction of enzyme with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was prevented in the presence of substrates or substrate plus glyphosate, an inhibitor of the enzyme. Upon 90% inactivation, approximately 1 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was incorporated per mol of enzyme. The azomethine linkage between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and the enzyme was reduced by NaB3H4. Tryptic digestion followed by reverse phase chromatographic separation resulted in the isolation of a peptide which contained the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate moiety as well as 3H label. By amino acid sequencing of this peptide, the modified residue was identified as Lys-22. The amino acid sequence around Lys-22 is conserved in bacterial, fungal, as well as plant enzymes suggesting that this region may constitute a part of the enzyme's active site.  相似文献   

7.
It has been shown that horse muscle acylphosphatase is inhibited by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and that the inhibition is pH dependent, reversible and competitive with respect to substrate binding. Spectral analysis on the EI complex demonstrates the presence of a Schiff base. Reduction of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-inhibited enzyme with sodium borohydride, followed by amino acid analysis, produces a diminution of the free lysine peak and the appearance of a new peak corresponding to epsilon-pyridoxyllysine. The results suggest that there is at least one NH2-lysyl residue of horse muscle acylphosphatase at or near the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
P F Guidinger  T Nowak 《Biochemistry》1991,30(36):8851-8861
The participation of lysine in the catalysis by avian liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was studied by chemical modification and by a characterization of the modified enzyme. The rate of inactivation by 2,4-pentanedione is pseudo-first-order and linearly dependent on reagent concentration with a second-order rate constant of 0.36 +/- 0.025 M-1 min-1. Inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate of the reversible reaction catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase follows bimolecular kinetics with a second-order rate constant of 7700 +/- 860 M-1 min-1. A second-order rate constant of inactivation for the irreversible reaction catalyzed by the enzyme is 1434 +/- 110 M-1 min-1. Treatment of the enzyme with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate gives incorporation of 1 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mole of enzyme or one lysine residue modified concomitant with 100% loss in activity. A stoichiometry of 1:1 is observed when either the reversible or the irreversible reactions catalyzed by the enzyme are monitored. A study of kobs vs pH suggests this active-site lysine has a pKa of 8.1 and a pH-independent rate constant of inactivation of 47,700 M-1 min-1. The phosphate-containing substrates IDP, ITP, and phosphoenolpyruvate offer almost complete protection against inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Modified, inactive enzyme exhibits little change in Mn2+ binding as shown by EPR. Proton relaxation rate measurements suggest that pyridoxal 5'-phosphate modification alters binding of the phosphate-containing substrates. 31P NMR relaxation rate measurements show altered binding of the substrates in the ternary enzyme.Mn2+.substrate complex. Circular dichroism studies show little change in secondary structure of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate modified phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. These results indicate that avian liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase has one reactive lysine at the active site and it is involved in the binding and activation of the phosphate-containing substrates.  相似文献   

9.
1. Pig heart mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase incubated with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C gradually loses activity. Such inactivation can be largely reversed by dialysis or by addition of L-lysine or L-cysteine, and can be made permanent by NaBH4 reduction. 2. Modification of malate dehydrogenase with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at 35 degrees C involves two phases, an initial inactivation which is reversible and a slower irreversible second stage. 3. The initial reaction between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and malate dehydrogenase appears to involve reversible formation of a Schiff base with the epsilon-amino group of a lysine residue. 4. Inactivation of malate dehydrogenase by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at 10 degrees C involves only the reversible reaction. 5. At 10 degrees C repeated cycles of treatment with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and NaBH4 reduction lead to a stepwise decline in residual activity. 6. Apparent Km values for malate and NAD+ are unaltered in the partially inactivated enzyme. 7. NAD+ and NADH give only partial protection against pyridoxal 5'-phosphate inactivation. Substrates give no effect.  相似文献   

10.
Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate rapidly abolished the DNA-hydrolyzing activities as well as DNA-dependent ATP-ase activity of the recBC enzyme of Escherichia coli. Pyridoxal also had an inhibitory effect on the enzyme but less effective than that of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate, pyridoxamine, or pyridoxine had no effect on the activities of the enzyme. The inhibition was rapidly reversed by dilution but could be made irreversible by reduction with sodium borohydride prior to dilution. This suggests the formation of Schiff base between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and an epsilon-amino group of a lysine residue which is essential for the enzyme activity. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate is a competitive inhibitor of DNA substrate but not of ATP. Furthermore, the presence of DNA substrate protected the enzyme from inactivation by the reduction but the presence of ATP showed no effect. Thus, the recBC enzyme appears to have an essential lysine residue at or near the DNA binding site of the enzyme, and the enzyme possesses two independent catalytic sites, such as a DNA binding site and an ATP binding site.  相似文献   

11.
When hydroxymethylbilane synthase (porphobilinogen deaminase) from Euglena gracilis is incubated with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at pH 7.0 and 0 degree C, it rapidly loses part of its activity. The proportion of activity that remains decreases as the concentration of the modifier increases up to approx. 2mM, above which no further significant inactivation occurs. Dialysis of the partly inactivated enzyme restores its activity, whereas reduction with NaBH4 makes the inactivation permanent. The maximum inactivation achievable from one cycle of the treatment with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, then with borohydride, is 53 +/- 5%; taking this modified enzyme through second and third cycles causes further loss of activity. The enzyme from Rhodopseudomonas spheroides behaves similarly, but there are quantitative differences. Spectroscopic evidence indicates that the inactivation procedure modifies lysine residues, and labelling studies show that epsilon-N-pyridoxyl-L-lysine is a product when permanently inactivated enzyme is completely hydrolysed. Several lysine residues per molecule of the E. gracilis enzyme are modified by the treatment with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and borohydride, but only one appears to be essential for enzymic activity, since porphobilinogen protects the enzyme against inactivation and then one fewer lysine residue per molecule of enzyme is affected. It is suggested that, during the biosynthesis of hydroxymethylbilane, the first porphobilinogen unit is covalently bound to the enzyme through the epsilon-amino group of the essential lysine.  相似文献   

12.
The reaction of aldose reductase from human psoas muscle with either pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) or pyridoxal 5'-diphospho-5'-adenosine (PLP-AMP) results in a pseudo first-order 2-fold activation of the enzyme with the stoichiometric incorporation of 1 mol of either reagent per mol of enzyme. However, in addition to an increase in Vmax there was also an increase in Km for both substrate, DL-glyceraldehyde, and coenzyme, NADPH. This resulted in an overall decrease in catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km). Spectral analysis indicated that activation by both PLP and PLP-AMP was accompanied by Schiff's base formation and epsilon-pyridoxyllysine was identified in hydrolysates of the reduced enzyme PLP-complex. Digestion of either PLP-modified or PLP-AMP-modified aldose reductase with endoproteinase Lys-C followed by high performance liquid chromatography purification and amino acid sequencing of the pyridoxyllated peptide revealed that PLP and PLP-AMP had modified the same lysine residue. A 32-residue peptide containing the essential lysine was found to be highly homologous with a segment of the sequence of both human liver aldehyde reductase and rat lens aldose reductase. A tetrapeptide (Ile-Pro-Lys-Ser) containing the essential lysine was identical in all three enzymes. These results highlight the close structural similarity between members of the aldehyde reductase family.  相似文献   

13.
Chemical modification studies with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate have indicated that lysine(s) appear to be at or near the active site of Escherichia coli glutamine synthetase (Colanduoni, J., and Villafranca, J. J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 15042-15050; Whitley, E. J., Jr., and Ginsburg, A. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 7017-7025). Enzyme samples were prepared that contained approximately 1, approximately 2, and approximately 3 pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate residues/50,000-Da monomer; the activity of each sample was 100, 25, and 14% of the activity of unmodified enzyme, respectively. Cyanogen bromide cleavage of each enzyme sample was performed, the peptides were separated by high performance liquid chromatography, and the peptides containing pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate were identified by their absorbance at 320 nm. These isolated peptides were analyzed for amino acid composition and sequenced. The N terminus of the protein (a serine residue) was modified by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at a stoichiometry of approximately 1/50,000 Da and this modified enzyme had full catalytic activity. Beyond a stoichiometry of approximately 1, lysines 383 and 352 reacted with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and each modification results in a partial loss of activity. When various combinations of substrates and substrate analogs (ADP/Pi or L-methionine-SR-sulfoximine phosphate/ADP) were used to protect the enzyme from modification, Lys-352 was protected from modification indicating that this residue is at the active site. Under all experimental conditions employed, Lys-47, which reacts with the ATP analog 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl-adenosine does not react with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate.  相似文献   

14.
Treatment of yeast fatty acid synthetase with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate inhibited the enzyme. Assays of the partial activities of the pyridoxal phosphate-treated synthetase showed that only the beta-ketoacyl reductase was significantly inhibited. NADPH prevented inactivation of the enzyme by pyridoxal phosphate, indicating that pyridoxal modifies a residue near or in the beta-ketoacyl reductase site. The pyridoxal-treated synthetase shows a fluorescence spectrum with a maximum of 426 nm after uv irradiation at 325 nm. Binding of the pyridoxal phosphate to the synthetase is reversible as shown by the disappearance of the fluorescence band after dialysis of pyridoxal-treated enzyme. Reduction with NaBH4 of the pyridoxal-treated enzyme eliminates this fluorescence maximum and causes the appearance of a new band at 393 nm. These observations suggest that pyridoxal phosphate interacts with the synthetase by forming a Schiff base with lysine residue at the beta-ketoacyl reductase site. Amino acid analyses of the HCl hydrolysates of the borohydride-reduced, pyridoxal-treated synthetase showed the presence of 6 mol of N6-pyridoxal derivative of lysine per mole of fatty acid synthetase, indicating the presence of six sites of beta-ketoacyl reductase in the native enzyme. Autoradiography of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels of the pyridoxal phosphate enzyme reduced with NaB3H4 indicates that the alpha subunit contains the beta-ketoacyl reductase domain. These findings are consistent with the proposed structure of the alpha 6 beta 6 complex required for palmitoyl-CoA synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) DNA polymerase is inactivated by preincubation with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. This inactivation is relatively specific since various pyridoxal-5'-P analogs cause no inactivation. This effect is reversible but can be made irreversible by reduction with sodium borohydride; the reduced pyridoxal-5'-P adduct exhibits a new absorbance maximum at 325 nm and a fluorescence emission at 392 nm when excited at 325 nm. The evidence presented suggests the formation of a Schiff base between pyridoxal-5'-P and a nucleophilic residue of AMV DNA polymerase. The presence of a deoxynucleoside 5'-triphosphate (dTTP) protected the enzyme from inactivation. Reduction of the pyridoxal-5'-P enzyme complex in the presence or absence of a deoxynucleoside 5'-triphosphate showed that the alpha subunit possesses five reactive amino groups, one of which is essential for catalytic activity; the beta subunit has three reactive amino groups which are not involved in the deoxynucleoside binding site.  相似文献   

16.
Essential Active-Site Lysine of Brain Glutamate Dehydrogenase Isoproteins   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Abstract: Two soluble forms of bovine brain glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) isoproteins were inactivated by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Spectral evidence is presented to indicate that the inactivation proceeds through Schiff's base formation with amino groups of the enzyme. Sodium borohydride reduction of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-inactivated GDH isoproteins produced a stable pyridoxyl enzyme derivative that could not be reactivated by dialysis. The pyridoxyl enzyme was studied through fluorescence spectroscopy. No substrates or coenzymes separately gave complete protection against pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. A combination of 10 m M 2-oxoglutarate with 2 m M NADH, however, gave complete protection against the inactivation. Tryptic peptides of the isoproteins, modified with and without protection, resulted in a selective modification of one lysine. In both GDH isoproteins, the sequences of the peptide containing the phosphopyridoxyllysine were clearly identical to sequences of other GDH species.  相似文献   

17.
1. The inactivation of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate in phosphate buffer, pH8, at 10 degrees C was investigated. Activity declines to a minimum value determined by the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate concentration. The maximum inactivation in a single treatment is 75%. This limit appears to be set by the ratio of the first-order rate constants for interconversion of inactive covalently modified enzyme and a readily dissociable non-covalent enzyme-modifier complex. 2. Reactivation was virtually complete on 150-fold dilution: first-order analysis yielded an estimate of the rate constant (0.164min-1), which was then used in the kinetic analysis of the forward inactivation reaction. This provided estimates for the rate constant for conversion of non-covalent complex into inactive enzyme (0.465 min-1) and the dissociation constant of the non-covalent complex (2.8 mM). From the two first-order constants, the minimum attainable activity in a single cycle of treatment may be calculated as 24.5%, very close to the observed value. 3. Successive cycles of modification followed by reduction with NaBH4 each decreased activity by the same fraction, so that three cycles with 3.6 mM-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate decreased specific activity to about 1% of the original value. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme thus treated indicated incorporation of 2-3 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mol of subunit, covalently bonded to lysine residues. 4. NAD+ and NADH protected the enzyme completely against inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, but ethanol and acetaldehyde were without effect. 5. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate used as an inhibitor in steady-state experiments, rather than as an inactivator, was non-competitive with respect to both NADH and acetaldehyde. 6. The partially modified enzyme (74% inactive) showed unaltered apparent Km values for NAD+ and ethanol, indicating that modified enzyme is completely inactive, and that the residual activity is due to enzyme that has not been covalently modified. 7. Activation by methylation with formaldehyde was confirmed, but this treatment does not prevent subsequent inactivation with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Presumably different lysine residues are involved. 8. It is likely that the essential lysine residue modified by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate is involved either in binding the coenzymes or in the catalytic step. 9. Less detailed studies of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase suggest that this enzyme also possesses an essential lysine residue.  相似文献   

18.
Human erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase contains a reactive lysyl residue, which can be labelled with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The binding of one mole of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate per mole of enzyme subunit produces substantial inactivation. The substrate glucose-6-phosphate prevents the loss of activity, suggesting that the reaction site is close to the substrate-binding site. A tryptic peptide containing the pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-binding lysyl residue has been isolated and characterised. The reactive lysyl residue has been identified in the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase amino acid sequence. Comparison with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from other sources shows a high homology with a peptide containing a reactive lysyl residue, isolated from the enzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae; glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides also contains a region highly homologous with the sequence around the reactive lysyl residue in the human enzyme. The results of this communication provide the first direct evidence for the association of an essential catalytic function with a specific region of the molecule of human erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

19.
Pure 2-amino-3-ketobutyrate CoA ligase from Escherichia coli, which catalyzes the cleavage/condensation reaction between 2-amino-3-ketobutyrate (the presumed product of the L-threonine dehydrogenase-catalyzed reaction) and glycine + acetyl-CoA, is a dimeric enzyme (Mr = 84,000) that requires pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as coenzyme for catalytic activity. Reduction of the hololigase with tritiated NaBH4 yields an inactive, radioactive enzyme adduct; acid hydrolysis of this adduct allowed for the isolation and identification of epsilon-N-pyridoxyllysine. Quantitative determinations established that 2 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate are bound per mol of dimeric enzyme. After the inactive, tritiated enzyme adduct was digested with trypsin, a single radioactive peptide containing 23 amino acids was isolated and found to have the following primary structure: Val-Asp-Ile-Ile-Thr-Gly-Thr-Leu-Gly-Lys*-Ala-Leu-Gly-Gly-Ala-Ser-Gly-Gly -Tyr-Thr-Ala-Ala-Arg (where * = the lysine residue in azomethine linkage with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate). This peptide corresponds to residues 235-257 in the intact protein; 10 residues around the lysine residue have a high level of homology with a segment of the primary structure of 5-aminolevulinate synthase from chicken liver.  相似文献   

20.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from Rhodospirillum rubrum was modified with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and then reduced with sodium borohydride. Both carboxylase and oxygenase activities were lost when one molecule of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was bound per enzyme dimer. Peptide maps of modified enzyme showed one N6-(phosphopyridoxal)lysine-containing peptide. This peptide was isolated by gel filtration and cation-exchange chromatography and its sequence determined as Ala-Leu-Gly-Arg-Pro-Glu-Val-Asp-(PLP-Lys)-Gly-Thr-Leu-Val-Ile-Lys. Since activation of the enzyme with Mg2+/CO2 enhances pyridoxal 5'-phosphate modification and subsequent inactivation and the substrate ribulose bisphosphate protects against modification, the modified lysyl group is most certainly at the catalytic site and not at the activation site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

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