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1.
Cold labile extramitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase (dimeric form) purified from rat liver was activated by various nucleoside triphosphates and inhibited by various nucleoside diphosphates. Activation of acetyl-CoA hydrolase by ATP was inhibited by a low concentration of ADP (Ki congruent to 6.8 microM) or a high concentration of AMP (Ki congruent to 2.3 mM). ADP and AMP were competitive inhibitors of ATP. A Scatchard plot of the binding of ATP to acetyl-CoA hydrolase (dimer) at room temperature gave a value of 25 microM for the dissociation constant with at least 2 binding sites/mol of dimer. Cold-treated monomeric enzyme also associated with ATP-agarose, suggesting that the monomeric form of the enzyme also has a nucleotide binding site(s), probably at least 1 binding site/mol of monomer. Phenylglyoxal or 2,3-butanedione, both of which modify arginyl residues of protein, inactivated acetyl-CoA hydrolase. ATP (an activator) greatly protected acetyl-CoA hydrolase from inactivation by these reagents, while ADP (an inhibitor) greatly (a substratelike, competitive inhibitor), and CoASH (a product) were less effective. However, addition of ADP plus valeryl-CoA (or CoASH) effectively prevented the inactivation by 2,3-butanedione, but that is not the case for phenylglyoxal. These results suggest that one or more arginyl residues are involved in the nucleotide binding site of extramitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase and that their nucleotide binding sites locate near the substrate binding site.  相似文献   

2.
An extramitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolase (EC 3.1.2.1) purified from rat liver was inactivated by heavy metal cations (Hg2+, Cu2+, Cd2+ and Zn2+), which are known to be highly reactive with sulfhydryl groups. Their order of potency for enzyme inactivation was Hg2+ greater than Cu2+ greater than Cd2+ greater than Zn2+. This enzyme was also inactivated by various sulfhydryl-blocking reagents such as p-hydroxymercuribenzoate (PHMB), N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB), and iodoacetate (IAA). DL-Dithiothreitol (DTT) reversed the inactivation of this enzyme by DTNB markedly, and that by PHMB slightly, but did not reverse the inactivations by NEM, DTNB and IAA. Benzoyl-CoA (a substrate-like competitive inhibitor) and ATP (an activator) greatly protected acetyl-CoA hydrolase from inactivation by PHMB, NEM, DTNB and IAA. These results suggest that the essential sulfhydryl groups are on or near the substrate binding site and nucleotide binding site. The enzyme contained about four sulfhydryl groups per mol of monomer, as estimated with DTNB. When the enzyme was denatured by 4 M guanidine-HCl, about seven sulfhydryl groups per mol of monomer reacted with DTNB. Two of the four sulfhydryl groups of the subunit of the native enzyme reacted with DTNB first without any significant inactivation of the enzyme, but its subsequent reaction with the other two sulfhydryl groups seemed to be involved in the inactivation process.  相似文献   

3.
The purified carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from Clostridium thermoaceticum is the only protein required to catalyze an exchange reaction between carbon monoxide and the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA. This exchange requires that the CO dehydrogenase bind the methyl, the carbonyl, and the CoA groups of acetyl-CoA, then equilibrate the carbonyl with CO in the solution and re-form acetyl-CoA. CoA is not necessary for the exchange and, in fact, inhibits the reaction. These studies support the view that CO dehydrogenase is the condensing enzyme that forms acetyl-CoA from its component parts. Carbon dioxide also exchanges with the C-1 of acetyl-CoA, but at a much lower rate than does CO. At 50 degrees C and pH 5.3, the optimal pH, the turnover number is 70 mol of CO exchanged per min/mol of enzyme. Low potential electron carriers are stimulatory. The Km app for stimulation by ferredoxin is 50-fold less than the value for flavodoxin. Neither ATP or Pi stimulate the exchange. The EPR spectrum of the CO-reacted enzyme is markedly changed by binding of CoA or acetyl-CoA. Arginine residues of the CO dehydrogenase appear to be involved in the active site, possibly by binding acetyl-CoA. Mersalyl acid, methyl iodide, 5,5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate), and sodium dithionite inhibit the exchange reaction. A scheme is presented to account for the role of CO dehydrogenase in the exchange reaction and in the synthesis of acetate.  相似文献   

4.
Acetone degradation by cell suspensions of Desulfococcus biacutus was CO2 dependent, indicating initiation by a carboxylation reaction, while degradation of 3-hydroxybutyrate was not CO2 dependent. Growth on 3-hydroxybutyrate resulted in acetate accumulation in the medium at a ratio of 1 mol of acetate per mol of substrate degraded. In acetone-grown cultures no coenzyme A (CoA) transferase or CoA ligase appeared to be involved in acetone metabolism, and no acetate accumulated in the medium, suggesting that the carboxylation of acetone and activation to acetoacetyl-CoA may occur without the formation of a free intermediate. Catabolism of 3-hydroxybutyrate occurred after activation by CoA transfer from acetyl-CoA, followed by oxidation to acetoacetyl-CoA. In both acetone-grown cells and 3-hydroxybutyrate-grown cells, acetoacetyl-CoA was thioyltically cleaved to two acetyl-CoA residues and further metabolized through the carbon monoxide dehydrogenase pathway. Comparison of the growth yields on acetone and 3-hydroxybutyrate suggested an additional energy requirement in the catabolism of acetone. This is postulated to be the carboxylation reaction (delta G(o)' for the carboxylation of acetone to acetoacetate, +17.1 kJ.mol-1). At the intracellular acyl-CoA concentrations measured, the net free energy change of acetone carboxylation and catabolism to two acetyl-CoA residues would be close to 0 kJ.mol of acetone-1, if one mol of ATP was invested. In the absence of an energy-utilizing step in this catabolic pathway, the predicted intracellular acetoacetyl-CoA concentration would be 10(13) times lower than that measured. Thus, acetone catabolism to two acetyl-CoA residues must be accompanied by the utilization of teh energetic equivalent of (at lease) one ATP molecule. Measurement of enzyme activities suggested that assimilation of acetyl-CoA occurred through a modified citric acid cycle in which isocitrate was cleaved to succinate and glyoxylate. Malate synthase, condensing glyoxylate and acetyl-CoA, acted as an anaplerotic enzyme. Carboxylation of pyruvate of phosphoenolpyruvate could not be detected.  相似文献   

5.
The incubation of bovine mitochondrial F1-ATPase with 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl bromide (HNB), a selective reagent toward tryptophan residues in proteins, produced a concentration dependent inactivation of the enzyme and the covalent binding of 0.88 mol reagent/mol F1. Although HNB is highly specific for tryptophan it has also some reactivity toward cysteine, then a pre-treatment of F1 with several sulphydryl reagents has been performed to make the site of reaction clearer. This pre-treatment had neither effects in the binding stoichiometry nor in the extent of catalytic inhibition, suggesting that readly accessible thiol groups are not involved in the reaction with HNB. Since the only tryptophan bearing polypeptide of the bovine mitochondrial F1-ATPase complex is its smallest subunit, subunit-epsilon, this is the most probable candidate for HNB reaction. Therefore it may be inferred that the intactness and/or the correct conformation of this subunit could be important factor(s) for the multisite ATP hydrolytic activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Bromopyruvate behaves as an active-site-directed inhibitor of the pyruvate decarboxylase (E1) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli. It requires the cofactor thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP) and acts initially as an inhibitor competitive with pyruvate (Ki ca. 90 microM) but then proceeds to react irreversibly with the enzyme, probably with the thiol group of a cysteine residue. E1 catalyzes the decomposition of bromopyruvate, the enzyme becoming inactivated once every 40-60 turnovers. Bromopyruvate also inactivates the intact pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in a TPP-dependent process, but the inhibition is more rapid and is mechanistically different. Under these conditions, bromopyruvate is decarboxylated, and the lipoic acid residues in the lipoate acetyltransferase (E2) component become reductively bromoacetylated. Further bromopyruvate then reacts with the new thiol groups thus generated in the lipoic acid residues, inactivating the complex. If reaction with the lipoic acid residues is prevented by prior treatment of the complex with N-ethylmaleimide in the presence of pyruvate, the mode of inhibition reverts to irreversible reaction with the E1 component. In both types of inhibition of E1, reaction of 1 mol of bromopyruvate/mol of E1 chain is required for complete inactivation, and all the evidence is consistent with reaction taking place at or near the pyruvate binding site.  相似文献   

7.
Thiourea dioxide was used in chemical modification studies to identify functionally important amino acids in Escherichia coli CTP synthetase. Incubation at pH 8.0 in the absence of substrates led to rapid, time dependent, and irreversible inactivation of the enzyme. The second-order rate constant for inactivation was 0.18 M-1 s-1. Inactivation also occurred in the absence of oxygen and in the presence of catalase, thereby ruling out mixed-function oxidation/reduction as the mode of amino acid modification. Saturating concentrations of the substrates ATP and UTP, and the allosteric activator GTP prevented inactivation by thiourea dioxide, whereas saturating concentrations of glutamine (a substrate) did not. The concentration dependence of nucleotide protection revealed cooperative behavior with respect to individual nucleotides and with respect to various combinations of nucleotides. Mixtures of nucleotides afforded greater protection against inactivation than single nucleotides alone, and a combination of the substrates ATP and UTP provided the most protection. The Hill coefficient for nucleotide protection was approximately 2 for ATP, UTP, and GTP. In the presence of 1:1 ratios of ATP:UTP, ATP:GTP, and UTP:GTP, the Hill coefficient was approximately 4 in each case. Fluorescence and circular dichroism measurements indicated that modification by thiourea dioxide causes detectable changes in the structure of the protein. Modification with [14C]thiourea dioxide demonstrated that complete inactivation correlates with incorporation of 3 mol of [14C]thiourea dioxide per mole of CTP synthetase monomer. The specificity of thiourea dioxide for lysine residues indicates that one or more lysines are most likely involved in CTP synthetase activity. The data further indicate that nucleotide binding prevents access to these functionally important residues.  相似文献   

8.
The paper describes the interaction of ATP, Na+ and K+ with (NaK)-ATPase exploiting the inactivation by reaction with NBD-chloride as an analytical tool for the evaluation of enzyme ligandation with the various effectors. 1. The inactivation of (NaK)-ATPase by reaction with NBD-chloride showing under all conditions studied a pseudo first-order rate rests on the alkylation of thiol groups in or near catalytic centre. ATP bound to catalytic centre prevents from enzyme inactivation by NDD-chloride through protection of these thiol groups from alkylation. Na+ and K+ affect the reactivity of the thiol groups towards NBD-chloride either indirectly via influencing ATP binding or more directly via changing the conformation of catalytic centre. Proceeding from these interrelations, the interaction of the various effectors with the enzyme was analyzed. 2. The K'D-values of various nucleotides determined by our approach correspond to the values obtained by independent methods. As shown for the first time, two catalytic centres per enzyme molecule exist. They exhibit high or low affinity to both ATP and ADP apparently caused by anticooperative interaction of the half-units of the enzyme through intersubunit communication ("half-of-the-sites reactivity"). 3. In the absence of ATP, Na+ or K+ ligandation of (NaK)-ATPase produce opposite effects on the reactivity of the thiol groups of catalytic centres reflecting different changes of their conformation. This corresponds to the well-known antagonistic effect of Na+ and K+ on some partial reactions of (NaK)-ATPase. The Na+ and K+ concentrations required to change thiol reactivity are rather high, i.e. the ionophoric centres for both Na+ and K+ are not readily accessible for cation complexation in the absence of enzyme complexation with ATP. 4. Na+ being without effect on ATP binding to the enzyme also does not influence the inactivating reaction with NBD-chloride while K+ by decreasing ATP binding dramatically decreases the protective effect of ATP. The K+ affinity of the enzyme-ATP complex is by more than two orders of magnitude higher than that of free enzyme. Na+ ligandation of the K+-liganded enzyme-ATP complex reverses the effect of K+ ligandation and produces a protective effect which distinctly surpasses that of the complexation of free enzyme with ATP. Hence, the enzyme molecule carries simultaneously ionophoric centres for both Na+ and K+. 5. The findings that per enzyme molecule ionophoric centres for Na+ and K+, and two catalytic centres with anticooperative interaction coexist corroborate the corresponding basic predictions of the flip-flop concept of (NaK)-ATPase pump mechanism, and explain some peculiar kinetic features of transport and enzyme activities of (NaK)-ATPase.  相似文献   

9.
V D Redkar  U W Kenkare 《Biochemistry》1975,14(21):4704-4712
Inactivation of bovine brain mitochondrial hexokinase by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB), a sulfhydryl specific reagent, has been investigated. The study shows that the inactivation of the enzyme by DTNB proceeds by way of prior binding of the reagent to the enzyme and involves the reaction of 1 mol of DTNB with a mol of enzyme. At stoichiometric levels of DTNB, the inactivation of the enzyme is accompanied by the formation of a disulfide bond. But it is not clear whether the disulfide bond or the mixed disulfide intermediate formed prior to it causes inactivation. On the basis of considerable protection afforded by glucose against this inactivation it is tentatively concluded that the sulfhydryl residues involved in this inactivation are at the glucose binding site of the enzyme, although other possibilities are not ruled out. An analysis of effects of various substrates and inhibitors on the kinetics of inactivation and sulfhydryl modification by DTNB has led to the proposal that the binding of substrates to the enzyme is interdependent and that glucose and glucose 6-phosphate produce slow conformational changes in the enzyme. Protective effects by ligands have been employed to calculate their dissociation constant with respect to the enzyme. The data also indicate that glucose 6-phosphate and inorganic phosphate share the same locus on the enzyme as the gamma phosphate of ATP and that nucleotides ATP and ADP bind to the enzyme in the absence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

10.
Mitochondrial F1-ATPase from the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe has been prepared under a stable form and in relatively high amounts by an improved purification procedure. Specific chemical modification of the enzyme by the thiol reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) at pH 6.8 leads to complete inactivation characterized by complex kinetics and pH dependence, indicating that several thiols are related to the enzyme activity. A complete protection against NEM effect is afforded by low concentrations of nucleotides in the presence of Mg2+, with ADP and ATP being more efficient than GTP. A total binding of 5 mol of [14C]NEM/mol of F1-ATPase is obtained when the enzyme is 85% inactivated: 3 mol of the label are located on the alpha-subunits and 2 on the gamma-subunit. Two out of the 3 mol on the alpha-subunits bind very rapidly before any inactivation occurs, indicating that the two thiols modified are unrelated to the inactivation process. Complete protection by ATP against inactivation by NEM prevents the modification of three essential thiols out of the group of five thiols labeled in the absence of ATP: one is located on a alpha-subunit and two on the gamma-subunit. These two essential thiols of the gamma-subunit can be differentiated by modification with 6,6'-dithiodinicotinic acid (CPDS), another specific thiol reagent. A maximal binding of 4 mol of [14C]CPDS/mol of enzyme is obtained, concomitant to a 25% inhibition. Sequential modification of the enzyme by CPDS and [14C]NEM leads to the same final deep inactivation as that obtained with [14C]NEM alone. One out of the two thiols of the gamma-subunit is no longer accessible to [14C]NEM after CPDS treatment. When incubated at pH 6.8 with [3H]ATP in the presence of Mg2+, F1-ATPase is able to bind 3, largely exchangeable, mol of nucleotide/mol of enzyme. Modification of the three essential thiols by NEM dramatically decreases the binding of 3H-nucleotide down to about 1 mol/mol of enzyme. Partial modification modifies the cooperative properties, the enzyme being no longer sensitive to anion activation.  相似文献   

11.
1. Crude extracts of seeds of Pinus radiata catalysed acetate-, propionate-, n-butyrate- and n-valerate-dependent PP(i)-ATP exchange in the presence of MgCl(2), which was apparently due to a single enzyme. Propionate was the preferred substrate. Crude extracts did not catalyse medium-chain or long-chain fatty acid-dependent exchange. 2. Ungerminated dry seeds contained short-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase activity. The activity per seed was approximately constant for 11 days after imbibition and then declined. The enzyme was located only in the female gametophyte tissue. 3. The synthetase was purified 70-fold. 4. Some properties of the enzyme were studied by [(32)P]PP(i)-ATP exchange. K(m) values for acetate, propionate, n-butyrate and n-valerate were 4.7, 0.21, 0.33 and 2.1mm respectively. Competition experiments between acetate and propionate demonstrated that only one enzyme was involved and confirmed that the affinity of the enzyme for propionate was greater than that for acetate. CoA inhibited fatty acid-dependent PP(i)-ATP exchange. The enzyme catalysed fatty acid-dependent [(32)P]PP(i)-dATP exchange. 5. The enzyme also catalysed the fatty acyl-AMP-dependent synthesis of [(32)P]ATP from [(32)P]PP(i). Apparent K(m) (acetyl-AMP) and apparent K(m) (propionyl-AMP) were 57mum and 7.5mum respectively. The reaction was inhibited by AMP and CoA. 6. Purified enzyme catalysed the synthesis of acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA. Apparent K(m) (acetate) and apparent K(m) (propionate) were 16mm and 7.5mm respectively. The rate of formation of acetyl-CoA was enhanced by pyrophosphatase. 7. It was concluded that fatty acyl adenylates are intermediates in the formation of the corresponding fatty acyl-CoA.  相似文献   

12.
Ribulose-5-phosphate kinase from maize (Zea mays) can exist in either a reduced, active form or an oxidized, inactive form. Reduced ribulose-5-phosphate kinase is rapidly and irreversibly inactivated by the dichlorotriazine dye Reactive Red 1 (Procion Red MX-2B), but the irreversible inactivation of the oxidized form of ribulose-5-phosphate kinase occurs at only 0.05% of this rate. The rate of inactivation of the reduced enzyme by Reactive Red 1 (apparent bimolecular rate constant 10(4)M-1 X s-1 at pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C) is several orders of magnitude greater than previous estimates of the rates of dye-mediated inactivation of other enzymes. The dye-dependent inactivation of the reduced enzyme is inhibited by Hg2+ or p-mercuribenzoate (thiol reagents that reversibly inhibit ribulose-5-phosphate kinase activity), or by ATP and ADP, the nucleotide substrates of the enzyme. Hydrolysed Reactive Red 1, which does not inactivate the enzyme, is a reversible inhibitor of ribulose-5-phosphate kinase. This inhibition is competitive with respect to ATP (Ki approximately 0.5 mM). The dye appears to act as an affinity label for the ATP/ADP-binding site by preferentially arylating a thiol residue generated during the reductive activation of the enzyme that is achieved by dithiothreitol or thioredoxin in vitro or during illumination of leaves.  相似文献   

13.
The inactivation of the catecholase activity of mushroom tyrosinase was investigated under nonaqueous conditions. The enzyme was immobilized on glass beads, and assays were conducted in chloroform, toluene, amyl acetate, isopropyl ether, and butanol. The reaction components were pre-equilibrated for 2 weeks with a saturated salt solution at a water activity of 0.90. The initial reaction velocity varied between 1.3 x 10(3) mol product/((mol enzyme)(min)) in toluene and 8.7 x 10(3) mol product/((mol enzyme)(min)) in amyl acetate. The turnover number varied between 8.1 x 10(3) mol product/mol enzyme in toluene and 7.2 x 10(4) mol product/mol enzyme in amyl acetate. In each solvent, the tyrosinase reaction inactivation parameters were represented by a probabilistic model. Changes in the probability of inactivation were followed throughout the course of the reaction using a second model which relates the reaction velocity to the amount of product formed. These models reveal that the inactivation rate of tyrosinase decreases as the reaction progresses, and that the inactivation kinetics are independent of the quinone concentration in toluene, chloroform, butanol, and amyl acetate. Significant effects of quinone concentration were, however, observed in isopropyl ether. The likelihood of inactivation of the enzyme was found to be greatest toward the beginning of the reaction. In the latter phase of the reaction, inactivation probability was less and tended to remain constant until the completion of the reaction.  相似文献   

14.
A covalent, catalytic intermediate of cytosolic liver acetyl coenzyme A: arylamine N-acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.5) from rapid acetylator rabbits (III/J) was isolated and chemically characterized. The active site was further studied using two covalent inhibitors, [2-3H]iodoacetic acid and bromoacetanilide. Inhibition experiments with [2-3H]iodoacetic acid at pH 6.9 showed that the incorporation of 0.7 mol of [2-3H]iodoacetic acid/mol of N-acetyltransferase led to rapid, irreversible loss of enzyme activity. Preincubation of the enzyme with acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) completely protected against inactivation by [2-3H]iodoacetic acid. After incubating the N-acetyltransferase with [2-3H]acetyl-CoA in the absence of an acceptor amine, an acetyl-cysteinyl-enzyme intermediate was isolated and characterized. Preincubation of N-acetyltransferase with iodoacetic acid prevented the incorporation of the [2-3H]acetyl group into the enzyme. The product analog, bromoacetanilide, caused a rapid irreversible loss of N-acetyltransferase activity. The reaction was pseudo first-order and saturated at high bromoacetanilide concentrations (KI = 0.67 mM; k3 = 1 min-1). Preincubation of the enzyme with acetyl-CoA prevented inactivation by the inhibitor. The acceptor amine 4-ethylaniline did not prevent inhibition. Incorporation of the inhibitor was directly proportional to the loss of activity showing a 1:1 stoichiometry of enzyme to inhibitor. The target amino acid was identified as cysteine by amino acid analysis of inhibitor-treated enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Two rat liver fatty acid synthetase preparations, containing 1.6 and 2.0 mol of 4'-phosphopantetheine/mol of synthetase, showed specific activity of 2006 and 2140 nmol of NADPH oxidized/min per mg of protein respectively. The two synthetase preparations could be loaded with either 3.3-4.4 mol of [1-14] acetate or 2.9-3.7 mol of [2-14C]malonate, by incubation with either [1-14C] acetyl-CoA or [2-14C]malonyl-CoA. The 4'-phosphopantetheine site could be more than 90% saturated and the serine site about 80% saturated with malonate derived from malonyl-CoA. However, with acetyl-CoA as substrate, binding at both the 4'-phosphopantetheine and cysteine thiol sites did not reach saturation. We interpret these results to indicate that, whereas the equilibrium constant for transfer of substrates between the serine loading site and the 4'-phosphopantetheine site is close to unity, that for transfer of acetyl moieties between the 4'-phosphopantetheine and cysteine sites favours formation of the 4'-phosphopantetheine thioester. Thus, despite the apparent sub-stoichiometric binding of acetate, the results are consistent with a functionally symmetrical model for the fatty acid synthetase which permits simultaneous substrate binding at two separate active centres.  相似文献   

16.
Yeast hexokinase is a homodimer consisting of two identical subunits. Yeast hexokinase was inactivated by 2-aminothiophenol at 25 degrees C (pH 9.1). The reaction followed pseudo-first-order kinetics until about 70% of the phosphotransferase activity was lost. About 0.65 mol of 2-aminothiophenol/mol of hexokinase was found to be bound after the 70% loss of the enzyme activity. Completely inactivated hexokinase showed a stoichiometry of about 1 mol of 2-aminothiophenol bound/mol of the enzyme. The evidence obtained from kinetic experiments, stoichiometry of the inactivation reaction and fluorescence emission measurements suggested site-site interaction (weak negative co-operativity) during the inactivation reaction. The approximate rate constants for the reversible binding of 2-aminothiophenol to the first subunit (KI) and for the rate of covalent bond formation with only one site occupied (k3) were 150 microM and 0.046 min-1 respectively. The inactivation reaction was pH-dependent. Dithiothreitol, 2-mercaptoethanol and cysteine restored the phosphotransferase activity of the hexokinase after inactivation by 2-aminothiophenol. Sugar substrates protected the enzyme from inactivation more than did the nucleotides. Thus it is concluded that the inactivation of the hexokinase by 2-aminothiophenol was a consequence of a covalent disulphide bond formation between the aminothiol and thiol function at or near the active site of the enzyme. Hexokinase that had been completely inactivated by 2-aminothiophenol reacted with o-phthalaldehyde. Fluorescence emission intensity of the incubation mixture containing 2-aminothiophenol-modified hexokinase and o-phthalaldehyde was one-half of that obtained from an incubation mixture containing hexokinase and o-phthalaldehyde under similar experimental conditions. The intensity and position of the fluorescence emission maximum of the 2-aminothiophenol-modified hexokinase were different from those of the native enzyme, indicating conformational change following modification. Whereas aliphatic aminothiols were completely ineffective, aromatic aminothiols were good inhibitors of the hexokinase. Cyclohexyl mercaptan weakly inhibited the enzyme. Inhibition of the hexokinase by heteroaromatic thiols was dependent on the nature of the heterocyclic ring and position of the thiol-thione equilibrium. The inhibitory function of a thiol is associated with the following structural characteristics: (a) the presence of an aromatic ring, (b) the presence of a free thiol function and (c) the presence of a free amino function in the close proximity of the thiol function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The reaction of the water-soluble carbodimide, 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDC), with active papain in the presence of the nucleophile ethyl glycinate results in an irreversible inactivation of the enzyme. This inactivation is accompanied by the derivatization of the catalytically essential thiol group of the enzyme (Cys-25) and by the modification of 6 out of 14 of papain's carboxyl groups and up to 9 out of 19 of the enyzme's tyrosyl residues. No apparent irreversible modification of histidine residues is observed. Mercuripapain is also irreversibly inactivated by EDC/ethyl glycinate, again with the concomitant modification of 6 carboxyl groups, up to 10 tyrosyl residues, and no histidine residues; but in this case there is no thiol derivatization. Treatment of either modified native papain or modified mercuripapain with hydroxylamine results in the complete regeneration of free tyrosyl residues but does not restore any activity. The competitive inhibitor benzamidoacetonitrile substantially protects native papain against inactivation and against the derivatization of the essential thiol group as well as 2 of the 6 otherwise accessible carboxyl groups. The inhibitor has no effect upon tyrosyl modification. These findings are discussed in the context of a possible catalytic role for a carboxyl group in the active site of papain.  相似文献   

18.
The enzyme responsible for the direct phosphorylation of pyruvate during gluconeogenesis in Acetobacter xylinum has been purified 46-fold from ultrasonic extracts and freed from interfering enzyme activities. The enzyme was shown to catalyze the reversible Mg(2+) ion-dependent conversion of equimolar amounts of pyruvate, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and orthophosphate (P(i)) into phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), adenosine monophosphate (AMP), and pyrophosphate (PP). The optimal pH for PEP synthesis was pH 8.2; for the reversal it was pH 6.5. The ratio between the initial rates of the reaction in the forward and reverse directions was 5.1 at pH 8.2 and 0.45 at pH 6.5. The apparent K(m) values of the components of the system in the forward reaction were: pyruvate, 0.2 mm; ATP, 0.4 mm; P(i), 0.8 mm; Mg(2+), 2.2 mm; and for the reverse reaction: PEP, 0.1 mm; AMP, 1.6 mum; PP, 0.067 mm; Mg(2+), 0.87 mm. PEP formation was inhibited by AMP and PP. The inhibition by AMP was competitive with regard to ATP (K(i) = 0.2 mm). The reverse reaction was inhibited competitively by ATP and noncompetitively by pyruvate. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. The inhibition was reversed by dithiothreitol and glutathione. The properties of the enzyme are discussed in relation to the regulation of the opposing enzymatic activities involved in the interconversion of PEP and pyruvate in A. xylinum.  相似文献   

19.
The enzyme succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase from pig brain has been 2000-fold purified by a combination of DEAE-cellulose, hydroxyapatite, and AMP-Sepharose chromatography. This preparation has a molecular weight of 160,000 and a specific activity of 5.3 mumol/min.mg at 25 degrees C. The inhibition of succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase by carbonyl compounds, i.e. P-pyridoxal and o-phthalaldehyde was investigated in detail. The enzyme is reversible, inhibited by preincubation with P-pyridoxal (mixing molar ratio, 300:1) at either 25 degrees or 37 degrees C. Reduction with NaBH1 results in the incorporation of approximately 4 mol of P-pyridoxyl residues/mol of enzyme. NAD+ protects the enzyme against inactivation by P-pyridoxal, whereas the substrate succinic semialdehyde failed to prevent the reaction of P-pyridoxal with lysine residues of the protein. The binding of approximately 10 mol of o-phthalaldehyde/mol of enzyme results in irreversible loss of catalytic activity. The reaction is fast and easily monitored by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy.  相似文献   

20.
Malic enzyme (S)-malate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (oxaloacetate-decarboxylating, EC 1.1.1.40) purified from the thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus, strain MT-4, catalyzed the metal-dependent decarboxylation of oxaloacetate at optimum pH 7.6 at a rate comparable to the decarboxylation of L-malate. The oxaloacetate decarboxylase activity was stimulated about 50% by NADP but only in the presence of MgCl2, and was strongly inhibited by L-malate and NADPH which abolished the NADP activation. In the presence of MnCl2 and in the absence of NADP, the Michaelis constant and Vm for oxaloacetate were 1.7 mM and 2.3 mumol.min-1.mg-1, respectively. When MgCl2 replaced MnCl2, the kinetic parameters for oxaloacetate remained substantially unvaried, whereas the Km and Vm values for L-malate have been found to vary depending on the metal ion. The enzyme carried out the reverse reaction (malate synthesis) at about 70% of the forward reaction, at pH 7.2 and in the presence of relatively high concentrations of bicarbonate and pyruvate. Sulfhydryl residues (three cysteine residues per subunit) have been shown to be essential for the enzymatic activity of the Sulfolobus solfataricus malic enzyme. 5,5'-Dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and N-ethylmaleimide caused the inactivation of the oxidative decarboxylase activity, but at different rates. The inactivation of the overall activity by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate was partially prevented by NADP singly or in combination with both L-malate and MnCl2, and strongly enhanced by the carboxylic acid substrates; NADP + malate + MnCl2 afforded total protection. The inactivation of the oxaloacetate decarboxylase activity by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate treatment was found to occur at a slower rate than that of the oxidative decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

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