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1.
In human liver, almost 90% of malic enzyme activity is located within the extramitochondrial compartment, and only approximately 10% in the mitochondrial fraction. Extramitochondrial malic enzyme has been isolated from the post-mitochondrial supernatant of human liver by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, ADP-Sepharose-4B and Sephacryl S-300 to apparent homogeneity, as judged from polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The specific activity of the purified enzyme was 56 mumol.min-1.mg protein-1, which corresponds to about 10,000-fold purification. The molecular mass of the native enzyme determined by gel filtration is 251 kDa. SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed one polypeptide band of molecular mass 63 kDa. Thus, it appears that the native protein is a tetramer composed of identical-molecular-mass subunits. The isoelectric point of the isolated enzyme was 5.65. The enzyme was shown to carboxylate pyruvate with at least the same rate as the forward reaction. The optimum pH for the carboxylation reaction was at pH 7.25 and that for the NADP-linked decarboxylation reaction varied with malate concentration. The Km values determined at pH 7.2 for malate and NADP were 120 microM and 9.2 microM, respectively. The Km values for pyruvate, NADPH and bicarbonate were 5.9 mM, 5.3 microM and 27.9 mM, respectively. The enzyme converted malate to pyruvate (at optimum pH 6.4) in the presence of 10 mM NAD at approximately 40% of the maximum rate with NADP. The Km values for malate and NAD were 0.96 mM and 4.6 mM, respectively. NAD-dependent decarboxylation reaction was not reversible. The purified human liver malic enzyme catalyzed decarboxylation of oxaloacetate and NADPH-linked reduction of pyruvate at about 1.3% and 5.4% of the maximum rate of NADP-linked oxidative decarboxylation of malate, respectively. The results indicate that malic enzyme from human liver exhibits similar properties to the enzyme from animal liver.  相似文献   

2.
The roles of the pyruvate decarboxylation pathway and TCA metabolic cycle in activation of anaerobic metabolism in ripening Hamlin oranges were investigated. Oranges were harvested weekly from October to February during the 1980–81 and 1981–82 growing season. Juice vesicles from each weekly sample were assayed for pyruvate decarboxylase, alcohol dehydrogenase, malic enzyme, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, malate dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, isocitrate dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase. Also, juice was assayed for ethanol, acetaldehyde, pyruvate, oxalacetate, malate and citrate. In December when ethanol accumulated rapidly in the fruit, pyruvate decarboxylase and alcohol dehydrogenase increased markedly. During the same month, the pyruvate level declined, suggesting that the increases in enzyme levels activated the conversion of pyruvate to ethanol.  相似文献   

3.
An NADP-preferring malic enzyme ((S)-malate:NADP oxidoreductase (oxalacetate-decarboxylating) EC 1.1.1.40) with a specific activity of 36.6 units per mg of protein at 60 degrees C and an isoelectric point of 5.1 was purified to homogeneity from the thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus, strain MT-4. The purification procedure employed ion exchange chromatography, ammonium sulfate fractionation, affinity chromatography, and gel filtration. Molecular weight determinations demonstrated that the enzyme was a dimer of Mr 105,000 +/- 2,000 with apparently identical Mr 49,000 +/- 1,500 subunits. Amino acid composition of S. solfataricus enzyme was determined and found to be significantly higher in tryptophan content than the malic enzyme from Escherichia coli. In addition to the NAD(P)-dependent oxidative decarboxylation of L-malate, S. solfataricus malic enzyme was able to catalyze the decarboxylation of oxalacetate. The enzyme absolutely required divalent metal cations and it displayed maximal activity at 85 degrees C and pH 8.0 with a turnover number of 376 s-1. The enzyme showed classical saturation kinetics and no sigmoidicity was detected at different pH values and temperatures. At 60 degrees C and in the presence of 0.1 mM MnCl2, the Michaelis constants for malate, NADP, and NAD were 18, 3, and 250 microM, respectively. The S. solfataricus malic enzyme was shown to be very thermostable.  相似文献   

4.
A sensitive isotope exchange method was developed to assess the requirements for and compartmentation of pyruvate and oxalacetate production from malate in proliferating and nonproliferating human fibroblasts. Malatedependent pyruvate production (malic enzyme activity) in the particulate fraction containing the mitochondria was dependent on either NAD+ or NADP+. The production of pyruvate from malate in the soluble, cytosolic fraction was strictly dependent on NADP+. Oxalacetate production from malate (malate dehydrogenase, EC 1.1.1.37) in both the particulate and soluble fraction was strictly dependent on NAD+. Relative to nonproliferating cells, NAD+-linked malic enzyme activity was slightly reduced and the NADP+-linked activity was unchanged in the particulate fraction of serum-stimulated, exponentially proliferating cells. However, a reduced activity of particulate malate dehydrogenase resulted in a two-fold increase in the ratio of NAD(P)+-linked malic enzyme to NAD+-linked malate dehydrogenase activity in the particulate fraction of proliferating fibroblasts. An increase in soluble NADP+-dependent malic enzyme activity and a decrease in NAD+-linked malate dehydrogenase indictated an increase in the ratio of pyruvate-producing to oxalacetate-producing malate oxidase activity in the cytosol of proliterating cells. These coordinate changes may affect the relative amount of malate that is oxidized to oxalacetate and pyruvate in proliferating cells and, therefore, the efficient utilization of glutamine as a respiratory fuel during cell proliferation.  相似文献   

5.
Kalanchoë pinnata mitochondria readily oxidized succinate, malate, NADH, and NADPH at high rates and coupling. The highest respiration rates usually were observed in the presence of succinate. The high rate of malate oxidation was observed at pH 6.8 with thiamine pyrophosphate where both malic enzyme (ME) and pyruvate dehydrogenase were activated. In CAM phase III of K. pinnata mitochondria, both ME and malate dehydrogenase (MDH) simultaneously contributed to metabolism of malate. However, ME played a main function: malate was oxidized via ME to produce pyruvate and CO2 rather than via MDH to produce oxalacetate (OAA). Cooperative oxidation of two or three substrates was accompanied with the dramatic increase in the total respiration rates. Our results showed that the alternative (Alt) pathway was more active in malate oxidation at pH 6.8 with CoA and NAD+ where ME operated and was stimulated, indicating that both ME and Alt pathway were related to malate decarboxylation during the light. In K. pinnata mitochondria, NADH and NADPH oxidations were more sensitive with KCN than that with succinate and malate oxidations, suggesting that these oxidations were engaged to cytochrome pathway rather than to Alt pathway and these capacities would be desirable to supply enough energy for cytosol pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase activity.  相似文献   

6.
S H Park  B G Harris  P F Cook 《Biochemistry》1986,25(13):3752-3759
Both chicken liver NADP-malic enzyme and Ascaris suum NAD-malic enzyme catalyze the metal-dependent decarboxylation of oxalacetate. Both enzymes catalyze the reaction either in the presence or in the absence of dinucleotide. The presence of dinucleotide increases the affinity of oxalacetate for the chicken liver NADP-malic enzyme, but this information could not be obtained in the case of A. suum NAD-malic enzyme because of the low affinity of free enzyme for NAD. The kinetic mechanism for oxalacetate decarboxylation by the chicken liver NADP-malic enzyme is equilibrium ordered at pH values below 5.0 with NADP adding to enzyme first. The Ki for NADP increases by a factor of 10 per pH unit below pH 5.0. An enzyme residue is required protonated for oxalacetate decarboxylation (by both enzymes) and pyruvate reduction (by the NAD-malic enzyme), but the beta-carboxyl of oxalacetate must be unprotonated for reaction (by both enzymes). The pK of the enzyme residue of the chicken liver NADP-malic enzyme decreases from a value of 6.4 in the absence of NADP to about 5.5 with Mg2+ and 4.8 with Mn2+ in the presence of NADP. The pK value of the enzyme residue required protonated for either oxalacetate decarboxylation or pyruvate reduction for the A. suum NAD-malic enzyme is about 5.5-6.0. Although oxalacetate binds equally well to protonated and unprotonated forms of the NADP-enzyme, the NAD-enzyme requires that oxalacetate or pyruvate selectively bind to the protonated form of the enzyme. Both enzymes prefer Mn2+ over Mg2+ for oxalacetate decarboxylation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Enzyme activities forming extracellular products from succinate, fumarate, and malate were examined using washed cell suspensions of Pseudomonas fluorescens from chemostat cultures. Membrane-associated enzyme activities (glucose, gluconate, and malate dehydrogenases), producing large accumulations of extracellular oxidation products in carbon-excess environments, have previously been found in P. fluorescens. Investigations carried out here have demonstrated the presence in this microorganism of a malic enzyme activity which produces extracellular pyruvate from malate in carbon-excess environments. Although the three membrane dehydrogenase enzymes decrease significantly in carbon-limited chemostat cultures, malic enzyme activity was found to increase fourfold under these conditions. The regulation of malate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme by malate or succinate was similar. Malate dehydrogenase increased and malic enzyme decreased in carbon-excess cultures. The opposite effect was observed in carbon-limited cultures. When pyruvate or glucose was used as the carbon source, malate dehydrogenase was regulated similarly by the available carbon concentration, but malic enzyme activity producing extracellular pyruvate was not detected. While large accumulations of extracellular oxalacetate and pyruvate were produced in malate-excess cultures, no extracellular oxidation products were detected in succinate-excess cultures. This may be explained by the lack of detectable activity for the conversion of added external succinate to extracellular fumarate and malate in cells from carbon-excess cultures. In cells from carbon-limited (malate or succinate) cultures, very active enzymes for the conversion of succinate to extracellular fumarate and malate were detected. Washed cell suspensions from these carbon-limited cultures rapidly oxidized added succinate to extracellular pyruvate through the sequential action of succinate dehydrogenase, fumarase, and malic enzyme. Succinate dehydrogenase and fumarase activities producing extracellular products were not detected in cells from chemostat cultures using pyruvate or glucose as the carbon source. Uptake activities for succinate, malate, and pyruvate also were found to increase in carbon-limited (malate or succinate) and decrease in carbon-excess cultures. The role of the membrane-associated enzymes forming different pathways for carbon dissimilation in both carbon-limited and carbon-excess environments is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
RNA synthesis during morphogenesis of the fungusMucor racemosus   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Bacteroides succinogenes produces acetate and succinate as major products of carbohydrate fermentation. An investigation of the enzymes involved indicated that pyruvate is oxidized by a flavin-dependent pyruvate cleavage enzyme to acetyl-CoA and CO2. Active CO2 exchange is associated with the pyruvate oxidation system. Reduction of flavin nucleotides is CoASH-dependent and does not require ferredoxin. Acetyl-CoA is further metabolized via acetyl phosphate to acetate and ATP. Reduced flavin nucleotide is used to reduce fumarate to succinate by a particulate flavin-specific fumarate reductase reaction which may involve cytochrome b. Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) is carboxylated to oxalacetate by a GDP-specific PEP carboxykinase. Oxalacetate, in turn, is converted to malate by a pyridine nucleotide-dependent malate dehydrogenase. The organism has a NAD-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The data suggest that reduced pyridine nucleotides generated during glycolysis are oxidized in malate formation and that the electrons generated during pyruvate oxidation are used to reduce fumarate to succinate.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Decarboxylation of oxalacetate by pyruvate carboxylase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
P V Attwood  W W Cleland 《Biochemistry》1986,25(25):8191-8196
The decarboxylation of oxalacetate by pyruvate carboxylase in the absence of ADP and Pi is stimulated 400-fold by the presence of oxamate, which is an inhibitory analogue of pyruvate. The observation of substrate inhibition when either oxamate or oxalacetate is varied at a fixed concentration of the other indicates that both molecules bind at the same site on the enzyme. The pH profiles for this reaction show no evidence of the involvement of an enzymic acid-base catalyst, suggesting that the proton and CO2 units may be exchanged directly between the reactants (although CO2 sequestered in the active site may be an intermediate in the process). The pH profiles of the full reverse reaction of pyruvate carboxylase in which oxalacetate decarboxylation is coupled to ATP formation and where Pi is the variable substrate do, however, indicate that such an acid-base catalyst is involved in the other partial reaction of the enzyme in proton transfer to and from biotin. The enzyme also displays two oxamate-independent oxalacetate decarboxylating activities, one of which is biotin-dependent and the other is independent of biotin.  相似文献   

11.
Michel Neuburger  Roland Douce 《BBA》1980,589(2):176-189
Mitochondria isolated from spinach leaves oxidized malate by both a NAD+-linked malic enzyme and malate dehydrogenase. In the presence of sodium arsenite the accumulation of oxaloacetate and pyruvate during malate oxidation was strongly dependent on the malate concentration, the pH in the reaction medium and the metabolic state condition.Bicarbonate, especially at alkaline pH, inhibited the decarboxylation of malate by the NAD+-linked malic enzyme in vitro and in vivo. Analysis of the reaction products showed that with 15 mM bicarbonate, spinach leaf mitochondria excreted almost exclusively oxaloacetate.The inhibition by oxaloacetate of malate oxidation by spinach leaf mitochondria was strongly dependent on malate concentration, the pH in the reaction medium and on the metabolic state condition.The data were interpreted as indicating that: (a) the concentration of oxaloacetate on both sides of the inner mitochondrial membrane governed the efflux and influx of oxaloacetate; (b) the NAD+/NADH ratio played an important role in regulating malate oxidation in plant mitochondria; (c) both enzymes (malate dehydrogenase and NAD+-linked malic enzyme) were competing at the level of the pyridine nucleotide pool, and (d) the NAD+-linked malic enzyme provided NADH for the reversal of the reaction catalyzed by the malate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

12.
The regulatory properties of the NAD-dependent malic enzyme from the mitochondria of Ascaris suum have been studied. The malate saturation curve exhibits sigmoidicity and the degree of this sigmoidicity increases as the pH is increased. Fumarate was the only compound tested that stimulated the enzyme activity, whereas oxalacetate was the most powerful inhibitor. Activation by low levels of fumarate was found to be competitive with malate. It is proposed that this stimulation has physiological significance in controlling the dismutation reaction in the parasite. The branched-chain volatile fatty acid excretion products, tiglate, 2-methylbutanoate, and 2-methylpentanoate, inhibited the enzyme activity and this inhibition was competitive with malate. The Ki values for these compounds are in the physiological range of their concentrations; therefore, it is suggested that they may aid in controlling the malic enzyme activity in vivo. Oxalacetate inhibition of malic enzyme activity was competitive with malate, and the Ki values decreased with an increase in pH. Two alternatives are proposed which could account for the lack of oxalacetate decarboxylation by the ascarid malic enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Pyruvate, a precursor for several amino acids, can be synthesized from phosphoenolpyruvate by pyruvate kinase. Nevertheless, pyk1 pyk2 mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae devoid of pyruvate kinase activity grew normally on ethanol in defined media, indicating the presence of an alternative route for pyruvate synthesis. A candidate for this role is malic enzyme, which catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of malate to pyruvate. Disruption of open reading frame YKL029c, which is homologous to malic enzyme genes from other organisms, abolished malic enzyme activity in extracts of glucose-grown cells. Conversely, overexpression of YKL029c/MAE1 from the MET25 promoter resulted in an up to 33-fold increase of malic enzyme activity. Growth studies with mutants demonstrated that presence of either Pyk1p or Mae1p is required for growth on ethanol. Mutants lacking both enzymes could be rescued by addition of alanine or pyruvate to ethanol cultures. Disruption of MAE1 alone did not result in a clear phenotype. Regulation of MAE1 was studied by determining enzyme activities and MAE1 mRNA levels in wild-type cultures and by measuring β-galactosidase activities in a strain carrying a MAE1::lacZ fusion. Both in shake flask cultures and in carbon-limited chemostat cultures, MAE1 was constitutively expressed. A three- to fourfold induction was observed during anaerobic growth on glucose. Subcellular fractionation experiments indicated that malic enzyme in S. cerevisiae is a mitochondrial enzyme. Its regulation and localization suggest a role in the provision of intramitochondrial NADPH or pyruvate under anaerobic growth conditions. However, since null mutants could still grow anaerobically, this function is apparently not essential.  相似文献   

14.
Isolated pea leaf mitochondria oxidatively decarboxylate added glycine. This decarboxylation could be linked to the respiratory chain (in which case it was coupled to three phosphorylations) or to mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase when oxalacetate was supplied. Decarboxylation rates measured as O2 uptake, or CO2 and NH3 release were adequate to account for whole leaf photorespiration. Oxalacetate-supported glycine decarboxylation, measured by linking malate efflux to added malic enzyme, yielded rates considerably less than the electron transport rates. Butylmalonate inhibited malate efflux but not oxalacetate entry; phthalonate inhibited oxalacetate entry but had little effect on malate or α-ketoglutarate oxidation. It is suggested that oxalacetate and malate transport are catalyzed by separate carrier systems of the mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

15.
Malic enzyme is one of at least five enzymes, known to be present in Corynebacterium glutamicum, capable of carboxylation and decarboxylation reactions coupling glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle. To date, no information is available concerning the physiological role of the malic enzyme in this bacterium. The malE gene from C. glutamicum has been cloned and sequenced. The protein encoded by this gene has been purified to homogeneity, and the biochemical properties have been established. Biochemical characteristics indicate a decarboxylation role linked to NADPH generation. Strains of C. glutamicum in which the malE gene had been disrupted or overexpressed showed no detectable phenotype during growth on either acetate or glucose, but showed a significant modification of growth behavior during lactate metabolism. The wild type showed a characteristic brief period of exponential growth on lactate followed by a linear growth period. This growth pattern was further accentuated in a malE-disrupted strain (ΔmalE). However, the strain overexpressing malE maintained exponential growth until all lactate had been consumed. This strain accumulated significantly larger amounts of pyruvate in the medium than the other strains.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of anaplerotic pathways activation on CO2-dependent anaerobic glucose utilization by Escherichia coli strains deficient in the main fermentation pathways and possessing a modified system of glucose transport and phosphorylation was studied. Intracellular CO2 generation in the strains was ensured resulting from oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvic acid by pyruvate dehydrogenase. Sodium bicarbonate dissolved in the medium was used as an external source of CO2. The genes of heterologous pyruvate carboxylase and native NADH-dependent malic enzyme were overexpressed in the strains to allow anaplerotic carboxylation of pyruvic acid to oxaloacetic or malic acid. The ability of the strains to reoxidize NADH utilizing carboxylation products was additionally increased due to enhanced expression of malate dehydrogenase gene. In the case of endogenous CO2 formation, the activation of anaplerotic pathways did not cause a notable increase in the anaerobic glucose consumption by the constructed strains. At the same time, the expression of pyruvate carboxylase led to a pronounced decrease in the secretion of pyruvic acid with the concomitant increase in the yield of four-carbon metabolites. Further enhancement of NADH-dependent malic enzyme expression provoked activation of a pyruvate–oxaloacetate–malate–pyruvate futile cycle in the strains. The availability in the medium of the external CO2 source sharply increased the anaerobic utilization of glucose by strains expressing pyruvate carboxylase. The activity of the futile cycle has raised with the increased malic enzyme expression and dropped upon enhancement of malate dehydrogenase expression. As a result, the efficiency of CO2-dependent anaerobic glucose utilization coupled to the formation of four-carbon carboxylation products increased in the studied strains resulting from the primary anaplerotic conversion of pyruvic acid into oxaloacetic acid followed by the involvement of the precursor formed in NADH-consuming biosynthetic reactions dominating over the reactions of the revealed futile cycle.  相似文献   

17.
Structure and properties of malic enzyme from Bacillus stearothermophilus   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.38) gene of Bacillus stearothermophilus was cloned in Escherichia coli, and the enzyme was purified to homogeneity from the E. coli clone. In addition to the NAD(P)-dependent oxidative decarboxylation of L-malate, the enzyme catalyzes the decarboxylation of oxalacetate. The enzyme is a tetramer of Mr 200,000 consisting of four identical subunits of Mr 50,000. The pH optima for malate oxidation and pyruvate reduction are 8.0 and 6.0, respectively; and the optimum temperature is 55 degrees C. The enzyme strictly requires divalent metal cations for its activity, and the activity is enhanced 5-7 times by NH4+ and K+. Kinetic study shows that the values of the dissociation constant of the enzyme-coenzyme complex are 77 microM for NAD and 1.0 mM for NADP, indicating that the enzyme has a higher affinity for NAD than for NADP. The nucleotide sequence of the gene and its flanking regions was also found. A single open reading frame of 1434 base pairs encoding 478 amino acids was concluded to be that for the malic enzyme gene because the amino acid composition of the enzyme and the sequence of 16 amino acids from the amino terminus of the enzyme agreed well with those deduced from this open reading frame.  相似文献   

18.
Mutants of Escherichia coli lacking malic dehydrogenase activity (mdh) were incapable of growth on acetate", succinate- or malate/mineral medium. Revertants of mdh strains which had regained the ability to grow on C4-dicarboxylic acids could be divided into two distinct classes. One type of revertant had regained the ability to synthesize functional malic dehydrogenase. The other type of revertant still lacked malic dehydrogenase activity but possessed a suppressor mutation which altered the regulation of the synthesis or activity of the C4-dicarboxylic acid transport system, resulting in increased C4-dicarboxylic acid transport activity. This latter class of revertants apparently synthesized oxalacetate from malate via the sequential actions of the NAD-linked malic enzyme, phosphoenolpyruvate synthetase, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. Evidence has been presented that is consistent with the hypothesis that oxalacetate is the inducer of the C4-dicarboxylic acid transport system. The inability of mutants lacking malic dehydrogenase to grow with a C4-dicarboxylic acid as the carbon source can be attributed to the difficulty such mutants have in synthesizing oxalacetate.  相似文献   

19.
NADP+ -dependent malic enzyme of Rhizobium meliloti.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The bacterium Rhizobium meliloti, which forms N2-fixing root nodules on alfalfa, has two distinct malic enzymes; one is NADP+ dependent, while a second has maximal activity when NAD+ is the coenzyme. The diphosphopyridine nucleotide (NAD+)-dependent malic enzyme (DME) is required for symbiotic N2 fixation, likely as part of a pathway for the conversion of C4-dicarboxylic acids to acetyl coenzyme A in N2-fixing bacteroids. Here, we report the cloning and localization of the tme gene (encoding the triphosphopyridine nucleotide [NADP+]-dependent malic enzyme) to a 3.7-kb region. We constructed strains carrying insertions within the tme gene region and showed that the NADP+ -dependent malic enzyme activity peak was absent when extracts from these strains were eluted from a DEAE-cellulose chromatography column. We found that NADP+ -dependent malic enzyme activity was not required for N2 fixation, as tme mutants induced N2-fixing root nodules on alfalfa. Moreover, the apparent NADP+ -dependent malic enzyme activity detected in wild-type (N2-fixing) bacteroids was only 20% of the level detected in free-living cells. Much of that residual bacteroid activity appeared to be due to utilization of NADP+ by DME. The functions of DME and the NADP+ -dependent malic enzyme are discussed in light of the above results and the growth phenotypes of various tme and dme mutants.  相似文献   

20.
When cod fish muscle oxalacetate decarboxylase catalyzes the decarboxylation of oxalacetate in the presence of NaBH4, L-lactate results from the reduction of enzyme-bound pyruvate. However, D-lactate results when borohydride reduces the binary enzyme-pyruvate complex formed by adding pyruvate from solution, as reported by others. This observation suggests that there are alternate mechanisms for reduction that are either kinetically or sterically determined for the E-pyruvate forms produced in the two directions. In the process of investigating the mechanism of reduction, the cod fish muscle decarboxylase was discovered to be identical with pyruvate kinase. Decarboxylase activity appears to take place at a site which overlaps the phosphoenolpyruvate binding site on this enzyme, as discussed in the following paper. Crystalline rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase also contains significant decarboxylase activity indicating that the two reactions may be structurally related functions. In the presence of K+, orthophosphate, or ATP the rabbit muscle enzyme catalyzes the detritiation of enzyme-bound pyruvate formed during decarboxylation before release of pyruvate from the enzyme, in analogy with the detritiation of pyruvate formed from P-[3-3/]enolpyruvate in the kinase reaction. This observation is consistent with the formation of an enolpyruvate intermediate common to the kinetic pathways of both reactions. Since the decarboxylase reac.tion is completely stereospecific, within the limits of detection, going with retention of configuration, the protonation of the enolpyruvate intermediate is completely determined by the enzyme as is the case with the enolpyruvate intermediate generated from P-enolpyruvate in the kinase reaction.  相似文献   

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