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1.
The use of suicide substrates remains a very important and useful method in enzymology for studying enzyme mechanisms and designing potential drugs. Suicide substrates act as modified substrates for the target enzymes and bind to the active site. Therefore the presence of a competitive reversible inhibitor decreases the rate of substrate-induced inactivation and protects the enzyme from this inactivation. This lowering on the inactivation rate has evident physiological advantages, since it allows the easy acquisition of experimental data and facilitates kinetic data analysis by providing another variable (inhibitor concentration). However despite the importance of the simultaneous action of a suicide substrate and a competitive reversible inhibition, to date no corresponding kinetic analysis has been carried out. Therefore we present a general kinetic analysis of a Michaelis-Menten reaction mechanism with double inhibition caused by both, a suicide substrate and a competitive reversible inhibitor. We assume rapid equilibrium of the reversible reaction steps involved, while the time course equations for the reaction product have been derived with the assumption of a limiting enzyme. The goodness of the analytical solutions has been tested by comparison with the simulated curves obtained by numerical integration. A kinetic data analysis to determine the corresponding kinetic parameters from the time progress curve of the product is suggested. In conclusion, we present a complete kinetic analysis of an enzyme reaction mechanism as described above in an attempt to fill a gap in the theoretical treatment of this type of system.  相似文献   

2.
With a strategy of chelating coppers at tyrosinase active site to detect an effective inhibitor, several copper-specific chelators were applied in this study. Ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (ATTM) among them, known as a drug for treating Wilson's disease, turned out to be a significant tyrosinase inhibitor. Treatment with ATTM on mushroom tyrosinase completely inactivated enzyme activity in a dose-dependent manner. Progress-of-substrate reaction kinetics using the two-step kinetic pathway and dilution of the ATTM revealed that ATTM is a tight-binding inhibitor and high dose of ATTM irreversibly inactivated tyrosinase. Progress-of-substrate reaction kinetics and activity restoration with a dilution of the ATTM indicated that the copper-chelating ATTM may bind slowly but reversibly to the active site without competition with substrate, and the enzyme-ATTM complex subsequently undergoes reversible conformational change, leading to complete inactivation of the tyrosinase activity. Thus, inhibition by ATTM on tyrosinase could be categorized as complexing type of inhibition with a slow and reversible binding. Detailed analysis of inhibition kinetics provided IC50 at the steady-state and inhibitor binding constant (K(I)) for ATTM as 1.0+/-0.2 microM and 10.65 microM, respectively. Our results may provide useful information regarding effective inhibitor of tyrosinase as whitening agents in the cosmetic industry.  相似文献   

3.
Cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase) uses an alpha-retaining double displacement mechanism to catalyze three distinct transglycosylation reactions. To investigate these reactions as catalyzed by the CGTase from Thermoanaerobacterium thermosulfurigenes the enzyme was overproduced (8 mg.L(-1) culture) using Bacillus subtilis as a host. Detailed analysis revealed that the three reactions proceed via different kinetic mechanisms. The cyclization reaction (cyclodextrin formation from starch) is a one-substrate reaction, whereas the other two transglycosylation reactions are two-substrate reactions, which obey substituted enzyme mechanism kinetics (disproportionation reaction) or ternary complex mechanism kinetics (coupling reaction). Analysis of the effects of acarbose and cyclodextrins on the disproportionation reaction revealed that cyclodextrins are competitive inhibitors, whereas acarbose is a mixed type of inhibitor. Our results show that one molecule of acarbose binds either in the active site of the free enzyme, or at a secondary site of the enzyme-substrate complex. The mixed inhibition thus indicates the existence of a secondary sugar binding site near the active site of T. thermosulfurigenes CGTase.  相似文献   

4.
O-Ethyl S-[2-(diisopropylamino)ethyl] methylphosphonothioate (MPT) is an active site directed inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase (AChE). Inhibition of the Electrophorus electricus (G4) enzyme follows classical second-order kinetics. However, inhibition of total mouse skeletal muscle AChE and inhibition of the individual molecular forms from muscle, including the monomeric species, do not proceed as simple irreversible bimolecular reactions. Similarly, complex inhibition kinetics are observed for the purified enzyme from Torpedo californica. AChE can be cross-linked with glutaraldehyde into a semisolid matrix. Under these conditions the abnormal concentration dependence for MPT inhibition is accentuated, and a range of MPT concentrations can be found where inhibition of polymerized AChE is far less than that observed at lower concentrations. Inhibition in certain concentration ranges is partially reversible after removal of all unbound ligand. Thus, there are two different modes of organophosphorus inhibition by MPT: the classical irreversible phosphorylation of the active site and a reversible interaction at a site peripheral to the active center. Propidium, a well-studied peripheral site ligand, can prevent the later interaction. Hence, the second site of MPT interaction with AChE may overlap or be linked to the peripheral anionic site of AChE characterized by the binding of propidium and other peripheral site inhibitors.  相似文献   

5.
Chemical modification of p-chloromercuribenzoate (PCMB) on beta-N-acetyl-d-glucosaminidase (NAGase, EC 3.2.1.52) from green crab (Scylla serrata) has been studied. The results show that sulfhydryl group is essential for the activity of the enzyme. Inhibitory kinetics of the enzyme by mercuric chloride (HgCl2) has been studied using the kinetic method of the substrate reaction during inhibitor of enzyme. The kinetic results show that the inhibition of the enzyme by mercuric ion (Hg2+) at lower than 1.0 microM is a reversible reaction with residual activity and the inhibition belongs to be competitive. The inhibition kinetics model of Hg2+ on the enzyme was set up and the microscopic rate constants were determined and the data obtained were well fitted with the model. It was also turned out that only one molecule of HgCl2 binds to the enzyme molecule to lead the enzyme lose its activity. The above results suggest that the cysteine residue is essential for activity and is situated at the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Incubation of homogeneous glutamin(asparagin)ase from Pseudomonas aurantiaca with 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine (DON) and azaserine leads to an almost complete inactivation of the enzyme. The inactivation process in both cases involves the step of reversible binding of the enzyme with the inhibitor into a complex and subsequent modification of the enzyme within this complex. The data on saturation of the enzyme by low concentrations of inhibitors, the protective effect of substrate and its analogs as well as of the competitive inhibitor and product of the enzymatic reaction, L-aspartate, suggest that the modification of functional groups takes place in the enzyme active site. The presence of essential threonine hydroxyl groups in/or near the enzyme active site is surmised.  相似文献   

7.
The initiation of coagulation results from the activation of factor X by an enzyme complex (Xase) composed of the trypsin-like serine proteinase, factor VIIa, bound to tissue factor (TF) on phospholipid membranes. We have investigated the basis for the protein substrate specificity of Xase using TF reconstituted into vesicles of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, or pure phosphatidylcholine. We show that occupation of the active site of VIIa within Xase by a reversible inhibitor or an alternate peptidyl substrate is sufficient to exclude substrate interactions at the active site but does not alter the affinity of Xase for factor X. This is evident as classical competitive inhibition of peptidyl substrate cleavage but as classical noncompetitive inhibition of factor X activation by active site-directed ligands. This implies that the productive recognition of factor X by Xase arises from a multistep reaction requiring an initial interaction at sites on the enzyme complex distinct from the active site (exosites), followed by active site interactions and bond cleavage. Exosite interactions determine protein substrate affinity, whereas the second binding step influences the maximum catalytic rate for the reaction. We also show that competitive inhibition can be achieved by interfering with exosite binding using factor X derivatives that are expected to have limited or abrogated interactions with the active site of VIIa within Xase. Thus, substrate interactions at exosites, sites removed from the active site of VIIa within the enzyme complex, determine affinity and binding specificity in the productive recognition of factor X by the VIIa-TF complex. This may represent a prevalent strategy through which distinctive protein substrate specificities are achieved by the homologous enzymes of coagulation.  相似文献   

8.
We present a general kinetic analysis of enzyme catalyzed reactions evolving according to a Michaelis-Menten mechanism, in which an uncompetitive, reversible inhibitor acts. Simultaneously, enzyme inactivation is induced by an unstable suicide substrate, i.e. it is a Michaelis-Menten mechanism with double inhibition: one originating from the substrate and another originating from the reversible inhibitor. Rapid equilibrium of the reversible reaction steps involved is assumed and the time course equations for the reaction product have been derived under the assumption of limiting enzyme. The goodness of the analytical solutions has been tested by comparison with simulated curves obtained by numerical integration. A kinetic data analysis to determine the corresponding kinetic parameters from the time progress curve of the product is suggested.  相似文献   

9.
R L Stein  D A Trainor 《Biochemistry》1986,25(19):5414-5419
The mechanism of inactivation of human leukocyte elastase (HLE) by the chloromethyl ketone MeOSuc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Val-CH2Cl was investigated. The dependence of the first-order rate constant for inactivation on concentration of chloromethyl ketone is hyperbolic and suggests formation of a reversible "Michaelis complex" prior to covalent interaction between the enzyme and inhibitor. However, the observed Ki value is 10 microM, at least 10-fold lower than dissociation constants for complexes formed from interaction of HLE with structurally related substrates or reversible inhibitors, and suggests that Ki is a complex kinetic constant, reflecting the formation and accumulation of both the Michaelis complex and a second complex. It is proposed that this second complex is a hemiketal formed from attack of the active site serine on the carbonyl carbon of the inhibitor. The accumulation of this intermediate may be a general feature of reactions of serine proteases and chloromethyl ketones derived from specific peptides and accounts for the very low Ki values observed for these reactions. The solvent deuterium isotope effect (SIE) on the inactivation step (ki) is 1.58 +/- 0.07 and is consistent with rate-limiting, general-catalyzed attack of the active site His on the methylene carbon of the inhibitor with displacement of chloride anion. The general catalyst is thought to be the active site Asp. In contrast, the SIE on the second-order rate constant for HLE inactivation, ki/Ki, is inverse and equals 0.64 +/- 0.05.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
1. Periodate-oxidized NADP+ inhibits the catalytic activity of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Candida utilis, competing with NADP+. 2. Incubation of the enzyme with the coenzyme analogue causes partial reversible inactivation of the enzyme as a result of affinity labelling of the coenzyme-binding site. 3. Some kinetic values of the reaction were calculated. 4. The inactivation can be made irreversible by treatment with NaBH4, which reduces a Schiff base formed between an aldehyde group on the coenzyme analogue and a lysine residue on the enzyme. 5. Complete inactivation can be correlated with the binding of only one inhibitor to each enzyme subunit. 6. The lysine residue involved in the binding of the inhibitor is present at the coenzyme-binding site.  相似文献   

11.
Phenylphosphate, a structural analog of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), was found to be an activator of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEP carboxylase) purified from maize leaves. This finding suggested the presence in the enzyme of a regulatory site, to which PEP could bind. We carried out kinetic studies on this enzyme using controlled concentrations of free PEP and of Mg-PEP complex and developed a theoretical kinetic model of the reaction. In summary, the main conclusions drawn from our results, and taken as assumptions of the model, were the following: (i) The affinity of the active site for the complex Mg-PEP is much higher than that for free PEP and Mg2+ ions, and therefore it can be considered that the preferential substrate of the PEP-catalyzed reaction is Mg-PEP. (ii) The enzyme has a regulatory site specific for free PEP, to which Mg2+ ions can not bind. (iii) The binding of free PEP, or an analog molecule, to this regulatory site yields a modified enzyme that has much lower apparent Km values and apparent Vmax values than the unmodified enzyme. So, free PEP behaves as an excellent activator of the reaction at subsaturating substrate concentrations, and as an inhibitor at saturating substrate concentrations. These findings may have important physiological implications on the regulation of the PEP carboxylase in vivo activity and, consequently, of the C4 pathway, since increased reaction rates would be obtained when the concentration of PEP rises, even at limiting Mg2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

12.
Inhibition of E. coli DNA polymerase I by 1,10-phenanthroline.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A 1,10-phenanthroline-cuprous ion complex is a potent reversible inhibitor of E. coli DNA polymerase I yielding 50% inhibition in the micromolar concentration range. The 2:1 1,10-phenanthroline-cuprous ion complex is most probably the inhibitory species. Complexes of cupric ion and 1,10-phenanthroline have no apparent kinetic effect. The previously reported inhibition of the enzyme by 1,10-phenanthroline (1,2) is most likely due to the formation of this complex from thiols normally added to the assay mixtures and trace amounts of cupric ion invariably present notwithstanding reasonable precaution. The reversible and instantaneous 1,10-phenanthroline inhibition observed for other polymerases may be due to this unique inhibitory species and not coordination of a catalytically important zinc ion at the active site by the chelating agent.  相似文献   

13.
Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase [3-phospho-D-glyceratecarboxy-lyase (dimerizing), EC 4.1.1.39] is rapidly and irreversibly inactivated by micromolar concentrations of dimethyl (2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl) sulphonium bromide (DMHNB), a tryptophan selective reagent, after reversible protection of the reactive sulphydryl groups. The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order reaction kinetics. Replots of the kinetic data indicated that no reversible enzyme-inhibitor complex was formed prior to irreversible modification. Kinetic analysis and the correlation of the spectral data at 410 nm with enzyme activity indicated that inactivation by DMHNB resulted from modification of on an average one tryptophan per 67 kDa combination of large and small subunits. Several competitive inhibitors and substrate RuBP offered strong protection against inhibition. The k1/2 (protection) for RuBP was 1.3 mM, indicating that the tryptophan residues may be located at or near the substrate binding site. Free and total sulphydryl groups were not affected by the reagent. The modified enzyme exhibited significantly reduced intrinsic fluorescence, indicating that the microenvironment of the tryptophans at the active site is significantly perturbed. Tryptic peptide profiles and CD spectral analyses suggested that inactivation may not be due to the extensive conformational changes in the enzyme molecule during modification.  相似文献   

14.
13-cis retinoic acid has been shown to be a stereospecific suicide inhibitor of thioredoxin reductase purified from human melanoma tissue. All trans retinoic acid does not inhibit this enzyme. The covalent addition of 13-cis retinoic acid to the thiolate active site of thioredoxin reductase produces a thioether enzyme-inhibitor complex. This has been established by a kinetic analysis and by active site labeling with 3H-13 cis retinoic acid. A mechanism involving Michael addition of the thiolate group in the active site of thioredoxin reductase to the 13-cis double bond of enzyme-bound inhibitor has been proposed. This reaction may be important in the human epidermis because thioredoxin reductase has been shown to be a major antioxidant catalyst in human keratinocytes, melanocytes, melanoma cells, and in human skin as well as in melanoma tissues.  相似文献   

15.
NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase from Cephalosporium acremonium CW-19 has been inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate following a first-order process giving a second-order rate constant of 3.0 m-1. s-1 at pH 6.5 and 25 degrees C. The pH-inactivation rate data indicated the participation of a group with a pK value of 6.9. Quantifying the increase in absorbance at 240 nm showed that six histidine residues per subunit were modified during total inactivation, only one of which was essential for catalysis, and substrate protection analysis would seem to indicate its location at the substrate binding site. The enzyme was not inactivated by 5, 5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate), N-ethylmaleimide or iodoacetate, which would point to the absence of an essential reactive cysteine residue at the active site. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate reversibly inactivated the enzyme at pH 7.7 and 5 degrees C, with enzyme activity declining to an equilibrium value within 15 min. The remaining activity depended on the modifier concentration up to about 2 mm. The kinetic analysis of inactivation and reactivation rate data is consistent with a reversible two-step inactivation mechanism with formation of a noncovalent enzyme-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate complex prior to Schiff base formation with a probable lysyl residue of the enzyme. The analysis of substrate protection shows the essential residue(s) to be at the active site of the enzyme and probably to be involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

16.
The steady-state kinetic data show that 3-hydroxy-4-phenylthiazole-2(3H)-thione (3H4PTT) is a potent tight-binding inhibitor for dopamine beta-monooxygenase (DbetaM) with a dissociation constant of 0.9 nM. Ackermann-Potter plots of the enzyme dependence of the inhibition revealed that the stoichiometry of the enzyme inhibition by 3H4PTT is 1:1. Pre-steady-state progress curves at varying inhibitor with fixed reductant and enzyme concentrations clearly show the slow binding behavior of the inhibitor. The observed kinetic behavior is consistent with the apparent direct formation of the tightly bound E x I* complex. The k(on) and k(off) for 3H4PTT which were determined under pre-steady-state conditions at variable inhibitor concentrations were found to be (1.85 +/- 0.07) x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) and (1.9 +/- 0.6) x 10(-3) s(-1), respectively. The dissociation constant calculated from these rates was similar to that determined under steady-state conditions, confirming that 3H4PTT is a kinetically well-behaved inhibitor. The steady-state as well as pre-steady-state kinetic studies at variable DMPD concentrations show that the inhibition is competitive with respect to the reductant, demonstrating the exclusive interaction of 3H4PTT with the oxidized form of the enzyme. The kinetic behavior and the structural properties of 3H4PTT are consistent with the proposal that the E x 3H4PTT complex may mimic the transition state for the product (protonated) release step of the enzyme. Therefore, 3H4PTT could be used as a convenient probe to examine the properties of the E x P complex of the DbetaM reaction and also as an active site titrant for the oxidized enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Limited proteolysis is a highly specific irreversible process, which can serve to initiate physiological function by converting a precursor protein into a biologically active form. When the activating enzyme and the activated enzyme coincide, the process is an autocatalytic zymogen activation (i.e. reactions in which the zymogens serves as a substrate for the corresponding active enzyme). The activity of proteases is frequently regulated by the binding of specific protease inhibitors. Thus, to understand the biological regulation of proteolysis, one must understand the role of protease inhibitors. In the present study, a detailed kinetic analysis of autocatalytic reaction modulated by a reversible inhibitor is represented. On the basis of the kinetic equation, a novel procedure is developed to evaluate the kinetic parameters of the reaction. As an example of the application of this method, effects of acetamidine, p-amidinobenzamidine and benzamidine on the autoactivation of trypsinogen by trypsin were studied.  相似文献   

18.
O-ethyl-S (2 diisopropylaminoethyl) methyl phosphorothiolate (MPT) is an active site-directed inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase (AChE). The inhibition of mouse muscle AChE by MPT as well as the inhibition of its individual molecular forms do not proceed as simple irreversible bimolecular reactions. The insolubilization of AChE into a semisolid matrix allows to characterize, after dialysis of all unbound ligand, a partially reversible phase of the inhibition by MPT. These results can be explained in terms of two different modes of inhibition by MPT: the classical irreversible phosphorylation of the active site and an inhibition phase involving the reversible binding of MPT at a site peripheral to the active site, the peripheral organophosphorus site (POP-site). We now find that BW 284 C 51, a reversible specific inhibitor of AChE which protects the active site against irreversible inhibition by low MPT concentrations, can prevent the occurrence of the partially reversible inhibition phase. Hence, BW may bind to a peripheral site that either overlaps or is linked to the POP-site.  相似文献   

19.
Thermoanaerobacter brockii alcohol dehydrogenase (TbADH) catalyzes the reversible oxidation of secondary alcohols to the corresponding ketones using NADP(+) as the cofactor. The active site of the enzyme contains a zinc ion that is tetrahedrally coordinated by four protein residues. The enzymatic reaction leads to the formation of a ternary enzyme-cofactor-substrate complex; and catalytic hydride ion transfer is believed to take place directly between the substrate and cofactor at the ternary complex. Although crystallographic data of TbADH and other alcohol dehydrogenases as well as their complexes are available, their mode of action remains to be determined. It is firmly established that the zinc ion is essential for catalysis. However, there is no clear agreement about the coordination environment of the metal ion and the competent reaction intermediates during catalysis. We used a combination of X-ray absorption, circular dichroism (CD), and fluorescence spectroscopy, together with structural analysis and modeling studies, to investigate the ternary complexes of TbADH that are bound to a transition-state analogue inhibitor. Our structural and spectroscopic studies indicated that the coordination sphere of the catalytic zinc site in TbADH undergoes conformational changes when it binds the inhibitor and forms a pentacoordinated complex at the zinc ion. These studies provide the first active site structure of bacterial ADH bound to a substrate analogue. Here, we suggest the active site structure of the central intermediate complex and, more specifically, propose the substrate-binding site in TbADH.  相似文献   

20.
A generalized theoretical treatment of the kinetics of an enzyme-catalysed reaction in the presence of an unstable irreversible inhibitor (or activator) is presented. Analytical expressions describing the time-dependence of product formation have been derived in coefficient form amenable to non-linear regression analysis for two operationally distinct types of reaction mechanism dependent on whether the reaction of the unstable modifier (X) with either or both the free enzyme (E) and enzyme-substrate complex (ES) occurs as a simple bimolecular process, or proceeds through the intermediacy of either or both adsorptive enzyme-modifier (EX) and enzyme-modifier-substrate (EXS) complexes in what may be considered as an extension of the Botts-Morales general modifier mechanism for (stable) reversible enzyme inhibitors and activators. Special cases of both models are classified in an analogous way to the traditional naming of reversible enzyme modifications, and guidelines concerning tests of mechanism and determination of kinetic parameters are given. In particular, it has been shown that kinetic constants describing enzyme inactivation by an unstable site-specific inhibitor forming a reversible EX complex prior to covalent modification step may be determined from a single progress curve. Kinetic analysis of the extended Botts-Morales mechanism describing irreversible enzyme inactivation has demonstrated that analytical expressions describing the time-course of product formation may be derived for a stable modifier by retaining the usual steady-state assumptions regarding the fluxes around ES and EXS provided quasi-equilibrium modifier binding to E and ES is assumed, but for unstable modifiers all of the binding steps must be assumed to be at quasi-equilibrium in the steady-state, except under restrictive circumstances.  相似文献   

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