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1.
Inactivation of apo-glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate: NAD+ oxidoreductase(phosphorylating) (EC 1.2.1.12) from rat skeletal muscle at 4 degrees C in 0.15 M NaC1, 5 mM EDTA, 4 mM 2-mercaptoethanol pH 7.2 is a first-order reaction. The rate constant of inactivation depends on protein concentration. With one molecule of NAD bound per tetrameric enzyme, a 50 per cent loss in activity is observed and the rate constant of inactivation becomes independent of the protein concentration over a 30-fold range. Two moles of NAD bound per mole of enzyme fully protect it against inactivation. NADH affords a cooperative effect on enzyme structure similar to that of NAD. Inactivation of 7.8 S apoenzyme is reflected in its dissociation into 4.8-S dimers. In the case of enzyme-NAD1 complex, no direct relationship between the extent of inactivation and dissociation is observed, suggesting that these two processes do not occur simultaneously; we may say that dissociation is slower than inactivation. A mechanism in which the rate-limiting step for inactivation is a conformational change in the tetramer occurring prior to dissociation and affecting only the structure of the non-liganded dimer, is consistent with the experimental observations. Inorganic phosphate protects apoenzyme against inactivation. Its effect is shown to be due to the anion binding at specific sites on the protein with a dissociation constant of 2.6 plus or minus 0.4 mM. The NaC1-induced cold inactivation of glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase is fully reversible at 25 degrees C in the presence of 20 mM dithiothreitol and 50 mM inorganic phosphate. The rate of reactivation is independent of protein concentration. Inactivated enzyme retains the ability to bind specific antibodies produced in rabbits, but diminishes its precipitating capability.  相似文献   

2.
Tetrameric D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.12) isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle was covalently bound to CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B via a single subunit. Catalytically active immobilized dimer and monomeric forms of the enzyme were prepared after urea-induced dissociation of the tetramer. A study of the coenzyme-binding properties of matrix-bound tetrameric, dimeric and monomeric species has shown that: (1) an immobilized tetramer binds NAD+ with negative cooperativity, the dissociation constants being 0.085 microM for the first two coenzyme molecules and 1.3 microM for the third and the fourth one; (2) coenzyme binding to the dimeric enzyme form also displays negative cooperativity with Kd values of 0.032 microM and 1.1 microM for the first and second sites, respectively; (3) the binding of NAD+ to a monomer can occur with a dissociation constant of 1.6 microM which is close to the Kd value for low-affinity coenzyme binding sites of the tetrameric or dimeric enzyme forms. In the presence of NAD+ an immobilized monomer acquires a stability which is not inferior to that of a holotetramer. The catalytic properties of monomeric and tetrameric enzyme forms were compared and found to be different under certain conditions. Thus, the monomers of rabbit muscle D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase displayed a hyperbolic kinetic saturation curve for NAD+, whereas the tetramers exhibited an intermediary plateau region corresponding to half-saturating concentrations of NAD+. At coenzyme concentrations below half-saturating a monomer is more active than a tetramer. This difference disappears at saturating concentrations of NAD+. Immobilized monomeric and tetrameric forms of D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from baker's yeast were also used to investigate subunit interactions in catalysis. The rate constant of inactivation due to modification of essential arginine residues in the holoenzyme decreased in the presence of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, probably as a result of conformational changes accompanying catalysis. This effect was similar for monomeric and tetrameric enzyme forms at saturating substrate concentrations, but different for the two enzyme species under conditions in which about one-half of the active centers remained unsaturated. Taken together, the results indicate that association of D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase monomers into a tetramer imposes some constraints on the functioning of the active centers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
In order to titrate and understand the role of arginyl residues of D-β-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, arginyl specific reagents: butanedione, 1,2-cyclohexanedione and phenylglyoxal were incubated with three different forms of the enzyme; native enzyme (inner mitochondrial membrane bound), purified apoenzyme (phospholipid -free) and phospholipid-enzyme complex (reconstituted active form).After complete inactivation of the enzyme by [14C]-phenylglyoxal, the number of modified arginyl residues was different: one with the lipid-free apoenzyme and three with the phospholipid-enzyme complex, suggesting a conformational change of the enzyme triggered by the presence of phospholipids.After exhaustive chemical modification either of the apoenzyme or of the phospholipid-enzyme complex with [14C]-phenylglyoxal, four arginyl residues were titrated indicating that these residues are located in the hydrophilic part of the enzyme, not interacting with phospholipids.Reconstituted enzyme inactivated by butanedione could no longer bind a pseudosubstrate (succinate) which indicates that an arginyl residue is involved in the enzyme-substrate complex formation.The values of second order rate constants of D-β-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase inactivation by butanedione and 1,2-cyclohexanedione were unchanged with the three enzyme forms, suggesting that phospholipids are not involved in the substrate binding mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
The inactivation of cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase (L-malate: NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.37) from porcine heart and the specific modification of arginyl residues have been found to occur when the enzyme is inhibited with the reagent butanedione in sodium borate buffer. The inactivation of the enzyme was found to follow pseudo-first order kinetics. This loss of enzymatic activity was concomitant with the modification of 4 arginyl residues per molecule of enzyme. All 4 residues could be made inaccessible to modification when a malate dehydrogenase-NADH-hydroxymalonate ternary complex was formed. Only 2 of the residues were protected by NADH alone and appear to be essential. Studies of the butanedione inactivation in sodium phosphate buffer and of reactivation of enzymatic activity, upon the removal of excess butanedione and borate, support the role of borate ion stabilization in the inactivation mechanism previously reported by Riordan (Riordan, J.F. (1970) Fed. Proc. 29, Abstr. 462; Riordan, J.F. (1973) Biochemistry 12, 3915-3923). Protection from inactivation was also provided by the competitive inhibitor AMP, while nicotinamide exhibited no effect. Such results suggest that the AMP moiety of the NADH molecule is of major importance in the ability of NADH to protect the enzyme. When fluorescence titrations were used to monitor the ability of cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase to form a binary complex with NADH and to form a ternary complex with NADH and hydroxymalonate, only the formation of ternary complex seemed to be effected by arginine modification.  相似文献   

5.
Yeast hexokinase PII is rapidly inactivated (assayed at pH 8.0) by either butanedione in borate buffer or phenylglyoxal, reagents which are highly selective for the modification of arginyl residues. MgATP alone offers no protection against inactivation, consistent with low affinity of hexokinase for this nucleotide in the absence of sugar. Glucose provides slight protection against inactivation, while the combined presence of glucose and MgATP gives significant protection, suggesting that modified arginyl residues may lie at the active site, possibly serving to bind the anionic polyphosphate of the nucleotide in the ternary enzyme:sugar:nucleotide complex. Extrapolation to complete inactivation suggests that inactivation by butanedione correlates with the modification of 4.2 arginyl residues per subunit, and complete protection against inactivation by the combined presence of glucose and MgATP correlates with the protection of 2 to 3 arginyl residues per subunit. When the modified enzyme is assayed at pH 6.5, significant activity remains. However, modification by butanedione in borate buffer abolishes the burst-type slow transient process, observed when the enzyme is assayed at pH 6.5, to such an extent that after extensive modification the kinetic assays are characterized by a lag-type slow transient process. But even after extensive modification, hexokinase PII still demonstrates negative cooperativity with MgATP and is still strongly activated by citrate when assayed at pH 6.5.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphoglycerate mutase is inactivated by butanedione in borate buffer. Inactivation by 0.13 mM reagent correlates with the modification of one arginyl residue per subunit, and is prevented by either 2, 3-diphosphoglycerate or 3-phosphoglycerate. With 0.50 mM butanedione, inactivation is accompanied by the modification of three arginyl residues per subunit, two of which are protected by the combined presence of cofactor and substrate.  相似文献   

7.
F Marcus 《Biochemistry》1976,15(16):3505-3509
Modification of pig kidney fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase with 2,3-butanedione in borate buffer (pH 7.8) leads to the loss of the activation of the enzyme by monovalent cations, as well as to the loss of allosteric adenosine 5'-monophosphate (AMP) inhibition. In agreement with the results obtained for the butanedione modification of arginyl residues in other enzymes, the effects of modification can be reversed upon removal of excess butanedione and borate. Significant protection to the loss of K+ activation was afforded by the presence of the substrate fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, whereas AMP preferentially protected against the loss of AMP inhibition. The combination of both fructose 1,6-bisphosphate and AMP fully protected against the changes in enzyme properties on butanedione treatment. Under the latter conditions, one arginyl residue per mole of enzyme subunit was modified, whereas three arginyl residues were modified by butanedione under conditions leading to the loss of both potassium activation and AMP inhibition. Thus, the modification of two arginyl residues per subunit would appear to be responsible for the change in enzyme properties. The present results, as well as those of a previous report on the subject (Marcus, F. (1975), Biochemistry 14, 3916-3921) support the conclusion that one arginyl residue per subunit is essential for monovalent cation activation, and another arginyl residue is essential for AMP inhibition. A likely role of the latter residue could be its involvement in the binding of the phosphate group of AMP.  相似文献   

8.
Yeast enolase is rapidly inactivated by butanedione in borate buffer, complete inactivation correlating with the modification of 1. 8 arginyl residues per subunit. Protection against inactivation is provided by either an equilibrium mixture of substrates or inorganic phosphate, a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme. Complete protection by substrates correlates with the shielding of 1. 3 arginyl residues per subunit, while phosphate protects 1. 0 arginyl residue per subunit from modification.  相似文献   

9.
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.12) from pig muscle was inactivated by incubation with butanedione in triethanolamine buffer, pH 8.3. The inactivation was reversible after short treatment with butanedione; it became irreversible after 12-15 h, with a concomitant loss of two arginyl residues per subunit. The modified enzyme was digested with TPCK-trypsin and the peptides were purified by chromatography and electrochromatography. Two new peptides were obtained as the result of modification. From their partially determined sequence the modified arginyl residues were identified as Arg-13 and Arg-231 in the primary structure of pig muscle enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of a alpha-dicarbonyl chromophoric reagent: 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenylglyoxal on the D-beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase have been compared to those of phenylglyoxal, a specific arginyl reagent in proteins. Both reagents inactivate irreversibly the enzyme. Kinetic experiments show that only one molecule of these reagents per molecule of enzyme is sufficient to inactivate the enzyme. The second order inactivation rate constant is more than 500 times higher with the chromophoric reagent than with phenylglyoxal. A pseudosubstrate (methylmalonate) in presence of coenzyme (NAD) strongly protects enzyme against inactivation by both reagents. Coenzyme alone has no effect on inactivation by phenylglyoxal while it protects whether inhibitor is the chromophoric reagent or N-ethylmaleimide: a thiol specific reagent. These results indicate: 1. That one arginyl residue is essential for D-beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase activity (experiments with phenylglyoxal). 2. That the presence of a nitro group on position 3 and a hydroxyl-group on position 4 strongly increase the reactivity of the alpha-dicarbonyl groups, but the specificity of the chemical reaction with arginyl residues seems to be lost for the benefit of cysteyl residues.  相似文献   

11.
The structure of the active center of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and the arrangement of subunits in the tetrameric molecule is delineated. The mechanism of cooperative effects in the oligomer is considered, and the involvement of various regions of the active center and of different-subunit contact area in the realization of the cooperative phenomena is discussed. A special attention is paid to the effect of NAD+ bound to one of the subunits of the tetramer on the structure of an adjacent subunit and to the problem of the participation of the coenzyme in the creation of anion-binding sites of the enzyme. The conditions of reversible dissociation of the tetrameric apoenzyme molecule into dimers are depicted, and the role of NAD+ in the organization of the quaternary structure of the dehydrogenase is discussed. The problem of catalytic activity of the dimeric form of the enzyme is argued.  相似文献   

12.
Rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase is inactivated by 2,3-butanedione in borate buffer. The inactivation follows pseudo-first-order kinetics with a calculated second-order rate constant of 4.6 m?1 min?1. The modification can be reversed with almost total recovery of activity by elimination of the butanedione and borate buffer, suggesting that only arginyl groups are modified; this result agrees with the loss of arginine detected by amino acid analysis of the modified enzyme. Using the kinetic data, it was estimated that the reaction of a single butanedione molecule per subunit of the enzyme is enough to completely inactivate the protein. The inactivation is partially prevented by phosphoenolpyruvate in the presence of K+ and Mg2+, but not by the competitive inhibitors lactate and bicarbonate. These findings point to an essential arginyl residue being located near the phosphate binding site of phosphoenolpyruvate.  相似文献   

13.
The possible interaction of the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate with a guanidinium group in glutamate apodecarboxylase was investigated. The holoenzyme is not inactivated significantly by incubation with butanedione, glyoxal, methylglyoxal, or phenylglyoxal. However, the apoenzyme is inactivated by these arginine reagents in time-dependent processes. Phenylgloxal inactivates the apoenzyme most rapidly. The inactivation follows pseudo-first-order kinetics at high phenylglyoxal to apoenzyme ratios. The rate of inactivation is proportional to phenylglyoxal concentration, increases with increasing pH, and is also dependent on the type of buffer present. The rate of inactivation of the apoenzyme by phenylglyoxal is fastest in bicarbonate — carbonate buffer and increases with increasing bicarbonate — carbonate concentration. Phosphate, which inhibits the binding of pyridoxal phosphate to the apoenzyme, protects the apodecarboxylase against inactivation by phenylglyoxal. When the apodecarboxylase is inactivated with [14C]phenylglyoxal, approximately 1.6 mol of [14C]phenylglyoxal is incorporated per mol subunit. The phenylglyoxal is thought to modify an arginyl residue at or near the pyridoxal phosphate binding site of glutamate apodecarboxylase.  相似文献   

14.
Koningic acid, a sesquiterpene antibiotic, is a specific inhibitor of the enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate:NAD+ oxidoreductase (phosphorylating), EC 1.2.1.12). In the presence of 3 mM of NAD+, koningic acid irreversibly inactivated the enzyme in a time-dependent manner. The pseudo-first-order rate constant for inactivation (kapp) was dependent on koningic acid concentration in saturate manner, indicating koningic acid and enzyme formed a reversible complex prior to the formation of an inactive, irreversible complex; the inactivation rate (k 3) was 5.5.10(-2) s-1, with a dissociation constant for inactivation (Kinact) of 1.6 microM. The inhibition was competitive against glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate with a Ki of 1.1 microM, where the Km for glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate was 90 microM. Koningic acid inhibition was uncompetitive with respect to NAD+. The presence of NAD+ accelerated the inactivation. In its absence, the charcoal-treated NAD+-free enzyme showed a 220-fold decrease in apparent rate constant for inactivation, indicating that koningic acid sequentially binds to the enzyme next to NAD+. The enzyme, a tetramer, was inactivated when maximum two sulfhydryl groups, possibly cysteine residues at the active sites of the enzyme, were modified by the binding of koningic acid. These observations demonstrate that koningic acid is an active-site-directed inhibitor which reacts predominantly with the NAD+-enzyme complex.  相似文献   

15.
Chemical modification of purified d-glucosaminate dehydratase (GADH) apoenzyme by N-ethyl-maleimide (NEM) and by 7-chloro-4-aminobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBDC1) resulted in the time- and concentration-dependent inactivation of the enzyme in each case. The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics and a double-logarithmic plot of the observed pseudo-first-order rate constant against reagent concentration proved evidence for an approximately first-order reaction, suggesting that the modification of a single cysteine residue per mole of enzyme resulted in inactivation. Amino acid analysis of the NEM-inactivated enzyme showed that three moles of cysteine residues among six moles per mole of subunit were modified under these conditions, therefore one of the three cysteine residues modified by NEM may be essential for activity. Pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP) and D-glucosaminate (GlcNA) protected the enzyme against inactivation by NEM and NBDCI. The apoenzyme was inactivated by EDTA and activity of enzyme was restored by incubation with Mn2+ in the presence of PLP. Incubation of the EDTA-treated enzyme with NEM inhibited the restoration of activity. These results suggest that one of the cysteine residues of GADH may be chelated to a Mn2+ at or near the active site of GADH, contributing to formation of the active enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Purified NAD-malic enzyme from Ascaris suum is rapidly inactivated by the arginine reagent, 2,3-butanedione, and this inactivation is facilitated by 30 mM borate. Determination of the inactivation rate as a function of butanedione concentration suggests a second-order process overall, which is first order in butanedione. A second-order rate constant of 0.6 M-1 s-1 at pH 9 is obtained for the butanedione reaction. The inactivation is reversed by removal of the excess reagent upon dialysis. The enzyme is protected against inactivation by saturating amounts of malate in the presence and absence of borate. The divalent metal Mg2+ affords protection in the presence of borate but has no effect in its absence. The nucleotide reactant NAD+ has no effect on the inactivation rate in either the presence or absence of borate. A dissociation constant of 24 mM is obtained for E:malate from the decrease in the inactivation rate as a function of malate concentration. An apparent Ki of 0.5 mM is obtained for oxalate (an inhibitor competitive vs malate) from E:Mg:oxalate while no significant binding is observed for oxalate using the butanedione modified enzyme. The pH dependence of the first-order rate of inactivation by butanedione gives a pKa of 9.4 +/- 0.1 for the residue(s) modified, and this pK is increased when NAD is bound. The arginine(s) modified is implicated in the binding of malate.  相似文献   

17.
The spontaneous inactivation of yeast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was found to fit a simple two-state model at pH 8.5 and 25 degrees. The first step is a relatively rapid dissociation of the tetramer to dimers with the equilibrium largely in favor of the tetramer. In the absence of NAD+ the dimer inactivates irreversibly. The apoenzyme is quite stable with a half-life for complete activity loss proportional to the square root of the enzyme concentration. Perturbances of the protein structure (by pH, ionic strength, and specific salts), which have no effect on the tetrameric state of the molecule, result in an alteration of the cooperativity of NAD+ binding, the reactivity of the active-site sulfhydryl group, and the catalytic activity of the enzyme. Covalent modification of two of the four active-site sulfhydryl groups has profound effects on the enzymic activity which are mediated by changes in the subunit interactions. Sedimentation analysis and hybridization studies indicate that the interaction between subunits remains strong after covalent modification. Under normal physiological and equilibrium dialysis conditions the protein is a tetramer. Equilibrium dialysis studies of NAD+ binding to the enzyme at pH 8.5 and 25 degrees reveal a mixed cooperativity pattern. A model consistent with these observations and the observed half-of-the-sites reactivity is that of ligand induced sequential conformational changes which are transferred across strongly interacting subunit domains. Methods for distinguishing negatively cooperative binding patterns from mixtures of denatured enzyme and multiple species are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Treatment of submitochondrial particles (ETP) with trypsin at 0 degrees destroyed NADPH leads to NAD (or 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide, AcPyAD) transhydrogenase activity. NADH oxidase activity was unaffected; NADPH oxidase and NADH leads to AcPyAD transhydrogenase activities were diminished by less than 10%. When ETP was incubated with trypsin at 30 degrees, NADPH leads to NAD transhydrogenase activity was rapidly lost, NADPH oxidase activity was slowly destroyed, but NADH oxidase activity remained intact. The reduction pattern by NADPH, NADPH + NAD, and NADH of chromophores absorbing at 475 minus 510 nm (flavin and iron-sulfur centers) in complex I (NADH-ubiquinone reductase) or ETP treated with trypsin at 0 degrees also indicated specific destruction of transhydrogenase activity. The sensitivity of the NADPH leads to NAD transhydrogenase reaction to trypsin suggested the involvement of susceptible arginyl residues in the enzyme. Arginyl residues are considered to be positively charged binding sites for anionic substrates and ligands in many enzymes. Treatment of ETP with the specific arginine-binding reagent, butanedione, inhibited transhydrogenation from NADPH leads to NAD (or AcPyAD). It had no effect on NADH oxidation, and inhibited NADPH oxidation and NADH leads to AcPyAD transhydrogenation by only 10 to 15% even after 30 to 60 min incubation of ETP with butanedione. The inhibition of NADPH leads to NAD transhydrogenation was diminished considerably when butanedione was added to ETP in the presence of NAD or NADP. When both NAD and NADP were present, the butanedione effect was completely abolished, thus suggesting the possible presence of arginyl residues at the nucleotide binding site of the NADPH leads to NAD transhydrogenase enzyme. Under conditions that transhydrogenation from NADPH to NAD was completely inhibited by trypsin or butanedione, NADPH oxidation rate was larger than or equal to 220 nmol min-1 mg-1 ETP protein at pH 6.0 and 30 degrees. The above results establish that in the respiratory chain of beef-heart mitochondria NADH oxidation, NADPH oxidation, and NADPH leads to NAD transhydrogenation are independent reactions.  相似文献   

19.
S L Bender  S Mehdi  J R Knowles 《Biochemistry》1989,28(19):7555-7560
The cofactor requirements of dehydroquinate synthase from Escherichia coli have been characterized. The homogeneous enzyme, purified from the overproducing strain RB791 (pJB14), is a monomeric metalloenzyme of Mr = 39,000 that contains 1 mol of tightly bound Co(II) according to atomic absorption analysis. The holoenzyme rapidly loses activity upon incubation with EDTA, giving rise to a stable but catalytically inactive apoenzyme. Activity is fully restored by reconstitution with Co(II) and partially restored with other divalent cations. Reconstitution of the apoenzyme with Zn(II) (which is probably the functioning metal in vivo) restores activity to 53% of the level observed with the Co(II)-holoenzyme. The presence of the substrate 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate (1) blocks the inactivation by EDTA. Dehydroquinate synthase also binds 1 mol of NAD+, the presence of which is essential for catalytic activity. The rate constant for the dissociation of NAD+ from the Co(II)-holoenzyme was found to be 0.024 min-1. Under turnover conditions with saturating levels of substrate, the dissociation rate of NAD+ increases by a factor of 40, to 1 min-1. Under these conditions (pH 7.5, 20 degrees C), the Km for NAD+ was determined to be 80 nM.  相似文献   

20.
An investigation was made of the effect of NAD+ analogues on subunit interactions in yeast and rabbit muscle glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenases by using the subunit exchange (hybridization) method described previously [e.g. see Osborne & Hollaway (1975) Biochem. J. 151, 37-45]. The ligands ATP, ITP, ADP, AMP, cyclic AMP and ADP-ribose like NADH, all caused an apparent weakening of intramolecular subunit interactions, whereas NAD+ caused an apparent increase in the stability of the tetrameric enzyme molecules. A mixture of NMN and AMP, although it did not simulate completely the NAD+-induced 'tightening' of the enzyme structure, did result in a more than 20-fold decrease in the rate of subunit exchange compared with that in the presence of AMP alone. These results show that occupancy of the NMN subsite of the enzyme NAD+-binding site is insufficient in itself to give the marked tightening of the enzyme structure induced by NAD+. The 'tightening' effect is specific in that it seems to require a phosphodiester link between NMN and ADP-ribose. These effects are discussed in terms of the detailed X-ray structure of the lobster holoenzyme [Buehner et al. (1974) J. Mol. Biol. 90, 25-49].  相似文献   

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