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1.
Liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH; E.C. 1.1.1.1) provides an excellent system for probing the role of binding interactions with NAD(+) and alcohols as well as with NADH and the corresponding aldehydes. The enzyme catalyzes the transfer of hydride ion from an alcohol substrate to the NAD(+) cofactor, yielding the corresponding aldehyde and the reduced cofactor, NADH. The enzyme is also an excellent catalyst for the reverse reaction. X-ray crystallography has shown that the NAD(+) binds in an extended conformation with a distance of 15 A between the buried reacting carbon of the nicotinamide ring and the adenine ring near the surface of the horse liver enzyme. A major criticism of X-ray crystallographic studies of enzymes is that they do not provide dynamic information. Such data provide time-averaged and space-averaged models. Significantly, entries in the protein data bank contain both coordinates as well as temperature factors. However, enzyme function involves both dynamics and motion. The motions can be as large as a domain closure such as observed with liver alcohol dehydrogenase or as small as the vibrations of certain atoms in the active site where reactions take place. Ternary complexes produced during the reaction of the enzyme binary entity, E-NAD(+), with retinol (vitamin A alcohol) lead to retinal (vitamin A aldehyde) release and the enzyme binary entity E-NADH. Retinal is further metabolized via the E-NAD(+)-retinal ternary complex to retinoic acid (vitamin A acid). To unravel the mechanistic aspects of these transformations, the kinetics and energetics of interconversion between various ternary complexes are characterized. Proton transfers along hydrogen bond bridges and NADH hydride transfers along hydrophobic entities are considered in some detail. Secondary kinetic isotope effects with retinol are not particularly large with the wild-type form of alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver. We analyze alcohol dehydrogenase catalysis through a re-examination of the reaction coordinates. The ground states of the binary and ternary complexes are shown to be related to the corresponding transition states through topology and free energy acting along the reaction path.  相似文献   

2.
The use of the steady-state treatment in the study of rapid kinetics was illustrated with experiments on horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase using a stopped-flow spectrophoto-fluorimeter. The amplitude of the “burst” formation of NADH fluorescence observed in the transient reaction of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase, NAD+, and ethanol corresponded mainly to the steady-state concentration of the binary complex, horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase-NADH. The results on the forward and reverse reactions are shown to be consistent with a Theorell-Chance mechanism. The formation of the ternary complexes appeared to decrease the “burst” formation of the binary complex in the benzylalcoholbenzaldehyde system. There was no evidence for the participation of nonequivalent states of the two active sites in the enzyme molecule. It is shown that the equilibrium constants and rate constants involving the mechanisms of LADH reactions can be evaluated using the data of the amplitude of the “burst” reaction in similar manner to that of usual steady-state kinetics.  相似文献   

3.
In this work, we have postulated a comprehensive and unified chemical mechanism of action for yeast alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1, constitutive, cytoplasmic), isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The chemical mechanism of yeast enzyme is based on the integrity of the proton relay system: His-51....NAD+....Thr-48....R.CH2OH(H2>O)....Zn++, stretching from His-51 on the surface of enzyme to the active site zinc atom in the substrate-binding site of enzyme. Further, it is based on extensive studies of steady-state kinetic properties of enzyme which were published recently. In this study, we have reported the pH-dependence of dissociation constants for several competitive dead-end inhibitors of yeast enzyme from their binary complexes with enzyme, or their ternary complexes with enzyme and NAD+ or NADH; inhibitors include: pyrazole, acetamide, sodium azide, 2-fluoroethanol, and 2,2,2-trifluorethanol. The unified mechanism describes the structures of four dissociation forms of apoenzyme, two forms of the binary complex E.NAD+, three forms of the ternary complex E.NAD+.alcohol, two forms of the ternary complex E.NADH.aldehyde and three binary complexes E.NADH. Appropriate pKa values have been ascribed to protonation forms of most of the above mentioned complexes of yeast enzyme with coenzymes and substrates.  相似文献   

4.
The NAD+ analogue, 3-aldoxime pyridine adenine dinucleotide, is prepared by transglycosidation. Contrary to the published data, this analogue shows no activity as coenzyme with alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver or from yeast. This is demonstrated by three methods: no increase of absorption at 331 nm by the enzymic oxidation of ethanol; no increase at 290 nm with cinnamic alcohol; and no exchange reaction. The inhibition by this analogue of the oxidation of ethanol by NAD+ is competitive at pH 7.6 and 9.5 with yeast alcohol dehydrogenase; with liver alcohol dehydrogenase, it is of the mixed type at pH 7.6 and non-competitive at pH 9.5. The lack of activity of the analogue and inhibition of the competitive or mixed type may be explained by the fact that the binary complex does not bind the substrate or that in the ternary complex the hydride shift does not occur. The non-competitive inhibition at pH 9.5 with the horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase may be explained by the existence of binding sites specific for this analogue.  相似文献   

5.
Active site substituted Cd(II) horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase has been studied by Perturbed Angular Correlation of Gamma rays Spectroscopy during turnover conditions for benzaldehyde and 4-trans-(N,N-dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde. The ternary complex between alcohol dehydrogenase NAD+ and Cl, and the binary complex between alcohol dehydrogenase and orthophenanthroline have also been studied. The Nuclear Quadrupole Interaction parameters have been interpreted in terms of different coordination geometries for Cd(II) in the catalytic zinc site of the enzyme. Calculation of the nuclear quadrupole interaction for cadmium in the catalytic site of the enzyme with and without coenzyme, based upon the four coordinated geometries determined from X-ray diffraction, agrees with the experimentally determined values. The ternary complexes between enzyme, NAD+ and either Cl or trifluoroethanol and the binary complex between enzyme and orthophenanthroline have almost identical spectral parameters which are not consistent with a four coordinated geometry, but are consistent with a five coordinated geometry. The nonprotein ligands for the ternary complex with trifluoroethanol are suggested to be an alkoxide group and a water molecule. The Nuclear Quadrupole Interaction parameters for the productive ternary complex between enzyme, NADH and an aldehyde is consistent with the four coordinated geometry predicted from X-ray diffraction data having the carbonyl group of the aldehyde substituting the water molecule as ligand to the metal.Abbreviations LADH Horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase - H4Zn2LADH derivative of LADH free of zinc in the catalytic site - 111CdZn2LADH derivative of LADH with 111Cd (carrier free) in the catalytic site - Cd2Zn2LADH derivative of LDH with 2 mole of Cd(II) per mole LADH in the catalytic site - PAC pertubed angular correlation of gamma rays - NQI Nuclear quadrupole interaction - AOM Angular overlap model - trifluoroethanol 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol - DACA trans-4-(N,N-dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde - NAD+ and NADH oxidized and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide - NADH2 reduced 1,4,5,6-tetrahydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide The experimental work was carried out at the Niels Bohr Institute Risø, 4000 Roskilde and Blegdamsvej 19, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark Offprint requests to: R. Bauer  相似文献   

6.
The effect of addition of product on the amplitude of the “burst” reaction of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase was studied using a stopped-flow spectrophotofluorimeter. The amplitude of the “burst” formation of enzyme-bound NADH fluorescence was completely diminished by the addition of excess acetaldehyde or benzaldehyde in the reaction with NAD+ and ethanol or NAD+ and benzylalcohol, respectively. The results indicate that a significant concentration of the ternary enzyme-coenzyme-substrate complex was formed during the steady-state in the presence of product, and this ternary complex did not exhibit NADH fluorescence. The dissociation constants for the ternary complex were determined from the amplitudes of the “burst” reactions. The “active site” titration of the enzyme with NAD+ in the presence of ethanol and iso-butyramide is also described.  相似文献   

7.
A hollow fiber module was used as a reactor for conversion of ethanol to acetaldehyde in the presence of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase as catalyst. Mass transport rates for NAD+, the overall acetaldehyde generation rate, catalyst effectiveness factors, and the overall order of the reaction with respect to NAD+ concentration were measured. A coupled-substrate reactor with continuous in situ regeneration of cofactor was also examined. Two substrates of opposite redox state were added simultaneously to the feed stream. NADH and acetaldehyde concentrations were monitored in the effluent stream. The cofactor recycle number, or ratio of moles of product to moles of NADH produced, exceeded 10,000 under certain conditions. While decreasing the NAD+ concentration in the feed stream decreased reactor productivity somewhat, it greatly enhanced the ratio of product formed per mole of NAD+ fed to the reactor. It is suggested that high cofactor costs in dehydrogenase reactors may be overcome with efficient in situ regeneration and secondary recovery and recycling of cofactor from the process stream.  相似文献   

8.
Acetone was found to form a dead-end ternary complex with horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase and oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) when the reactants were incubated for a long time at relatively high concentrations. The complex formation was demonstrated by measuring the increase in absorbance at 320 nm, the quenching of protein fluorescence, and the loss of enzyme activity. Since acetone is a substrate of liver alcohol dehydrogenase, and the presence of acetaldehyde or pyrazole prevents acetone from forming the dead-end complex with liver alcohol dehydrogenase and NAD+, the acetone molecule in the complex may be bound to the substrate binding site of liver alcohol dehydrogenase. The dissociation of the complex was demonstrated by prolonged dialysis or by addition of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and iso-butyramide. A modified nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide was obtained as a main product from the dead-end complex after dissociation of the complex or denaturation of the apoenzyme. The modified nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide was found to exhibit an absorption spectrum similar to that of NADH; however, it was not oxidizable by liver alcohol dehydrogenase in the presence of acetaldehyde and exhibited no fluorescence.  相似文献   

9.
As shown by X-ray crystallography, horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase undergoes a global conformational change upon binding of NAD+ or NADH, involving a rotation of the catalytic domain relative to the coenzyme binding domain and the closing up of the active site to produce a catalytically efficient enzyme. The conformational change requires a complete coenzyme and is affected by various chemical or mutational substitutions that can increase the catalytic turnover by altering the kinetics of the isomerization and rate of dissociation of coenzymes. The binding of NAD+ is kinetically limited by a unimolecular isomerization (corresponding to the conformational change) that is controlled by deprotonation of the catalytic zinc-water to produce a negatively-charged zinc-hydroxide, which can attract the positively-charged nicotinamide ring. The deprotonation is facilitated by His-51 acting through a hydrogen-bonded network to relay the proton to solvent. Binding of NADH also involves a conformational change, but the rate is very fast. After the enzyme binds NAD+ and closes up, the substrate displaces the hydroxide bound to the catalytic zinc; this exchange may involve a double displacement reaction where the carboxylate group of a glutamate residue first displaces the hydroxide (inverting the tetrahedral coordination of the zinc), and then the exogenous ligand displaces the glutamate. The resulting enzyme-NAD+-alcoholate complex is poised for hydrogen transfer, and small conformational fluctuations may bring the reactants together so that the hydride ion is transferred by quantum mechanical tunneling. In the process, the nicotinamide ring may become puckered, as seen in structures of complexes of the enzyme with NADH. The conformational changes of alcohol dehydrogenase demonstrate the importance of protein dynamics in catalysis.  相似文献   

10.
Liver alcohol dehydrogenase (E.C.1.1.1.1) is an NAD+/NADH dependent enzyme with a broad substrate specificity being active on an assortment of primary and secondary alcohols. It catalyzes the reversible oxidation of a wide variety of alcohols to the corresponding aldehydes and ketones as well as the oxidation of certain aldehydes to their related carboxylic acids. Although the bioinorganic and bioorganic aspects of the enzymatic mechanism, as well as the structures of various ternary complexes, have been extensively studied, the kinetic significance of certain intermediates has not been fully evaluated. Nevertheless, the availability of computer-assisted programs for kinetic simulation and molecular modeling make it possible to describe the biochemical mechanism more completely. Although the true physiological substrates of this zinc metalloenzyme are unknown, alcohol dehydrogenase effectively catalyzes not only the interconversion of all-trans-retinol and all-trans-retinal but also the oxidation of all-trans-retinal to the corresponding retinoic acid. Retinal and related vitamin A derivatives play fundamental roles in many physiological processes, most notably the vision process. Furthermore, retinoic acid is used in dermatology as well as in the prevention and treatment of different types of cancer. The enzyme-NAD+-retinol complex has an apparent pKa value of 7.2 and loses a proton rapidly. Proton inventory modeling suggests that the transition state for the hydride transfer step has a partial negative charge on the oxygen of retinoxide. Spectral evidence for an intermediate such as E-NAD+-retinoxide was obtained with enzyme that has cobalt(II) substituted for the active site zinc(II). Biophysical considerations of water in these biological processes coupled with the inverse solvent isotope effect lead to the conclusion that the zinc-bound alkoxide makes a strong hydrogen bond with the hydroxyl group of Ser48 and is thus activated for hydride transfer. Moderate pressure accelerates enzyme action indicative of a negative volume of activation. The data with retinol is discussed in terms of enzyme stability, mechanism, adaptation to extreme conditions, as well as water affinities of substrates and inhibitors. Our data concern all-trans, 9-cis, 11-cis, and 13-cis retinols as well as the corresponding retinals. In all cases the enzyme utilizes an approximately ordered mechanism for retinol–retinal interconversion and for retinal–retinoic acid transformation.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetic mechanism of betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase from leaves of the plant Amaranthus hypochondriacus is ordered with NAD+ adding first. NADH is a noncompetitive inhibitor against NAD+, which was interpreted before as evidence of an iso mechanism, in which NAD+ and NADH binds to different forms of free enzyme. With the aim of testing the proposed kinetic mechanism, we have now investigated the ability of NADH to form different complexes with the enzyme. By initial velocity and equilibrium binding studies, we found that the steady-state levels of E.glycine betaine are negligible, ruling out binding of NADH to this complex. However, NADH readily bind to E.betaine aldehyde, whose levels most likely are kinetically significant given its low dissociation constant. Also, NADH combined with E.NADH and E.NAD+. Finally, NADH was not able to revert the hydride transfer step, what suggest that there is no acyl-enzyme intermediate, i.e. the release of the reduced dinucleotide takes place after the deacylation step. Although formation of the complex E.NAD+.NADH would produce an uncompetitive effect in the inhibition of NADH against NAD+, the iso mechanism cannot be conclusively discarded.  相似文献   

12.
The transient kinetics of aldehyde reduction by NADH catalyzed by liver alcohol dehydrogenase consist of two kinetic processes. This biphasic rate behavior is consistent with a model in which one of the two identical subunits in the enzyme is inactive during the reaction at the adjacent protomer. Alternatively, enzyme heterogeneity could result in such biphasic behavior. We have prepared liver alcohol dehydrogenase containing a single major isozyme; and the transient kinetics of this purified enzyme are biphasic.Addition of two [14C]carboxymethyl groups per dimer to the two “reactive” sulfhydryl groups (Cys46) yields enzyme which is catalytically inactive toward alcohol oxidation. Alkylated enzyme, as initially isolated by gel filtration chromatography at pH 7·5, forms an NAD+-pyrazole complex. However, the ability to bind NAD+-pyrazole is rapidly lost in pH 8·75 buffer; therefore, our alkylated preparations, as isolated by chromatography at pH 8·75, are inactive toward NAD+-pyrazole complex formation. We have prepared partially inactivated enzyme by allowing iodoacetic acid to react with liver alcohol dehydrogenase until 50% of the NAD+-pyrazole binding capacity remains; under these reaction conditions one [14C]carboxymethyl group is added per dimer. This partially alkylated enzyme preparation is isolated by gel filtration and has been aged sufficiently to lose NAD+-pyrazole binding ability at alkylated subunits. When solutions of native liver alcohol dehydrogenase and partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase containing the same number of unmodified active sites are allowed to react with substrate under single turnover conditions, partially alkylated enzyme is only half as reactive as native enzyme. This indicates that some molecular species in partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase that react with pyrazole and NAD+ during the active site titration do not react with substrate. These data are consistent with a model in which a subunit adjacent to an alkylated protomer in the dimeric enzyme is inactive toward substrate. In addition, NAD+-pyrazole binding at the protomers adjacent to alkylated subunits is slowly lost so that 75% of the enzyme-NAD+-pyrazole binding capacity is lost in 50% alkylated enzyme. These data supply strong evidence for subunit interactions in liver alcohol dehydrogenase.Binding experiments performed on partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase indicate that coenzyme binding is normal at a subunit adjacent to an alkylated protomer even though active ternary complexes cannot be formed. One hypothesis consistent with these results is the unavailability of zinc for substrate binding at the active site in subunits adjacent to alkylated protomers in monoalkylated dimer.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined aspects of the second catalytic activity of alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver (LADH), which involves an apparent dismutation of an aldehyde substrate into alcohol and acid in the presence of LADH and NAD. Using the substrate p-trifluoromethylbenzaldehyde, we have observed various bound complexes by 19F NMR in an effort to further characterize the mechanism of the reaction. The mechanism appears to involve the catalytic activity of LADH · NAD · aldehyde complex which reacts to form an enzyme · NADH · acid complex. The affinity of the acid product for LADH · NADH is weak and the acid product readily desorbs from the ternary complex. The resulting LADH · NADH can then react with a second molecule of aldehyde to form NAD and the corresponding alcohol. The result is the conversion of two molecules of aldehyde to one each of acid and alcohol, with LADH and NAD acting catalytically. This sequence of reactions can also explain the slow formation of acid product observed when alcohol and NAD are incubated with the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Defatted soybean extract was fractionated into protein fractions and low molecular weight fractions with gel filtration. NAD-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase from bovine liver mitochondria and from yeast was found to oxidize aldehyde in both fractions. These enzymes, therefore, were used to determine the quantity of aldehyde. When the protein fraction obtained by gel filtration was subjected to gel filtration again, aldehyde was recovered in the protein fractions. The level of aldehyde in the protein fractions was unchanged before and after digestion of the protein with pepsin. When the soybean extract was incubated beforehand with aldehyde dehydrogenase and NAD+ and the subjected to gel filtration, no aldehyde was detected in the protein fractions. These results indicate that aldehyde dehydrogenase acts on the soybean protein-bound aldehyde. Alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver in the presence of NADH did not convert the bound aldehyde to alcohol.

A large portion of the aldehyde in the extract was separated from the protein by acid precipitation of the protein. Aldehyde dehydrogenase acts on the aldehyde remaining in the protein after acid precipitation. Thus acid precipitation helps to save NAD+ required for complete removal of aldehyde from the soybean protein by aldehyde dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetic studies have shown that the reaction catalyzed by the human placental 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase proceeds by a single displacement mechanism. Addition of the reactants is ordered with NAD+ binding first. The lifetime of the ternary complex is affected by the pH of the reaction mixture. At pH 7.0 a kinetically significant ternary complex is formed, while at pH 9.0 the ternary complex is not kinetically significant (Theorell-Chance mechanism). There is evidence for the occurrence of a kinetically significant isomerization of the enzyme · NADH complex at pH 9.0 but not at pH 7.0. At high substrate concentrations there is formation of unreactive complexes between the 15-hydroxyrostaglandin and both the free enzyme and enzyme · NADH complex and between the 15-ketoprostaglandin and both the free enzyme and enzyme · NAD+ complex. The inhibition of the 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase by various prostaglandins and prostaglandin analogs may be explained by the formation of similar unreactive complexes. Certain prostaglandin analogs, arachidonic acid, and ethacrynic acid also affect the activity of the enzyme by causing its irreversible inactivation.  相似文献   

16.
Corrected fluorescence properties of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and its coenzyme complexes have been investigated as a function of temperature. Dissociation constants have been obtained for binary and ternary complexes of NAD and NADH by following the enhancement of NADH fluorescence or the quenching of the protein fluorescence. It is found that the presence of pyrazole increases the affinity of NAD to the enzyme approximately 100-fold. The formation of the ternary enzyme - NAD - pyrazole complex is accompanied by a large change in the ultraviolet absorption properties, with a new band in the 290-nm region. Significant optical changes also accompany the formation of the ternary enzyme-NADH-acetamide complex. The possible origin for the quenching of the protein fluorescence upon coenzyme binding is discussed, and it is suggested that a coenzyme-induced conformational change can cause it. Thermodynamic parameters associated with NAD and NADH binding have been evaluated on the basis of the change of the dissociation constants with temperature. Optical and thermodynamic properties of binary and ternary complexes of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase are compared with the analogous properties of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

17.
Three crystal structures have been determined of active site specific substituted Cd(II) horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase and its complexes. Intensities were collected for the free, orthorhombic enzyme to 2.4-A resolution and for a triclinic binary complex with NADH to 2.7-A resolution. A ternary complex was crystallized from an equilibrium mixture of NAD+ and p-bromobenzyl alcohol. The microspectrophotometric analysis of these single crystals showed the protein-bound coenzyme to be largely NADH, which proves the complex to consist of CdII-LADH, NADH, and p-bromobenzyl alcohol. Intensity data for this abortive ternary complex were collected to 2.9-A resolution. The coordination geometry in the free Cd(II)-substituted enzyme is highly similar to that of the native enzyme. Cd(II) is bound to Cys-46, Cys-174, His-67, and a water molecule in a distorted tetrahedral geometry. Binding of coenzymes induces a conformational change similar to that in the native enzyme. The interactions between the coenzyme and the protein in the binary and ternary complexes are highly similar to those in the native ternary complexes. The substrate binds directly to the cadmium ion in a distorted tetrahedral geometry. No large, significant structural changes compared to the native ternary complex with coenzyme and p-bromobenzyl alcohol were found. The implications of these results for the use of active site specific Cd(II)-substituted horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase as a model system for the native enzyme are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The proton magnetic resonance spectra of the dihydronicotinamide ring of αNADH3 and the nicotinamide ring of αNAD+ are reported and the proton absorptions assigned. The absolute assignment of the C4 methylene protons of αNADH is based on the generation of specifically deuterium-labeled (pro-S) B-deuterio-αNADH from enzymatically prepared B-deuterio-βNADH. The C4 proton absorption of αNAD+ is assigned by oxidation of B-deuterio-αNADH by the A specific, yeast alcohol dehydrogenase to yield 4-deuterio-αNAD+.The epimerization of either αNADH or βNADH yields an equilibrium ratio of approximately 9:1 βNADH to αNADH. The rate of epimerization of αNADH to βNADH at 38 °C in 0.05, pH 7.5, phosphate buffer is 3.1 × 10?3 min?1, corresponding to a half-life of 4 hr. Four related dehydrogenases, yeast and horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase and chicken M4 and H4 lactate dehydrogenase, are shown to oxidize αNADH to αNAD+ at rates three to four orders of magnitude slower than for βNADH. By using specifically labeled B-deuterio-αNADH the enzymatic oxidation by yeast alcohol dehydrogenase has been shown to occur with the identical stereospecificity as the oxidation of βNADH. The nonenzymatic epimerization of αNADH to βNADH and the enzymatic oxidation αNADH are discussed as a possible source of αNAD+in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
Methionine metabolism is disrupted in patients with alcoholic liver disease, resulting in altered hepatic concentrations of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH), and other metabolites. The present study tested the hypothesis that reductive stress mediates the effects of ethanol on liver methionine metabolism. Isolated rat livers were perfused with ethanol or propanol to induce a reductive stress by increasing the NADH/NAD+ ratio, and the concentrations of SAM and SAH in the liver tissue were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. The increase in the NADH/NAD+ ratio induced by ethanol or propanol was associated with a marked decrease in SAM and an increase in SAH liver content. 4-Methylpyrazole, an inhibitor the NAD+-dependent enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase, blocked the increase in the NADH/NAD+ ratio and prevented the alterations in SAM and SAH. Similarly, co-infusion of pyruvate, which is metabolized by the NADH-dependent enzyme lactate dehydrogenase, restored the NADH/NAD+ ratio and normalized SAM and SAH levels. The data establish an initial link between the effects of ethanol on the NADH/NAD+ redox couple and the effects of ethanol on methionine metabolism in the liver.  相似文献   

20.
Horse-liver alcohol dehydrogenase was carboxymethylated with iodoacetate, which is known to selectively alkylate cysteine-46 in the polypeptide sequence. Carboxymethyl and native enzyme had the same electrophoretic mobility on starch or polyacrylamide gel, but some separation was achieved when isobutyramide and a low concentration of NADH were present (under these conditions NADH was bound by native enzyme but not by Carboxymethyl enzyme).The Carboxymethyl enzyme formed ternary complexes with NAD+ and pyrazole or decanoate. The fluorescence emission of NADH was enhanced 7- to 8-fold (at 410 nm), and a dissociation-constant of 1.7 μM was calculated at pH 7.4; but, in contrast to native enzyme, neither the affinity nor fluorescence were increased by amides (acetamide or isobutyramide).Carboxymethyl alcohol dehydrogenase possesses catalytic activity. Higher alcohols gave maximum velocities up to 7-fold higher than ethanol (reaching nearly 20% of the activity of native enzyme) while [2H]ethanol showed an isotope-rate effect of 3.3. Although the affinity for aldehydes was considerably increased, the maximum velocity of aldehyde-reduction was always at least 20% of that shown by native enzyme, and at pH 9.9 it was almost 2-fold greater than with native enzyme. The rate-limiting step in alcohol-oxidation is likely to be the interconversion of ternary complexes (possibly the hydride-transfer step), while in aldehyde-reduction it could still be the dissociation of the enzyme/NAD+ complex. This is also indicated by inhibition experiments with decanoate, pyrazole, and isobutyramide.These results suggest that a major effect of carboxymethylation is upon ternary complexes of enzyme and NADH, which become much more reluctant to form, either by combination of NADH and ligand with the modified enzyme, or by catalytic conversion of the enzyme/NAD +/alcohol complex.  相似文献   

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