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1.
Cellulose acetate zymograms of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), aldehyde dehydrogenase (AHD), aldehyde reductase (AHR), aldehyde oxidase (AOX) and xanthine oxidase (XOX) extracted from horse tissues were examined. Five ADH isozymes were resolved: three corresponded to the previously reported class I ADHs (EE, ES and SS) (Theorell, 1969); a single form of class II ADH (designated ADH-C2) and of class III ADH (designated ADH-B2) were also observed. The latter isozyme was widely distributed in horse tissues whereas the other enzymes were found predominantly in liver. Four AHD isozymes were differentially distributed in subcellular preparations of horse liver: AHD-1 (large granules); AHD-3 (small granules); and AHD-2, AHD-4 (cytoplasm). AHD-1 was more widely distributed among the horse tissues examined. Liver represented the major source of activity for most AHDs. A single additional form of NADPH-dependent AHR activity (identified as hexonate dehydrogenase), other than the ADHs previously described, was observed in horse liver. Single forms of AOX and XOX were observed in horse tissue extracts, with highest activities in liver.  相似文献   

2.
Livers of rabbits contain three classes of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) isozymes which are highly analogous to the human classes. Class I ADHs migrate toward cathode on starch gel and are very sensitive to 4-methylpyrazole (4-MePz) inhibition. Class II ADH migrates slowly toward anode and is less sensitive to 4-MePz. Class III ADH migrates rapidly toward anode and is insensitive to 4-MePz. There are one class II, one class III and at least three class I ADH isozymes present in the rabbit liver. The three class I isozymes purified to homogeneity are all dimers with subunit molecular weight of 41700. Two are heterodimers composed of A-, C-chains and B-, C-chains, respectively. The third one is a homodimer, contains only the C-chain. These results indicate that among all the mammals examined, rabbit ADH bears the greatest resemblance to the human enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Two isozymes of horse liver aldehyde dehydrogenase (aldehyde, NAD oxidoreductase (EC 1.2.1.3)), F1 and F2, have been purified to homogeneity using salt fractionation followed by ion exchange and gel filtration chromatography. The specific activities of the two isozymes in a pH 9.0 system with propionaldehyde as substrate were approximately 0.35 and 1.0 mumol of NADH/min/mg of protein for the F1 and F2 isozymes, respectively. The multiporosity polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis molecular weights of the F1 and F2 isozymes were approximately 230,000 and 240,000 respectively. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gave subunit molecular weight estimates of 52,000 and 53,000 for the F1 and F2 isozymes, respectively. The amino acid compositions of the two isozymes were found to be similar; the ionizable amino acid contents being consistent with the electrophoretic and chromatographic behavior of the two isozymes. Both isozymes exhibited a broad aldehyde specificity, oxidizing a wide variety of aliphatic and aromatic aldehydes and utilized NAD as coenzyme, but at approximately 300-fold higher coenzyme concentration could use NADP. The F1 isozyme exhibited a very low Km for NAD (3 muM) and a higher Km for acetaldehyde (70 muM), while the F2 isozyme was found to have a higher Km for NAD (30 muM) and a low Km for acetaldehyde (0.2 muM). The two isozymes showed similar chloral hydrate and p-chloromercuribenzoate inhibition characteristics, but the F1 isozyme was found to be several orders of magnittude more sensitive to disulfiram, a physiological inhibitor of acetaldehyde oxidation. Based on its disulfiram inhibition characteristics, it has been suggested that the F1 isozyme may be the primary enzyme for oxidizing the acetyldehyde produced during ethanol oxidation in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
Human liver extracts show two major bands with aldehyde dehydrogenase (Aldehyde:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.2.1.3) activity via starch gel electrophoresis at pH 7.0. Both bands have been purified to apparent homogeneity via classical chromatography combined with affinity chromatography on 5'-AMP-Sepharose 4B. The slower migrating band, enzyme 1, when assayed at pH 9.5 has a low Km for NAD (8 micrometer) and a high Km for acetaldehyde (approx. 0.1 mM). It is very strongly inhibited by disulfiram at pH 7.0 with a Ki of 0.2 micrometer. The faster migrating band, enzyme 2, has a low Km for acetaldehyde, (2--3 micrometer at pH 9.5), a higher Km for NAD (70 micrometer at pH 9.5), and is not inhibited by disulfiram at pH 7.0. The two enzymes are very similar to the F1 and F2 isozymes of horse liver purified by Eckfeldt et al. (Eckfeldt, J., Mope, L., Takio, K. and Yonetani, T. (1976) J. Biol, Chem. 251, 236-240) in molecular weight, subunit composition, amino acid composition and extinction coefficient. Preliminary kinetic characterizations of the enzyme are presented.  相似文献   

5.
4-Hydroxyalkenals, natural cytotoxic products of lipid peroxidation, are substrates for human alcohol dehydrogenases (ADH). Class I and II ADHs reduce aliphatic 4-hydroxyalkenals with chain lengths of from 5 to 15 carbons at pH 7 with kcat and Km values comparable to simple aliphatic aldehydes of the same chain length. Class II is particularly effective in the reduction with kcat values as high as 3300 min-1 for 4-hydroxyundecenal. Class III ADH is essentially inactive toward all of these substrates. The class I and II isozymes also catalyze the oxidation of the 4-hydroxy group at pH 10. However, during the reaction, an NAD(+)-dependent irreversible partial inactivation of the alpha beta 1 isozyme is observed which is attributed, with the aid of computer graphics modeling, to selective modification of the alpha subunit. Both ethanol and 1,10-phenanthroline, known to compete with conventional substrates, instantaneously, reversibly, and competitively inhibit 4-hydroxyalkenal reduction and oxidation, indicating that 4-hydroxyalkenals bind at the same site as do conventional substates. The fact that the class II enzyme pi pi-ADH so far is found only in the liver and that the 4-hydroxyalkenals are the best substrates known for this isozyme suggest that it may play a significant role in cellular defenses in the conversion of the cytotoxic aldehydes to the less reactive alcohols.  相似文献   

6.
1. (Na+ + K+)-ATPase from rectal glands of Squalus acanthias contains 34 SH groups per mol (Mr 265000). 15 are located on the alpha subunit (Mr 106000) and two on the beta subunit (Mr 40000). The beta subunit also contains one disulphide bridge. 2. The reaction of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase with N-ethylmaleimide shows the existence of at least three classes of SH groups. Class I contains two SH groups on each alpha subunit and one on each beta subunit. Reaction of these groups with N-ethylmaleimide in the presence of 40% glycerol or sucrose does not alter the enzyme activity. Class II contains four SH groups on each alpha subunit, and the reaction of these groups with 0.1 mM N-ethylmaleimide in the presence of 150 mM K+ leads to an enzyme species with about 16% activity. The remaining enzyme activity can be completely abolished by reaction with 5-10 mM N-ethylmaleimide, indicating a third class of SH groups (Class III). This pattern of inactivation is different from that of the kidney enzyme, where only one class of SH groups essential to activity is observed. 3. It is also shown that N-ethylmaleimide and DTNB inactivate by reacting with the same Class II SH groups. 4. Spin-labelling of the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase with a maleimide derivative shows that Class II groups are mostly buried in the membrane, whereas Class I groups are more exposed. It is also shown that spin label bound to the Class I groups can monitor the difference between the Na+- and K+-forms of the enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Folylpolyglutamate synthetase (FPGS) was isolated from human liver cytosol by 0-30% (w/v) ammonium sulfate fractionation and characterized biochemically. Using aminopterin (AMT), L-[3H]glutamate and MgATP as cosubstrates, maximal gamma-L-glutamylation activity was observed in the presence of the activators KCl and NaHCO3. ATP and 2-mercaptoethanol were each required for enzyme activity and stability. In the absence of ATP, human liver FPGS rapidly inactivated at 37 degrees C (t1/2 approximately 8 min), whereas FPGS isolated from rabbit liver was significantly more stable (t1/2 = 68 min). Both folates and antifolates were effectively polyglutamylated by the isolated human liver enzyme. Km parameters determined for AMT (Km = 4.3 microM) were similar to those determined for several reduced folates (tetrahydrofolic acid, dihydrofolic acid, and folinic acid; Km = 3-7 microM), while significantly higher Km values were observed for methotrexate (MTX) and 5-methyltetrahydrofolic acid (Km = 50-60 microM) and for folic acid (Km = 100 microM). All of the substrates examined exhibited Vmax values ranging from 30 to 90% of the AMT value (Vmax = 935 pmol product/mg/h). The order of reactivity for these substrates differed from that determined in parallel studies for FPGS isolated from rat and rabbit liver. In the case of AMT and several reduced folates, inhibition of human liver FPGS was observed at substrate concentrations at or above 50-250 microM. FPGS isolated from six individual human livers exhibited highly similar biochemical and kinetic properties, suggesting the presence of the same or at least highly similar enzyme species in each individual, with a five-fold interindividual range in specific activities observed. Comparison of MTX with its higher polyglutamates (MTX-Glu2 to MTX-Glu6) as FPGS substrates indicated a significant decrease in Vmax values with increasing glutamate chain length which was partially compensated for by a corresponding decrease in Km. Consistent with these observations, the isolated enzyme was unable to synthesize polyglutamates higher than MTX-Glu3 when MTX was supplied as substrate, raising the question as to how MTX polyglutamates containing up to five or six gamma-L-glutamate residues are formed in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
1. Isoelectric focusing (IEF) and zymogram methods were used to examine the tissue distribution, multiplicity and substrate specificities of alcohol dehydrogenases (ADHs), aldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDHs) and ocular oxidases (EOXs) from mammalian anterior eye tissues. 2. Baboon, cattle, pig and sheep corneal extracts exhibited high ALDH activities; the corneal ALDHs were distinct from the major liver ALDHs and distinguished by their preference for medium-chain aldehydes. 3. Baboon and pig corneal extracts also showed high ADH activities, by comparison with ovine and bovine samples. Moreover, the ADHs were distinct from the major liver isozymes in pI value and substrate specificity. 4. Mammalian lens extracts exhibited significant ALDH activity of a form corresponding to the major liver cytosolic isozyme. Minor activity of the corneal enzyme was also observed in some species. 5. Lens ADH phenotypes were species-specific, and consisted of either Class II activity (baboon and sheep), Class III ADH activity (pig), or activities of both ADH classes (cattle). 6. Lens extracts also exhibited a complex pattern of ocular oxidase (EOX) activities following IEF. 7. A role in peroxidatic aldehyde detoxification is proposed for these enzymes in anterior eye tissues.  相似文献   

9.
Alcohol dehydrogenase isozymes from mouse liver (A2 and B2) and stomach (C2) tissues have been purified to homogeneity using triazine-dye affinity chromatography. The enzymes are dimers with similar but distinct subunit sizes, as determined by SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis: A, 43000; B, 39000, and C, 47000. Zinc analyses and 1,10-phenanthroline inhibition studies indicated that the A and C subunits each contained two atoms of zinc, with at least one being involved catalytically, whereas the B subunit probably contained a single non-catalytic zinc atom. The isozymes exhibited widely divergent kinetic characteristics. A2 exhibited a Km value for ethanol of 0.15 mM and a broad substrate specificity, with Km values decreasing dramatically with an increase in chain length; C2 also exhibited this broad specificity for alcohols but showed a Km value of 232 mM for ethanol. These isozymes also showed broad substrate specificities as aldehyde reductases. In contrast, B2 showed no detectable activity as an aldehyde reductase for the aldehydes examined, and used ethanol as substrate only at very high concentrations (greater than 0.5 M). The isozyme exhibited low Km and high Vmax values, however, with medium-chain alcohols. Immunological studies showed that A2 was immunologically distinct from the B2 and C2 isozymes. In vitro molecular hybridization studies gave no evidence for association between the alcohol dehydrogenase subunits. The results confirm genetic analyses [Holmes, Albanese, Whitehead and Duley (1981) J. Exp. Zool. 215, 151-157] which are consistent with at least three structural genes encoding alcohol dehydrogenase in the mouse and confirm the role of the major liver isozyme (A2) in ethanol metabolism.  相似文献   

10.
Quino(hemo)protein alcohol dehydrogenases (ADH) that have pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) as the prosthetic group are classified into 3 groups, types I, II, and III. Type I ADH is a simple quinoprotein having PQQ as the only prosthetic group, while type II and type III ADHs are quinohemoprotein having heme c as well as PQQ in the catalytic polypeptide. Type II ADH is a soluble periplasmic enzyme and is widely distributed in Proteobacteria such as Pseudomonas, Ralstonia, Comamonas, etc. In contrast, type III ADH is a membrane-bound enzyme working on the periplasmic surface solely in acetic acid bacteria. It consists of three subunits that comprise a quinohemoprotein catalytic subunit, a triheme cytochrome c subunit, and a third subunit of unknown function. The catalytic subunits of all the quino(hemo)protein ADHs have a common structural motif, a quinoprotein-specific superbarrel domain, where PQQ is deeply embedded in the center. In addition, in the type II and type III ADHs this subunit contains a unique heme c domain. Various type II ADHs each have a unique substrate specificity, accepting a wide variety of alcohols, as is discussed on the basis of recent X-ray crystallographic analyses. Electron transfer within both type II and III ADHs is discussed in terms of the intramolecular reaction from PQQ to heme c and also from heme to heme, and in terms of the intermolecular reaction with azurin and ubiquinone, respectively. Unique physiological functions of both types of quinohemoprotein ADHs are also discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Deoxyribose 5-phosphate aldolase was purified 41 times from Bacillus cereus induced by growth on deoxyribonucleosides. The purification procedure includes ammonium sulphate fractionation, gel filtration on Sephadex G-100, ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel and preparative electrophoresis on 10% polyacrylamide gel. The enzyme is stable above pH 6.5, but is rapidly inactivated by sulfhydryl reagents. Being insensitive to EDTA, it may be considered as a Class I aldolase. Among a number of compounds tested (including some carboxylic acids, free and phosphorylated pentoses, nucleotides and nucleosides), none has been found to affect the enzyme activity. The enzyme appears to be dimeric, with a subunit Mr of 23,600. A Km of 4.4 x 10(-4) M was calculated for dRib 5-P.  相似文献   

12.
The angiotensin I-coverting enzyme (peptidyldipeptide hydrolase, EC 3.4.15.1) was isolated from both guinea pig lung and serum; Km and V values were determined using both angiotensin I and hippurylhistidylleucine as substrates. Km values for the lung enzyme were 3.1 mM for hippurylhistidylleucine hippurylhistidylleucine and 0.076 mM for angiotensin I. Inhibition studies were performed and I50 values were obtained with the following inhibitors: angiotensin II (lung, 1.9 - 10(-5) M; serum, 1.7 - 10(-5) M), bradykinin (lung, 2.6 - 10(-6) M; serum, 2.1 - 10(-6) M), and pyrrolidone-Lys-Trp-Ala-Pro (lung, 7.9 - 10(-8) M; serum, 5.6 - 10(-8) M). Both enzymes were glycoproteins and were inhibited by concanavalin A. A maximum inhibition of 35% initial enzymatic activity was observed for both enzymes at a concanavalin A concentration of 4 - 10(-4) M suggesting that the sugar moieties of each enzyme are similar. Both enzymes required NaCl for activity and were inhibited by EDTA. A comparison of kinetic and inhibition properties indicates that both enzymes are quite similar.  相似文献   

13.
A kinetic analysis of the tyrosine-specific protein kinase of pp60c-src from the C1300 mouse neuroblastoma cell line Neuro-2A and pp60c-src expressed in fibroblasts was carried out to determine the nature of the increased specific activity of the neuroblastoma enzyme. In immune-complex kinase assays with ATP-Mn2+ and the tyrosine-containing peptide angiotensin I as phosphoacceptor substrate, pp60c-src from the neuroblastoma cell line was characterized by a maximum velocity (Vmax.) that was 7-15-fold greater than the Vmax. of pp60c-src from fibroblasts. The neuroblastoma enzyme exhibited Km values for ATP (16 +/- 3 microM) and angiotensin I (6.8 +/- 2.6 mM) that were similar to Km values for ATP (25 +/- 3 microM) and angiotensin I (6.5 +/- 1.7 mM) of pp60c-src from fibroblasts. pp60v-src expressed in Rous-sarcoma-virus-transformed cells exhibited an ATP Km value (25 +/- 4 microM) and an angiotensin I Km value (6.6 +/- 0.5 mM) that approximated the values determined for pp60c-src in neuroblastoma cells and fibroblasts. These results indicate that the pp60c-src kinase from neuroblastoma cells has a higher turnover number than pp60c-src kinase from fibroblasts, and that the neural form of the enzyme would be expected to exhibit increased catalytic activity at the saturating concentrations of ATP that are found intracellularly.  相似文献   

14.
Phylogenetic relationship and the rates of evolution of mammalian alcohol dehydrogenases (ADHs) have been studied by using the amino acid sequences from the human (ADH alpha, ADH beta, and ADH gamma), rat, mouse, and horse (ADH E and ADH S). With the maize ADH1 and ADH2 used as references, the patterns of the amino acid replacements in the beta-sheets, alpha-helices, and random coils in each of the catalytic and coenzyme-binding domains were analyzed separately. The phylogenetic trees based on the different sets of amino acid substitutions consistently showed that (1) multiple ADHs in human and horse have arisen after mammalian radiation, (2) the common ancestor of human ADHs alpha and beta diverged from the ancestor of ADH gamma first and the former two ADHs diverged from each other more recently, and (3) the human ADHs are more closely related to the rodent ADHs than to the horse ADHs. Furthermore, the estimated branch lengths showed that the rodent ADHs are evolving faster than the other ADHs. This difference in evolutionary rate between the two groups of organisms is explainable either in terms of the difference in the number of cell generations per year or in terms of reduction of functional constraints.  相似文献   

15.
The phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (ATP:oxaloacetate carboxy-lyase (transphosphorylating), EC 4.1.1.49) of the epimastigote form of Trypanosoma (Schizotrypanum) cruzi has been purified to homogeneity. The enzyme is composed of two apparently identical 42,000 +/- 500 subunits, is highly specific for adenine nucleotides, and has a strict requirement of Mn2+ ions for activity; the activation of the enzyme by ionic Mn2+ reveals that one Mn2+ ion required for each 42,000 subunit. Hyperbolic kinetics are observed for all substrates in the carboxylation reaction with Km (phosphoenolpyruvate) of 0.36 +/- 0.08 mM, Km (HCO-3) of 3.7 +/- 0.2 mM, and Km (Mg-ADP) of 39 +/- 1 microM. In the decarboxylation reaction the kinetics with respect to oxalacetic acid are also hyperbolic with a Km of 27 +/- 3 microM, but towards Mg-ATP there is a biphasic response: hyperbolic at low (less than 250 microM) concentrations with a Km of 39 +/- 1 microM, but at higher concentrations the nucleotide produces a strong inhibition of the enzyme activity. This inhibition is also observed with Mg-GTP and Mg-ITP which are not substrates of the reaction. The results are consistent with an important regulatory function of the enzyme in the amino-acid catabolism of T. cruzi.  相似文献   

16.
An extralysosomal tripeptide-releasing aminopeptidase was recently discovered in rat liver (B?l?w, R.-M., Ragnarsson, U., and Zetterqvist, O. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 11622-11628). In the present work this tripeptidyl peptidase is shown to occur in several rat tissues and in human erythrocytes. The erythrocyte enzyme was purified about 80,000-fold from a hemolysate while the rat liver enzyme was purified about 4,000-fold from a homogenate. Upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate under reducing conditions more than 90% of the protein was represented by a polypeptide of Mr 135,000 in both cases. In addition, the two enzymes eluted at similar positions in the various chromatographic steps, showed similar specific activity, and had a pH optimum around 7.5. A tryptic pentadecapeptide from the alpha-chain of human hemoglobin, Val-Gly-Ala-His-Ala-Gly-Glu-Tyr-Gly-Ala-Glu-Ala-Leu-Glu-Arg, i.e. residues 17-31, was found to be sequentially cleaved by the erythrocyte enzyme into five tripeptides, beginning from the NH2 terminus. Chromogenic tripeptidylamides showed various rates of hydrolysis at pH 7.5. With Ala-Ala-Phe-4-methyl-7-coumarylamide, Km was 16 microM and Vmax 13 mumol min-1 . mg-1, comparable to the standard substrate Arg-Arg-Ala-Ser(32P)-Val-Ala values (Km 13 microM and Vmax 24 mumol . min-1 . mg-1). The tripeptidyl peptidase of human erythrocytes was classified as a serine peptidase from its irreversible inhibition by phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride and diisopropyl fluorophosphate. The rate of inhibition was decreased by the presence of an efficient competitive inhibitor, Val-Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Ser-Val-Ala (Ki 1.5 microM). [3H]Diisopropylphosphate was incorporated to the extent of 0.7-0.9 mol/mol of Mr 135,000 subunit, which confirms the high purity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Two different molecular species of protein methylases I (S-adenosylmethionine:protein-arginine N-methyltransferase, EC 2.1.1.23), one specific for myelin basic protein (MBP) and the other for histone, have been purified from calf brain to near homogeneity, as discerned by nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Although both methylases share some common properties, such as utilization of S-adenosyl-L-methionine as the methyl donor and methylation of protein-bound arginine residues, they are distinctly different from each other in molecular weight and in catalytic, as well as the immunological, properties. The MBP-specific protein methylase I (approximately 500 kDa) methylates MBP preferentially (Km = 2 X 10(-7) M) and histone to a much lesser extent (Km = 1 X 10(-4) M), while the histone-specific methylase I (approximately 275 kDa) methylates histone only. Both methylases exhibit two major subunit bands on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis: 100 and 72 kDa for the MBP-specific and 110 and 75 kDa for the histone-specific. At 0.5 mM p-chloromercuribenzoate, about 50% of the MBP-specific enzyme remained as active, while most of the histone-specific enzyme activity was lost. In 2 mM guanidine HCl, approximately 90% of the former enzyme activity remained while nearly complete inactivation of the latter enzyme was observed. The enzymes also exhibited quite different inactivation profiles toward high temperature (45-65 degrees C); MBP-enzyme was stable up to 50 degrees C and was rapidly inactivated at higher temperatures with an inflection point at about 57 degrees C. However, under the identical conditions, histone-enzyme was inactivated progressively and linearly in the same temperature range. Finally, Western immunoblot analysis of polyclonal antibodies directed against either enzyme exhibited no cross-reactivity with the other.  相似文献   

18.
Using Bacillus subtilis as a host and pTB524 as a vector plasmid, we cloned the thermostable alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH-T) gene (adhT) from Bacillus stearothermophilus NCA1503 and determined its nucleotide sequence. The deduced amino acid sequence (337 amino acids) was compared with the sequences of ADHs from four different origins. The amino acid residues responsible for the catalytic activity of horse liver ADH had been clarified on the basis of three-dimensional structure. Since those catalytic amino acid residues were fairly conserved in ADH-T and other ADHs, ADH-T was inferred to have basically the same proton release system as horse liver ADH. The putative proton release system of ADH-T was elucidated by introducing point mutations at the catalytic amino acid residues, Cys-38 (cysteine at position 38), Thr-40, and His-43, with site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzyme Thr-40-Ser (Thr-40 was replaced by serine) showed a little lower level of activity than wild-type ADH-T did. The result indicates that the OH group of serine instead of threonine can also be used for the catalytic activity. To change the pKa value of the putative system, His-43 was replaced by the more basic amino acid arginine. As a result, the optimum pH of the mutant enzyme His-43-Arg was shifted from 7.8 (wild-type enzyme) to 9.0. His-43-Arg exhibited a higher level of activity than wild-type enzyme at the optimum pH.  相似文献   

19.
Streit BR  DuBois JL 《Biochemistry》2008,47(19):5271-5280
Chlorite dismutase carries out the heme-catalyzed decomposition of ClO2- to Cl- and O2, an unusual transformation with biotechnological and bioremediative applications. The enzyme has been successfully overexpressed for the first time in highly functional form in Escherichia coli and its steady state kinetics studied. The purified enzyme is abundant (55 mg/L cell culture), highly active (approximately 4.7 x 10(3) micromol of ClO2- min(-1) mg(-1) subunit) and nearly stoichiometric in heme; further, it shares spectroscopic and physicochemical features with chlorite dismutases previously isolated from three organisms. A careful study of the enzyme's steady state kinetics has been carried out. ClO2- consumption and O2 release rates were measured, yielding comparable values of kcat (4.5 x 10(5) min(-1)), K(m) (approximately 215 microM), and kcat/Km (3.5 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1) via either method (4 degrees C, pH 6.8; all values referenced per heme-containing subunit). ClO2-:O2 stoichiometry exhibited a 1:1 relationship under all conditions measured. Though the value of kcat/Km indicates near diffusion control of the reaction, viscosogens had no effect on k(cat)/K(m) or V(max). The product O2 did not inhibit the reaction at saturating [O2], but Cl- is a mixed inhibitor with relatively high values of KI (225 mM for enzyme and 95.6 mM for the enzyme-substrate complex), indicating a relatively low affinity of the heme iron for halogen ions. Chlorite irreversibly inactivates the enzyme after approximately 1.7 x 10(4) turnovers (per heme) and with a half-life of 0.39 min, resulting in bleaching of the heme chromophore. The inactivation K(I) (K(inact)) of 166 microM is similar in magnitude to Km, consistent with a common Michaelis complex on the pathway to both reaction and inactivation. The one-electron peroxidase substrate guaiacol offers incomplete protection of the enzyme from inactivation. Mechanisms in keeping with the available data and the properties of other well-described heme enzymes are proposed.  相似文献   

20.
Liver cytosolic aldehyde dehydrogenases (AHD-2) have been isolated in a highly purified state from "alcohol-drinking" (C57BL/6J) and "alcohol-avoiding" (DBA/2J) strains of mice. The purified enzymes were resolved into three major and one minor form of activity by isoelectric focusing (IEF) techniques and showed similar zymogram patterns. The enzymes had identical subunit sizes on SDS-polyacrylamide gels: 53,000. Gel exclusion chromatography, using Ultrogel AcA34, indicated that the enzymes were dimers. The enzymes exhibited biphasic kinetic characteristics and were readily distinguished from each other. The purified forms of AHD-2 from C57BL/6J and DBA/2J mice exhibited two apparent Km values in each case: 10 microM/100 microM and 30 microM/330 microM respectively. AHD-2 exhibited a broad pH optimum in the range 7.0-9.0 and was very sensitive towards disulphuram inhibition, with 50% inhibition occurring at 0.17 microM. The kinetic results support proposals that AHD-2 may be the primary enzyme for oxidizing acetaldehyde during ethanol oxidation in vivo.  相似文献   

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