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1.
A heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chain, biotinylated at its reducing-end, was bound to a streptavidin-coated biochip. Surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy showed a low affinity interaction with antithrombin III (ATIII) when it was flowed over a surface containing heparan sulfate. ATIII bound tightly with high affinity when the same surface was enzymatically modified to using 3-O-sulfotransferase isoform 1 (3-OST-1) in the presence of 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS). The 3-OST-1 enzyme is involved in heparan sulfate biosynthesis and introduces a critical 3-O-sulfo group into this glycosaminoglycan affording the appropriate pentasaccharide sequence capable of high affinity binding to ATIII. This experiment demonstrates the specific structural modification of a glycosaminoglycan bound to a biochip using a biosynthetic enzyme, suggesting a new approach to rapid screening glycosaminoglycan-protein interactions.  相似文献   

2.
1. Alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1.) has been immobilised to aminoethyl-cellulose by glutaraldehyde, to DEAE-cellulose by an s-triazine derivative and to agarose using CNBr. Lactate dehydrogenase has been immobilised to the latter two supports. 2. Their use for affinity chromatography of NAD was compared and alcohol dehydrogenase immobilised to CNBr-activated agarose chosen for detailed study due to the efficient coupling of applied enzyme and the specific nature of binding. 3. The efficiency of coupling of alcohol dehydrogenase dropped from 94.5 to 72.2% when the applied load was increased from 18 to 54 mg/g activated agarose. Activity relative to free enzyme fell from 21 to 11%. The binding of NAD was maximal between pH 5.5 and 6. With the lowest loading of enzyme, NAD binding fell from 450 to 320 mug/g support when the linear flow rate was increased from 0.84 to 3.95 cm/min. 4. NAD was completely separated from a mixture with ATP, ADP and AMP. Separation from NMN and hydrolysed RNA and DNA was evidently possible. Immobilised alcohol dehydrogenase used for 34 binding experiments over a period of weeks maintained 60% of its original enzyme activity. 5. The method was applied to yeast NAD following mechanical disruption of yeast, clarification and either ultrafiltration or hollow-fibre dialysis to permit separate purification of macromolecules and nucleotides.  相似文献   

3.
D-beta-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (D-3-hydroxybutyrate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.30) is a lipid-requiring enzyme which specifically requires phosphosphatidylcholine for enzymic activity. The phosphatidylcholine modifies the binding and orientation of the coenzyme, NAD(H), with respect to the enzyme. In the present study, two derivatives of NAD, spin-labeled either at N-6 or C-8 of the adenine ring, were found to be active as coenzyme. The binding affinity of NADH to the enzyme was opitimized by increasing the salt concentration and increasing the pH from 6 to 8, with the pK at 6.8. Monomethylmalonate, a substrate analogue, was found to enhance NADH binding (Kd is reduced from 4 to 1 microM). Sulfite strongly enhances the binding of NAD+ via the enzyme-catalyzed formation of an adduct of sulfite with the nucleotide; the Kd for binding of NAD-sulfite is in the micromolar range, whereas NAD+ binding is more than a magnitude weaker. The binding of spin-labeled NAD(H) was further characterized by EPR spectroscopy. Increased sensitivity and resolution were obtained with the use of NAD(H) analogues perdeuterated in the spin-label moiety. For these analogues bound to D-beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase in phospholipid vesicles, EPR studies showed the spin-label moiety to be constrained and revealed two distinct components. Increasing the viscosity of the medium by addition of glycerol affected the EPR spectral characteristics of only the component with the smaller resolved averaged hyperfine splitting. The stage is now set to study motional characteristics of the enzyme, using these spin-labeled probes which mimic the coenzyme.  相似文献   

4.
1. Three established methods for immobilization of ligands through primary amino groups promoted little or no attachment of NAD(+) through the 6-amino group of the adenine residue. Two of these methods (coupling to CNBr-activated agarose and to carbodi-imide-activated carboxylated agarose derivatives) resulted instead in attachment predominantly through the ribosyl residues. Other immobilized derivatives were prepared by azolinkage of NAD(+) (probably through the 8 position of the adenine residue) to a number of different spacer-arm-agarose derivatives. 2. The effectiveness of these derivatives in the affinity chromatography of a variety of NAD-linked dehydrogenases was investigated, applying rigorous criteria to distinguish general or non-specific adsorption effects from truly NAD-specific affinity (bio-affinity). The ribosyl-attached NAD(+) derivatives displayed negligible bio-affinity for any of the NAD-linked dehydrogenases tested. The most effective azo-linked derivative displayed strong bio-affinity for glycer-aldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, weaker bio-affinity for lactate dehydrogenase and none at all for malate dehydrogenase, although these three enzymes have very similar affinities for soluble NAD(+). Alcohol dehydrogenase and xanthine dehydrogenase were subject to such strong non-specific interactions with the hydrocarbon spacer-arm assembly that any specific affinity was completely eclipsed. 3. It is concluded that, in practice, the general effectiveness of a general ligand may be considerably distorted and attenuated by the nature of the immobilization linkage. However, this attenuation can result in an increase in specific effectiveness, allowing dehydrogenases to be separated from one another in a manner unlikely to be feasible if the general effectiveness of the ligand remained intact. 4. The bio-affinity of the various derivatives for lactate dehydrogenase is correlated with the known structure of the NAD(+)-binding site of this enzyme. Problems associated with the use of immobilized derivatives for enzyme binding and mechanistic studies are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The rates of the oxidized (Eox) and reduced (Ered) (by NAD . H through the ubiquinone pool) succinate dehydrogenase inhibition by N-ethyl-maleimide are equal and obey pseudo-first order kinetics. The protection of the enzyme against irreversible alkylation was used to quantitate the dissociation constants for Eox and Ered complexes with fumarate, succinate and malonate under conditions when no intramolecular redox reactions might occur. the membrane-bound succinate dehydrogenase catalyzes the succinate : phenazine-methosulphate reductase reaction in the presence of thenoyltrifluoroacetone by a Slater-Bonner mechanism. A comparison of the constants measured by the protection with those derived from the steady-state kinetics shows that succinate affinity for Eox is about 10 times higher than that for Ered; the reverse relations were found for fumarate, whereas the affinity for malonate only slightly depends on the redox state of the enzyme. The data obtained suggest that the dicarboxylate binding at the active site induces changes in the enzyme redox potential. The surface charge does not contribute significantly to the energy of the dicarboxylate binding to the active site of the membrane-bound enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Lei Y  Pawelek PD  Powlowski J 《Biochemistry》2008,47(26):6870-6882
The meta-cleavage pathway for catechol is a central pathway for the bacterial dissimilation of a wide variety of aromatic compounds, including phenols, methylphenols, naphthalenes, and biphenyls. The last enzyme of the pathway is a bifunctional aldolase/dehydrogenase that converts 4-hydroxy-2-ketovalerate to pyruvate and acetyl-CoA via acetaldehyde. The structure of the NAD (+)/CoASH-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase subunit is similar to that of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, with a Rossmann fold-based NAD (+) binding site observed in the NAD (+)-enzyme complex [Manjasetty, B. A., et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 6992-6997]. However, the location of the CoASH binding site was not determined. In this study, hydrogen-deuterium exchange experiments, coupled with peptic digest and mass spectrometry, were used to examine cofactor binding. The pattern of hydrogen-deuterium exchange in the presence of CoASH was almost identical to that observed with NAD (+), consistent with the two cofactors sharing a binding site. This is further supported by the observations that either CoASH or NAD (+) is able to elute the enzyme from an NAD (+) affinity column and that preincubation of the enzyme with NAD (+) protects against inactivation by CoASH. Consistent with these data, models of the CoASH complex generated using AUTODOCK showed that the docked conformation of CoASH can fully occupy the cavity containing the enzyme active site, superimposing with the NAD (+) cofactor observed in the X-ray crystal structure. Although CoASH binding Rossmann folds have been described previously, this is the first reported example of a Rossmann fold that can alternately bind CoASH or NAD (+) cofactors required for enzymatic catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
p-Hydroxyacetophenone was coupled to epoxy-activated Sepharose 6B to generate an affinity chromatographic matrix to purify aldehyde dehydrogenase. Purified beef liver mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase specifically bound to the support and could be eluted with p-hydroxyacetophenone. A post-ammonium sulfate (30-55%) fraction of bovine liver was applied to the affinity gel column and aldehyde dehydrogenase was effectively purified, although not to complete homogeneity, indicating the potential selectivity of the matrix. Both beef liver cytosolic and mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase bound to the column. A post-Cibacron blue Sepharose Cl-6B affinity-fractionated liver mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase was purified to complete homogeneity by p-hydroxyacetophenone-Sepharose, thus eliminating the need for the isoelectric focusing step often employed. p-Hydroxyacetophenone was found to be a competitive inhibitor against propionaldehyde and noncompetitive against NAD. Escherichia coli lysates of recombinantly expressed aldehyde dehydrogenase were purified from E. coli lysates with one major 25-kDa protein contaminant also binding to the column, as detected by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. The 25-kDa contaminant was found to be chloramphenicol acetyl transferase from sequence analysis and binding studies.  相似文献   

8.
This study is concerned with further development of the kinetic locking-on strategy for bioaffinity purification of NAD(+)-dependent dehydrogenases. Specifically, the synthesis of highly substituted N(6)-linked immobilized NAD(+) derivatives is described using a rapid solid-phase modular approach. Other modifications of the N(6)-linked immobilized NAD(+) derivative include substitution of the hydrophobic diaminohexane spacer arm with polar spacer arms (9 and 19.5 A) in an attempt to minimize nonbiospecific interactions. Analysis of the N(6)-linked NAD(+) derivatives confirm (i) retention of cofactor activity upon immobilization (up to 97%); (ii) high total substitution levels and high percentage accessibility levels when compared to S(6)-linked immobilized NAD(+) derivatives (also synthesized with polar spacer arms); (iii) short production times when compared to the preassembly approach to synthesis. Model locking-on bioaffinity chromatographic studies were carried out with bovine heart l-lactate dehydrogenase (l-LDH, EC 1.1.1.27), bakers yeast alcohol dehydrogenase (YADH, EC 1.1.1.1) and Sporosarcinia sp. l-phenylalanine dehydrogenase (l-PheDH, EC 1.4.1.20), using oxalate, hydroxylamine, and d-phenylalanine, respectively, as locking-on ligands. Surprisingly, two of these test NAD(+)-dependent dehydrogenases (lactate and alcohol dehydrogenase) were found to have a greater affinity for the more lowly substituted S(6)-linked immobilized cofactor derivatives than for the new N(6)-linked derivatives. In contrast, the NAD(+)-dependent phenylalanine dehydrogenase showed no affinity for the S(6)-linked immobilized NAD(+) derivative, but was locked-on strongly to the N(6)-linked immobilized derivative. That this locking-on is biospecific is confirmed by the observation that the enzyme failed to lock-on to an analogous N(6)-linked immobilized NADP(+) derivative in the presence of d-phenylalanine. This differential locking-on of NAD(+)-dependent dehydrogenases to N(6)-linked and S(6)-linked immobilized NAD(+) derivatives cannot be explained in terms of final accessible substitutions levels, but suggests fundamental differences in affinity of the three test enzymes for NAD(+) immobilized via N(6)-linkage as compared to thiol-linkage.  相似文献   

9.
1. UDP-xylose and UDP-glucose both bind to UDP-glucose dehydrogenase in the absence of NAD+, causing an enhancement of protein fluorescence. 2. The binding of UDP-xylose is pH-dependent, tighter binding being observed at pH8.2 than at pH8.7. 3. At low protein concentrations sigmiodal profiles of fluorescence enhancement are obtained on titration of the enzyme with UDP-xylose. As the protein concentration is increased the titration profiles become progressively more hypebolic in shape. 4. The markedly different titration profiles obtained on titrating enzyme and the enzyme-NAD+ complex with UDP-xylose suggests a conformational difference between these two species 5. NAD+ lowere the apparent affinity of the enzyme for UDP-xylose. 6. There is no change in the apparent moleculare weight of UDP-glucose dehydrogenase on binging UDP-xylose. 7. Protein modification by either diethyl pyrocarbonate or 5, 5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate) does not "desensitize" the enzyme with respect to the inhibition by UDP-xylose. 8. UDP-xylose lowers the affinity of the enzyme for NADG. 9. It is suggested that UDP-xylose is acting as a substrate analogue of UDP-glucose and causes protein-conformational changes on binding to the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
In preparation for the development of a xylitol biosensor, the xylitol dehydrogenase of Candida tropicalis IFO 0618 was partially purified and characterized. The optimal pH and temperature of the xylitol dehydrogenase were pH 8.0 and 50 degrees C, respectively. Of the various alcohols tested, xylitol was the most rapidly oxidized, with sorbitol and ribitol being reduced at 65% and 58% of the xylitol rate. The enzyme was completely inactive on arabitol, xylose, glucose, glycerol, and ethanol. The enzyme's xylitol oxidation favored the use of NAD+ (7.9 U/mg) over NADP+ (0.2 U/mg) as electron acceptor, while the reverse reaction, D-xylulose reduction, favored NADPH (7.7 U/mg) over NADH (0.2 U/mg) as electron donor. The K(m) values for xylitol and NAD+ were 49.8 mM and 38.2 microM, respectively. For the generation of the xylitol biosensor, the above xylitol dehydrogenase and a diaphorase were immobilized on bromocyan-activated sephallose. The gel was then attached on a dissolved oxygen electrode. In the presence of vitamin K3, NAD+ and phosphate buffer, the biosensor recorded a linear response to xylitol concentration up to 3 mM. The reaction was stable after 15 min. When the biosensor was applied to a flow injection system, optimal operation pH and temperature were 8.0 and 30 degrees C, respectively. The strengths and limitations of the xylitol biosensor are its high affinity for NAD+, slow reaction time, narrow linear range of detection, and moderate affinity for xylitol.  相似文献   

11.
NAD(H) was retained in a noncharged ultrafiltration membrane reactor for the simultaneous and continuous production of L-lactate and gluconate with coenzyme regeneration. Polyethyleneimine (PEI), a 50-kDa cationic polymer, achieved coenzyme retentions above 0.8 for PEI/NAD(H) molar ratios higher than 5. The ionic strength of the inlet medium caused a decrease of NAD(H) retention that can be counterbalanced by an initial addition of 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA). Continuous reactor performance in the presence of PEI and BSA showed that NAD(H), glucose dehydrogenase, and lactate dehydrogenase were retained by 10-kDa ultrafiltration membranes; L-lactate and gluconate were produced at conversions higher than 95%. PEI enhanced the thermal stability of the enzymes used and increased the catalytic efficiency of glucose dehydrogenase, while no effect was found on the kinetic parameters of lactate dehydrogenase. A model that implements the kinetic equations of the two enzymes describes the reactor behavior satisfactorily. In brief, the use of PEI to retain NAD(H) is a new interesting approach to be widely applied in continuous synthesis with the large number of known dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

12.
The binding of NAD(+) and NADH to bovine liver UDP-glucose dehydrogenase was studied by using gel-filtration and fluorescence-titration methods. The enzyme bound 0.5mol of NAD(+) and 2 mol of NADH/mol of subunit at saturating concentrations of both substrate and product. The dissociation constant for NADH was 4.3mum. The binding of NAD(+) to the enzyme resulted in a small quench of protein fluorescence whereas the binding of NADH resulted in a much larger (60-70%) quench of protein fluorescence. The binding of NADH to the enzyme was pH-dependent. At pH8.1 a biphasic profile was obtained on titrating the enzyme with NADH, whereas at pH8.8 the titration profile was hyperbolic. UDP-xylose, and to a lesser extent UDP-glucuronic acid, lowered the apparent affinity of the enzyme for NADH.  相似文献   

13.
We describe a procedure using immobilized nicotinamide as an affinity chromatographic ligand for the binding of NAD(P)+-dependent dehydrogenases. The procedure involves preparation of nicotinamide N1-(N-(6-aminohexyl)-acetamide)-agarose and modification of the immobilized nicotinamide by the addition of a ketone or an aldehyde to form an adduct. The nicotinamide, which has no affinity for dehydrogenase, becomes a very specific ligand of dehydrogenase, which binds the ketone or the aldehyde as substrate or inhibitor. In tests, the adduct prepared with immobilized nicotinamide and sodium pyruvate bound specifically to lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27), whereas the adduct prepared with alpha-ketoglutarate bound to glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3). This technique enables the rapid isolation of a given dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

14.
The kinetic locking-on strategy improves the selectivity of protein purification procedures based on immobilized cofactor derivatives through use of enzyme-specific substrate analogues in irrigants to promote biospecific adsorption. This paper describes the development and application of this strategy to the one-chromatographic step affinity purification of NAD(P)+-dependent alcohol dehydrogenases using 8'-azo-linked immobilized NAD(P)+, S6-linked and N6-linked immobilized NAD+, and N6-linked immobilized NADP+ derivatives. These studies were carried out using alcohol dehydrogenases from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (YADH, EC 1.1.1.1), equine liver (HLADH, EC 1.1.1.1), and Thermoanaerobium brockii (TBADH, EC 1.1.1.2). The results reveal that the factors which require careful consideration before development of a truly biospecific system based on the locking-on strategy include: (i) the stability of the immobilized cofactor derivative; (ii) the spacer-arm composition of the affinity derivative; (iii) the accessible immobilized cofactor concentration; (iv) the soluble locking-on ligand concentration; (v) the dissociation constant of locking-on ligand, and (vi) the identification and elimination of nonbiospecific interference. The S6-linked immobilized NAD+ derivative (synthesized with a hydrophilic spacer arm) proved to be the most suitable of the affinity adsorbents investigated in the present study for use with the locking-on strategy. This conclusion was based primarily on the observations that this affinity adsorbent was stable, retained cofactor activity with the "test" enzymes under study, and was not prone to nonbiospecific interactions. Using this immobilized derivative in conjunction with the locking-on strategy, alcohol dehydrogenase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity in a single affinity chromatographic step.  相似文献   

15.
1. The formation of the non-enzymic adduct of NAD(+) and sulphite was investigated. In agreement with others we conclude that the dianion of sulphite adds to NAD(+). 2. The formation of ternary complexes of either lactate dehydrogenase or malate dehydrogenase with NAD(+) and sulphite was investigated. The u.v. spectrum of the NAD-sulphite adduct was the same whether free or enzyme-bound at either pH6 or pH8. This suggests that the free and enzyme-bound adducts have a similar electronic structure. 3. The effect of pH on the concentration of NAD-sulphite bound to both enzymes was measured in a new titration apparatus. Unlike the non-enzymic adduct (where the stability change with pH simply reflects HSO(3) (-)=SO(3) (2-)+H(+)), the enzyme-bound adduct showed a bell-shaped pH-stability curve, which indicated that an enzyme side chain of pK=6.2 must be protonated for the complex to form. Since the adduct does not bind to the enzyme when histidine-195 of lactate dehydrogenase is ethoxycarbonylated we conclude that the protein group involved is histidine-195. 4. The pH-dependence of the formation of a ternary complex of lactate dehydrogenase, NAD(+) and oxalate suggested that an enzyme group is protonated when this complex forms. 5. The rate at which NAD(+) binds to lactate dehydrogenase and malate dehydrogenase was measured by trapping the enzyme-bound NAD(+) by rapid reaction with sulphite. The rate of NAD(+) dissociation from the enzymes was calculated from the bimolecular association kinetic constant and from the equilibrium binding constant and was in both cases much faster than the forward V(max.). No kinetic evidence was found that suggested that there were interactions between protein subunits on binding NAD(+).  相似文献   

16.
A soluble NAD+-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase has been isolated from Crithidia fasciculata. The enzyme was purified 128-fold, almost to homogeneity, and was highly specific for NAD+ as the coenzyme. There is also a cytoplasmic NADP+-linked and a mitochondrial isocitrate dehydrogenase in the organism. Studies of the physical and kinetic properties of the soluble NAD+-isocitrate dehydrogenase from this organism showed that it resembled microbial NADP+-isocitrate dehydrogenases in general, all of which are cytoplasmic enzymes. The enzyme appeared not to be related to other NAD+-isocitrate dehydrogenases, which are found in the mitochondria of eukaryotic cells. The molecular weight of the soluble NAD+-isocitrate dehydrogenase was 105,000 which is within the range of the values for microbial NADP+-isocitrate dehydrogenases. Similar to the NADP+-isocitrate dehydrogenase in this organism, the enzyme was inhibited in a concerted manner by glyoxalate plus oxalacetate. Kinetic analysis revealed that Mn2+ was involved in the binding of isocitrate to the enzyme. Inhibition of the NAD+-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase by p-chloromercuribenzoate could be prevented by prior incubation of the enzyme with both Mn2+ and isocitrate; however, neither ion alone conferred protection. Free isocitrate, free Mn2+, and the Mn2+-isocitrate complex could all bind to the enzyme. Four different mechanisms with respect to the binding of isocitrate to the enzyme were tested. Of these, the formation of the active enzyme-Mn2+-isocitrate complex from (a) the random binding of Mn2+, isocitrate, and the Mn2+-isocitrate complex, or (b) the binding of Mn2+-isocitrate with free Mn2+ and isocitrate acting as dead-end competitors were both in agreement with these data.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The interaction of NAD(H)-dependent dehydrogenases--yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and rabbit muscle lactate dehydrogenase--with reactive dyes produced in the USSR was studied. The essential role of metal ions in specific binding of alcohol dehydrogenase and dyes was demonstrated by differential spectroscopy, circular dichroism spectroscopy and chromatography. Lactate dehydrogenase in contrast with alcohol dehydrogenase does not require metal ions for the binding of the above-said dyes. A comparative study of eluting abilities of selected desorption agents (imidazole, adenine, 8-oxyquinoline-5-sulfonic acid, NAD, AMP, EDTA) by alcohol dehydrogenase chromatography on adsorbents with light-resistant yellow 2KT-Cu(II) and orange 5K revealed the differences in competition of the dyes for NAD-binding sites of alcohol dehydrogenase. The participation of light-resistant yellow 2KT-Cu(II) in the formation of mixed complexes with imidazole, adenine, 8-oxyquinoline-5-sulfonic acid, NAD and EDTA suggests that the specific binding of alcohol dehydrogenase to light-resistant yellow 2KT-Cu(II) is due to coordination between the Cu(II) ion and the amino acid residue in alcohol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

19.
The tetrameric glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from rabbit muscle binds NAD+ and some of its analogues in a negatively cooperative manner, whereas other NAD+ analogues bind non-cooperatively to this enzyme. Subsequent to alkylation of a fraction of the active sites of the enzyme with the fluorescent SH reagent N-iodoacetyl-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)-ethylenediamine, it was found that the alkylated sites bind NAD+ and NAD+ analogues with a markedly reduced affinity as compared with non-alkylated sites. It was therefore feasible to measure the fluorescence and the circular polarization of the luminescence of the enzyme-bound alkyl groups as a function of binding of NAD+ and of NAD+ analogues to the non-alkylated sites. The changes observed indicate that ligand binding to the non-alkylated sites induces changes in the fluorescence properties of the alkyl groups bound to neighbouring subunits, most likely through the protein moiety. The nature of these changes appears to depend on the structure of the coenzyme analogue. The binding of the non-cooperative binders acetyl-pyridine--adenine dinucleotide, ATP and ADP-ribose induce different conformational changes in the neighbouring vacant subunit, as monitored by the spectroscopic properties of the bound alkyl group. These results in conjunction with other data support the view that the negative cooperativity in NAD+ binding to glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase results from ligand-induced conformational changes. Furthermore, these results further support the view that subtle structural changes in the coenzyme molecule determine the nature of the conformational changes induced within the enzyme tetramer.  相似文献   

20.
The reaction of pig heart lactate dehydrogenase with methyl methanethiosulphonate resulted in the modification of one thiol group per protomer, and this was located at cysteine-165 in the enzyme sequence. On reduction, both the thiomethylation of cysteine-165 and any changes in kinetic properties of the enzyme were completely reversed. Cysteine-165 has been considered essential for catalytic activity; however, cysteine-165-thiomethylated dehydrogenase possessed full catalytic activity, although the affinity of the enzyme for carbonyl-or hydroxy-containing substrates was markedly decreased. The nicotinamide nucleotide-binding capacity was unaffected, as judged by the formation of fluorescent complexes with NADH. The enzyme-mediated activation of NAD+, as judged by sulphite addition, was unaffected in thiomethylated lactate dehydrogenase. However, the affinity of oxamate for the enzyme--NADH complex was decreased by 100-fold and it was calculated that this constituted a net increase of 10.4 kJ/mol in the activation energy for binding. Thiomethylated lactate dehydrogenase was able to form an abortive adduct between NAD+ and fluoropyruvate. However, the equilibrium constant for adduct formation between pyruvate and NAD+ was too low to demonstrate this complex at reasonable pyruvate concentrations. A conformational change in the protein structure on selective thiomethylation was revealed by the decreased thermostability of the modified enzyme. The alteration of lactate dehydrogenase catalytic properties on modification depended on the bulk of the reagent used, since thioethylation resulted in an increase in Km for pyruvate (13.5 +/- 3.5 mm) and an 85% decrease in maximum catalytic activity. The implications of all these findings for the catalytic mechanism of lactate dehydrogenase are discussed.  相似文献   

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