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1.
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) is a cofactor for aromatic amino acid hydroxylases and nitric oxide synthase. The biosynthesis includes two reduction steps catalyzed by sepiapterin reductase. An intermediate, 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin (PPH(4)) is reduced to 1(')-oxo-2(')-hydroxypropyl-tetrahydropterin (1(')-OXPH(4)) or 1(')-hydroxy-2(')-oxopropyl-tetrahydropterin (2(')-OXPH(4)), which is further converted to BH(4). However, patients with sepiapterin reductase deficiency show normal urinary excretion of pterins without hyperphenylalaninemia, suggesting that other enzymes catalyze the two reduction steps. In this study, the reductase activities for the tetrahydropterin intermediates were examined using several human recombinant enzymes belonging to the aldo-keto reductase (AKR) family and short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family. In the reduction of PPH(4) by AKR family enzymes, 2(')-OXPH(4) was formed by 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2, whereas 1(')-OXPH(4) was produced by aldose reductase, aldehyde reductase, and 20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, and both 1(')-OXPH(4) and 2(')-OXPH(4) were detected as the major and minor products by 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (types 1 and 3). The activities of aldose reductase and 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 (106 and 35 nmol/mg/min, respectively) were higher than those of the other enzymes (0.2-4.0 nmol/mg/min). Among the SDR family enzymes, monomeric carbonyl reductase exhibited low 1(')-OXPH(4)-forming activity of 5.0 nmol/mg/min, but L-xylulose reductase and peroxisomal tetrameric carbonyl reductase did not form any reduced product from PPH(4). Aldose reductase reduced 2(')-OXPH(4) to BH(4), but the other enzymes were inactive towards both 2(')-OXPH(4) and 1(')-OXPH(4). These results indicate that the tetrahydropterin intermediates are natural substrates of the human AKR family enzymes and suggest a novel alternative pathway from PPH(4) to BH(4), in which 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 and aldose reductase work in concert.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The yeast, Pachysolen tannophilus, can utilize the pentose D-xylose with accumulation of significant quantities of ethanol. Cell extracts of the organism contain NADPH-linked D-xylose reductase (aldose reductase EC 1.1.1.21) and NAD-dependent D-xylitol dehydrogenase (D-xylulose reductase EC 1.1.1.9). D-Xylose was required for induction of both the D-xylitol dehydrogenase and the D-xylose reductase. Neither enzyme was found in glucose grown cell-free extracts.  相似文献   

3.
A cytosolic aldo-keto reductase was purified from Saccharomyces cerevisiae ATCC 26602 to homogeneity by affinity chromatography, chromatofocusing, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. The relative molecular weights of the aldo-keto reductase as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and size exclusion chromatography were 36,800 and 35,000, respectively, indicating that the enzyme is monomeric. Amino acid composition and N-terminal sequence analysis revealed that the enzyme is closely related to the aldose reductases of xylose-fermenting yeasts and mammalian tissues. The enzyme was apparently immunologically unrelated to the aldose reductases of other xylose-fermenting yeasts. The aldo-keto reductase is NADPH specific and catalyzes the reduction of a variety of aldehydes. The best substrate for the enzyme is the aromatic aldehyde p-nitrobenzaldehyde (Km = 46 microM; kcat/Km = 52,100 s-1 M-1), whereas among the aldoses, DL-glyceraldehyde was the preferred substrate (Km = 1.44 mM; kcat/Km = 1,790 s-1 M-1). The enzyme failed to catalyze the reduction of menadione and p-benzoquinone, substrates for carbonyl reductase. The enzyme was inhibited only slightly by 2 mM sodium valproate and was activated by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The optimum pH of the enzyme is 5. These data indicate that the S. cerevisiae aldo-keto reductase is a monomeric NADPH-specific reductase with strong similarities to the aldose reductases.  相似文献   

4.
Drosophila alcohol dehydrogenase belongs to the short chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family which lack metal ions in their active site. In this family, it appears that the three amino acid residues, Ser138, Tyr151 and Lys155 have a similar function as the catalytic zinc in medium chain dehydrogenases. The present work has been performed in order to obtain information about the function of these residues. To obtain this goal, the pH and temperature dependence of various kinetic coefficients of the alcohol dehydrogenase from Drosophila lebanonensis was studied and three-dimensional models of the ternary enzyme-coenzyme-substrate complexes were created from the X-ray crystal coordinates of the D. lebanonensis ADH complexed with either NAD(+) or the NAD(+)-3-pentanone adduct. The kon velocity for ethanol and the ethanol competitive inhibitor pyrazole increased with pH and was regulated through the ionization of a single group in the binary enzyme-NAD(+) complex, with a DeltaHion value of 74(+/-4) kJ/mol (18(+/-1) kcal/mol). Based on this result and the constructed three-dimensional models of the enzyme, the most likely candidate for this catalytic residue is Ser138. The present kinetic study indicates that the role of Lys155 is to lower the pKa values of both Tyr151 and Ser138 already in the free enzyme. In the binary enzyme-NAD(+) complex, the positive charge of the nicotinamide ring in the coenzyme further lowers the pKa values and generates a strong base in the two negatively charged residues Ser138 and Tyr151. With the OH group of an alcohol close to the Ser138 residue, an alcoholate anion is formed in the ternary enzyme NAD(+) alcohol transition state complex. In the catalytic triad, along with their effect on Ser138, both Lys155 and Tyr151 also appear to bind and orient the oxidized coenzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Human aldose reductase and aldehyde reductase are members of the aldo-keto reductase superfamily that share three domains of homology and a nonhomologous COOH-terminal region. The two enzymes catalyze the NADPH-dependent reduction of a wide variety of carbonyl compounds. To probe the function of the domains and investigate the basis for substrate specificity, we interchanged cDNA fragments encoding the NH2-terminal domains of aldose and aldehyde reductase. A chimeric enzyme (CH1, 317 residues) was constructed in which the first 71 residues of aldose reductase were replaced with first 73 residues of aldehyde reductase. Catalytic effectiveness (kcat/Km) of CH1 for the reduction of various substrates remained virtually identical to wild-type aldose reductase, changing a maximal 4-fold. Deletion of the 13-residue COOH-terminal end of aldose reductase, yielded a mutant enzyme (AR delta 303-315) with markedly decreased catalytic effectiveness for uncharged substrates ranging from 80- to more than 600-fold (average 300-fold). The KmNADPH of CH1 and AR delta 303-315 were nearly identical to that of the wild-type enzyme indicating that cofactor binding is unaffected. The truncated AR delta 303-315 displayed a NADPH/D isotope effect in kcat and an increased D(kcat/Km) value for DL-glyceraldehyde, suggesting that hydride transfer has become partially rate-limiting for the overall reaction. We conclude that the COOH-terminal domain of aldose reductase is crucial to the proper orientation of substrates in the active site.  相似文献   

6.
An enzyme labeling and screening strategy for the discovery of ligands selective in binding two structurally similar members of the aldo-keto reductase family of enzymes is reported. The resulting fluorescence microscope data obtained by screening a 74,088 member library led to the identification of selective ligands for aldose reductase (ALR2) and aldehyde reductase (ALR1). Resynthesis results validate the selectivity of these ligands.  相似文献   

7.
Aldehyde reductase (alcohol:NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.2), aldose reductase (alditol:NAD(P)+ 1-oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.21) and carbonyl reductase (secondary-alcohol:NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.184) constitute the enzyme family of the aldo-keto reductases, a classification based on similar physicochemical properties and substrate specificities. The present study was undertaken in order to obtain information about the structural relationships between the three enzymes. Treatment of human aldehyde and carbonyl reductase with phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione caused a complete and irreversible loss of enzyme activity, the rate of loss being proportional to the concentration of the dicarbonyl reagents. The inactivation of aldehyde reductase followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, whereas carbonyl reductase showed a more complex behavior, consistent with protein modification cooperativity. NADP+ partially prevented the loss of activity of both enzymes, and an even better protection of aldehyde reductase was afforded by the combination of coenzyme and substrate. Aldose reductase was partially inactivated by phenylglyoxal, but insensitive to 2,3-butanedione. The degree of inactivation with respect to the phenylglyoxal concentration showed saturation behavior. NADP+ partially protected the enzyme at low phenylglyoxal concentrations (0.5 mM), but showed no effect at high concentrations (5 mM). These findings suggest the presence of an essential arginine residue in the substrate-binding domain of aldehyde reductase and the coenzyme-binding site of carbonyl reductase. The effect of phenylglyoxal on aldose reductase may be explained by the modification of a reactive thiol or lysine rather than an arginine residue.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract: Human brain aldose reductase and hexonate dehydrogenase are inhibited by alrestatin (AY 22,284) and sorbinil (CP 45,634). Inhibition by alrestatin is noncompetitive for both enzymes, and slightly stronger for hexonate dehydrogenase ( K I values 52-250 μ M ) than for aldose reductase ( K I values 170-320 μ M ). Sorbinil inhibits hexonate dehydrogenase far more potently than aldose reductase, K I values being 5 μ M for hexonate dehydrogenase and 150 μ M for aldose reductase. The inhibition of hexonate dehydrogenase by sorbinil is noncompetitive with respect to both aldehyde and NADPH substrates, and is thus kinetically similar to the inhibition by alrestatin. However, sorbinil inhibition of aldose reductase is uncompetitive with respect to glyceraldehyde and noncompetitive with NADPH as the varied substrate. Inhibition of human brain aldose reductase by these two inhibitors is much less potent than that reported for the enzyme from other sources.  相似文献   

9.
Escherichia coli K-12 strain MG1655 was engineered to coproduce acetaldehyde and hydrogen during glucose fermentation by the use of exogenous acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) reductase (for the conversion of acetyl-CoA to acetaldehyde) and the native formate hydrogen lyase. A putative acetaldehyde dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA reductase from Salmonella enterica (SeEutE) was cloned, produced at high levels, and purified by nickel affinity chromatography. In vitro assays showed that this enzyme had both acetaldehyde dehydrogenase activity (68.07 ± 1.63 μmol min(-1) mg(-1)) and the desired acetyl-CoA reductase activity (49.23 ± 2.88 μmol min(-1) mg(-1)). The eutE gene was engineered into an E. coli mutant lacking native glucose fermentation pathways (ΔadhE, ΔackA-pta, ΔldhA, and ΔfrdC). The engineered strain (ZH88) produced 4.91 ± 0.29 mM acetaldehyde while consuming 11.05 mM glucose but also produced 6.44 ± 0.26 mM ethanol. Studies showed that ethanol was produced by an unknown alcohol dehydrogenase(s) that converted the acetaldehyde produced by SeEutE to ethanol. Allyl alcohol was used to select for mutants with reduced alcohol dehydrogenase activity. Three allyl alcohol-resistant mutants were isolated; all produced more acetaldehyde and less ethanol than ZH88. It was also found that modifying the growth medium by adding 1 g of yeast extract/liter and lowering the pH to 6.0 further increased the coproduction of acetaldehyde and hydrogen. Under optimal conditions, strain ZH136 converted glucose to acetaldehyde and hydrogen in a 1:1 ratio with a specific acetaldehyde production rate of 0.68 ± 0.20 g h(-1) g(-1) dry cell weight and at 86% of the maximum theoretical yield. This specific production rate is the highest reported thus far and is promising for industrial application. The possibility of a more efficient "no-distill" ethanol fermentation procedure based on the coproduction of acetaldehyde and hydrogen is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
An enzyme that catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of a wide range of aromatic and hydroxy-aliphatic aldehydes was purified from chicken breast muscle. This enzyme shares many properties with mammalian aldose reductases including molecular weight, relative substrate specificity, Michaelis constants, an inhibitor specificity. Therefore, it seems appropriate to call this enzyme an aldose reductase (EC 1.1.1.21). Chicken muscle aldose reductase appears to be kinetically identical to an aldose reductase that has been purified from chicken kidney (Hara et al., Eur. J. Biochem. 133, 207-214) and to hen muscle L-glycol dehydrogenase (Bernado et al., Biochim. biophys. Acta 659, 189-198). The association of this aldose reductase with muscular dystrophy in the chick is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Xylose reductase is a homodimeric oxidoreductase dependent on NADPH or NADH and belongs to the largely monomeric aldo-keto reductase superfamily of proteins. It catalyzes the first step in the assimilation of xylose, an aldose found to be a major constituent monosaccharide of renewable plant hemicellulosic material, into yeast metabolic pathways. It does this by reducing open chain xylose to xylitol, which is reoxidized to xylulose by xylitol dehydrogenase and metabolically integrated via the pentose phosphate pathway. No structure has yet been determined for a xylose reductase, a dimeric aldo-keto reductase or a family 2 aldo-keto reductase. The structures of the Candida tenuis xylose reductase apo- and holoenzyme, which crystallize in spacegroup C2 with different unit cells, have been determined to 2.2 A resolution and an R-factor of 17.9 and 20.8%, respectively. Residues responsible for mediating the novel dimeric interface include Asp-178, Arg-181, Lys-202, Phe-206, Trp-313, and Pro-319. Alignments with other superfamily members indicate that these interactions are conserved in other dimeric xylose reductases but not throughout the remainder of the oligomeric aldo-keto reductases, predicting alternate modes of oligomerization for other families. An arrangement of side chains in a catalytic triad shows that Tyr-52 has a conserved function as a general acid. The loop that folds over the NAD(P)H cosubstrate is disordered in the apo form but becomes ordered upon cosubstrate binding. A slow conformational isomerization of this loop probably accounts for the observed rate-limiting step involving release of cosubstrate. Xylose binding (K(m) = 87 mM) is mediated by interactions with a binding pocket that is more polar than a typical aldo-keto reductase. Modeling of xylose into the active site of the holoenzyme using ordered waters as a guide for sugar hydroxyls suggests a convincing mode of substrate binding.  相似文献   

12.
Placental aldose reductase (EC 1.1.1.21) was incubated with glucose in the presence of [4A-2H] NADPH prepared in the oxidation of [2-2H] isocitrate by isocitrate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.42) or [4B-2H] NADPH prepared in the oxidation of [1-2H] glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49). The sorbitol formed from [4A-2H] NADPH contained deuterium and from [4B-2H] NADPH it did not. Therefore, aldose reductase in an A-type enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Aldose reductase is an NADPH-dependent enzyme which catalyzes the reduction of glucose to sorbitol. Specific potent inhibitors of aldose reductase are of potential pharmacological use because elevated levels of sorbitol produced by this enzyme in lens, peripheral nerve, retina, and renal glomeruli may be responsible for the pathogenesis associated with chronic diabetes. These inhibitors could also serve as probes of the mechanism of action of aldose reductase. anti-Oximes of aromatic aldehydes (e.g., benzaldoxime and 4-fluorobenzaldoxime) have proved to be effective inhibitors of aldose reductase rivaling pharmacological agents currently used to inhibit this enzyme in vivo. The kinetic patterns of inhibition in which benzyl alcohol is used as the oxidizable substrate suggest that the inhibition is due to the formation of a stable ternary complex composed of aldose reductase, NADP+, and the anti-oxime. Analogus ternary complexes are formed at the active site of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase which is also inhibited by anti-oximes of efficient substrates.  相似文献   

14.
The yakC gene in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, which encodes yakC protein (YakC), a potential member of an aldo-keto reductase (AKR) family, was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli cells. The recombinant YakC purified to homogeneity catalyzed the reduction of 2-nitrobenzaldehyde (k(cat), 44.1 s(-1), K(m), 0.185 +/- 0.018 mM), 2-phthalaldehyde (19.8, 0.333 +/- 0.032), and pyridine-2-aldehyde (7.64, 0.302 +/- 0.028). Neither pyridoxal nor other compounds examined acted as substrates. NADPH, but not NADH, was a hydrogen donor. The enzyme is a monomer with a molecular weight of 38,900 +/- 6,600 (SDS-PAGE). The amino acid sequence deduced from yakC showed the highest (34%) identity with that of pyridoxal reductase (AKR8A1) among the identified AKRs. Twenty-one function-unknown proteins showed 40% or higher identity to the deduced amino acid sequence: DR2261 protein of Deionococcus radiodurans showed the highest (50%) identity. The predicted secondary structure of YakC is similar to that of human aldose reductase, a representative AKR. The results establish YakC as the first member of a new AKR family, AKR13. The yeast cells contained enzyme(s) other than YakC and pyridoxal reductase with the ability to reduce 2-nitrobenzaldehyde: total (100%) activity in the crude extract consisted of about 23% YakC, about 44% pyridoxal reductase, and about 33% other enzyme(s).  相似文献   

15.
Pyridoxal reductase (PL reductase), which catalyzes reduction of PL by NADPH to form pyridoxine and NADP(+), was purified from Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The purified enzyme was very unstable but was stabilized by low concentrations of various detergents such as Tween 40. The enzyme was a monomeric protein with the native molecular weight of 41,000 +/- 1,600. The enzyme showed a single absorption peak at 280 nm (E(1%) = 10.0). PL and 2-nitrobenzaldehyde were excellent substrates, and no measurable activity was observed with short chain aliphatic aldehydes; substrate specificity of PL reductase was obviously different from those of yeast aldo-keto reductases (AKRs) so far purified. The peptide sequences of PL reductase were identical with those in a hypothetical 333-amino acid protein from S. pombe (the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank(TM) accession number D89205). The gene corresponding to this protein was expressed in Escherichia coli, and the purified protein was found to have PL reductase activity. The recombinant PL reductase showed the same properties as those of native PL reductase. PL reductase showed only low sequence identities with members of AKR superfamily established to date; it shows the highest identity (18.5%) with human Shaker-related voltage-gated K(+) channel beta2 subunit. The elements of secondary structure of PL reductase, however, distributed similarly to those demonstrated in the three-dimensional structure of human aldose reductase except that loop A region is lost, and loop B region is extended. Amino acid residues involved in substrate binding or catalysis are also conserved. Conservation of these features, together with the major modifications, establish PL reductase as the first member of a new AKR family, AKR8.  相似文献   

16.
Mammalian 3α-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (3α-HSDs) have been divided into two types: Cytosolic NADP(H)-dependent 3α-HSDs belonging to the aldo-keto reductase family, and mitochondrial and microsomal NAD+-dependent 3α-HSDs belonging to the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family. In this study, we characterized a rat aldo-keto reductase (AKR1C17), whose functions are unknown. The recombinant AKR1C17 efficiently oxidized 3α-hydroxysteroids and bile acids using NAD+ as the preferred coenzyme at an optimal pH of 7.4-9.5, and was inhibited by ketamine and organic anions. The mRNA for AKR1C17 was detected specifically in rat kidney, where the enzyme was more highly expressed as a cytosolic protein than NADP(H)-dependent 3α-HSD (AKR1C9). Thus, AKR1C17 represents a novel NAD+-dependent type of cytosolic 3α-HSD with unique inhibitor sensitivity and tissue distribution. In addition, the replacement of Gln270 and Glu276 of AKR1C17 with the corresponding residues of NADP(H)-dependent 3α-HSD resulted in a switch in favor of NADP+ specificity, suggesting their key roles in coenzyme specificity.  相似文献   

17.
Prostaglandin (PG) F(2α) is widely distributed in various organs and exhibits various biological functions, such as luteolysis, parturition, aqueous humor homeostasis, vasoconstriction, rennin secretion, pulmonary fibrosis and so on. The first enzyme reported to synthesize PGF(2) was referred to as PGF synthase belonging to the aldo-keto reductase (AKR) 1C family, and later PGF(2α) synthases were isolated from protozoans and designated as members of the AKR5A family. In 2003, AKR1B5, which is highly expressed in bovine endometrium, was reported to have PGF(2α) synthase activity, and recently, the paper entitled 'Prostaglandin F(2α) synthase activities of AKR 1B1, 1B3 and 1B7' was reported by Kabututu et al. (J. Biochem.145, 161-168, 2009). Clones that had already been registered in a database as aldose reductases (AKR1B1, 1B3, and 1B7) were expressed in Escherichia coli, and these enzymes were found to have PGF(2α) synthase activity. Moreover, in the above-cited article, the effects of inhibitors specific for aldose reductase on the PGF(2α) synthase activity of AKR1B were discussed. Here, I present an overview of various PGF/PGF(2α) synthases including those of AKR1B subfamily that have been reported until now.  相似文献   

18.
NAD(P)H-dependent d-xylose reductase is a homodimeric oxidoreductase that belongs to the aldo-keto reductase superfamily. The enzyme has the special function to catalyze the first step in the assimilation of xylose into yeast metabolic pathways. Performing this function via reducing the open chain xylose to xylitol, the xylose reductase of Pichia stipitis is one of the most important enzymes that can be used to construct recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain for utilizing xylose and producing alcohol. To investigate into the interaction mechanism of the enzyme with its ligand NAD and NADP, the 3D structure was developed for the NAD(P)H-dependent d-xylose reductase from P. stipitis. With the 3D structure, the molecular docking operations were conducted to find the most stable bindings of the enzyme with NAD and NADP, respectively. Based on these results, the binding pockets of the enzyme for NAD and NADP have been explicitly defined. It has been found that the residues in forming the binding pockets for both NAD and NADP are almost the same and mainly hydrophilic. These findings may be used to guide mutagenesis studies, providing useful clues to modify the enzyme to improve the utilization of xylose for producing alcohol. Also, because human aldose reductases have the function to reduce the open chain form of glucose to sorbitol, a process physiologically significant for diabetic patients at the time that their blood glucose levels are elevated, the information gained through this study may also stimulate the development of new strategies for therapeutic treatment of diabetes.  相似文献   

19.
甲醛脱氢酶(FADH)属于中等锌链醇脱氢酶家族中的一员,存在于绝大多数原核生物以及所有的真核生物中,是微生物中主要用于甲醛解毒的酶。近年来一些研究确定甲醛脱氢酶还具有S-亚硝基谷胱甘肽还原酶(GSNOR)的活性,用于调节内源性NO的动态平衡。对微生物甲醛脱氢酶的结构,生理生化特性,基因克隆以及在环保上的应用方面进行综述。  相似文献   

20.
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