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1.
Glycolate oxidase from spinach has been expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The active enzyme was purified to near-homogeneity (purification factor approximately 1400-fold) by means of hydroxyapatite and anion-exchange chromatography. The purified glycolate oxidase is nonfluorescent and has absorbance peaks at 448 (epsilon = 9200 M-1 cm-1) and 346 nm in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 8.3. The large bathochromic shift of the near-UV band indicates that the N(3) position is deprotonated at pH 8.3. A pH titration revealed that the pK of the N(3) is shifted from 10.3 in free flavin to 6.4 in glycolate oxidase. Glycolate oxidase is competitively inhibited by oxalate with a Kd of 0.24 mM at 4 degrees C in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 8.3. Three pieces of evidence demonstrate that glycolate oxidase stabilizes a negative charge at the N(1)-C(2 = O) locus: the enzyme forms a tight sulfite complex with a Kd of 2.7 x 10(-7) M and stabilizes the anionic flavosemiquinone and the benzoquinoid form of 8-mercapto-FMN. Steady-state analysis at pH 8.3, 4 degrees C, yielded a Km = 1 x 10(-3) M for glycolate and Km = 2.1 x 10(-4) M for oxygen. The turnover number has been determined to be 20 s-1. Stopped-flow studies of the reductive (k = 25 s-1) and oxidative (k = 8.5 x 10(4) M-1 s-1) half-reactions have identified the reduction of glycolate oxidase to be the rate-limiting step.  相似文献   

2.
Glycolate oxidase extracted from tobacco leaves (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. NC-95) and assayed by the 2,6-dichlorophe-nolindophenol reduction method was stimulated by chlorogenic acid and other o-diphenols but not by p-diphenols such as hydroquinone. Chlorogenic acid also protected the enzyme against certain enzyme antagonists. A novel assay utilizing horseradish peroxidase with the chromogen o-dianisidine was developed for detecting glycolate oxidase in conjunction with disc electrophoresis. Dissociation of glycolate oxidase into an active monomer during ammonium sulfate fractiona-tion was confirmed electrophoretically. After electrophoresis, flavin mononucleotide was required for monomer activity whereas chlorogenic acid was inhibitory to enzyme band development.  相似文献   

3.
Glycolate oxidase (GOX) is one of the principal enzymes involved in the pathway of oxalate synthesis. It converts glycolate to glyoxylate by oxidation and then glyoxylate is finally converted to oxalate. Therapeutic intervention of GOX in this consequence thus found potential in the treatment of calcium oxalate urolithiasis. In present investigation, we explored GOX in search of potential leads from traditional resources. Molecular modeling of the identified leads, quercetin and kaempherol, was performed by employing Glide 5.5.211 (SchrodingerTM suite). In the absence of pure human glycolate oxidase (hGOX) preparation, in vitro experiments were performed on spinach glycolate oxidase (sGOX) as both enzymes possess 57% identity and 76% similarity along with several conserved active site residues in common. We aimed to identify a possible mechanism of action for the anti-GOX leads from Tribuls terrestris, which can be attributed to anti-urolithic drug development. This study found promising in development of future GOX inhibitory leads.  相似文献   

4.
Glycolate oxidase was isolated and partially purified from human and rat liver. The enzyme preparation readily catalyzed the oxidation of glycolate, glyoxylate, lactate, hydroxyisocaproate and α-hydroxybutyrate. The oxidation of glycolate and glyoxylate by glycolate oxidase was completely inhibited by 0.02 m dl-phenyllactate or n-heptanoate. The oxidation of glyoxylate by lactic dehydrogenase or xanthine oxidase was not inhibited by 0.067 m dl-phenyllactate or n-heptanoate. The conversion of [U-14C] glyoxylate to [14C] oxalate by isolated perfused rat liver was completely inhibited by dl-phenyllactate and n-heptanoate confirming the major contribution of glycolate oxidase in oxalate synthesis. Since the inhibition of oxalate was 100%, lactic dehydrogenase and xanthine oxidase do not contribute to oxalate biosynthesis in isolated perfused rat liver. dl-Phenyllactate also inhibited [14C] oxalate synthesis from [1-14C] glycolate, [U-14C] ethylene glycol, [U-14C] glycine, [3-14C] serine, and [U-14C] ethanolamine in isolated perfused rat liver. Oxalate synthesis from ethylene glycol was inhibited by dl-phenyllactate in the intact male rat confirming the role of glycolate oxidase in oxalate synthesis in vivo and indicating the feasibility of regulating oxalate metabolism in primary hyperoxaluria, ethylene glycol poisoning, and kidney stone formation by enzyme inhibitors.  相似文献   

5.
Glycolate oxidase and hydroxypyruvate reductase, two key enzymes of glycolate metabolism, are present in the brown alga Egregia menziesii (Turn.) Aresch. The pH optimum and Km for the partially purified glycolate oxidase are similar to the enzyme from higher plants, Charophyta and Xanthophyta, whereas the substrate specificity is different from the higher plant enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Isolation and characterization of glycolic acid oxidase from human liver.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Glycolic acid oxidase has been isolated from human liver and purified over 3000-fold to a specific activity of 123 U/mg protein by a 5-step procedure. The preparation gave a single protein band on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, required flavin mononucleotide for catalytic activity, had a pH optimum between 8.2-8.8 depending on the substrate, and had a molecular weight of 105 000. The enzyme has a broad specificity towards alpha-hydroxy acids. Glycolate (Km = 3.3 . 10(-4) M) was the most effective substrate. The enzyme was stable for several months when stored as an (NH4)2SO4 precipitate or in 15% glycerol. Since glycolate inhibits the oxidation of glyoxylate to oxalate by glycolic acid oxidase, it is suggested that glycolic acid oxidase contributes to the synthesis of oxalate in vivo when the glyoxylate concentration is high and the glycolate concentration is low.  相似文献   

7.
Glycolate oxidase (GOX) is an essential enzyme involved in photorespiratory metabolism in plants. In cyanobacteria and green algae, the corresponding reaction is catalyzed by glycolate dehydrogenases (GlcD). The genomes of N(2)-fixing cyanobacteria, such as Nostoc PCC 7120 and green algae, appear to harbor genes for both GlcD and GOX proteins. The GOX-like proteins from Nostoc (No-LOX) and from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii showed high L-lactate oxidase (LOX) and low GOX activities, whereas glycolate was the preferred substrate of the phylogenetically related At-GOX2 from Arabidopsis thaliana. Changing the active site of No-LOX to that of At-GOX2 by site-specific mutagenesis reversed the LOX/GOX activity ratio of No-LOX. Despite its low GOX activity, No-LOX overexpression decreased the accumulation of toxic glycolate in a cyanobacterial photorespiratory mutant and restored its ability to grow in air. A LOX-deficient Nostoc mutant grew normally in nitrate-containing medium but died under N(2)-fixing conditions. Cultivation under low oxygen rescued this lethal phenotype, indicating that N(2) fixation was more sensitive to O(2) in the Δlox Nostoc mutant than in the wild type. We propose that LOX primarily serves as an O(2)-scavenging enzyme to protect nitrogenase in extant N(2)-fixing cyanobacteria, whereas in plants it has evolved into GOX, responsible for glycolate oxidation during photorespiration.  相似文献   

8.
Glycolate oxidase was purified and crystallized from cotyledons of germinating pumpkin seedlings. The molecular weight of the enzyme was determined to be 280,000-320,000, consisting of 8 identical subunits with molecular weight of 38,000. There are two absorption peaks at 340 and 450 nm, indicating the glycolate oxidase is a flavin protein. Several kinetic parameters were determined, Km (glycolate) 0.33 mM and Km (O2) 76.2 microM at pH 8.0. Oxalate and oxalacetate were found to be potent competitive inhibitors against glycolate; the Ki values for oxalate and oxalacetate were 4.5 and 7.8 mM, respectively. Fatty acids such as linoleic acid inhibited the enzyme noncompetitively; the Km for linoleic acid was 0.63 mM. The regulation of glycolate oxidase in the glycolate pathway occurring in leaf peroxisomes is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Glycolate oxidase is loosely held by microbodies obtained from etiolated barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves depleted of nitrate. Defined centrifugation conditions cause the complete detachment of the enzyme from the microbodies. Addition of nitrate to these plants brings about a greater retention of glycolate oxidase by the microbodies. Synthesis of a nitrate-induced protein seems to be responsible for the enhanced retention of glycolate oxidase. Catalase, on the contrary, is strongly attached to the microbodies under all nutritional and experimental conditions considered.  相似文献   

10.
徐杰 《植物学报》1998,15(4):75-77
用改进后的方法,从菜心绿叶中分离纯化得到一个亚基分子量为42kD的乙醇酸氧化酶,用氧电极法测定该酶同时能催化乙醇酸和乙醛酸的氧化。  相似文献   

11.
Oxalate oxidase (EC 1.2.3.4) catalyzes the conversion of oxalate and dioxygen to hydrogen peroxide and carbon dioxide. In this study, glycolate was used as a structural analogue of oxalate to investigate substrate binding in the crystalline enzyme. The observed monodentate binding of glycolate to the active site manganese ion of oxalate oxidase is consistent with a mechanism involving C-C bond cleavage driven by superoxide anion attack on a monodentate coordinated substrate. In this mechanism, the metal serves two functions: to organize the substrates (oxalate and dioxygen) and to transiently reduce dioxygen. The observed structure further implies important roles for specific active site residues (two asparagines and one glutamine) in correctly orientating the substrates and reaction intermediates for catalysis. Combined spectroscopic, biochemical, and structural analyses of mutants confirms the importance of the asparagine residues in organizing a functional active site complex.  相似文献   

12.
Glycolate oxidase was purified to apparent homogeneity from the brown alga Spatoglossum pacificum Yendo. The 1326-fold purified glycolate oxidase enzyme exhibited a specific activity of 22. 4 micromoles glyoxylate formed ·min?1·mg protein?1. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was estimated to be 230,000 by gel filtration. The subunit molecular weight of the enzyme was determined to be 49,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, suggesting that the native enzyme is a tetramer. There were two absorption peaks at 345 and 445 nm, indicating that glycolate oxidase is a flavoprotein. This enzyme had a high isoelectric point (pI 9.6) and a high pH optimum (pH 8.3). The Km values for glycolate and l -lactate were 0.49 and 5.5 mM, respectively. This enzyme also had a broad specificity for other straight-chain α-hydroxy acids but not for β-hydroxyacids. Cyanide, azide, N-ethylmaleimide, and p-chloromercuribenzoic acid did not affect the enzyme, whereas 2-pyridylhydroxymethanesulfonic acid strongly inhibited it. These properties of glycolate oxidase from the brown alga S. pacificum are similar to the properties of the glycolate oxidasesfrom higher plants. Polyclonal antibodies raised against the polypeptide fragment of Spatoglossum glycolate oxidase could recognize glycolate oxidase from Spinacia oleracea L., although the cross-reactivity was weak. The N-terminal sequence of two internal polypeptide fragments of the enzyme from S. pacificum showed a high degree of similarity to that of glycolate oxidase from higher plants. These results suggest that glycolate oxidase from higher plants and brown algae share the same ancestral protein.  相似文献   

13.
Glycolate oxidase is a flavin-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of α-hydroxy acids to the corresponding α-keto acids, with reduction of molecular oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. A number of probes have been used to investigate the oxidative half-reaction catalyzed by the enzyme, including steady state and rapid kinetics, pH studies, solvent kinetic isotope effects, and solvent viscosity effects. Here we present the first spectroscopic evidence of the formation of an intermediate with absorbance features resembling those of a flavosemiquinone in the oxidative half-reaction of glycolate oxidase.  相似文献   

14.
The crystal structures of a soluble mutant of the flavoenzyme mandelate dehydrogenase (MDH) from Pseudomonas putida and of the substrate-reduced enzyme have been analyzed at 1.35-A resolution. The mutant (MDH-GOX2) is a fully active chimeric enzyme in which residues 177-215 of the membrane-bound MDH are replaced by residues 176-195 of glycolate oxidase from spinach. Both structures permit full tracing of the polypeptide backbone chain from residues 4-356, including a 4-residue segment that was disordered in an earlier study of the oxidized protein at 2.15 A resolution. The structures of MDH-GOX2 in the oxidized and reduced states are virtually identical with only a slight increase in the bending angle of the flavin ring upon reduction. The only other structural changes within the protein interior are a 10 degrees rotation of an active site tyrosine side chain, the loss of an active site water, and a significant movement of six other water molecules in the active site by 0.45 to 0.78 A. Consistent with solution studies, there is no apparent binding of either the substrate, mandelate, or the oxidation product, benzoylformate, to the reduced enzyme. The observed structural changes upon enzyme reduction have been interpreted as a rearrangement of the hydrogen bonding pattern within the active site that results from binding of a proton to the N-5 position of the anionic hydroquinone form of the reduced flavin prosthetic group. Implications for the low oxidase activity of the reduced enzyme are also discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Glycolate oxidase (E.C. 1.1.3.1) was purified from spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea). The molecular weight of the native protein was determined by sucrose density gradient centrifugation to be 290,000 daltons (13S), whereas that of the monomeric form was 37,000 daltons. The quaternary structure of the holoenzyme is likely to be octameric, analogous to pumpkin cotyledon glycolate oxidase [Nishimura et al, 1982]. The subcellular localization of the enzyme was studied using linear sucrose density gradient centrifugation, and it was found that glycolate oxidase activity is detectable in both leaf peroxisomal and supernatant fractions, but not in chloroplasts and mitochondria; the activity distribution pattern is essentially similar to that for catalase, a known leaf peroxisomal enzyme. Ouchterlony double diffusion and immunotitration analyses, demontrated that the rabbit antiserum against purified spinach leaf glycolate oxidase cross-reacted, identically, with the enzyme molecules present in two different subcellular fractions, i.e, the leaf peroxisome and supernatant fractions. It is thus concluded that the enzyme present in the supernatant is due to the disruption of leaf peroxisomes during the isolation, and hence glycolate oxidase is exclusively localized in leaf peroxisomes in spinach leaves.  相似文献   

16.
Glycolate oxidase (E.C. 1.1.3.1) was purified from spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea). The molecular weight of the native protein was determined by sucrose density gradient centrifugation to be 290,000 daltons (13S), whereas that of the monomeric form was 37,000 daltons. The quaternary structure of the holoenzyme is likely to be octameric, analogous to pumpkin cotyledon glycolate oxidase [Nishimura et al, 1982]. The subcellular localization of the enzyme was studied using linear sucrose density gradient centrifugation, and it was found that glycolate oxidase activity is detectable in both leaf peroxisomal and supernatant fractions, but not in chloroplasts and mitochondria; the activity distribution pattern is essentially similar to that for catalase, a known leaf peroxisomal enzyme. Ouchterlony double diffusion and immunotitration analyses, demonstrated that the rabbit antiserum against purified spinach leaf glycolate oxidase cross-reacted, identically, with the enzyme molecules present in two different subcellular fractions, i.e, the leaf peroxisome and supernatant fractions. It is thus concluded that the enzyme present in the supernatant is due to the disruption of leaf peroxisomes during the isolation, and hence glycolate oxidase is exclusively localized in leaf peroxisomes in spinach leaves.  相似文献   

17.
植物中草酸积累与光呼吸乙醇酸代谢的关系   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:6  
对几种C3 和C4 植物中草酸含量及相应的乙醇酸氧化酶活性测定结果表明 :叶片光呼吸强度及其关键酶活性大小与草酸积累量没有相关性 ;植物根中均能积累草酸 ,但未测出乙醇酸氧化酶活性。烟草根、叶中的草酸含量在不同生长时期差异明显 ,且二者呈极显著正相关 (y =2 .5 6 5lnx 2 .137,r =0 .749,P <0 .0 0 1) ,说明根中草酸可能来自叶片。氧化乙醇酸的酶的活性与氧化乙醛酸的酶的活性呈极显著线性正相关 (y =0 .2 41x 0 .0 0 6 ,r=0 .96 7,P <0 .0 0 0 1) ,进一步证实是乙醇酸氧化酶催化了两种底物的反应。烟草在不同生长期叶片中草酸总含量变化与相应的乙醇酸氧化酶活性变化亦没有相关性 ;低磷胁迫可显著诱导烟草根叶中的草酸形成和分泌 ,但并未影响乙醇酸氧化酶活性 ,进一步证明草酸积累与该酶活性大小无关  相似文献   

18.
从菠菜中提纯了乙醇酸氧化酶并制备其抗体,经免疫双扩散、Westernblot和Northernblot证实水稻和豌豆黄化苗中不存在乙醇酸氧化酶。在黑暗中,底物可促进该酶基因的表达,而在黄化苗光照初期,推测光可能是不经过底物促进该酶基因的表达。  相似文献   

19.
An enzymatic assay was developed for the spectrophotometric determination of glycolate in urine and plasma. Glycolate was first converted to glyoxylate with glycolate oxidase, and the glyoxylate formed was condensed with phenylhydrazine. The glyoxylate phenylhydrazone formed was then oxidized with K(3)Fe(CN)(6) in the presence of excess phenylhydrazine, and A(515) of the resulting 1, 5-diphenylformazan was measured. Since glycolate oxidase also acts on glyoxylate and L-lactate, the incubation of samples with glycolate oxidase was carried out in 120-170 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.3) to obtain glyoxylate as its adduct with Tris. The pyruvate formed from lactate was removed by subsequent brief incubation with alanine aminotransferase in the presence of L-glutamate, and alpha-ketoglutarate formed was converted back to L-glutamate by glutamate dehydrogenase and an NADPH generating system. Thus the specificity of the assay relies principally on the substrate specificity of glycolate oxidase, and high sensitivity is provided by the high absorbance of 1,5-diphenylformazan at 515-520 nm. Plasma was deproteinized with perchloric acid, and then neutralized with KOH. Plasma and urine samples were then incubated with approximately 5 mM phenylhydrazine, and then treated with stearate-deactivated activated charcoal to remove endogenous keto and aldehyde acids as their phenylhydrazones. The normal plasma glycolate and urinary glycolate/creatinine ratio for adults determined by this method are approximately 8 microM and approximately 0.036, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
Glycolate oxidase that was partially purified from pea leaves was inactivated in vitro by blue light in the presence of FMN. Inactivation was greatly retarded in the absence of O2. Under aerobic conditions H2O2 was formed. The presence of catalase, GSH or dithiothreitol protected glycolate oxidase against photoinactivation. Less efficient protection was provided by ascorbate, histidine, tryptophan or EDTA. The presence of superoxide dismutase or of hydroxyl radical scavengers had no, or only minor, effects. Glutathione suppressed H2O2 accumulation and was oxidized in the presence of glycolate oxidase in blue light. Glycolate oxidase was also inactivated in the presence of a superoxide-generating system or by H2O2 in darkness. In intact leaves photoinactivation of glycolate oxidase was not observed. However, when catalase was inactivated by the application of 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole or depleted by prolonged exposure to cycloheximide a strong photoinactivation of glycolate oxidase was also seen in leaves. In vivo blue and red light were similarly effective. Furthermore, glycolate oxidase was photoinactivated in leaves when the endogenous GSH was depleted by the application of buthionine sulfoximine. Both catalase and antioxidants, in particular GSH, appear to be essential for the protection of glycolate oxidase in the peroxisomes in vivo.  相似文献   

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