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1.
Purified phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from both the crassulacean acid metabolism plant Crassula argentea and the C4 plant Zea mays was shown by kinetic studies at saturating fixed-varying concentrations of free mg2+ to selectively use the metal-complexed form of phosphoenolpyruvate when assayed at pH 8.0. A similar response to added magnesium at high free phosphoenolpyruvate concentrations was obtained for both enzymes, consistent with the use of the complex as the substrate. Kinetic studies at pH 7.0 indicated that at this pH the total concentration of phosphoenolpyruvate (including both free and metal-complexed forms) could be used by the enzyme from C.argentea while the C4 enzyme still utilized the complex. The loss of specificity induced by the decrease in the pH of the assay medium was accompanied by a decrease in the Km of this enzyme for phosphoenolpyruvate whatever the form considered and an increase in Vmax/Km. In contrast, a similar decrease of pH led to an increased Km of the C4 enzyme for phosphoenolpyruvate and a decrease of Vmax/Km. For the enzyme from C. argentea (previously shown to contain an essential arginine at the active site), protection of activity by the different forms of substrate against inactivation by the specific arginyl reagent 2,3-butanedione changes markedly with pH. At pH 8.1, the metal complex is the better protector while at pH 7.0 free phosphoenolpyruvate gives the best protection consistent with the observed kinetic changes in substrate form utilization. The relationship between the enzyme affinity for substrate, substrate specificity, and the requirement for magnesium for substrate turnover is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of temperature on the kinetic parameters of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase purified from Crassula argentea was such that both the Vmax and Km(MgPEP) values tended upward over the range from 11 to 35 degrees C. The increased rate at low temperatures due to the low Km is at least partially offset by the increased Vmax at higher temperatures, potentially leading to a broad plateau of enzyme activity and a relatively small effect of temperature on the enzyme. The cooperativity was negative at 11 degrees C, but above 15 degrees C it became positive. The presence of 5 mM glucose-6-phosphate has relatively little effect on Vmax but it clearly reduces Km and overcomes any effect of temperature on this parameter in the range studied. Positive cooperativity is observed only at temperatures above 25 degrees C. The size of the native enzyme, as determined by dynamic light scattering, was strongly toward the tetrameric form. At a temperature of 40 degrees C and above, a considerable oligomerization takes place. No loss of activity can be observed in this range of temperature. In the presence of either glucose-6-phosphate or magnesium phosphoenolpyruvate, at temperatures under 25 degrees C, the equilibrium is displaced toward higher levels of aggregation. Maximal accumulation of lead malate occurred at 10 to 12 degrees C in vivo with reduction to about 25% at 35 degrees C. Glucose-6-phosphate followed a similar curve in response to temperature, but the overall difference was about 50%. The sum of phosphoenolpyruvate plus pyruvate is level at night temperatures below 25 degrees C, doubling at 35 degrees C. Calculated concentrations of malate, glucose-6-phosphate, and phosphoenolpyruvate plus pyruvate indicate that the concentrations present are equal to or greater than Ki, Ka, and Km values for these metabolites, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of phosphate and several phosphate-containing compounds on the activity of purified phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) from the crassulacean acid metabolism plant, Crassula argentea, were investigated. When assayed at subsaturating phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) concentrations, low concentrations of most of the compounds tested were found to stimulate PEPC activity. This activation, variable in extent, was found in all cases to be competitive with glucose 6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) stimulation, suggesting that these effectors bind to the Glc-6-P site. At higher concentrations, depending upon the effector molecule studied, deactivation, inhibition, or no response was observed. More detailed studies were performed with Glc-6-P, AMP, phosphoglycolate, and phosphate. AMP had previously been shown to be a specific ligand for the Glc-6-P site. The main effect of Glc-6-P and AMP on the kinetic parameters was to decrease the apparent Km and increase Vmax/Km. AMP also caused a decrease in the Vmax of the reaction. In contrast, phosphoglycolate acted essentially as a competitive inhibitor increasing the apparent Km for PEP and decreasing Vmax/Km. Inorganic phosphate had a biphasic effect on the kinetic parameters, resulting in a transient decrease in Km followed by an increase of the apparent Km for PEP with increasing concentration of phosphate. The Vmax also was decreased with increasing phosphate concentrations. Further, the enzyme appeared to respond to the complex of phosphate with magnesium. In the presence of a saturating concentration of AMP, no activation but rather inhibition was observed with increasing phosphate concentration. This is consistent with the binding of phosphate to two separate sites--the Glc-6-P activation site and an inhibitory site, a phenomenon that may be occurring with other phosphate containing compounds. High concentrations of phosphate with magnesium were found to protect enzyme activity when PEPC, previously shown to contain an essential arginine at the active site, was incubated with the specific arginyl reagent 2,3-butanedione, consistent with the binding of phosphate at the active site. Data were successfully fitted to a rapid equilibrium model allowing for binding of the phosphate-magnesium complex to both the activation site and the active site which accounts for the activation/deactivation observed at low substrate concentrations. Effects on the Vmax of the reaction are also addressed. Factors controlling the differential affinity of various effectors to the active site or activation site appear to include charge distribution, size, and other steric factors.  相似文献   

4.
J W Janc  W W Cleland  M H O'Leary 《Biochemistry》1992,31(28):6441-6446
Formate is an alternate substrate for bicarbonate in the reaction with PEP catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Zea mays, producing formyl phosphate and pyruvate. The Km for formate is 25 +/- 2 mM, and the maximum velocity is 1% of that for bicarbonate at pH 8.0. Use of [18O]formate produces inorganic phosphate containing 1 equiv of 18O, but no label is incorporated into residual phosphoenolpyruvate. PEP carboxylase catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphoglycolate or L-phospholactate 2000 times more slowly and D-phospholactate 4000 times more slowly than the reaction between bicarbonate and PEP.  相似文献   

5.
The local anaesthetic procaine showed the properties of an allosteric effector of bovine erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase at low ionic strength; it antagonised inhibition of substrate hydrolysis caused by decamethonium, decreased the rate of ageing of isopropylmethylphosphonyl-acetylcholinesterase, increased the rate of decarbamylation of dimethylcarbamyl-acetylcholinesterase, and interacted synergistically with the nucleophilic alcohol 3,3-dimethyl-1-butanol in the acceleration of decarbamylation. These allosteric effects almost completely disappeared as the ionic strength was increased to a physiological level, and they could not be demonstrated at the physiological ionic strength with membrane-bound human erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase. There was no evidence of significant cooperativity in the binding of procaine to the enzyme, nor in the binding of the substrate acetylthiocholine in the presence of procaine, contrary to reports in the literature for other sources of acetylcholinesterase. Procaine was not hydrolysed by acetylcholinesterase (EC 3.1.1.7) although it is a substrate for serum cholinesterase (EC 3.1.1.8).The possibility that the results at low ionic strength can be explained on the basis of procaine binding to the active site of acetylcholinesterase (at low concentrations) and also to a peripheral allosteric site (at higher concentrations) is discussed. The results confirm the complexity of the kinetics of acetylcholinesterase, and extend the range of compounds with the ability to modify rates of decarbamylation and ageing.  相似文献   

6.
We have determined the crystal structure of Mn2+-bound Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) using X-ray diffraction at 2.6 A resolution, and specified the location of enzyme-bound Mn2+, which is essential for catalytic activity. The electron density map reveals that Mn2+ is bound to the side chain oxygens of Glu-506 and Asp-543, and located at the top of the alpha/beta barrel in PEPC. The coordination sphere of Mn2+ observed in E. coli PEPC is similar to that of Mn2+ found in the pyruvate kinase structure. The model study of Mn2+-bound PEPC complexed with phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) reveals that the side chains of Arg-396, Arg-581 and Arg-713 could interact with PEP.  相似文献   

7.
A kinetic investigation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Zea mays.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
J W Janc  M H O'Leary  W W Cleland 《Biochemistry》1992,31(28):6421-6426
The reaction catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Zea mays has been studied kinetically. Results of initial velocity patterns and inhibition studies indicate that phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase has a random sequential mechanism in which there is a high level of synergism in the binding of substrates. The preferred order of addition of reactants is Mg2+, phosphoenolpyruvate, and bicarbonate. The binding of Mg2+ is at equilibrium. Values for the various kinetic parameters are KiMg = 2.3 +/- 0.4 mM, KPEP = 3.6 +/- 0.6 mM, KiPEP = 0.2 +/- 0.07 mM, and Kbicarbonate = 0.18 +/- 0.04 mM. In addition, double inhibition experiments have been performed to examine the nature of the active site interactions with the putative intermediates, carboxy phosphate and the enolate of pyruvate. Highly synergistic inhibition of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase was observed in the presence of oxalate and carbamyl phosphate (alpha = 0.0013). However, an antisynergistic relationship exists between oxalate and phosphonoformate (alpha = 2.75).  相似文献   

8.
S L Ausenhus  M H O'Leary 《Biochemistry》1992,31(28):6427-6431
In addition to the normal carboxylation reaction, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Zea mays catalyzes a HCO3(-)-dependent hydrolysis of phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate and Pi. Two independent methods were used to establish this reaction. First, the formation of pyruvate was coupled to lactate dehydrogenase in assay solutions containing high concentrations of L-glutamate and aspartate aminotransferase. Under these conditions, oxalacetic acid produced in the carboxylation reaction was efficiently transaminated, and decarboxylation to form spurious pyruvate was negligible. Second, sequential reduction of oxalacetate and pyruvate was achieved by initially running the reaction in the presence of malate dehydrogenase with NADH in excess over phosphoenolpyruvate. After the reaction was complete, lactate dehydrogenase was added, thus giving a measure of pyruvate concentration. At pH 8.0 in the presence of Mg2+, the rate of phosphoenolpyruvate hydrolysis was 3-7% of the total reaction rate. The hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase was strongly metal dependent, with rates decreasing in the order Ni2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Mn2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Ca2+. These results suggest that the active site metal ion binds to the enolate oxygen, thus stabilizing the proposed enolate intermediate. The more stable the enolate, the less reactive it is toward carboxylation and the greater the opportunity for hydrolysis.  相似文献   

9.
A hormonally induced change in the covalent phosphorylation state of several enzymes is generally regarded as an important mechanism for hormonal modulation of enzyme activity. We have previously demonstrated that epinephrine stimulates the phosphorylation of a peptide of Mr = 220,000 in adipocytes. Incubation of 32P-labeled cytosolic proteins from adipocytes and hepatocytes with antisera raised against homogeneous chicken and rat liver acetyl coenzyme A carboxylase results in the specific and complete precipitation of the same phosphopeptide. No other major phosphopeptide is specifically precipitated. In hepatocytes, glucagon stimulates the incorporation of 32P into this peptide associated with an inhibition of enzyme activity. These data, coupled with previous studies in adipocytes, suggest that cyclic AMP-dependent protein phosphorylation plays a major role in the regulation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity and of fatty acid biosynthesis in adipose tissue and liver.  相似文献   

10.
5-Hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), but not acetylcholine, carbamylcholine or L-D-noradrenaline, binds to ox brain ganglioside micelles, to phosphatidylcholine smectic mesophases (liposomes) containing gangliosides and to the glycoprotein fetuin, through the negatively charged N-acctylneuraminic acid (NeuNAc) residues. The 5-HT binding to NeuNAc is reversible, saturable, prodeeds in a 1: 1 fashion and can be specifically blocked by 7-methyltryptamine. Thc affinity constant at equilibrium for the reaction is of the order of 102 1. mol-1. No special ganglioside was identified as specifically associating with the amine. A terminal NeuNAc in the gangliosides is not a prerequisite for binding, although it seems important for binding 5-HT in entire mcmbrane preparations (MARCHBANKS, 1966) or for bringing about the 5-HT induced contraction of smooth muscle cells (WOOLLCY & GOMML 1964a). It is proposed that in 5-HT target cells, NeuNAc residues, probably attached to membrane surface glycoprotein(s) are involved in thc mechanism of action of the drug.  相似文献   

11.
Zhu G  Jensen RG 《Plant physiology》1990,93(1):244-249
The properties of the tight and specific binding of 2-C-carboxy-d-arabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate (CABP), which occurs only to reaction sites of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) that are activated by CO2 and Mg2+, were studied. With fully active purified spinach (Spinacia oleracea) Rubisco the rate of tight binding of [14C]CABP fit a multiple exponential rate equation with half of the sites binding with a rate constant of 40 per minute and the second half of the sites binding at 3.2 per minute. This suggests that after CABP binds to one site of a dimer of Rubisco large subunits, binding to the second site is considerably slower, indicating negative cooperativity as previously reported (S Johal, BE Partridge, R Chollet [1985] J Biol Chem 260: 9894-9904). The rate of CABP binding to partially activated Rubisco was complete within 2 to 5 minutes, with slower binding to inactive sites as they formed the carbamate and bound Mg2+. Addition of [14C]CABP and EDTA stopped binding of Mg2+ and allowed tight binding of the radiolabel only to sites which were CO2/Mg2+-activated at that moment. This approach estimated the amount of CO2/Mg2+-activated sites in the presence of inactive sites and carbamylated sites lacking Mg2+. The rate of CO2 fixation was proportional to the CO2/Mg2+-activated sites. During light-dependent CO2 fixation with isolated spinach chloroplasts, the amount of carbamylation was proportional to Rubisco activity either initially upon lysis of the plastids or following total activation with Mg2+ and CO2. Lysis of chloroplasts in media with [14C]CABP plus EDTA estimated those carbamylated sites having Mg2+. The loss of Rubisco activation during illumination was partially due to the lack of Mg2+ to stabilize the carbamylated sites.  相似文献   

12.
Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was purified 100-fold from the cyanobacterium Coccochloris peniocystis with a yield of 10%. A single isozyme was found at all stages of purification, and activity of other beta-carboxylase enzymes was not detected. The apparent molecular weight of the native enzyme was 560,000. Optimal activity was observed at pH 8.0 and 40 degrees C, yielding a Vmax of 8.84 mumol/mg of protein per min. The enzyme was not protected from heat inactivation by aspartate, malate, or oxalacetate. Michaelis-Menten reaction kinetics were observed for various concentrations of PEP, Mg2+, and HCO3-, yielding Km values of 0.6, 0.27, and 0.8 mM, respectively. Enzyme activity was inhibited by aspartate and tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates and noncompetitively inhibited by oxalacetate, while activation by any compound was not observed. However, the enzyme was sensitive to metabolic control at subsaturating substrate concentrations at neutral pH. These data indicate that cyanobacterial PEP carboxylase resembles the enzyme isolated from C3 plants (plants which initially incorporate CO2 into C3 sugars) and suggest that PEP carboxylase functions anapleurotically in cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

13.
When incubated with CO2 and Mg2+, ribulose-1,5-bis-phosphate carboxylase forms a ternary complex of enzyme . CO2 . Mg. This complex was prepared using high specific activity [14C]O2 and injected into a solution containing a large (50- to 112-fold) molar excess of [12C]O2 and sufficient ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate to permit the catalytic site to turn over several times. The enzyme was then rapidly separated from the other components by gel filtration and its radiospecific activity was determined to be 30 to 60 times that of the medium. If the CO2 activator and the CO2 substrate sites were one and the same, then, following turnover, the enzyme should have been in isotopic equilibrium with the medium. The finding that this was not the case, by a factor of about 40, indicates that the CO2 activator site is physically distinct from the CO2 substrate site.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The light-dependent phosphorylation of the photosynthetic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PyrPC) was shown to occur in protoplasts from Sorghum mesophyll cells. It was accompanied by an increase in PyrPC protein-serine-kinase activity and conferred the target-specific functional properties, i.e. an increase in Vmax and apparent Ki for L-malate, as previously found with the whole leaf. The light-dependent regulatory phosphorylation of PyrPC was (a) specifically promoted by the weak bases NH4Cl and methylamine (agents which increase cytosolic pH), but not by KNO3, (b) inhibited by the cytosolic protein-synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide, thus confirming that protein turnover is a component of the signal-transduction cascade, as reported in [4], (c) found to moderately decrease in the presence of EGTA and to be strongly depressed when the Ca(2+)-selective ionophore A23187 was added to the incubation medium together with EGTA. Addition of Ca2+, but not of Mg2+, to the Ca(2+)-depleted protoplasts partially, but significantly, relieved the inhibition. Calcium deprivation apparently affected the in-situ light-activation of the PyrPC protein kinase. These data indicated that both Ca2+ and an increase in cytosolic pH are required for the induction of PyrPC protein kinase activity/PyrPC phosphorylation in illuminated protoplasts from Sorghum mesophyll cells.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Enzyme structures determined in organic solvents show that most organic molecules cluster in the active site, delineating the binding pocket. We have developed algorithms to perform solvent mapping computationally, rather than experimentally, by placing molecular probes (small molecules or functional groups) on a protein surface, and finding the regions with the most favorable binding free energy. The method then finds the consensus site that binds the highest number of different probes. The probe-protein interactions at this site are compared to the intermolecular interactions seen in the known complexes of the enzyme with various ligands (substrate analogs, products, and inhibitors). We have mapped thermolysin, for which experimental mapping results are also available, and six further enzymes that have no experimental mapping data, but whose binding sites are well characterized. With the exception of haloalkane dehalogenase, which binds very small substrates in a narrow channel, the consensus site found by the mapping is always a major subsite of the substrate-binding site. Furthermore, the probes at this location form hydrogen bonds and non-bonded interactions with the same residues that interact with the specific ligands of the enzyme. Thus, once the structure of an enzyme is known, computational solvent mapping can provide detailed and reliable information on its substrate-binding site. Calculations on ligand-bound and apo structures of enzymes show that the mapping results are not very sensitive to moderate variations in the protein coordinates.  相似文献   

18.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase has been purified to homogeneity from maize (Zea mays L. var. Golden Cross Bantam T51) leaves. The ratio of specific activities in crude extracts and the purified enzyme suggests that the enzyme is a major soluble protein in the tissue. The enzyme has a sedimentation coefficient (s20,w) of 12.3S and a molecular weight, determined by sedimentation equilibrium, of 400,000 daltons. Dissociation of the enzyme and electrophoresis on dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels yields a single stained band which corresponds to a subunit weight of 99,000 daltons. Thus it appears that the native enzyme is composed of four identical or similar polypeptide chains.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Nitrate and alanine were found to stimulate partially purified maize leaf phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase under specific assay conditions. Both metabolites stimulated the enzyme at low pH (7.0-7.5) and low substrate levels (1mM phosphoenolpyruvate). Nitrate was found to have a biphasic effect on the enzyme, stimulating at low concentrations (1mM-3mM), with a decrease in stimulation at higher levels. Nitrate caused inhibition of activity at pH 8.0 and although alanine caused some stimulation in activity at pH 8.0 this was not as marked as at the lower pH levels.  相似文献   

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