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1.
DT-diaphorase, also referred to as NQO1 or NAD(P)H: quinone acceptor oxidoreductase, is a flavoprotein that catalyzes the two-electron reduction of quinones and quinonoid compounds to hydroquinones, using either NADH or NADPH as the electron donor. NRH (dihydronicotinamide riboside): quinone oxidoreductase, also referred to as NQO2, has a high nucleotide sequence identity to DT-diaphorase and is considered to be an isozyme of DT-diaphorase. These enzymes transfer two electrons to a quinone, resulting in the formation of a hydroquinone product without the accumulation of a dissociated semiquinone. Steady and rapid-reaction kinetic experiments have been performed to determine the reaction mechanism of DT-diaphorase. Furthermore, chimeric and site-directed mutagenesis experiments have been performed to determine the molecular basis of the catalytic differences between the two isozymes and to identify the critical amino acid residues that interact with various inhibitors of the enzymes. In addition, functional studies of a natural occurring mutant Pro-187 to Ser (P187S) have been carried out. Results obtained from these investigations are summarized and discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase activity of tobacco leaves is catalyzed by a soluble flavoprotein [NAD(P)H-QR] and membrane-bound forms of the same enzyme. In particular, the activity associated with the plasma membrane cannot be released by hypoosmotic and salt washing of the vesicles, suggesting a specific binding. The products of the plasma-membrane-bound quinone reductase activity are fully reduced hydroquinones rather than semi-quinone radicals. This peculiar kinetic property is common with soluble NAD(P)H-QR, plasma-membrane-bound NAD(P)H:quinone reductase purified from onion roots, and animal DT-diaphorase. These and previous results demonstrate that soluble and plasma-membrane-bound NAD(P)H:quinone reductases are strictly related flavo-dehydrogenases which seem to replace DT-diaphorase in plant tissues. Following purification to homogeneity, the soluble NAD(P)H-QR from tobacco leaves was digested. Nine peptides were sequenced, accounting for about 50% of NAD(P)H-QR amino acid sequence. Although one peptide was found homologous to animal DT-diaphorase and another one to plant monodehydroascorbate reductase, native NAD(P)H-QR does not seem to be structurally similar to any known flavoprotein.Abbreviations MDAR monodehydroascorbate reductase - PM plasma membrane - NAD(P)H-QR NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase - DPI diphenylene iodonium - DQ duroquinone - CoQ2 coenzyme Q2  相似文献   

3.
In higher plants, NAD(P)H:quinone reductase (NQR) is the only flavoreductase known to reduce quinone substrates directly to hydroquinones by a two-electron reaction mechanism. This enzymatic activity is believed to protect aerobic organisms from the oxidative action of semiquinones. For this reason plant NQR has recently been suggested to be related to animal DT-diaphorase. A cDNA clone for NQR of Arabidopsis thaliana was identified, expressed in Escherichia coli, purified and characterized. Its amino acid sequence was found related to a number of putative proteins, mostly from prokaryotes, with still undetermined function. Conversely, in spite of the functional homology, sequence similarity between plant NQR and animal DT-diaphorase was limited and essentially confined to the flavin binding site.  相似文献   

4.
zeta-Crystallin is a major protein in the lens of certain mammals. In guinea pigs it comprises 10% of the total lens protein, and it has been shown that a mutation in the zeta-crystallin gene is associated with autosomal dominant congenital cataract. As with several other lens crystallins of limited phylogenetic distribution, zeta-crystallin has been characterized as an "enzyme/crystallin" based on its ability to reduce catalytically the electron acceptor 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. We report here that certain naturally occurring quinones are good substrates for the enzymatic activity of zeta-crystallin. Among the various quinones tested, the orthoquinones 1,2-naphthoquinone and 9,10-phenanthrenequinone were the best substrates whereas menadione, ubiquinone, 9,10-anthraquinone, vitamins K1 and K2 were inactive as substrates. This quinone reductase activity was NADPH specific and exhibited typical Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Activity was sensitive to heat and sulfhydryl reagents but was very stable on freezing. Dicumarol (Ki = 1.3 x 10(-5) M) and nitrofurantoin (Ki = 1.4 x 10(-5) M) inhibited the activity competitively with respect to the electron acceptor, quinone. NADPH protected the enzyme against inactivation caused by heat, N-ethylmaleimide, or H2O2. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of the reaction products showed formation of a semiquinone radical. The enzyme activity was associated with O2 consumption, generation of O2- and H2O2, and reduction of ferricytochrome c. These properties indicate that the enzyme acts through a one-electron transfer process. The substrate specificity, reaction characteristics, and physicochemical properties of zeta-crystallin demonstrate that it is an active NADPH:quinone oxidoreductase distinct from quinone reductases described previously.  相似文献   

5.
The present study demonstrated that the 38-kDa protein, instead of rho-crystallin (36 kDa), is expressed taxon specifically in the lens of Japanese tree frog (Hyla japonica). The 38-kDa protein was distinguished from rho-crystallin expressed in the lenses of bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) and European common frog (Rana temporaria) immunochemically. Although the N terminus of the 38-kDa protein was blocked, the analyses of partial amino acid sequences showed that the protein was zeta-crystallin. Analysis of cDNA sequence encoding zeta-crystallin of the tree frog lens demonstrated that the deduced protein consisted of 329 amino acids including initial methionine and having 62.2 and 62.9% identity with zeta-crystallin of camel and guinea pig lenses, respectively. The molecular mass of the deduced structure was calculated to be 35,564 Da. zeta-Crystallin of the tree frog lens exhibited the intrinsic enzymatic activity of quinone reductase (EC, NADPH:quinone oxidoreductase). The crystallin specifically catalyzed the reduction of 9,10-phenanthrenequinone (Km, 42 microm) using NADPH (Km, 60 microm) as a cofactor. The enzymatic activity was inhibited by dicumarol, anti-coagulant drug, with IC50 of 4 microm. On gel filtration chromatography, the crystallin was recovered as 150-kDa molecular mass complex, indicating that the crystallin was homotetramer consisting of 38-kDa subunits. The crystallin gene was expressed specifically in the lens. These results show that taxon-specific crystallins such as zeta- and rho-crystallins may be available for the biochemical discrimination of Hyla- and Rana groups among frogs.  相似文献   

6.
NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductases (NQOs) are flavoproteins that catalyze the oxidation of NADH or NADPH by various quinones and oxidation-reduction dyes. We have previously described a complementary DNA that encodes a dioxin-inducible cytosolic form of human NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1). In the present report we describe the nucleotide sequence and deduced amino acid sequence for a cDNA clone that is likely to encode a second form of NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO2) which was isolated by screening a human liver cDNA library by hybridization with a NQO1 cDNA probe. The NQO2 cDNA is 976 nucleotides long and encodes a protein of 231 amino acids (Mr = 25,956). The human NQO2 cDNA and protein are 54% and 49% similar to human liver cytosolic NQO1 cDNA and protein, respectively. COS1 cells transfected with NQO2 cDNA showed a 5-7-fold increase in NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase activity as compared to nontransfected cells when either 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol or menadione was used as substrate. Western blot analysis of the expressed NQO1 and NQO2 cDNA proteins showed cross-reactivity with rat NQO1 antiserum, indicating that NQO1 and NQO2 proteins are immunologically related. Northern blot analysis shows the presence of one NQO2 mRNA of 1.2 kb in control and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) treated human hepatoblastoma Hep-G2 cells and that TCDD treatment does not lead to enhanced levels of NQO2 mRNA as it does for NQO1 mRNA. Southern blot analysis of human genomic DNA suggests the presence of a single gene approximately 14-17 kb in length. The NQO2 gene locus is highly polymorphic as indicated by several restriction fragment length polymorphisms detected with five different restriction enzymes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The crystal structures of the zeta-crystalline-like soluble quinone oxidoreductase from Thermus thermophilus HB8 (QOR(Tt)) and of its complex with NADPH have been determined at 2.3- and 2.8-A resolutions, respectively. QOR(Tt) is composed of two domains, and its overall fold is similar to the folds of Escherichia coli quinone oxidoreductase (QOR(Ec)) and horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase. QOR(Tt) forms a homodimer in the crystal by interaction of the betaF-strands in domain II, forming a large beta-sheet that crosses the dimer interface. High thermostability of QOR(Tt) was evidenced by circular dichroic measurement. NADPH is located between the two domains in the QOR(Tt)-NADPH complex. The disordered segment involved in the coenzyme binding of apo-QOR(Tt) becomes ordered upon NADPH binding. The segment covers an NADPH-binding cleft and may serve as a lid. The 2'-phosphate group of the adenine of NADPH is surrounded by polar and positively charged residues in QOR(Tt), suggesting that QOR(Tt) binds NADPH more readily than NADH. The putative substrate-binding site of QOR(Tt), unlike that of QOR(Ec), is largely blocked by nearby residues, permitting access only to small substrates. This may explain why QOR(Tt) has weak p-benzoquinone reduction activity and is inactive with such large substrates of QOR(Ec) as 5-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone and phenanthraquinone.  相似文献   

8.
The gene yhdA from Bacillus subtilis encoding a putative flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-dependent oxidoreductase was cloned and heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli. The purified enzyme has a noncovalently bound FMN cofactor, which is preferentially reduced by NADPH, indicating that YhdA is a NADPH:FMN oxidoreductase. The rate of NADPH oxidation is enhanced by the addition of external FMN, and analysis of initial rate measurements reveals the occurrence of a ternary complex in a bi-bi reaction mechanism. YhdA has also been shown to reductively cleave the -N=N- bond in azo dyes at the expense of NADPH, and hence, it possesses azoreductase activity, however, at a rate 100 times slower than that found for FMN. Using Cibacron Marine as a model compound, we could demonstrate that the dye is a competitive inhibitor of NADPH and FMN. The utilization of NADPH and the absence of a flavin semiquinone radical distinguish YhdA from flavodoxins, which adopt the same structural fold, i.e., a five-stranded beta sheet sandwiched by five alpha helices. The native molecular-mass of YhdA was determined to be 76 kDa, suggesting that the protein occurs as a tetramer, whereas the YhdA homologue in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (YLR011wp) forms a dimer in solution. Interestingly, the different oligomerization of these homologous proteins correlates to their thermostability, with YhdA exhibiting a melting point of 86.5 degrees C, which is 26.3 degrees C higher than that for the yeast protein. This unusually high melting point is proposed to be the result of increased hydrophobic packing between dimers and the additional presence of four salt bridges stabilizing the dimer-dimer interface.  相似文献   

9.
D M Peterson  J Fisher 《Biochemistry》1986,25(14):4077-4084
Mitomycin c in the presence of NADPH and brewers' yeast NADPH: (acceptor) oxidoreductase (Old Yellow enzyme, EC 1.6.99.1) is transformed, at pH 8.0 and with anaerobicity, to two major mitosene products (the cis- and trans-1-hydroxy-2,7-diaminomitosenes; respective yields of 45 and 30%). These arise by covalent trapping by solvent of a quinone methide intermediate, obtained by rearrangement of the mitomycin c hydroquinone. At lower pH (6.5), the major product of this reaction is 2,7-diaminomitosene, which arises by covalent trapping of the quinone methide by H+. In the former instance the quinone methide acts as an electrophile and in the latter as a nucleophile. A detailed kinetic analysis indicates that the role of the NADPH and Old Yellow enzyme is to initiate an autocatalytic reaction, propagated by mitomycin c reduction by the mitosene hydroquinones (arising by the electrophilic pathway). The evidence supporting this conclusion is the formation of oxidized mitosene products, under the rigorously anaerobic reaction circumstance, the nonstoichiometric participation of NADPH, a dependence of the velocity on the total mitomycin c concentration, the pH dependence of the reaction, and the accurate simulation of the overall kinetic course with a mathematical model of the autocatalytic pathway. These observations indicate that the autocatalytic pathway may be dominant during in vitro mitomycin c anaerobic reductive activation by other reducing agents and that (as with anthracycline reductive activation) oxidation of the mitosene hydroquinone obtained from nucleophile addition to the quinone methide may be a necessary event for the formation of stable covalent adducts in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
NADPH:isoflavone oxidoreductase (IFR) is the first soluble enzyme of the pterocarpan-specific part of phytoalexin biosynthesis in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.). The enzyme was purified to apparent homogeneity by a five-step procedure from chickpea cell cultures treated with yeast extract as elicitor. Analysis by gel filtration and SDS/PAGE showed that the enzyme consists of a single polypeptide with a molecular mass of 36 kDa. Km values for the substrates 2'-hydroxyformononetin, 2'-hydroxypseudobaptigenin and NADPH were 6, 6 and 20 microM, respectively. The IFR showed pronounced specificity for the substitution pattern of isoflavones. We found a 2'-hydroxy group and a 4',5'-methylenedioxy or 4'-methoxy function to be essential for acceptance as substrate. The isoelectric point of the protein was determined as 6.3 by IEF and there is no evidence for the existence of isoenzymes. Partial amino acid sequences of IFR were determined from internal peptides obtained by tryptic digestion of the protein and corresponding oligonucleotides were synthesized. A lambda gt10 cDNA library was constructed using poly(A)-rich RNA isolated from chickpea cell cultures treated with Ascochyta rabiei elicitor. 150 positive clones were obtained by screening 2 x 10(5) clones with an IFR-specific oligonucleotide. The identity of sequenced clones was confirmed by comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence with the internal peptide sequences of purified IFR. The sequence of a 1183-bp clone contained a continuous open reading frame of 954 bases encoding a polypeptide of 318 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 35.4 kDa, indicating that a full-length cDNA coding for IFR was isolated.  相似文献   

11.
Insertion mutant Ins2 of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, lacking NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQR) encoded by drgA gene, was characterized by higher sensitivity to quinone-type inhibitors (menadione and plumbagin) than wild type (WT) cells. In photoautotrophically grown cyanobacterial cells more than 60% of NADPH:quinone-reductase activity, as well as all NADPH:dinoseb-reductase activity, was associated with the function of NQR. NQR activity was observed only in soluble fraction of cyanobacterial cells, but not in membrane fraction. The effects of menadione and menadiol on the reduction of Photosystem I reaction center (P700(+)) after its photooxidation in the presence of DCMU were studied using the EPR spectroscopy. The addition of menadione increased the rate of P700(+) reduction in WT cells, whereas in Ins2 mutant the reduction of P700(+) was strongly inhibited. In the presence of menadiol the reduction of P700(+) was accelerated both in WT and Ins2 mutant cells. These data suggest that NQR protects the cyanobacterial cells from the toxic effect of exogenous quinones by their reduction to hydroquinones. These data may also indicate the probable functional homology of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 NQR with mammalian and plant NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductases (DT-diaphorases).  相似文献   

12.
The quinone oxidoreductases [NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase1 (NQO1) and NRH:quinone oxidoreductase2 (NQO2)] are flavoproteins. NQO1 is known to catalyse metabolic detoxification of quinones and protect cells from redox cycling, oxidative stress and neoplasia. NQO2 is a 231 amino acid protein (25956 mw) that is 43 amino acids shorter than NQO1 at its carboxy-terminus. The human NQO2 cDNA and protein are 54 and 49% similar to the human liver cytosolic NQO1 cDNA and protein. Recent studies have revealed that NQO2 differs from NQO1 in its cofactor requirement. NQO2 uses dihydronicotinamide riboside (NRH) rather than NAD(P)H as an electron donor. Another difference between NQO1 and NQO2 is that NQO2 is resistant to typical inhibitors of NQO1, such as dicoumarol, Cibacron blue and phenindone. Flavones, including quercetin and benzo(a)pyrene, are known inhibitors of NQO2. Even though overlapping substrate specificities have been observed for NQO1 and NQO2, significant differences exist in relative affinities for the various substrates. Analysis of the crystal structure of NQO2 revealed that NQO2 contains a specific metal binding site, which is not present in NQO1. The human NQO2 gene has been precisely localized to chromosome 6p25. The human NQO2 gene locus is highly polymorphic. The NQO2 gene is ubiquitously expressed and induced in response to TCDD. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the NQO2 gene promoter revealed the presence of several cis-elements, including SP1 binding sites, CCAAT box, xenobiotic response element (XRE) and an antioxidant response element (ARE). The complement of these elements regulates tissue specific expression and induction of the NQO2 gene in response to xenobiotics and antioxidants. The in vivo role of NQO2 and its role in quinone detoxification remains unknown.  相似文献   

13.
The response of the hexose monophosphate shunt (HMS) in organ-cultured guinea pig lens to 1,2-naphthoquinone and 5-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone (juglone) has been investigated. Both these compounds, which are substrates of guinea pig lens zeta-crystallin (NADPH:quinone oxidoreductase), were found to cause increases in the rate of 14CO2 production from 1-14C-labelled glucose. Exposure of lenses to 15 microM 1,2-naphthoquinone or 20 microM juglone yielded 5.9- and 7-fold stimulation of HMS activity, respectively. Unlike hydrogen peroxide-induced stimulation of HMS activity, these effects were not abolished by preincubation with the glutathione reductase inhibitor, 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1 nitrosourea (BCNU). While hydrogen peroxide produced substantial decrements in lens glutathione (GSH) levels, incubation with quinones was not associated with a similar reduction in GSH concentration. Protein-bound NADPH content in quinone-exposed guinea pig lenses was decreased, with a concomitant increase in the amounts of free NADP+. This finding supported the involvement of zeta-crystallin bound NADPH in the in vivo enzymic reduction of quinones. Hydrogen peroxide, on the other hand, caused decreases in the level of free NADPH alone, serving to confirm our earlier inference that quinone stimulated increases in the guinea pig lens HMS could be mediated through zeta-crystallin NADPH:quinone oxidoreductase activity.  相似文献   

14.
Hepatic NADPH cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase capable of supporting polysubstrate monooxygenase (PSMO) reactions was purified from microsomes obtained from phenobarbitone (PB) pretreated rhesus monkey. Two preparations of the enzyme purified by affinity and molecular exclusion chromatographic techniques demonstrated specific content of 19.5 and 37.9 nmol cytochrome c reduced/min/mg protein and subunit molecular weight of 66 and 80 kDa, respectively. Both forms supported oxidation of NADPH and reduction of cytochrome c and DCIP but only 80 kDa preparation supported PSMO reactions. The reconstituted system consisted of hepatic P450, NADPH cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase, cytochrome b5 all purified from PB pretreated rhesus monkey and dilauroyl phosphatidylcholine or microsomal lipid. Eighty kDa preparation supported the metabolism of aminopyrine and tolbutamide by hepatic P4502C and erythromycin, ethylmorphine and nifedipine by hepatic P450 3A, respectively. The turnover of these substrates increased in the presence of partially purified cytochrome b5 from the rhesus monkey. To best of our knowledge this is the first report on the purification of monkey hepatic NADPH cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase capable of supporting in vitro PSMO by different isozymes of P450.  相似文献   

15.
Pyruvate:quinone oxidoreductase catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetate and CO2 with a quinone as the physiological electron acceptor. So far, this enzyme activity has been found only in Escherichia coli. Using 2,6-dichloroindophenol as an artificial electron acceptor, we detected pyruvate:quinone oxidoreductase activity in cell extracts of the amino acid producer Corynebacterium glutamicum. The activity was highest (0.055 +/- 0.005 U/mg of protein) in cells grown on complex medium and about threefold lower when the cells were grown on medium containing glucose, pyruvate, or acetate as the carbon source. From wild-type C. glutamicum, the pyruvate:quinone oxidoreductase was purified about 180-fold to homogeneity in four steps and subjected to biochemical analysis. The enzyme is a flavoprotein, has a molecular mass of about 232 kDa, and consists of four identical subunits of about 62 kDa. It was activated by Triton X-100, phosphatidylglycerol, and dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylglycerol, and the substrates were pyruvate (kcat=37.8 +/- 3 s(-1); Km=30 +/- 3 mM) and 2-oxobutyrate (kcat=33.2 +/- 3 s(-1); Km=90 +/- 8 mM). Thiamine pyrophosphate (Km=1 microM) and certain divalent metal ions such as Mg2+ (Km=29 microM), Mn2+ (Km=2 microM), and Co2+ (Km=11 microM) served as cofactors. In addition to several dyes (2,6-dichloroindophenol, p-iodonitrotetrazolium violet, and nitroblue tetrazolium), menadione (Km=106 microM) was efficiently reduced by the purified pyruvate:quinone oxidoreductase, indicating that a naphthoquinone may be the physiological electron acceptor of this enzyme in C. glutamicum.  相似文献   

16.
An intracellular, soluble 1,4-benzoquinone reductase was purified from agitated cultures of Phanerochaete chrysosporium and characterized. The quinone reductase was expressed in cultures grown under both nitrogen-sufficient and nitrogen-limiting (12 and 1.2 mM ammonium tartrate) conditions. The protein was purified to homogeneity by using ammonium sulfate fractionation, hydrophobic interaction, and ion-exchange and blue-agarose affinity chromatographies. The native flavin mononucleotide-containing protein, pI 4.3, has a molecular mass of 44 kDa as determined by gel filtration. The protein has a subunit molecular mass of ^sim22 kDa as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The quinone reductase exhibits a broad pH optimum between 5.0 and 6.5 and a temperature optimum of 30(deg)C. The enzyme catalyzes the two-electron reduction of several quinones and other electron acceptors utilizing either NADH or NADPH as an electron donor. The apparent K(infm) for 2-methoxy-1,4-benzoquinone is 2.4 (mu)M, and the apparent k(infcat) is 4.4 x 10(sup5) s(sup-1). Enzyme activity is strongly inhibited by Cibacron blue 3GA and by dicumarol.  相似文献   

17.
To study the function of soluble NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 encoded by drgA gene, recombinant DrgA protein carrying 12 histidine residues on the C-terminal end was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. Recombinant DrgA is a flavoprotein that exhibits quinone reductase and nitroreductase activities with NAD(P)H as the electron donor. Using EPR spectroscopy, it was demonstrated that addition of recombinant DrgA protein and NADPH to DCMU-treated isolated thylakoid membranes of the cyanobacterium increased the dark rereduction rate of the photosystem I reaction center (P700+). Thus, DrgA can participate in electron transfer from NADPH to the electron transport chain of the Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Phenylacetic acids are common intermediates in the microbial metabolism of various aromatic substrates including phenylalanine. In the denitrifying bacterium Thauera aromatica phenylacetate is oxidized, under anoxic conditions, to the common intermediate benzoyl-CoA via the intermediates phenylacetyl-CoA and phenylglyoxylate (benzoylformate). The enzyme that catalyzes the four-electron oxidation of phenylacetyl-CoA has been purified from this bacterium and studied. The enzyme preparation catalyzes the reaction phenylacetyl-CoA + 2 quinone + 2 H2O --> phenylglyoxylate + 2 quinone H2 + CoASH. Phenylacetyl-CoA:acceptor oxidoreductase is a membrane-bound molybdenum-iron-sulfur protein. The purest preparations contained three subunits of 93, 27, and 26 kDa. Ubiquinone is most likely to act as the electron acceptor, and the oxygen atom introduced into the product is derived from water. The protein preparations contained 0.66 mol Mo, 30 mol Fe, and 25 mol acid-labile sulfur per mol of native enzyme, assuming a native molecular mass of 280 kDa. Phenylglyoxylyl-CoA, but not mandelyl-CoA, was observed as a free intermediate. All enzyme preparations also catalyzed the subsequent hydrolytic release of coenzyme A from phenylglyoxylyl-CoA but not from phenylacetyl-CoA. The enzyme is reversibly inactivated by a low concentration of cyanide, but is remarkably stable with respect to oxygen. This new member of the molybdoproteins represents the first example of an enzyme which catalyzes the alpha-oxidation of a CoA-activated carboxylic acid without utilizing molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

19.
Quinone oxidoreductase activities dependent on pyridine nucleotides are associated with the plasma membrane (PM) in zucchini (Cucurbita pepo L.) hypocotyls. In the presence of NADPH, lipophilic ubiquinone homologs with up to three isoprenoid units were reduced by intact PM vesicles with a Km of 2 to 7 [mu]M. Affinities for both NADPH and NADH were similar (Km of 62 and 51 [mu]M, respectively). Two NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase forms were identified. The first, labeled as peak I in gel-filtration experiments, behaves as an intrinsic membrane complex of about 300 kD, it slightly prefers NADH over NADPH, it is markedly sensitive to the inhibitor diphenylene iodonium, and it is active with lipophilic quinones. The second form (peak II) is an NADPH-preferring oxidoreductase of about 90 kD, weakly bound to the PM. Peak II is diphenylene iodonium-insensitive and resembles, in many properties, the soluble NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase that is also present in the same tissue. Following purification of peak I, however, the latter gave rise to a quinone oxidoreductase of the soluble type (peak II), based on substrate and inhibitor specificities and chromatographic and electrophoretic evidence. It is proposed that a redox protein of the same class as the soluble NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (F. Sparla, G. Tedeschi, and P. Trost [1996] Plant Physiol. 112:249-258) is a component of the diphenylene iodonium-sensitive PM complex capable of reducing lipophilic quinones.  相似文献   

20.
The 3-hydroxypropionate cycle is a new autotrophic CO(2) fixation pathway in Chloroflexus aurantiacus and some archaebacteria. The initial step is acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylation to malonyl-CoA by acetyl-CoA carboxylase, followed by NADPH-dependent reduction of malonyl-CoA to 3-hydroxypropionate. This reduction step was studied in Chloroflexus aurantiacus. A new enzyme was purified, malonyl-CoA reductase, which catalyzed the two-step reduction malonyl-CoA + NADPH + H(+) --> malonate semialdehyde + NADP(+) + CoA and malonate semialdehyde + NADPH + H(+) --> 3-hydroxypropionate + NADP(+). The bifunctional enzyme (aldehyde dehydrogenase and alcohol dehydrogenase) had a native molecular mass of 300 kDa and consisted of a single large subunit of 145 kDa, suggesting an alpha(2) composition. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined, and the incomplete gene was identified in the genome database. Obviously, the enzyme consists of an N-terminal short-chain alcohol dehydrogenase domain and a C-terminal aldehyde dehydrogenase domain. No indication of the presence of a prosthetic group was obtained; Mg(2+) and Fe(2+) stimulated and EDTA inhibited activity. The enzyme was highly specific for its substrates, with apparent K(m) values of 30 microM malonyl-CoA and 25 microM NADPH and a turnover number of 25 s(-1) subunit(-1). The specific activity in autotrophically grown cells was 0.08 micromol of malonyl-CoA reduced min(-1) (mg of protein)(-1), compared to 0.03 micromol min(-1) (mg of protein)(-1) in heterotrophically grown cells, indicating downregulation under heterotrophic conditions. Malonyl-CoA reductase is not required in any other known pathway and therefore can be taken as a characteristic enzyme of the 3-hydroxypropionate cycle. Furthermore, the enzyme may be useful for production of 3-hydroxypropionate and for a coupled spectrophotometric assay for activity screening of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, a target enzyme of potent herbicides.  相似文献   

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