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1.
This paper describes a simple and rapid method for the purification of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from bovine lens, together with analysis of the kinetic behaviour and some properties of the enzyme. The purification consisted of two steps, 2',5'-ADP-Sepharose 4B affinity chromatography and DEAE Sepharose Fast Flow ion exchange chromatography in procedure which took two working days. The enzyme was obtained with a yield of 13.7% and had a specific activity of 2.64 U/mg protein. The overall purification was about 19,700-fold. The molecular weight of the enzyme was found to be 62 +/- 3 kDa by Sephadex G-200 gel filtration chromatography. A protein band corresponding to a molecular weight of 69.2 +/- 3.2 kDa was obtained on SDS polyacrylamide slab gel electrophoresis. On chromatofocusing, lens glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase gave a single peak at pI 5.14. The activation energy of the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme was calculated from Arrhenius plot as Ea = 5.88 kcal/mol. The pH versus velocity curve had two peaks at pH 7.7 and 9.6. By the double-reciprocal plots and the product inhibition studies, it was shown that the enzyme follows 'Ordered Bi Bi' sequential kinetics. From the graphical and statistical analyses, KmNADP+, KmG-6-P, KiNADPH, Ki6-PGA were estimated to be 0.008 +/- 0.002, 0.035 +/- 0.013, 0.173 +/- 0.007 and 1.771 +/- 0.160 mM, respectively. The observed kinetic behaviour of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from bovine lens was in accordance with the enzyme from other sources.  相似文献   

2.
The initial rates of phosphorylation of glucose catalysed by glucokinase from Bacillus stearothermophilus were measured over a wide range of glucose, MgATP2-, MgADP- and glucose 6-phosphate concentrations. The results of the effects of the inhibitors on the initial rates suggest that the reaction mechanism is essentially the ordered Bi Bi, in which glucose adds to the enzyme before MgATP2- and glucose 6-phosphate is released from the enzyme after the dissociation of MgADP-, and also suggest that the final step in which glucose 6-phosphate is released is irreversible. For many reaction schemes, the rate equations were derived on the basis of the pseudo-steady-state assumption and were used to correlate the experimental rate data. From this result, we concluded that the reaction obeys the ordered mechanism accompanied by the formation of a non-productive ternary complex, glucose-MgADP--enzyme. By using the experimental Dalziel coefficients phi i, some kinetic parameters were evaluated. The enzyme was characterized by the thermal stability and the low Michaelis constant, the values of which were 54 microM for glucose and 32 microM for MgATP2-.  相似文献   

3.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) catalyses the first step of the pentose phosphate pathway which generates NADPH for anabolic pathways and protection systems in liver. G6PD was purified from dog liver with a specific activity of 130 U x mg(-1) and a yield of 18%. PAGE showed two bands on protein staining; only the slower moving band had G6PD activity. The observation of one band on SDS/PAGE with M(r) of 52.5 kDa suggested the faster moving band on native protein staining was the monomeric form of the enzyme.Dog liver G6PD had a pH optimum of 7.8. The activation energy, activation enthalpy, and Q10, for the enzymatic reaction were calculated to be 8.96, 8.34 kcal x mol(-1), and 1.62, respectively.The enzyme obeyed "Rapid Equilibrium Random Bi Bi" kinetic model with Km values of 122 +/- 18 microM for glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) and 10 +/- 1 microM for NADP. G6P and 2-deoxyglucose-6-phosphate were used with catalytic efficiencies (kcat/Km) of 1.86 x 10(6) and 5.55 x 10(6) M(-1) x s(-1), respectively. The intrinsic Km value for 2-deoxyglucose-6-phosphate was 24 +/- 4mM. Deamino-NADP (d-NADP) could replace NADP as coenzyme. With G6P as cosubstrate, Km d-ANADP was 23 +/- 3mM; Km for G6P remained the same as with NADP as coenzyme (122 +/- 18 microM). The catalytic efficiencies of NADP and d-ANADP (G6P as substrate) were 2.28 x 10(7) and 6.76 x 10(6) M(-1) x s(-1), respectively. Dog liver G6PD was inhibited competitively by NADPH (K(i)=12.0 +/- 7.0 microM). Low K(i) indicates tight enzyme:NADPH binding and the importance of NADPH in the regulation of the pentose phosphate pathway.  相似文献   

4.
The steady-state kinetics of the reaction catalysed by the bloodstream form of Trypanosoma brucei were studied at pH 6.7. In the presence of 50 mM-potassium phosphate buffer, the apparent co-operativity with respect to fructose 6-phosphate and the non-linear relationship between initial velocity and enzyme concentration, which were found when the enzyme was assayed in 50 mM-imidazole buffer [Cronin & Tipton (1985) Biochem. J. 227, 113-124], are not evident. Studies on the variations of the initial rate with changing concentrations of MgATP and fructose 6-phosphate, the product inhibition by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate and the effects of the alternative substrate ITP were consistent with an ordered reaction pathway, in which MgATP binds to the enzyme before fructose 6-phosphate, and fructose 1,6-bisphosphate is the first product to dissociate from the ternary complex.  相似文献   

5.
3-Deoxy-D-manno-octulosonate (KDO)-8-phosphate synthetase has been purified 450-fold from frozen Escherichia coli B cells. The purified enzyme catalyzed the stoichiometric formation of KDO-8-phosphate and Pi from phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and D-arabinose-5-phosphate. The enzyme showed no metal requirement for activity and was inhibited by 1 mM Cd2+, Cu2+, Zn2+, and Hg2+. The inhibition by Hg2+ could be reversed by dithiothreitol. The optimum temperature for enzyme activity was determined to be 45 degrees C, and the energy of activation calculated by the Arrhenius equation was 15,000 calories (ca. 3,585 J) per mol. The enzyme activity was shown to be pH and buffer dependent, showing two pH optima, one at pH 4.0 to 6.0 in succinate buffer and one at pH 9.0 in glycine buffer. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was 5.1. KDO-8-phosphate synthetase had a molecular weight of 90,000 +/- 6,000 as determined by molecular sieving through G-200 Sephadex and by Ferguson analysis using polyacrylamide gels. Based on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the 90,000-molecular-weight native enzyme was composed of three identical subunits, each with an apparent molecular weight of 32,000 +/- 4,000. The enzyme had an apparent Km for D-arabinose-5-phosphate of 2 X 10(-5) M and an apparent Km for PEP of 6 X 10(-6) M. No other sugar or sugar-phosphate could substitute for D-arabinose-5-phosphate. D-Ribose-5-phosphate was a competitive inhibitor of D-arabinose-5-phosphate, with an apparent Ki of 1 X 10(-3) M. The purified enzyme has been utilized to synthesize millimole quantities of pure KDO-8-phosphate.  相似文献   

6.
A partially purified enzyme (120-fold) from Leuconostoc mesenteroides catalyzed the reversible N-acetylation of d-glucosamine-6-phosphate. Coenzyme A was not required and inhibited the reaction rate. Neither d-glucosamine nor N-acetyl-d-glucosamine served as a substrate for the reversible reaction. The enzyme preparation retained 50% of its original activity after 5 min at 100 C. The K(m) for acetate was 7.7 x 10(-2)m in the presence of 2 x 10(-2)md-glucosamine-6-phosphate. The K(m) for d-glucosamine-6-phosphate was 5.0 x 10(-3)m in the presence of 0.64 m acetate. The product of the reaction was characterized by comparison with N-acetyl-d-glucosamine-6-phosphate prepared by enzymatic phosphorylation of N-acetyl-d-glusamine. The characterization tests were: chromatographic migration, acid hydrolysis, enzymatic dephosphorylation, sodium borohydride reduction, and periodate oxidation. The equilibrium constant for the reaction was about 7.5 m for the expression K = (d-glucosamine-6-phosphate)(acetate)/N-acetyl-d-glucosamine-6-phosphate. The standard free energy of the reaction was approximately 1,200 cal per mole.  相似文献   

7.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase [D-glucose-6-phosphate: NADP oxidoreductase, EC. 1. 1. 1. 49] obtained from spores of Bacillus subtilis PCI 219 strain was partially purified by filtration on Sephadex G-200, ammonium sulfate fractionation and chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex A-25 (about 54-fold). The optimum pH for stability of this enzyme was about 6.3 and the optimum pH for the reaction about 8.3. The apparent Km values of the enzyme were 5.7 X 10(-4) M for glucose-6-phosphate and 2.4 X 10(-4) M for nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP). The isoelectric point was about pH 3.9. The enzyme activity was unaffected by the addition of Mg++ or Ca++. The inactive glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase obtained from the spores heated at 85 C for 30 min was not reactivated by the addition of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, dipicolinic acid or some salts unlike inactive glucose dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

8.
1. Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glucose 6-phosphate-NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.49) from baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) was immobilized on CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B with retention of about 3% of enzyme activity. This uncharged preparation was stable for up to 4 months when stored in borate buffer, pH7.6, at 4 degrees C. 2. Stable enzyme preparations with negative or positive overall charge were made by adding valine or ethylenediamine to the CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B 30min after addition of the enzyme. 3. These three immobilized enzyme preparations retained 40-60% of their activity after 15 min at 50 degrees C. The soluble enzyme is inactivated by these conditions. 4. The soluble enzyme lost 45 and 100% of its activity on incubation for 3h at pH6 and 10 respectively. The three immobilized-enzyme preparations were completely stable over this entire pH range. 5. The pH optimum of the positively and negatively charged immobilized-enzyme preparations were about 8 and 9 respectively. The soluble enzyme and the uncharged immobilized enzyme had an optimum pH at about 8.5 6. Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase immobilized on CNBr-activated Sephadex G-25 was unstable, as was enzyme attached to CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B to which glycine, asparitic acid, valine or ethylenediamine was added at the same time as the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
The inorganic pyrophosphate-requiring 6-phosphofructokinase of Entamoeba histolytica has been further investigated. The molecular weight of the enzyme is approximately 83,000 and its isoelectric point occurs at pH 5.8 to 6.0. The divalent cation requirement for reaction was explored. In the direction of fructose 6-phosphate formation half-maximal rate required 500 muM magnesium ion; in the direction of fructose bisphosphate formation 8 muM magnesium ion sufficed. ATP, PPi, polyphosphate, acetyl phosphate, or carbamyl phosphate cannot replace PPi as phosphate donor for the conversion of fructose 6-phosphate to fructose bisphosphate. In the direction of fructose 6-phosphate formation arsenate can replace orthophosphate. Isotope exchange studies indicate that little or no exchange occurs between Pi and PPi or between fructose 6-phosphate and fructose bisphosphate in the absence of a third substrate. These findings appear to rule out phosphoenzyme formation and a ping-pong reaction mechanism. PPi, Pi, and fructose bisphosphate are competitive inhibitors of fructose bisphosphate, PPi, and fructose 6-phosphate, respectively. This argues against an ordered mechanism and suggests a random mechanism. Fructose 6-phosphate and Pi were noncompetitive with respect to each other indicating the formation of a dead end complex. These product inhibition relationships are in accord with a Random Bi Bi mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
The binding of substrates and modifiers to glucosamine synthetase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
1. The binding of substrates and effectors to glucosamine synthetase (l-glutamine-d-fructose 6-phosphate aminotransferase, EC 2.6.1.16) was studied by using the ligand to alter the denaturation rate of the enzyme. The free enzyme bound fructose 6-phosphate, glucose 6-phosphate and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine, but not glutamine, AMP or UTP. Glucose 6-phosphate and AMP increased the binding of UDP-N-acetylglucosamine whereas UTP decreased the interaction between the enzyme and the feedback inhibitor. UDP-N-acetylglucosamine induced a glutamine-binding site on the enzyme. 2. Selective thermal or chemical denaturation revealed that the UDP-N-acetylglucosamine-binding site was not located at the catalytic site. The UTP site could not be distinguished from that for the nucleotide sugar. The AMP- and glucose 6-phosphate-binding sites were distinct from the catalytic and feedback-inhibitor-binding sites. 3. The specificity of the glutamine-binding site was investigated by using a series of potential analogues. 4. A model is proposed for the action of the effectors and the mechanism of the reaction discussed in kinetic and chemical terms.  相似文献   

11.
A novel form of 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase that possesses little 2-kinase or bisphosphatase activity as isolated has been partially purified from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves. However, the new form can be activated by pretreatment with Mg X ATP at room temperature. After ATP activation, the fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase activity has a Michaelis constant for fructose 2,6-bisphosphate of about 1 mM, and is inhibited by high substrate concentrations (greater than 2 mM) and both end products. The kinase/phosphatase activity ratio of the new form was dependent on pH and varied from 0.3 at pH 7.0 to 5.0 at pH 8.2. In contrast, the previously characterized form of the enzyme (which is isolated in an active form and is unaffected by preincubation with Mg X ATP) had an activity ratio of about 2 that was insensitive to pH over the range tested. The ATP-dependent activation of the new enzyme form was stimulated by fructose 6-phosphate and inhibited by glucose 6-phosphate. These results explain why activation is not observed during assay of this enzyme, and indicate that the activation process may be regulated by metabolites. Collectively, these data provide further evidence for the existence, in spinach leaves, of two molecular forms of the enzyme which exhibit different kinetic properties.  相似文献   

12.
The kinetic mechanisms of the NAD- and NADP-linked reactions catalyzed by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides were examined using product inhibition, dead-end inhibition and alternate substrate experiments. The results are consistent with a steady-state random mechanism for the NAD-linked and an ordered, sequential mechanism with NADP+ binding first for the NADP-linked reaction. Thus, the enzyme can bind NADP+, NAD+, and glucose 6-phosphate, but the enzyme-glucose 6-phosphate complex can react only with NAD+, not with NADP+. This affects the rate equation for the NADP-linked reaction by introducing a term for a dead-end enzyme-glucose 6-phosphate complex. The kinetic mechanisms represent revisions of those proposed previously (C. Olive, M.E. Geroch, and H.R. Levy, 1971, J. Biol. Chem. 246, 2047-2057) and provide a kinetic basis for the regulation of coenzyme utilization of the enzyme by glucose 6-phosphate concentration (H.R. Levy, and G.H. Daouk, 1979, J. Biol. Chem. 254, 4843-4847) and NADPH/NADP+ concentration ratios (H.R. Levy, G.H. Daouk, and M.A. Katopes, 1979, Arch, Biochem. Biophys. 198, 406-413). The kinetic mechanisms were found to be the same at pH 6.2 and pH 7.8. The kinetics of ATP inhibition of the NAD- and NADP-linked reactions were examined at pH 6.2 and pH 7.8. The results are interpreted in terms of ATP addition to binary enzyme-coenzyme and enzyme-glucose 6-phosphate complexes.  相似文献   

13.
The specificity and kinetic parameters of the reactions catalyzed by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides has been examined under a range of conditions in order to elucidate details about the mechanism of action of this enzyme. The rate of oxidation of glucose 6-phosphate is inhibited by the addition of various organic solvents. However, the low, inherent glucose dehydrogenase activity of this enzyme was stimulated under these conditions, and was further activated by divalent anions that were observed to be inhibitors of the glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenation. From an examination of the pH variation of the enzyme kinetic parameters two groups on the enzyme that appear to be involved in the binding of the phosphate group of the sugar substrate have been detected. An enzyme catalytic group, probably a carboxylic acid, has been identified that accepts the proton from the hydroxyl group at carbon-1 of the sugar substrate during its oxidation to a lactone. The ionization of a group on the enzyme with a pK of 8.7 resulted in an increase in the maximum velocity of the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity of the enzyme as a consequence of a pH-dependent product release step that is no longer rate limiting at high pH. Stabilization of gluconic acid-delta-lactone against nonenzymatic hydrolysis by organic solvents has allowed the kinetic parameters of the reverse reaction to be reliably measured for the first time in a narrow pH range.  相似文献   

14.
The D to I conversion of glycogen synthase from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes was examined both in a gel-filtered homogenate and in a preparation of glycogen particles with adhering enzymes, purified by chromatography on concanavalin A bound to Sepharose. It was found that glucose 6-phosphate as well as mannose 6-phosphate, glucosamine 6-phosphate, and 2-deoxy-glucose 6-phosphate activated the reaction, whereas the corresponding sugars were without effect. Mn2+ and Ca2+ increased the conversion rate by 51% and 27%, respectively, whereas Mg2+ and inorganic phosphate were without effect. Sodium fluoride inhibited the reaction completely. Glycogen inhibited the reaction in physiological concentrations and 0.5 mM glucose 6-phosphate was able to overcome this inhibition. MgATP greatly augmented the inhibition caused by glycogen in the glycogen particle preparation. This combined effect could be overcome by glucose 6-phosphate in concentrations from 0.1 to 1 mM. Phosphorylase alpha purified from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes inhibited the D to I conversion in a glycogen particle preparation. The inhibition was counteracted by glucose 6-phosphate and to a lesser degree by AMP. Phosphorylase beta was also inhibitory, but only at higher concentrations than phosphorylase alpha. No phosphorylase phosphatase activity was found in the glycogen particle preparation, which may indicate that chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose separates this enzyme from the synthase phosphatase or partially destroys the activity of a hypothetical common protein phosphatase.  相似文献   

15.
The procedure of isolation, purification, and characterization of glucosamine-6-phosphate acetylase from the pig liver is described. The steps of purification were as follows: adsorption on hydroxylapatite, fractionation with ammonium sulfate, chromatography on cellulose phosphate, electrofocusing, and preparative gel electrophoresis. A highly purified (about 3000-fold) preparation of GlcN-6-P acetylase, with a yield of 23%, was obtained. It was found that GlcN-6-P acetylase from pig liver is heterogeneous and exists in two active forms. The characteristic features of the preparation were established: Mr, about 24 kDa; temperature optimum at 37 degrees; pH optimum at 7.45; and Km (GlcN-6-P) 3.7 x 10(-3) M and Km (AcCoA) 1.4 x 10(-3) M. The ions K+, Na+, NH4+, Mg2+, Mn2+, and CH3COO- do not stimulate the acetylase activity. The product of acetylase reaction (GlcNAc-6-P) inhibits this reaction according to the feedback process. The highly purified preparation of GlcN-6-P acetylase is unstable during storage and it is protected by ampholine or glycine from enzyme inactivation, but it is not protected by 2-mercaptoethanol.  相似文献   

16.
An affinity chromotography resin highly specific for rat liver tyrosine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.5) has been synthesized and used in the purification of this enzyme. The structure of the resin, N-(5′-phosphopyridoxyl)-l-tyrosyl-aminoocytl-Sepharose 4B, was designed to resemble the tyrosine-pyridoxal phosphate Schiff's base intermediate in the reaction pathway catalyzed by this enzyme. Use of this resin in combination with octyl-agarose chromatography on partially purified enzyme resulted in a tyrosine aminotransferase preparation with a specific activity of about 450 units/mg protein. When analyzed on one-dimensional polyacrylamide-sodium dodecyl sulfate slab gels, the highly purified enzyme was composed of two polypeptides with molecular weights of about 56,000 and 53,000. Radioiodinated tryptic peptides from each of these polypeptides were essentially identical following two-dimensional analysis. Although the two polypeptides could not be separated from each other in an active form, it was found that (i) both polypeptides have pyridoxal phosphate-binding sites, (ii) the coenzyme is probably bound to both polypeptides as a Schiff's base, (iii) both polypeptides have binding sites for l-tyrosine and l-glutamic acid, the two specific substrates for the enzyme, and (iv) both polypeptides can catalyze the formation of the initial amino acid-pyridoxal phosphate Schiff's base adduct in the overall reaction pathway. Since the ratios of these polypeptides differed from preparation to preparation of purified enzyme, the 53,000 Mr species probably arises by proteolysis of tyrosine aminotransferase in crude liver extracts. These results imply that if tyrosine aminotransferase isozymes exist, they are not the result of translation products produced by different structural genes.  相似文献   

17.
D-Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate forms adducts with thiols. These adducts, which are presumed to be hemithioacetals, equilibrate rapidly with the unhydrated form of the aldehyde, which is the subtrate for D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The adduct provides a substrate buffer system whereby a constant low free aldehyde concentration can be maintained during the oxidation of aldehyde by the enzyme and NAD+. With this system, the kinetics of the association of the aldehyde with the enzyme were examined. The rate profile for this reaction is a single exponential process, showing that all four active sites of the enzyme have equivalent and independent reactivity towards the aldehyde, with an apparent second-order rate constant of 5 X 10(7)M-1-S-1 at pH8.0 and 21 degrees C. The second-order rate constant becomes 8 X 10(7)M-1-S-1 when account is taken of the forward and reverse catalytic rate constants of the dehydrogenase. The pH-dependence of the observed rate constant is consistent with a requirement for the unprotonated form of a group of pK 6.1, which is the pK observed for second ionization of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. The rate of phosphorolysis of the acyl-enzyme intermediate during the steady-state oxidative phosphorylation of the aldehyde was studied, and is proportional to the total Pi concentration up to at least 1 mM-Pi at pH 7.5. The pH-dependence of the rate of NADH generation under these conditions can be explained by the rate law d[NADA]/dt = k[acy] holoenzyme][PO4(3-)-A1, where thioester bond, although kinetically indistinguishable rate equations for the reaction are possible. The rates of the phosphorolysis reaction and of the aldehyde-association reaction decrease with increasing ionic strength, suggesting that the active site of the enzyme has cationic groups which are involved in the reaction of the enzyme with anionic substrates.  相似文献   

18.
Y K Cho  P F Cook 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4155-4160
The pH dependence of kinetic parameters for the pyrophosphate-dependent phosphofructokinase from Propionibacterium freudenreichii suggests that the enzyme catalyzes its reaction via general acid-base catalysis with the use of a proton shuttle. The base is required unprotonated in both reaction directions. In the direction of fructose 6-phosphate phosphorylation the base accepts a proton from the hydroxyl at C-1 of F6P and then donates it to protonate the leaving phosphate. Whether this occurs in one or two steps cannot be deduced from the present data. The maximum velocity of the reaction is pH independent in both reaction directions while V/K profiles exhibit pKs for binding groups (including enzyme and reactant functional groups) as well as pKs for enzyme catalytic groups. These data suggest that reactants bind only when correctly protonated and only to the correctly protonated form of the enzyme. Specifically, the requirement for two enzyme epsilon-amino groups in the protonated form for reactant binding was detected as was the requirement for the ionized phosphates of fructose 6-phosphate, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, MgPPi and HPO4(2-). The protonation state of enzyme and reactant binding groups is in agreement with data obtained previously [Cho, Y.-K., & Cook, P. F. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 5135].  相似文献   

19.
Glucosamine-6-phosphate deaminase (EC 5.3.1.10) from dog kidney cortex was purified to homogeneity, as judged by several criteria of purity. The purification procedure was based on two biospecific affinity chromatography steps, one of them using N-epsilon-amino-n-hexanoyl-D-glucosamine-6-phosphate agarose, an immobilized analog of the allosteric ligand, and the other by binding the enzyme to phosphocellulose followed by substrate elution, which behaved as an active-site affinity chromatography. The enzyme is an hexameric protein of about 180 kDa composed of subunits of 30.4 kDa; its isoelectric point was 5.7. The sedimentation coefficient was 8.3S, and its frictional ratio was 1.28, indicating that dog deaminase is a globular protein. The enzyme displays positive homotropic cooperativity toward D-glucosamine-6-phosphate (Hill coefficient = 2.1, pH 8.8). Cooperativity was completely abolished by saturating concentrations of GlcNAc6P; this allosteric modulator activated the reaction with a typical K-effect. Under hyperbolic kinetics, a Km value of 0.25 +/- 0.02 mM for D-glucosamine-6-phosphate was obtained. Assuming six catalytic sites per molecule, kcat is 42 s-1. Substrate-velocity data were fitted to the Monod's allosteric model for the exclusive-binding case for both substrate and activator, with two interacting substrate sites. The Kdis for N-acetyl-D-glucosamine-6-phosphate was estimated at 14 microM.  相似文献   

20.
Of the glutathione S-transferases from the New Zealand grass grub (Costelytra zealandica) active in conjugating the model substrate 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, the most active was isolated in a functionally homogeneous form. This had an isoelectric point of 8.7. Preliminary evidence suggests that it is a homodimer with subunits of Mr 23 500. The dependence of the enzyme-catalysed reaction on substrate concentration was analysed in terms of the rate equation characteristic of Ordered Bi Bi or Rapid-Equilibrium Random mechanisms. Evidence was found for a critical ionizing event at pH 9.3 at 37 degrees C. This event appears to involve a twofold change in charge on the enzyme, which may be the result of co-operative ionizations rather than independent ionizations. This appears to affect neither the binding of the aromatic substrate to the enzyme, nor the maximum catalytic velocity of the enzyme-catalysed reaction. The variation of the kinetics with temperature was studied. Apparent thermodynamic parameters characteristic of the reaction were derived. The possible relevance of the temperature-dependence of the enzyme-catalysed reaction in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

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