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1.
Electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETF), its redox partner flavoproteins, i.e., D-lactate dehydrogenase and butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase, and another well-known flavoprotein, flavodoxin, were purified from the same starting cell paste of an anaerobic bacterium, Megasphaera elsdenii. The purified ETF contained one mol FAD/mol ETF as the sole non-protein component and bound almost one mol of additional FAD. This preparation is a better subject for investigations of M. elsdenii ETF than the previously isolated ETF, which contains varying amounts of FAD and varying percentages of modified flavins such as 6-OH-FAD and 8-OH-FAD. The additionally bound FAD shows an anomalous absorption spectrum with strong absorption around 400 nm. This spectral change is not due to a chemical modification of the flavin ring because the flavin released by KBr or guanidine hydrochloride is normal FAD. It is also not due to unknown small molecules because the same spectrum appears when ETF is reconstituted from its guanidine-denatured subunits and FAD. A similar anomalous spectrum was observed for AMP-free pig ETF under acidic conditions, suggesting a common flavin environment between pig and M. elsdenii ETFs.  相似文献   

2.
DPNH peroxidase is a flavin adenine dinucleotide-containing flavoprotein. Anaerobic titration of enzyme with dithionite has shown that the active site of the enzyme contains 2 mol of flavin and in addition 1 mol of a non-flavin electron acceptor that is tentatively identified as a disulfide group. Thus complete reduction of the enzyme requires 3 mol of dithionite per mole of active site. The first mole of dithionite reduces the non-flavin acceptor; complex formation between the reduced acceptor and one of the bound flavin molecules causes the formation of a long wavelength absorption band between 500 and 670 nm. The second mole of dithionite reduces the flavin that interacts with the reduced non-flavin group, and the long wavelength band disappears. The third mole of dithionite reduces the second mole of flavin. All groups are reoxidized in the presence of air. DPNH reacts with only two of the enzyme-bound electron acceptors. The first mole of DPNH reduces the non-flavin group to form an intermediate (I) that is almost identical with that formed by dithionite. The second mole of DPNH complexes with the second flavin of Intermediate I to form Intermediate II. This reaction causes a further absorbance increase in the long wavelength region; the tail of the absorption band now extends to 960 nm. The titration data (potassium phosphate, 0.05 M, pH 7.0) can be fitted with dissociation constants of 1 times 10-7 M for the formation of I, and 3 times 10-6 M for the conversion of I to II. In air, species II is oxidized to I; I is stable in air, but is oxidized stoichiometrically to oxidized enzyme by H2O2. Present evidence suggests that bound DPN-plus is responsible for the air stability of species I. Intermediate I, but not oxidized enzyme, reacts slowly with phenylmercuric acetate. This reaction causes loss of the air-stable intermediate and parallel loss in enzyme activity. The inactive enzyme cannot be reduced by DPNH to Species I; DPNH can, however, still react with the second flavin to form the autoxidizable complex. With other methods of enzyme inactivation there is also a direct correlation between residual enzyme activity and the ability of enzyme to form the air-stable intermediate. It is concluded that the air-stable intermediate is an important catalytic species.  相似文献   

3.
Inactivation of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase by 5-iodouracil   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
5-Iodouracil was a substrate for bovine liver dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DHPDHase) and was a potent inactivator of the enzyme. NADPH increased the rate of inactivation and thymine protected against inactivation. These findings suggest that 5-iodouracil was a mechanism-based inactivator. However, dithiothreitol and excess 5-iodouracil protected the enzyme against inactivation. Thus, a reactive product, presumably 5-iodo-5,6-dihydrouracil generated through the enzymatic reduction of 5-iodouracil, was released from DHPDHase during processing of 5-iodouracil. Since only 18% of [6-3H]5-iodouracil reduced by DHPDHase was covalently bound to the enzyme and radiolabel was not lost to the solvent as tritium, the partition coefficient for inactivation was 4.5. However, the enzymatic activity was completely titrated with 1.7 mol of 5-iodouracil per mol of enzyme-bound flavin. These results indicate that there was 0.31 mol of enzyme-bound inactivator per mol of enzyme flavin. This suggests there were 3.2 flavins per active site, which is consistent with the report of multiple flavins per enzymic subunit (Podschun, B., Wahler, G., and Schnackerz, K. D. (1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 185, 219-224). DHPDHase was inactivated by 2.1 mol of racemic 5-iodo-5,6-dihydrouracil per mol of active sites. The stoichiometry for inactivation of the enzyme by the nonenzymatically generated enantiomer of 5-iodo-5,6-dihydrouracil was calculated to be 1. Two radiolabeled fragments were isolated from a tryptic digest of DHPDHase inactivated with radiolabeled 5-iodouracil. The amino acid sequences of these peptides were Asn-Leu-Ser-X-Pro-His and Asn-Leu-Ser-X-Pro-His-Gly-Met-Gly-Glu-Arg where X was the modified amino acid containing radiolabel from [6-3H]5-iodouracil. Fast atom bombardment mass spectral analysis of the smaller peptide yielded a protonated parent ion mass of 782 daltons that was consistent with X being a S-(hexahydro-2,4-dioxo-5-pyrimidinyl)cysteinyl residue.  相似文献   

4.
T Nishino  T Nishino 《Biochemistry》1987,26(11):3068-3072
Xanthine-NAD and NADH-methylene blue oxidoreductase activities of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase were inactivated by incubation with 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine (5'-FSBA), an active site directed reagent for nucleotide binding sites. The inactivation reaction displayed pseudo-first-order kinetics. A double-reciprocal plot of inactivation velocity vs. 5'-FSBA concentration showed that 5'-FSBA and enzyme formed a complex prior to inactivation. NAD protected the enzyme from inactivation by 5'-FSBA in a competitive fashion. The modified enzyme had the same xanthine-dichlorophenolindophenol and xanthine-O2 oxidoreductase activities as the native enzyme, and on addition of xanthine to the modified enzyme, bleaching of the spectrum occurred in the visible region. The amount of radioactivity incorporated into the enzyme by incubation with [14C]-5'-FSBA was parallel to the loss of xanthine-NAD oxidoreductase activity, and the stoichiometry was 1 mol/mol of enzyme-bound FAD for complete inactivation. These results indicated that 5'-FSBA modified specifically the binding site for NAD of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase. The incorporated radioactivity was released slowly from 14C-labeled enzyme by incubation with dithiothreitol with concomitant restoration of catalytic activity. The modified residue responsible for inactivation was identified as a tyrosine.  相似文献   

5.
Mammalian electron-transferring flavoproteins have previously been reported to form the red anionic semiquinone on 1-electron reduction. This work describes a new form of electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETFB) from pig kidney which yields the blue neutral semiquinone upon photochemical, dithionite, or enzymatic reduction. ETFB appears in varying amounts as part of an established purification scheme for ETF. Both the normal form of ETF (ETFR) and ETFB show small differences in the spectra of their oxidized flavins, but no detectable differences in molecular weight or subunit composition. The catalytic activities of ETFR and ETFB are comparable when they mediate the transfer of reducing equivalents between medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. ETFB can be converted into a form showing the characteristic red semiquinone of ETFR by full reduction at pH 6.5 or by preparation of the apoprotein and reconstitution with FAD. In contrast, no conditions for the conversion of red to blue forms of ETF have been found. ETFB contains substoichiometric levels of an unusual FAD analogue which yields a pink flavin species on photochemical or dithionite reduction. The evidence presented suggests that ETFB contains a labile factor or protein modification which is irreversibly lost on conversion to ETFR. The possible physiological significance of these data is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase was purified to apparent homogeneity from bovine heart and kidney mitochondria. The phosphatase has a sedimentation coefficient (S20,w) of about 7.4 S and a molecular weight (Mr) of about 150 000 as determined by sedimentation equilibrium and by gel-permeation chromatography. The phosphatase consists of two subunits with molecular weights of about 97 000 and 50 000 as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate--polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Phosphatase activity resides in the Mr 50 000 subunit, which is sensitive to proteolysis. The phosphatase contains approximately 1 mol of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) per mol of protein of Mr 150 000. FAD is apparently associated with the Mr 97 000 subunit. The function of this subunit remains to be established. The phosphatase binds 1 mol of Ca2+ per mol of enzyme of Mr 150 000 at pH 7.0, with a dissociation constant (Kd) of about 35 microM as determined by flow dialysis. Use of ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetate (EGTA) at pH 7.6 in conjunction with flow dialysis gave a Kd value for Ca2+ of about 8 microM. In the presence of both the phosphatase and the dihydrolipoyl transacetylase (E2) core of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, two equivalent and apparently non-interacting CA2+-binding sites were detected per unit of Mr 150 000, with a Kd value of about 24 microM in the absence and about 5 microM in the presence of EGTA. In the presence of 0.2 M KCl, which inhibits phosphatase activity about 95%, the phosphatase exhibited only one Ca2+-binding site, even in the presence of E2. The phosphatase apparently possesses an "intrinsic" Ca2+-binding site, and a second Ca2+-binding site is produced in the presence of E2. The second site is apparently altered by increasing the ionic strength. It is proposed that the second site may be at the interface between the phosphatase and E2, with Ca2+ acting as a bridging ligand for specific attachment of the phosphatase to E2.  相似文献   

7.
M S Jorns 《Biochemistry》1985,24(13):3189-3194
Sarcosine oxidase from Corynebacterium sp. U-96 contains 1 mol of noncovalently bound flavin and 1 mol of covalently bound flavin per mole of enzyme. Anaerobic titrations of the enzyme with either sarcosine or dithionite show that both flavins are reducible and that two electrons per flavin are required for complete reduction. Absorption increases in the 510-650-nm region, attributed to the formation of a blue neutral flavin radical, are observed during titration of the enzyme with dithionite or substrate, during photochemical reduction of the enzyme, and during reoxidation of substrate-reduced enzyme. Fifty percent of the enzyme flavin forms a reversible, covalent complex with sulfite (Kd = 1.1 X 10(-4) M), accompanied by a complete loss of catalytic activity. Sulfite does not prevent reduction of the sulfite-unreactive flavin by sarcosine but does interfere with the reoxidation of reduced enzyme by oxygen. The stability of the sulfite complex is unaffected by excess acetate (an inhibitor competitive with sarcosine) or by removal of the noncovalent flavin to form a semiapoprotein preparation where 75% of the flavin reacts with sulfite (Kd = 9.4 X 10(-5) M) while only 3% remains reducible with sarcosine. The results indicate that oxygen and sulfite react with the covalently bound flavin and suggest that sarcosine is oxidized by the noncovalently bound flavin.  相似文献   

8.
A novel acyl-CoA dehydrogenase that initiates beta-oxidation of the side chains of phenylacyl-CoA compounds by Pseudomonas putida was induced by growth with phenylhexanoate as carbon source. It was identified as the product of gene PP_0368, which was cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. This phenylacyl-CoA dehydrogenase was found to be dimeric with a subunit molecular mass of 66 kDa, to contain FAD and to be active with phenylacyl-CoA substrates having side chains from four to at least 11 carbon atoms. The same enzyme was induced by the aliphatic alkanoate octanoate. The optimal aliphatic substrates for the enzyme were palmitoyl-CoA and stearoyl-CoA, a property shared with mammalian very-long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenases. The FAD in the enzyme was reduced by aromatic and aliphatic substrates, with changes to the oxidation-reduction potential. Chemical reduction by dithionite ion and oxidation by ferricyanide ion showed that the enzyme can accept four electrons: two to reduce the flavin and two to slowly reduce an unknown acceptor, which in its reduced form interacts with the oxidized flavin in a charge-transfer complex. The experiments identify for the first time an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase that oxidizes the activated forms of aromatic acids similar to those used to first demonstrate the biological beta-oxidation of fatty acids.  相似文献   

9.
The acetylenic alpha-hydroxy acid 2-hydroxy-3-butynoate (alpha HB) is a substrate and an irreversible inactivator of the FAD-containing flavoenzyme D-lactate dehydrogenase from Megasphaera elsdenii. On the average, the enzyme undergoes five catalytic turnovers with alpha HB in air at pH 7.0 before being inactivated. Irreversible inactivation is due to the conversion of the flavin to a pink adduct with visible absorption peaks at 522, 382, and 330 nm and weak fluorescence with an emission maximum at 635 nm. The adduct is stable and can be released from the enzyme and purified. It retains a structure analogous to FAD since it binds to the FAD-specific apo-D-amino acid oxidase. It can be further converted to an FMN analogue with phosphodiesterase which binds to the FMN-specific apoflavodoxin. Experiments were conducted to test whether inactivation was initiated by an alpha HB allene carbanion or the dehydrogenation product of alpha HB. Kinetic studies proved inconclusive in that a rapid equilibrium between an oxidized enzyme--allene carbanion pair and reduced enzyme--keto acid pair would make these two species kinetically equivalent. The olefinic substrate 2-hydroxy-3-butenoate, however, produced no flavin adduct. Since the keto acid derived from the oxidation of this alpha-hydroxy acid is expected to be as reactive as 2-keto-3-butynoate, it is concluded that an allene carbanion produced by abstraction of the alpha-hydrogen of alpha HB is the reactive species which covalently adds to the flavin.  相似文献   

10.
cDNA of rat liver xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR), a molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur flavoprotein, was expressed in a baculovirus-insect cell system. The expressed XOR consisted of a heterogeneous mixture of native dimeric, demolybdo-dimeric, and monomeric forms, each of which was separated and purified to homogeneity. All the expressed forms contained flavin, of which the semiquinone form was stable during dithionite titration after dithiothreitol treatment, indicating that the flavin domains of all the expressed molecules have the intact conformations interconvertible between NAD(+)-dependent dehydrogenase (XDH) and O(2)-dependent oxidase (XO) types. The absorption spectrum and metal analyses showed that the monomeric form lacks not only molybdopterin but also one of the iron-sulfur centers. The reductive titration of the monomer with dithionite showed that the monomeric form required only three electrons for complete reduction, and the redox potential of the iron-sulfur center in the monomeric form is a lower value than that of FAD. In contrast to native or demolybdo-dimeric XDHs, the monomer showed a very slow reductive process with NADH under anaerobic conditions, although the conformation around FAD is a dehydrogenase form, suggesting the important role of the iron-sulfur center in the reductive process of FAD with the reduced pyridine nucleotide.  相似文献   

11.
We have purified the membrane-intrinsic glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from both normal and hyperthyroid rat liver mitochondria by extraction with Triton X-100, hydrophobic affinity chromatography, ion exchange chromatography, gel filtration, and FAD-linked Sepharose 4B affinity chromatography. The yields in both cases were over 20%, and purification ranged from 800- to 650-fold in mitochondria from hyperthyroid and normal rats, respectively. The final preparations appeared to be greater than 95% pure by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence or absence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The pure enzyme focused at pH 5.5 and produced a biphasic thermal inactivation plot at 50 degrees C. The holoenzyme was found to have a molecular mass of 250,000 daltons on gel filtration. The subunit molecular mass was found to be 74,000 daltons +/- 3,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis and high-performance liquid chromatography gel filtration in 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate. 1 mol of the holoenzyme preparation contains 1.1 mol of non-heme iron and 0.7-0.9 mol of noncovalently bound FAD. The absorption spectrum has a maximum at 375 nm and a shoulder at 450 nm which is bleached on treatment with sodium dithionite. The enzymatic reaction is competitively inhibited by glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, phosphoenolpyruvate, and phosphoglycolic acid. The apparent Km for DL-alpha-glycerol 3-phosphate and noncovalently bound FAD were found to be 6 mM and 7 microM, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Bacterial trimethylamine dehydrogenase contains a novel type of covalently bound flavin mononucleotide and a tetrameric iron-sulphur centre. The dehydrogenase takes up 1.5mol of dithionite/mol of enzyme and is thereby converted into the flavin quinol-reduced (4Fe-4S) form, with the expected bleaching of the visible absorption band of the flavin and the emergence of signals of typical reduced ferredoxin in the electronparamagnetic-resonance spectrum. On reduction with a slight excess of substrate, however, unusual absorption and electron-paramagnetic-resonance spectra appear quite rapidly. The latter is attributed to extensive interaction between the reduced (4Fe-4S) centre and the flavin semiquinone. The species of enzyme arising during the catalytic cycle were studied by a combination of rapid-freeze e.p.r. and stopped-flow spectophotometry. The initial reduction of the flavin to the quinol form is far too rapid to be rate-limiting in catalysis, as is the reoxidation of the substrate-reduced enzyme by phenazine methosulphate. Formation of the spin-spin-interacting species from the dihydroflavin is considerably slower, however, and it may be the rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle, since its rate of formation agrees reasonably well with the catalytic-centre activity determined in steady-state kinetic assays. In addition to the interacting form, a second form of the enzyme was noted during reduction by trimethylamine, differing in absorption spectrum, the structure of which remains to be determined.  相似文献   

13.
Mitochondrial glycerol-3-P dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.99.5) has been purified in 20% yield from both rabbit skeletal muscle and brain using a four step procedure involving osmotic shock, solubilization with Triton X-100, hydrophobic chromatography, gel filtration, and preparative column isoelectrofocusing. The active muscle and brain enzymes were found to be 95% and 80% homogeneous, respectively. Final purification was performed on the denatured subunit. The active enzyme from each of the tissues focused at pH 5.25 +/- 0.12 and each produced similar biphasic thermal inactivation plots at 50 degrees C. Mixtures of the purified brain and muscle enzymes co-migrated in discontinuous electrophoresis gels and each enzyme exhibited a single polypeptide component on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gels either when run separately or in mixtures. The subunit molecular weight was shown to be 76,000 +/- 3,000 by SDS-gel electrophoresis and gel filtration in 6 M guanidine HCl. One mole of noncovalently bound FAD and 1 mole of iron were measured per Mr = 100,000. The amino acid composition was determined based on the assumption of 70 aspartate residues per subunit to give a Mr = 76,000. The absorption spectrum has a maximum at 416 nm and a shoulder at 450 to 460 nm which is bleached on treatment with sodium dithionite. The maximum at 416 nm is removed by treatment with mersalyl.  相似文献   

14.
The high-level expression, purification, and characterization of recombinant membrane-bound human liver monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A) in Pichia pastoris is described. Two liters of fermentation culture produces 1170 units (660 mg) of MAO-A. The enzyme is purified in a 35% yield, is homogeneous on denaturing gel electrophoresis, and exhibits a single species (60,512 +/- 6 Da) on electrospray mass spectrometry. It contains 1 mol of 8alpha-S-cysteinyl FAD/mole of enzyme and exhibits >95% functionality. In contrast, the Saccharomyces cerevisiae-expressed enzyme is partially processed by C-terminal serine removal as demonstrated by mass spectra. The amino termini of both P. pastoris- and S. cerevisiae-expressed MAO-A are acetylated on the N-terminal methionine. The steady-state kinetic properties of P. pastoris-expressed MAO-A are similar to those of S. cerevisiae-expressed MAO-A using the following substrates: phenethylamine, p-CF(3)-benzylamine, dopamine, serotonin, and kynuramine. Reductive titrations demonstrate that the recombinant enzyme is reduced by 1 mol of substrate or dithionite as expected for the two electron equivalents required for flavin reduction. Absorption and EPR spectra show no radical species in the resting enzyme while the anionic flavin radical is formed in 50% yield during the reductive titration with dithionite. These data demonstrate significant advantages in the heterologous expression of human MAO-A in P. pastoris compared with the published S. cerevisiae system in higher expression level (329 mg/L) and in a higher level of homogeneity of the isolated enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
A high yield purification scheme for monoamine oxidase A from human placental mitochondria is described. The enzyme is solubilized by a combination of treatment with phospholipase A and C and extraction with Triton X-100 and further purified by partitioning between dextran and polyethylene glycol polymers. The enzyme was obtained in 35% yield and high purity on DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B chromatography. This product, 90% catalytically active, showed a single major and several minor bands on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Further purification could be achieved by additional chromatography using Bio-Gel HTP, but concomitant loss of catalytic activity occurred (enzyme remained about 60% active). The difference extinction coefficient for flavinox--flavinred at 456 nm was 10,800 +/- 350 m-1 cm-1. A sulfhydryl to flavin ratio of 7.5 was obtained when enzyme was denatured with sodium dodecyl sulfate, reduced with 2-mercaptoethanol, and titrated with 2,2'-dipyridyl disulfide. Anaerobic titration with 0.5 eq of sodium dithionite gave rise to the red anionic flavin radical, and full reduction was observed on further addition of reagent. The Km value for kynuramine was essentially the same for mitochondria (0.12 mM) and enzyme after DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B chromatography (0.17 mM). The concentration of clorgyline and deprenyl required for 50% inactivation also remained essentially unchanged. Incubation of the enzyme with 2,2'-dipyridyl disulfide caused inactivation in a biphasic manner with apparent second-order rate constants of 1230 M-1 min-1 and 235 M-1 min-1 for the rapid and slow phase, respectively. This inactivation was largely abolished by the inclusion of the competitive inhibitor amphetamine (Ki = 20 microM) in the incubation mixture. Analysis by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated a subunit molecular mass of 60-64 kDa, about 1.5-2.5 kDa higher than human liver monoamine oxidase B.  相似文献   

16.
The flavin prosthetic group (FAD) of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens was replaced by a stereochemical analog, which is spontaneously formed from natural FAD in alcohol oxidases from methylotrophic yeasts. Reconstitution of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from apoprotein and modified FAD is a rapid process complete within seconds. Crystals of the enzyme-substrate complex of modified FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase diffract to 2.1 A resolution. The crystal structure provides direct evidence for the presence of an arabityl sugar chain in the modified form of FAD. The isoalloxazine ring of the arabinoflavin adenine dinucleotide (a-FAD) is located in a cleft outside the active site as recently observed in several other p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase complexes. Like the native enzyme, a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase preferentially binds the phenolate form of the substrate (pKo = 7.2). The substrate acts as an effector highly stimulating the rate of enzyme reduction by NADPH (kred > 500 s-1). The oxidative part of the catalytic cycle of a-FAD-containing p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase differs from native enzyme. Partial uncoupling of hydroxylation results in the formation of about 0.3 mol of 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate and 0.7 mol of hydrogen peroxide per mol NADPH oxidized. It is proposed that flavin motion in p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase is important for efficient reduction and that the flavin "out" conformation is associated with the oxidase activity.  相似文献   

17.
The NAD(+)-dependent D-lactate dehydrogenase was purified to apparent homogeneity from Lactobacillus bulgaricus and its complete amino acid sequence determined. Two gaps in the polypeptide chain (10 residues) were filled by the deduced amino acid sequence of the polymerase chain reaction amplified D-lactate dehydrogenase gene sequence. The enzyme is a dimer of identical subunits (specific activity 2800 +/- 100 units/min at 25 degrees C). Each subunit contains 332 amino acid residues; the calculated subunit M(r) being 36,831. Isoelectric focusing showed at least four protein bands between pH 4.0 and 4.7; the subunit M(r) of each subform is 36,000. The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters, Km, Vm, and kcat/Km, suggested an enzymic residue with a pKa value of about 7 to be involved in substrate binding as well as in the catalytic mechanism. Treatment of the enzyme with group-specific reagents 2,3-butanedione, diethylpyrocarbonate, tetranitromethane, or N-bromosuccinimide resulted in complete loss of enzyme activity. In each case, inactivation followed pseudo first-order kinetics. Inclusion of pyruvate and/or NADH reduced the inactivation rates manyfold, indicating the presence of arginine, histidine, tyrosine, and tryptophan residues at or near the active site. Spectral properties of chemically modified enzymes and analysis of kinetics of inactivation showed that the loss of enzyme activity was due to modification of a single arginine, histidine, tryptophan, or tyrosine residue. Peptide mapping in conjunction with peptide purification and amino acid sequence determination showed that Arg-235, His-303, Tyr-101, and Trp-19 were the sites of chemical modification. Arg-235 and His-303 are involved in the binding of 2-oxo acid substrate whereas other residues are involved in binding of the cofactor.  相似文献   

18.
Fumarate reductase is a membrane-bound terminal oxidase which is induced when Escherichia coli is grown anaerobically. The purified enzyme is composed of two polypeptide chains of 69,000 and 24,000 daltons and contains 1 mol of covalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide per mol of enzyme. Fluorescence scanning of SDS-polyacrylamide gels of the protein shows that the flavin is attached to the large subunit. The hypsochromic shift of the 372 nm band of riboflavin to 350 nm in both native fumarate reductase and a flavin peptide released by proteolytic digestion indicates that the flavin is attached via position 8 alpha of riboflavin. Based on the spectral properties and pH-fluorescence dependence we have identified the linkage as 8 alpha-[N(3)-histidyl]FAD.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Some of the unusual molecular and catalytic properties of a high molecular weight dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase (DHOD) from Neurospora crassa have been determined. Comparison of the properties of this enzyme with the properties of the soluble biosynthetic enzyme of prokaryotes has revealed several important differences. The fungal enzyme is located in a mitochondrial membrane in a position consistent with linkage with the respiratory chain through ubiquinone (Miller, R. W.: Arch. Biochem, Biophys. 146, 256-270 (1971)). Release of the enzyme from the membrane results in a solubilized protein complex containing bound lipids and inactive hydrophobic proteins. Non-specific protein aggregation is minimized during purification by Triton-X-100 and phospholipase treatments. The catalytically active enzyme has an apparent molecular weight of 210 000. In contrast to soluble DHOD preparations the high molecular weight enzyme has no endogenous dihydro-orotate oxidase (EC 1.3.3.1) activity and is relatively insensitive to inactivation by sulfhydryl-reactive reagents in the presence of dihydro-orotate (DHO). The enzyme activity is highly sensitive to conditions causing oxidation of flavin mononucleotide (FMN). The activity cannot be restored by cysteine or other means. FMN is present in all purified preparations in a bound, non-fluorescent (reduced) form until dihydro-orotic acid is removed or oxidized. Catalytic efficiency of the purified enzyme was 12 000 mol DHO oxidized per minute per mole FMN. This high turnover rate is due in part to the small flavin content of the purified enzyme, equivalent to 1 mol FMN per 120 000 g of catalytically active protein. Iron was detected in the purified enzyme by atomic absorption spectroscopy but labile sulfide was absent. Thenoyltrifluoroacetone, an iron chelator, only partially inhibited DHO oxidation regardless of electron acceptor. Fatty acids interact with a hydrophobic site of the enzyme in non-competitive fashion but under certain conditions appear to significantly alter the Km for ubiquinone. Orotate, by comparison, is a purely competitive inhibitor. Both types of inhibitor may function to regulate the biosynthesis of orotate in vivo. Superoxide anion is not produced in significant quantities by the DHO-reduced enzyme unless both ubiquinone and a suitable single electron carrier such as phenazine methosulfate are present. DHOD has been proposed as a source of superoxide anion in mammalian mitochondria (Forman, H. J. & Kennedy, J. A.: J. Biol. Chem. 250, 4322-4326 (1975)).  相似文献   

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