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1.
6-Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase has been purified from human brain to a specific activity of 22.8 U/mg protein. The molecular weight was 90,000. At low ionic strengths enzyme activity increased, due to an increase in Vmax and a decrease in Km for 6-phosphogluconate, and activity subsequently decreased as the ionic strength was increased (above 0.12). Both 6-phosphogluconate and NADP+ provided good protection against thermal inactivation, with 6-phosphogluconate also providing considerable protection against loss of activity caused by p-chloromercuribenzoate and iodoacetamide. Initial velocity studies indicated the enzyme mechanism was sequential. NADPH was a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADP+, and the Ki values for this inhibition were dependent on the concentration of 6-phosphogluconate. Product inhibition by NADPH was noncompetitive when 6-phosphogluconate was the variable substrate, whereas inhibition by the products CO2 and ribulose 5-phosphogluconate and NADP+ were varied. In totality these data suggest that binding of substrates to the enzyme is random. CO2 and ribulose 5-phosphate are released from the enzyme in random order with NADPH as the last product released.  相似文献   

2.
Glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate : NADP+ oxidoreductase (phosphorylating), EC 1.2.1.13) from spinach chloroplasts is a polymeric protein of approx. 600,000 daltons and sodium dodecyl sulphate gel electrophoresis shows that it consists of two subunits of molecular weight 43,000 and 37,000. Comparison of amino acid analyses and tryptic peptide maps indicates that the two subunits have a different primary structure. The native enzyme contains 0.5 mol of NADP+ and 0.5 mol of NAD+ per protomer of 80,000 daltons, no reduced pyridine nucleotides have been detected. Almost complete inactivation is obtained by reaction of two cysteinyl residues per 80,000 daltons with tetrathionate or iodo[14C2]acetic acid; since the same amount of radioactivity is incorporated in the two subunits it is likely that they are both essential for the catalytic activity. Charcoal stripping of native glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase produces an apoprotein which still retains most of the enzymatic activity but, unlike the holoenzyme, is gradually inactivated by storage at 4 degrees C and does not react with iodoacetate under the same conditions in which the holoenzyme is completely inactivated.  相似文献   

3.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus NRRL 1555 (-) was partially purified. The enzyme showed a molecular weight of 85 700 as determined by gel-filtration. NADP+ protected the enzyme from inactivation. Magnesium ions did not affect the enzyme activity. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was specific for NADP+ as coenzyme. The reaction rates were hyperbolic functions of substrate and coenzyme concentrations. The Km values for NADP+ and glucose 6-phosphate were 39.8 and 154.4 microM, respectively. The kinetic patterns, with respect to coenzyme and substrate, indicated a sequential mechanism. NADPH was a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADP+ (Ki = 45.5 microM) and a non-competitive inhibitor with respect to glucose 6-phosphate. ATP inhibited the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. The inhibition was of the linear-mixed type with respect to NADP+, the dissociation constant of the enzyme-ATP complex being 2.6 mM, and the enzyme-NADP+-ATP dissociation constant 12.8 mM.  相似文献   

4.
1. The inactivation of cytosol enzymes by a rat liver membrane protein was studied with crude microsomal fraction, plasma membranes or a partially purified preparation of inactivation factor. 2. Complete inactivation of 125I-labelled glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) by membranes did not result in any detectable change in molecular weight when the products were analysed by gradient polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. 3. Inactivation of radioactive enzyme was not accompanied by extensive binding to the membrane surface. The maximum extent of binding was 15% of the total enzyme labelled, and bound radioactivity was released only slowly, mainly as trichloroacetic acid-insoluble material. 4. Treatment of membranes with dithiothreitol destroyed the inactivation capacity, whereas the thiol-alkylating agent iodoacetamide had no effect. Partial restoration of the inactivation capacity of reduced membranes after exposure to air was prevented by membrane alkylation with iodoacetamide. 5. Modification of enzyme thiol groups during inactivation was determined by measuring a decrease in iodoacetamide-reactive groups in purified glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase. 6. Incubation of membrane-inactivated glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase with dithiothreitol resulted in a partial restoration of enzyme activity. 7. As a result of these experiments it is concluded that inactivation proceeds by a disulphide–thiol exchange mechanism. The proposal that this reaction could be involved in the initial step of enzyme degradation is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
1. Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase was isolated and partially purified from a thermophilic fungus, Penicillium duponti, and a mesophilic fungus, Penicillium notatum. 2. The molecular weight of the P. duponti enzyme was found to be 120000+/-10000 by gelfiltration and sucrose-density-gradient-centrifugation techniques. No NADP(+)- or glucose 6-phosphate-induced change in molecular weight could be demonstrated. 3. Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase from the thermophilic fungus was more heat-stable than that from the mesophile. Glucose 6-phosphate, but not NADP(+), protected the enzyme from both the thermophile and the mesophile from thermal inactivation. 4. The K(m) values determined for glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase from the thermophile P. duponti were 4.3x10(-5)m-NADP(+) and 1.6x10(-4)m-glucose 6-phosphate; for the enzyme from the mesophile P. notatum the values were 6.2x10(-5)m-NADP(+) and 2.5x10(-4)m-glucose 6-phosphate. 5. Inhibition by NADPH was competitive with respect to both NADP(+) and glucose 6-phosphate for both the P. duponti and P. notatum enzymes. The inhibition pattern indicated a rapid-equilibrium random mechanism, which may or may not involve a dead-end enzyme-NADP(+)-6-phosphogluconolactone complex; however, a compulsory-order mechanism that is consistent with all the results is proposed. 6. The activation energies for the P. duponti and P. notatum glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenases were 40.2 and 41.4kJ.mol(-1) (9.6 and 9.9kcal.mol(-1)) respectively. 7. Palmitoyl-CoA inhibited P. duponti glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and gave an inhibition constant of 5x10(-6)m. 8. Penicillium glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase had a high degree of substrate and coenzyme specificity.  相似文献   

6.
Clostridium acetobutylicum gapN was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli BL-21. The IPTG-induced nonphosphorylating NADP-dependent GAPDH (GAPN) has been purified about 34-fold from E. coli cells and its physical and kinetic properties were investigated. The purification method consisted of a rapid and straightforward procedure involving anion-exchange and hydroxyapatite chromatographies. The purified protein is an homotetrameric of 204kDa exhibiting absolute specificity for NADP. Chromatofocusing analysis showed the presence of only one acidic GAPN isoform with an acid isoelectric point of 4.2. The optimum pH of purified enzyme was 8.2. Studies on the effect of assay temperature on enzyme activity revealed an optimal value of about 65 degrees C with activation energy of 18KJmol(-1). The apparent K(m) values for NADP and D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (D-G3P) or DL-G3P were estimated to be 0.200+/-0.05 and 0.545+/-0.1 mM, respectively. No inhibition was observed with L-D3P. The V(max) of the purified protein was estimated to be 78.8 U mg(-1). The Cl. acetobutylicum GAPN was markedly inhibited by sulfhydryl-modifying reagent iodoacetamide, these results suggest the participation of essential sulfhydryl groups in the catalytic activity.  相似文献   

7.
NADP+-specific glutamate dehydrogenase from Salmonella typhimurium, cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, has been purified to homogeneity. The nucleotide sequence of S. typhimurium gdhA was determined and the amino acid sequence derived. The nucleotide analogue 2-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-1,N6-ethenoadenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate (2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP) reacts irreversibly with the enzyme to yield a partially inactive enzyme. After about 60% loss of activity, no further inactivation is observed. The rate of inactivation exhibits a nonlinear dependence on 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP concentration with kmax = 0.160 min-1 and KI = 300 microM. Reaction of 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP with glutamate dehydrogenase for 120 min results in the incorporation of 0.94 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit. The coenzymes, NADPH and NADP+, completely protect the enzyme against inactivation by the reagent and decrease the reagent incorporation from 0.94 to 0.5 mol of reagent/mol enzyme subunit, while the substrate alpha-ketoglutarate offers only partial protection. These results indicate that 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP functions as an affinity label of the coenzyme binding site and that specific reaction occurs at only about 0.5 sites/enzyme subunit or 3 sites/hexamer. Glutamate dehydrogenase modified with 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP in the absence and presence of coenzyme was reduced with NaB3H4, carboxymethylated, and digested with trypsin. Labeled peptides were purified by high performance liquid chromatography and characterized by gas phase sequencing. Two peptides modified by the reagent were isolated and identified as follows: Phe-Cys(CM)-Gln-Ala-Leu-Met-Thr-Glu-Leu-Tyr-Arg and Leu-Cys(CM)-Glu-Ile-Lys. These two peptides were located within the derived amino acid sequence as residues 146-156 and 282-286. In the presence of NADPH, which completely prevents inactivation, only peptide 146-156 was labeled. This result indicates that modification of the pentapeptide causes loss of activity. Glutamate 284 in this peptide is the probable reaction target and is located within the coenzyme binding site.  相似文献   

8.
Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphoribulokinase exist as stable enzymes and as part of a complex in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We show here that phosphoribulokinase exerts an imprinting on glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, which affects its catalysis by decreasing the energy barrier of the reactions with NADH or NADPH by 3.8 +/- 0.5 and 1.3 +/- 0.3 kJ.mol(-1). Phosphoribulokinase and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase within the complex are regulated by NADP(H) but not by NAD(H). The activities of the metastable phosphoribulokinase and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase released from the complex preincubated with NADP(H) are different from those of the metastable enzymes released from the untreated complex. NADP(H) increases phosphoribulokinase and NADPH-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase activities with a (~)K(0.5 (NADP)) of 0.68 +/- 0.16 mm and a (~)K(0.5 (NADPH)) of 2.93 +/- 0.87 mm and decreases NADH-dependent activity. 1 mm NADP increases the energy barrier of the NADH-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase-dependent reaction by 1.8 +/- 0.2 kJ.mol(-1) and decreases that of the reactions catalyzed by phosphoribulokinase and NADPH-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase by 3 +/- 0.2 and 1.2 +/- 0.3 kJ.mol(-1), respectively. These cofactors have no effect on the independent stable enzymes. Therefore, protein-protein interactions may give rise to new regulatory properties.  相似文献   

9.
A new form of cytoplasmic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (E.C.1.1.1.49) was purified from rat liver by protamine sulfate precipitation, ammonium sulfate fractionation, ion exchange chromatography with diethylaminoethyl cellulose, and affinity chromatography with Cibacron blue agarose and NADP agarose. This form of the enzyme has a specific activity of over 600 units/mg of protein and gives essentially a single band by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The form of the enzyme isolated by this purification method is 3 times more active than the form purified from liver by previously reported procedures. The relative mass of this pure glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme was determined by disc gel electrophoresis to be 269,000. This high activity glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme, after inactivation by reaction with palmityl-CoA, was no longer precipitated by specific rabbit and goat antisera to this purified enzyme. Thus, the possibility still exists that starved fat-refed animals contain glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) enzyme protein in an inactivated form no longer detectable by either enzyme activity or immunoprecipitation.  相似文献   

10.
Murine hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase has been purified from liver microsomes by affinity chromatography on 2('),5(')-ADP-Sepharose. The purified enzyme has 6-phosphogluconolactonase activity and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity and has a native molecular mass of 178 kDa and a subunit molecular mass of 89 kDa. Glucose 6-phosphate, galactose 6-phosphate, 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate, glucosamine 6-phosphate, and glucose 6-sulfate are substrates for murine hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, with either NADP or deamino-NADP as coenzyme. This study confirms that hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is a bifunctional enzyme which can catalyze the first two reactions of the pentose phosphate pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase purified from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is rapidly inactivated by diethylpyrocarbonate at pH 6.8 and 30 degrees C with a concomitant increase in absorbance at 242 nm. The second-order rate constant for inactivation was calculated to be 487.8 M-1 min-1. The pH dependence of inactivation suggests the involvement of an amino acid residue having a pKa of 6.77. These results indicate that the inactivation is due to the modification of a histidine residue(s). In the presence of substrate, glucose-6-phosphate or NADP+, the rate of inactivation is decreased, indicating that the essential histidine residue(s) is located at the active site, possibly at the region of overlap of substrates at the binding site.  相似文献   

12.
An NAD-dependent glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (sn-glycerol 3-phosphate: NAD oxidoreductase; EC 1.1.1.8) has been purified from spinach leaves by a three-step procedure involving ion-exchange, gel filtration, and affinity chromatography. The enzyme has been purified over 10,000-fold to a specific activity of 38. It has a molecular weight of approximately 63,500. The pH optimum for the reduction of dihydroxyacetone phosphate is 6.8 and for glycerol 3-phosphate oxidation it is 9.5. During dihydroxyacetone phosphate reduction hyperbolic kinetics were observed when either NADH or dihydroxyacetone phosphate was the variable substrate, but concentrations of NADH greater than 150 μm were inhibitory. Michaelis constants were 0.30–0.35 mm for dihydroxyacetone phosphate and 0.01 mm for NADH. Glycerol 3-phosphate oxidation obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with a Km of 0.19 mm for NAD and 1.6 mm for glycerol 3-phosphate. The enzyme was specific for those substrates, and dihydroxyacetone, glyceraldehyde, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, NADPH, NADP, and glycerol were not utilized. The spinach leaf enzyme appears to be in the cytoplasm and probably functions for the production of glycerol 3-phosphate from dihydroxyacetone phosphate.  相似文献   

13.
The substrate analogue 3-bromo-2-ketoglutarate reacts with pig heart NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase to yield partially inactive enzyme. Following 65% inactivation, no further inactivation was observed. Concomitant with this inactivation, incorporation of 1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme dimer was measured. The dependence of the inactivation rate on bromoketoglutarate concentration is consistent with reversible binding of reagent (KI = 360 microM) prior to irreversible reaction. Manganous isocitrate reduces the rate of inactivation by 80% but does not provide complete protection even at saturating concentrations. Complete protection is obtained with NADP+ or the NADP+-alpha-ketoglutarate adduct. By modification with [14C]bromoketoglutarate or by NaB3H4 reduction of modified enzyme, a single major radiolabeled tryptic peptide was obtained by high performance liquid chromatography with the sequence: Asp-Leu-Ala-Gly-X-Ile-His-Gly-Leu-Ser-Asn-Val-Lys. Evidence in the following paper (Bailey, J.M., Colman, R.F. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12620-12626) indicates that X is glutamic acid. Enzyme modified at the coenzyme site by 2-(bromo-2,3-dioxobutylthio)-1,N(6)-ethenoadenosine 2',5'-biphosphate in the presence of manganous isocitrate is not further inactivated by bromoketoglutarate. Bromoketoglutarate-modified enzyme exhibits a stoichiometry of binding isocitrate and NADPH equal to 1 mol/mol of enzyme dimer, half that of native enzyme. These results indicate that bromoketoglutarate modifies a residue in the nicotinamide region of the coenzyme site proximal to the substrate site and that reaction at one catalytic site of the enzyme dimer decreases the activity of the other site.  相似文献   

14.
NADP-dependent non-phosphorylating D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.9), previously described in higher plants, has been now found to be present in eukaryotic green algae, but in neither cyanobacteria nor non-photosynthetic microorganisms. The enzyme from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, strain 6145c, has been purified to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity. The non-phosphorylating enzyme was effectively separated from the NADP-dependent phosphorylating D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13) dye-ligand chromatography on Reactive Red-120 agarose. The purified enzyme exhibited an optimum pH in the 8.5–9.0 range and a specific activity of approx. 8 μmol·(mg protein)−1·min−1. The native protein was characterized as a homotetramer with a molecular weight of 190 000, a Stokes radius of 5.2 mn, and an isoelectric point of 6.9. From kinetic studies, Km-values of 9.8 and 51 μM were calculated for NADP and D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, respectively, an absolute specificity for both substrates being observed. L-Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate was a potent non-competitive inhibior (Ki, 48 μM). The reaction products NADPH and D-3-phosphoglycerate inhibited enzyme activity in a competitive manner with respect to NADP (Ki, 78 μM) and D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (Ki, 1.2 mM), respectively. Thermal inactivation occurred above 45°C and was effectively prevented by either substrate. The presence of essential vicinal thiol groups is suggested by the inactivation produced by diamide, with D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, but not NADP, behaving as a protective agent. The enzyme's possible physiological role in photosynthetic metabolism is discussed briefly.  相似文献   

15.
Estradiol 17 beta-dehydrogenase of human placenta was rapidly inactivated by 2,3-butanedione under u.v. light, and no protection against the inactivation was observed in the presence of sodium azide. Under ordinary laboratory illumination, the inactivation was biphasically progressed in time-dependent and concentration-dependent manners, while a partial protection from the inactivation was indicated by sodium azide. These results suggest that the inactivation mechanism of the dehydrogenase by 2,3-butanedione under laboratory illumination is different from that under u.v. light. Therefore, the inactivation under laboratory illumination proceeded by a reaction with excited singlet molecular oxygen (1 delta g or 1 sigma +g states), and that under u.v. light was caused by a reaction of substrate with triplet sensitizer. In the presence of NADP+, the inactivation of the enzyme by 2,3-butanedione was markedly reduced. The maximum protection by NADP+ was about 80% of the initial enzyme activity. Amino acid analysis of the enzyme treated with 2,3-butanedione under laboratory illumination showed that the modified enzyme contained considerably less of the following amino acids than the native enzyme: histidine, arginine, threonine, methionine, tyrosine and leucine. In addition, other dicarbonyl reagents, 1,4-dibromo-2,3-butanedione, 1-phenyl-1,2-propanedione, phenylglyoxal, 16-oxoestrone, 1,2-cyclohexanedione, 2,4-pentanedione and glyoxal were found to decrease the dehydrogenase activity in various degree.  相似文献   

16.
Aldehyde dehydrogenase from sheep liver mitochondria was purified to homogeneity as judged by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels, and by sedimentation-equilibrium experiments in the analytical ultracentrifuge. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 198000 and a subunit size of 48000, indicating that the molecule is a tetramer. Fluorescence and spectrophotometric titrations indicate that each subunit can bind 1 molecule of NADH. Enzymic activity is completely blocked by reaction of 4mol of 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate)/mol of enzyme. Excess of disulfiram or iodoacetamide decreases activity to only 50% of the control value, and only two thiol groups per molecule are apparently modified by these reagents.  相似文献   

17.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase has been purified 1000-fold from pig liver. This enzyme exists as an active dimer of molecular weight 133,000 and an inactive monomer of molecular weight 67,500. The pH of maximum activity is 8.5 and the ionic strength maximum is 0.1 to 0.5 M. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is highly specific for NADP+ and glucose 6-phosphate. Apparent Km values of 3.6 muM and 5.4 muM were obtained for glucose 6-phosphate and NADP+. This enzyme is located almost entirely within the soluble portion of the cellular cytoplasm.  相似文献   

18.
The 2',3'-dialdehyde nicotinamide ribose derivatives of NAD (oNAD) and NADH (oNADH) have been prepared enzymatically from the corresponding 2',3'-dialdehyde analogs of NADP and NADPH. Pig heart NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase requires NAD as coenzyme but binds NADPH, as well as NADH, ADP, and ATP, at regulatory sites. Incubation of 1-3 mM oNAD or oNADH with this isocitrate dehydrogenase causes a time-dependent decrease in activity to a limiting value 40% that of the initial enzyme, suggesting that reaction does not occur at the catalytic coenzyme site. Upon varying the concentration of oNAD or oNADH from 0.2 to 3 mM, the inactivation rate constants increase in a nonlinear manner, consistent with reversible binding of oNAD and oNADH to the enzyme prior to covalent reaction. Inactivation is accompanied by incorporation of radioactive reagent with extrapolation to 0.54 mol [14C]oNAD or 0.45 mol [14C]oNADH/mol average enzyme subunit (or about 2 mol reagent/mol enzyme tetramer) when the enzyme is maximally inactivated; this value corresponds to the number of reversible binding sites for each of the natural ligands of isocitrate dehydrogenase. The protection against oNAD or oNADH inactivation by NADH, NADPH, and ADP (but not by isocitrate, NAD, or NADP) indicates that reaction occurs in the region of a nucleotide regulatory site. In contrast to the effects of oNAD and oNADH, oNADP and oNADPH cause total inactivation of the NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase, concomitant with incorporation, respectively, of about 3.5 mol [14C]oNADP or 1.3 mol [14C]oNADPH/mol average subunit. Reaction rates exhibit a linear dependence on [oNADP] or [oNADPH] and protection by natural ligands against inactivation is not striking. These results imply that oNADP and oNADPH are acting in this case as general chemical modifiers and indicate the importance of the free adenosine 2'-OH of oNAD and oNADH for specific labeling of the NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase. The new availability of 2',3'-dialdehyde nicotinamide ribose derivatives of NAD, NADH, NADP, and NADPH may allow selection of the appropriate reactive coenzyme analog for affinity labeling of a variety of dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

19.
The mercuric reductase from Yersinia enterocolitica 138A14 was inactivated by the arginine modifying reagents 2,3-butanedione and phenylglyoxal. The inactivation by 2,3-butanedione exhibited second order kinetics with rate constant of 32 min-1 M-1. In the case of phenylglyoxal, biphasic kinetics were observed. The oxidized coenzyme (NADP+) prevented inactivation of the enzyme by the alpha-dicarbonyl reagents, whereas the reduced coenzyme (NADPH) enhanced the inactivation rate. The loss of enzyme activity was related to the incorporation of [2-14C] phenylglyoxal; when two arginines per subunit were modified the enzyme was completely inactivated.  相似文献   

20.
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