首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 93 毫秒
1.
Photooxidation of inorganic pyrophosphatase [pyrophosphate phosphohydrolase EC 3.6.1.1] from Bacillus stearothermophilus in the presence of rose bengal resulted in rapid loss of enzymatic activity. The pH profile of the inactivation rate by the photooxidation showed an inflection point around pH 6.8, suggesting the involvement of histidyl residues in the inactivation. Amino acid analysis revealed that the loss of enzymatic activity was accompanied by the destruction of 3 histidyl residues per molecule. The presence of Mg2+ alone afforded partial protection against the inactivation, whereas inorganic pyrophosphate, the substrate, showed almost no protective effect against inactivation. The photooxidation of inorganic pyrophosphatase altered the circular dichroism spectrum and the difference UV spectrum induced by Mg2+ in the near ultraviolet region. These results suggested that histidyl residues appear to be located at the binding site of Mg2+ and may contribute to the conformational change induced by Mg2+.  相似文献   

2.
In the present paper the reactivity of histidyl residues of leucine aminopeptidase from bovine eye lens was studied by dye-sensitized photooxidation and by carbethoxylation of the enzyme protein using diethylpyrocarbonate. Of all the different amino acids modified by photooxidation only histidine is connected with the enzymic acticity, whereas tyrosine seems to be involved in structure stabilization. By changing the pH and varying the effectors (Mg2+ and/or dodecylsulfate) of the reaction mixture a different number of histidyl residues of the enzyme protein is caused to react with diethylpyrocarbonate. No secondary reactions with tyrosyl or tryptophyl residues could be observed by spectrophotometric investigations. The enzyme modified by one of the above-mentioned methods shows changes in the capacity of Mn2+ binding measured by autoradiography as well as in the degree of enhancement of enzymic activity by Mn2+ or Mg2+ ions. Of the 48 histidyl residues of the enzyme (Mr = 326000) up to 2 histidyl residues per subunit (Mr = 54000) may be involved in Mn2+ or Mg2+ binding and up to 4 histidyl residues have a strong influence on Zn2+ binding.  相似文献   

3.
Diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivates Pseudomonas ochraceae 4-hydroxy-4-methyl-2-oxoglutarate aldolase [4-hydroxy-4-methyl-2-oxoglutarate pyruvate-lyase: EC 4.1.3.17] by a simple bimolecular reaction. The inactivation is not reversed by hydroxylamine. The pH curve of inactivation indicates the involvement of a residue with a pK of 8.8. Several lines of evidence show that the inactivation is due to the modification of epsilon-amino groups of lysyl residues. Although histidyl residue is also modified, this is not directly correlated to the inactivation. No cysteinyl, tyrosyl, or tryptophyl residue or alpha-amino group is significantly modified. The modification of three lysyl residues per enzyme subunit results in the complete loss of aldolase activity toward various 4-hydroxy-2-oxo acid substrates, whereas oxaloacetate beta-decarboxylase activity associated with the enzyme is not inhibited by this modification. Statistical analysis suggests that only one of the three lysyl residues is essential for activity. l-4-Carboxy-4-hydroxy-2-oxoadipate, a physiological substrate for the enzyme, strongly protects the enzyme against inactivation. Pi as an activator of the enzyme shows no specific protection. The molecular weight of the enzyme, Km for substrate or Mg2+, and activation constant for Pi are virtually unaltered after modification. These results suggest that the modification occurs at or near the active site and that the essential lysyl residue is involved in interaction with the hydroxyl group but not with the oxal group of the substrate.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) on the activity of the inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPiase) from thermophilic bacterium PS-3 was studied. The enzyme was almost completely inactivated on chemical modification with NBS, depending upon the concentration of NBS. The presence of a complex of Mg2+ and a substrate analogue, imidodiphosphate (PNP), provided extensive protection against the inactivation, whereas Mg2+ or PNP alone showed no protective effect. Amino acid analysis of the NBS-modified enzyme after hydrolysis with 6 M HCl indicated no change in the amino acid composition. However, the magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) bands around 293 nm due to the tryptophan residue and the optical density at 280 nm, decreased concomitantly with modification by NBS. These results strongly suggested that the tryptophan residue at position 143, which is the only tryptophan residue per subunit in the thermophilic PPiase (Ichiba, T., Takenaka, O., Samejima, T. and Hachimori, A. (1990) J. Biochem. 108, 572-578), might be involved in the active site or be located in the vicinity of the active site. The circular dichroism (CD) spectrum in the far ultraviolet region showed no significant alteration during the modification, indicating that the polypeptide chain backbone of the enzyme remained unaltered. However, the modification considerably altered the CD bands in, the near ultraviolet region, indicating that a conformational change occurred in the vicinity of the active site in the enzyme molecule.  相似文献   

5.
Diphosphopyridine nucleotide-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase from bovine heart was inactivated at neutral pH by bromoacetate and diethyl pyrocarbonate and by photooxidation in the presence of methylene blue or rose bengal. Inactivation by diethyl pyrocarbonate was reversed by hydroxylamine. Loss of activity by photooxidation at pH 7.07 was accompanied by progressive destruction of histidine with time; loss of 83% of the enzyme activity was accompanied by modification of 1.1 histidyl residues per enzyme subunit. The pH-rate profiles of inactivation by photooxidation and by diethyl pyrocarbonate modification showed an inflection point around pH 6.6, in accord with the pKa for a histidyl residue of a protein. Partial protection against inactivation by photooxidation or diethyl pyrocarbonate was obtained with substrate (manganous isocitrate or magnesium isocitrate) or ADP; the combination of substrate and ADP was more effective than the components singly. As demonstrated by differential enzyme activity assays between pH 6.4 and pH 7.5 with and without 0.67 mm ADP, modification of the reactive histidyl residue of the enzyme caused a preferential loss of the positive modulation of activity by ADP. The latter was particularly apparent when substrate partially protected the enzyme against inactivation by rose bengal-induced photooxidation.  相似文献   

6.
Dihydrodiol dehydrogenase from pig liver was inactivated by diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) and by rose bengal-sensitized photooxidation. The DEP inactivation was reversed by hydroxylamine and the absorption spectrum of the inactivated enzyme indicated that both histidine and tyrosine residues were carbethoxylated. The rates of inactivation by DEP and by photooxidation were dependent on pH, showing the involvement of a group with a pKa of 6.4. The kinetics of inactivation and spectrophotometric quantification of the modified residues suggested that complete inactivation was caused by modification of one histidine residue per active site. The inactivation by the two modifications was partially prevented by either NADP(H) or the combination of NADP+ and substrate, and completely prevented in the presence of both NADP+ and a competitive inhibitor which binds to the enzyme-NADP+ binary complex. The DEP-modified enzyme caused the same blue shift and enhancement of NADPH fluorescence as did the native enzyme, suggesting that the modified histidine is not in the coenzyme-binding site of the enzyme. The results suggest the presence of essential histidine residues in the catalytic region of the active site of pig liver dihydrodiol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

7.
Chemical modifications were used to search for catalytically important residues of rat liver arginase. The results of carbamoylation, nitration and diazotization suggest that lysyl and tyrosyl residues are not involved in the catalytic function of arginase. The modification of 5--6 tryptophanyl residues by N-bromosuccinimide or 2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl bromide led to about 90% inhibition of the enzyme activity. Photooxidation of 21 histydyl residues also led to considerable inactivation of arginase. The modification of tryptophanyl and histidyl residues did not cause dissociation of the enzyme into subunits.  相似文献   

8.
Under suitable conditions (pH 9.0, 40°C), bovine milk lactoperoxidase was irreversibly and completely inactivated by diazotized sulfanilate. The inactivation process was temperature-dependent, the inactivation rate being fast at 30–40°C. Complete inactivation of the enzyme revealed ca. two azotyrosines and one azohistidine per each enzyme molecule. Modification with diethylpyrocarbonate, methyl-4-nitrobenzenesul fonate and rose bengal did not reveal essential histidyl residues. These experiments suggested that the activity of lactoperoxidase depends on two active tyrosyl residues and that the azotizable histidyl residue is not essential for activity.  相似文献   

9.
The binding site of NADPH in NADPH-adrenodoxin reductase was examined using crystalline enzyme from bovine adrenocortical mitochondria by studies on the effects of photooxidation and chemical modifications of amino acid residues in the reductase. (1) Photoxication decreased the enzymatic activity of NADPH-adrenodoxin reductase. Photooxidation of the reductase was prevented by NADP+, adrenodoxin, or reduced glutathione, but not NAD+. Photoinactivation caused loss of a histidyl residue, but not of tyrosyl, tryptophanyl, cysteinyl, or methionyl residues of the reductase. It did not affect the circular dichroism spectrum of the reductase appreciably. (2) NADPH-adrenodoxin reductase activity was inhibited by diethyl pyrocarbonate and the inhibition was partially reversed by addition of hydroxylamine. The inhibition was prevented by NADP+, but not NAD+. (3) NADPH-adrenodoxin reductase activity was inhibited by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) and the inhibition was reversed by reduced glutathione. It was also protected by NADP+, but not NAD+. The results indicate that a histidyl residue and a cysteinyl residue of NADPH-adrenodoxin reductase are essential for the binding of NADPH by the reductase.  相似文献   

10.
1. The inhibitory activity of an alkaline protease inhibitor, (Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor) towards subtilisin is found to decrease by photooxidation sensitized by methylene blue with a clear pH dependence, the midpoint of which is about 6.0. 2. Amino acid analyses of photooxidized Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor indicate that one of the two histidyl residues and the three methionyl residues are destroyed, concomittant with the loss of inhibitory activity. 3. In accordance with this observation, one of the clearly resolved nuclear magnetic resonances from C2-protons of the two histidyl residues is selectively diminished. This histidyl residue, sensitive to photooxidation and giving a proton magnetic resonance peak at lower field, is assigned to His-106 from peptide analyses. 4. Independent modification of methionyl residues by a reaction with H2O2 or Cl2 also decreases the inhibitory activity of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor. 5. Modification of lysyl, tyrosyl and tryptophanyl residues by diazonium-1-H-tetrazole does not lead to the loss of the inhibitory activity. 6. The above results indicate that one or more methionyl residue(s) are essential to the inhibitory activity of Streptomyces subtilisin inhibitor, whereas lysyl, tyrosyl and tryptophanyl residues are not essential to the inhibitory activity. Modification of His-106 is also strongly related to the loss of activity, although its distinct participation in the inactivation mechanism has not been demonstrated.  相似文献   

11.
The benzoylarginine peptidase of Treponema denticola (strain ASLM; a human oral spirochaete) was progressively and irreversibly inactivated by 1-(ethoxycarbonyl)-2-ethoxy-1, 2-dihydroquinoline, a carboxyl-group reagent. At acidic pH values, reaction of one mole of the modifier per active site of the enzyme resulted in total inactivation of the enzyme. Assuming that this modifier is a specific carboxyl reagent, the data suggest that the inactivation of the T. denticola benzoylarginine peptidase was caused by the modification of one carboxyl group located close to the active site of the enzyme. Results obtained with Woodward's reagent K (N-ethyl-5-phenylisoxazolium 3'-sulphonate) supported these findings. Carbethoxylation with diethylpyrocarbonate effectively inactivated the enzyme, and addition of hydroxylamine at pH 7.0 restored the activity almost totally, suggesting that the pyrocarbonate had reacted with tyrosyl or histidyl residues.  相似文献   

12.
Subtilisins Novo and DY were photoinactivated in the presence of methylene blue according to first order kinetics. The competitive inhibitor N alpha-benzoyl-L-arginine protected significantly against inactivation. Under the conditions employed in this study a selective photooxidation of the active site histidine 64 was achieved. Rate constants of 0.32 X 10(-2), s-1 and 0.35 X 10(-2), s-1, were calculated for the Novo enzyme and subtilisin DY, respectively. Apparent pKa values of the catalytically important imidazole group of 7.0 +/- 0.1 (s. Novo) and 7.1 +/- 0.1 (s. DY) were directly determined. The histidyl residues in the two proteases, except the active site histidine, which is the first target of photooxidation, are "buried" in the interior of the protein globule. Conformational studies suggested that the photoreactive histidine is not involved in the stabilization of the protein conformation.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Mono-, dicarboxylic acid-, andd-glucose transport were measured in brush border vesicles from renal cortex after treatment with reagents known to modify terminal amino, lysyl, -amino, guanidino, serine/threonine, histidyl, tyrosyl, tryptophanyl and carboxylic residues. All three sodium-coupled cotransport systems proved to possess sulfhydryl (and maybe tryptophanyl sulfhydryl, disulfide, thioether and tyrosyl) residues but not at the substrate site or at the allosteric cavity for the Na coion. Histidyl groups seem to be located in the active site of the dicarboxylic transporter in that the simultaneous presence of Na and succinate protects the transporter against the histidyl specific reagent diethylpyrocarbonate. Lithium, which specifically competes for sodium sites in the dicarboxylic acid transporter, substantially blocked the protective effect of Na and succinate. Hydroxylamine specifically reversed the covalent binding of diethylpyrocarbonate to the succinate binding site. The pH dependence of the Na/succinate cotransport is consistent with an involvement of histidyl and sulfhydryl residues. We conclude that a histidyl residue is at, or is close to, the active site of the dicarboxylate transporter in renal brush border membranes.  相似文献   

14.
UDPglucose 4-epimerase from Kluyveromyces fragilis was completely inactivated by diethylpyrocarbonate following pseudo-first order reaction kinetics. The pH profile of diethylpyrocarbonate inhibition and reversal of inhibition by hydroxylamine suggested specific modification of histidyl residues. Statistical analysis of the residual enzyme activity and the extent of modification indicated modification of 1 essential histidine residue to be responsible for loss in catalytic activity of yeast epimerase. No major structural change in the quarternary structure was observed in the modified enzyme as shown by the identical elution pattern on a calibrated Sephacryl 200 column and association of coenzyme NAD to the apoenzyme. Failure of the substrates to afford any protection against diethylpyrocarbonate inactivation indicated the absence of the essential histidyl residue at the substrate binding region of the active site. Unlike the case of native enzyme, sodium borohydride failed to reduce the pyridine moiety of the coenzyme in the diethylpyrocarbonate-modified enzyme. This indicated the presence of the essential histidyl residue in close proximity to the coenzyme binding region of the active site. The abolition of energy transfer phenomenon between the tryptophan and coenzyme fluorophore on complete inactivation by diethylpyrocarbonate without any loss of protein or coenzyme fluorescence are also added evidences in this direction.  相似文献   

15.
The involvement of tyrosyl residues in the function of D-beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, a lipid-requiring enzyme, has been investigated by using several tyrosyl modifying reagents, i.e., N-acetylimidazole, a hydrophilic reagent, and 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole and tetranitromethane, two hydrophobic reagents. Modification of the tyrosyl residues highly inactivates the derived enzyme: Treatment of the enzyme with 7-chloro-4-nitro[14C]benzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole leads to an absorbance at 380 nm and to an incorporation of about 1 mol of 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole per polypeptide chain for complete inactivation. Inactivation by N-acetylimidazole induces a decrease in absorbance at 280 nm which can be reversed by hydroxylamine treatment. On the other hand, the ligands of the active site, such as methylmalonate, a pseudosubstrate, and NAD+ (or NADH), do not protect the enzyme against inactivation. In contrast, the presence of phospholipids strongly protects the enzyme against hydrophobic reagents. Finally, previous modification of the enzyme with N-acetylimidazole does not affect the incorporation of 7-chloro-4-nitro[14C]benzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole while modification with tetranitromethane does. These results indicate the existence of two classes of tyrosyl residues which are essential for enzymatic activity, and demonstrate their location outside of the active site. One of these residues appears to be located close to the enzyme-phospholipid interacting sites. These essential residues may also be essential for maintenance of the correct active conformation.  相似文献   

16.
The denaturation of pantetheinase (pantetheine hydrolase, EC 3.5.1.-) was followed in guanidinium chloride using tyrosyl and tryptophanyl residues as probes in connection with change in enzymatic activity. Movements of tryptophanyl and tyrosyl residues during denaturation were studied by second-derivative and fluorescence spectroscopy and the number of these amino acids present in the protein was calculated from spectroscopic data. Pantetheinase shows a very high resistance to denaturation, being completely unfolded at guanidinium chloride concentration higher than 6.5 M. Monitoring enzymatic activity shows that inactivation of the enzyme occurred before noticeable conformational changes were detected and it is suggested that the conformation of the active site is flexible and easily perturbable compared to the protein as a whole. This inactivation is reversible, as shown by renaturation experiments. Second-derivative and fluorescence spectra showed also that tyrosyl and tryptophanyl residues are largely exposed in the native protein, confirming its hydrophobic behavior.  相似文献   

17.
Diethyl pyrocarbonate inhibits pig kidney holo-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine decarboxylase with a second-order rate constant of 1170 M-1 min-1 at pH 6.8 and 25 degrees C, showing a concomitant increase in absorbance at 242 nm due to formation of carbethoxyhistidyl derivatives. Activity can be restored by hydroxylamine, and the pH curve of inactivation indicates the involvement of a residue with a pKa of 6.03. Complete inactivation of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine decarboxylase requires the modification of 6 histidine residues/mol of enzyme. Statistical analysis of the residual enzyme activity and of the extent of modification shows that, among 6 modifiable residues, only one is critical for activity. Protection exerted by substrate analogues, which bind to the active site of the enzyme, suggests that the modification occurs at or near the active site. The modified inactivated 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine decarboxylase still retains most of its ability to bind substrates. Thus, it may be suggested that the inactivation of enzyme by diethyl pyrocarbonate is not due to nonspecific steric or conformational changes which prevent substrate binding. However, the modified enzyme fails to produce at high pH either an enzyme-substrate complex or an enzyme-product complex absorbing at 390 nm. Considerations on this peculiar feature of the modified enzyme consistent with a catalytic role for the modified histidyl residue are discussed. The overall conclusion of this study may be that the modification of only one histidyl residue of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine decarboxylase inactivates the enzyme and that this residue plays an essential role in the mechanism of action of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
The chemical modification of purified ampicillin acylase by N-bromosuccinimide and diethylpyrocarbonate resulted in time-dependent inactivation of the enzyme. Both substrates, ampicillin and 6-aminopenicillanic acid, protected the enzyme against inactivation, suggesting that the modification occurred near or at the active site. Amino acid analyses and other data indicated that two histidyl residues per subunit molecule were essential for catalytic activity.  相似文献   

19.
The reaction of the water-soluble carbodimide, 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDC), with active papain in the presence of the nucleophile ethyl glycinate results in an irreversible inactivation of the enzyme. This inactivation is accompanied by the derivatization of the catalytically essential thiol group of the enzyme (Cys-25) and by the modification of 6 out of 14 of papain's carboxyl groups and up to 9 out of 19 of the enyzme's tyrosyl residues. No apparent irreversible modification of histidine residues is observed. Mercuripapain is also irreversibly inactivated by EDC/ethyl glycinate, again with the concomitant modification of 6 carboxyl groups, up to 10 tyrosyl residues, and no histidine residues; but in this case there is no thiol derivatization. Treatment of either modified native papain or modified mercuripapain with hydroxylamine results in the complete regeneration of free tyrosyl residues but does not restore any activity. The competitive inhibitor benzamidoacetonitrile substantially protects native papain against inactivation and against the derivatization of the essential thiol group as well as 2 of the 6 otherwise accessible carboxyl groups. The inhibitor has no effect upon tyrosyl modification. These findings are discussed in the context of a possible catalytic role for a carboxyl group in the active site of papain.  相似文献   

20.
The interaction of clostridiopeptidase of Clostridium histolyticum with EDC, TNM and MA, the specific reagents for COOH-groups, tyrosine and lysine residues was studied. It was shown that at pH 6.0 EDC inactivates the enzyme. The inactivation process follows the pseudo-first order kinetics and is described by a second order rate constant equal to 1 M-1 min-1. The synthetic substrate does not prevent, in practical terms, the enzyme inactivation by EDC. At pH 8.0 TNM modifies about 19 tyrosine residues in the clostridiopeptidase molecule which is accompanied by marked inhibition of the enzyme activity (down to 70-90%). In this case, the inactivation process is not described by simple pseudo-first order kinetics but is characterized by two steps (fast and slow) with second order rate constants of approximately 14 and 3.5 M-1 min-1, respectively. The synthetic substrate partly prevents the inactivation of the enzyme by TNM and protects 11 tyrosine residues. The MA-induced incorporation of 13 +/- 3 maleyl groups into the clostridiopeptidase molecule in partially prevented by the synthetic substrate with protects the enzyme against inactivation. The data obtained suggest that lysine residues are seemingly included into the active center of clostridiopeptidase, whereas tyrosine residues provide for the maintenance of active conformation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号