首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 546 毫秒
1.
Iron release from ovotransferrin in acidic media (3 < pH < 6) occurs in at least six kinetic steps. The first is a very fast (相似文献   

2.
The phosphorus atoms of NAD+ bound within the active site of UDP-galactose 4-epimerase from Escherichia coli exhibit two NMR signals, one at delta = -9.60 +/- 0.05 ppm and one at delta = -12.15 +/- 0.01 ppm (mean +/- standard deviation of four experiments) relative to 85% H3PO4 as an external standard. Titration of epimerase.NAD+ with UMP causes a UMP-dependent alteration in the chemical shifts of the resulting exchange-averaged spectra, which extrapolate to delta = -10.51 ppm and delta = -11.06 ppm, respectively, for the fully liganded enzyme, with an interconversion rate between epimerase.NAD+ and epimerase.NAD+.UMP of at least 490 s-1. Conversely, the binding of 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate, which is competitive with UMP, causes a significant sharpening of the epimerase.NAD+ resonances but very little alteration in their chemical shifts, to delta = -9.38 ppm and delta = -12.16 ppm, respectively. UMP-dependent reductive inactivation by glucose results in the convergence of the two resonances into a single signal of delta = -10.57 ppm, with an off-rate constant for UMP dissociation from the epimerase.NADH.UMP complex estimated at 8 s-1. Reductive inactivation by borohydride under anaerobic conditions yields a single, broad resonance centered at about delta = -10.2 ppm. The data are consistent with, and may reflect, the activation of NAD+ via a protein conformational change, which is known from chemical studies to be driven by uridine nucleotide binding. Incubation of epimerase.NAD+ with UMP in the absence of additional reducing agents causes a very slow reductive inactivation of the enzyme with an apparent pseudo-first-order rate constant of 0.013 +/- 0.001 h-1, which appears to be associated with liberation of inorganic phosphate from UMP.  相似文献   

3.
G Wang  M Kawai 《Biophysical journal》1996,71(3):1450-1461
The elementary steps surrounding the nucleotide binding step in the cross-bridge cycle were investigated with sinusoidal analysis in rabbit soleus slow-twitch muscle fibers. The single-fiber preparations were activated at pCa 4.40, ionic strength 180 mM, 20 degrees C, and the effects of MgATP (S) and MgADP (D) concentrations on three exponential processes B, C, and D were studied. Our results demonstrate that all apparent (measured) rate constants increased and saturated hyperbolically as the MgATP concentration was increased. These results are consistent with the following cross-bridge scheme: [cross-bridge scheme: see text] where A = actin, M = myosin, S = MgATP, and D = MgADP. AM+S is a collision complex, and AM*S is its isomerized form. From our studies, we obtained K0 = 18 +/- 4 mM-1 (MgADP association constant, N = 7, average +/- sem), K1a = 1.2 +/- 0.3 mM-1 (MgATP association constant, N = 8 hereafter), k1b = 90 +/- 20 s-1 (rate constant of ATP isomerization), k-1b = 100 +/- 9 s-1 (rate constant of reverse isomerization), K1b = 1.0 +/- 0.2 (equilibrium constant of isomerization), k2 = 21 +/- 3 s-1 (rate constant of cross-bridge detachment), k-2 = 14.1 +/- 1.0 s-1 (rate constant of reversal of detachment), and K2 = 1.6 +/- 0.3 (equilibrium constant of detachment). K0 is 8 times and K1a is 2.2 times those in rabbit psoas, indicating that nucleotides bind to cross-bridges more tightly in soleus slow-twitch muscle fibers than in psoas fast-twitch muscle fibers. These results indicate that cross-bridges of slow-twitch fibers are more resistant to ATP depletion than those of fast-twitch fibers. The rate constants of ATP isomerization and cross-bridge detachment steps are, in general, one-tenth to one-thirtieth of those in psoas.  相似文献   

4.
The hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate catalysed by cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) from sheep liver was studied by steady-state and transient kinetic techniques. NAD+ and NADH stimulated the steady-state rate of ester hydrolysis at concentrations expected on the basis of their Michaelis constants from the dehydrogenase reaction. At higher concentrations of the coenzymes, both NAD+ and NADH inhibited the reaction competitively with respect to 4-nitrophenyl acetate, with inhibition constants of 104 and 197 micron respectively. Propionaldehyde and chloral hydrate are competitive inhibitors of the esterase reaction. A burst in the production of 4-nitrophenoxide ion was observed, with a rate constant of 12 +/- 2s-1 and a burst amplitude that was 30% of that expected on the basis of the known NADH-binding site concentration. The rate-limiting step for the esterase reaction occurs after the formation of 4-nitrophenoxide ion. Arguments are presented for the existence of distinct ester- and aldehyde-binding sites.  相似文献   

5.
The photophysics of the complex forming reaction of Ca2+ and Fura-2 are investigated using steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence measurements. The fluorescence decay traces were analyzed with global compartmental analysis yielding the following values for the rate constants at room temperature in aqueous solution with BAPTA as Ca2+ buffer: k01 = 1.2 x 10(9)s-1, k21 = 1.0 x 10(11) M-1 s-1, k02 = 5.5 x 10(8) s-1, k12 = 2.2 x 10(7) s-1, and with EGTA as Ca2+ buffer: k01 = 1.4 x 10(9) s-1, k21 = 5.0 x 10(10) M-1 s-1, k02 = 5.5 x 10(8) s-1, k12 = 3.2 x 10(7) s-1. k01 and k02 denote the respective deactivation rate constants of the Ca2+ free and bound forms of Fura-2 in the excited state. k21 represents the second-order rate constant of binding of Ca2+ and Fura-2 in the excited state, whereas k12 is the first-order rate constant of dissociation of the excited Ca2+:Fura-2 complex. The ionic strength of the solution was shown not to influence the recovered values of the rate constants. From the estimated values of k12 and k21, the dissociation constant K*d in the excited state was calculated. It was found that in EGTA Ca2+ buffer pK*d (3.2) is smaller than pKd (6.9) and that there is negligible interference of the excited-state reaction with the determination of Kd and [Ca2+] from fluorimetric titration curves. Hence, Fura-2 can be safely used as an Ca2+ indicator. From the obtained fluorescence decay parameters and the steady-state excitation spectra, the species-associated excitation spectra of the Ca2+ free and bound forms of Fura-2 were calculated at intermediate Ca2+ concentrations.  相似文献   

6.
Photophysics of the fluorescent K+ indicator PBFI.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The fluorescent indicator PBFI is widely used for the determination of intracellular concentrations of K+. To investigate the binding reaction of K+ to PBFI in the ground and excited states, steady-state and time-resolved measurements were performed. The fluorescence decay surface was analyzed with global compartmental analysis yielding the following values for the rate constants at room temperature in aqueous solution at pH 7.2: k01 = 1.1 x 10(9) s-1, k21 = 2.7 x 10(8) M-1s-1, k02 = 1.8 x 10(9) s-1, and k12 = 1.4 x 10(9) s-1. k01 and k02 denote the respective deactivation rate constants of the K+ free and bound forms of PBFI in the excited state. k21 represents the second-order rate constant of binding of K+ to the indicator in the excited state whereas k12 is the first-order rate constant of dissociation of the excited K(+)-PBFI complex. From the estimated values of k12 and k21, the dissociation constant Kd* in the excited state was calculated. It was found that pKd* (-0.7) is smaller than pKd (2.2). The effect of the excited-state reaction can be neglected in the determination of Kd and/or the K+ concentration. Therefore, intracellular K+ concentrations can be accurately determined from fluorimetric measurements by using PBFI as K+ indicator.  相似文献   

7.
5-Ethylphenazine-poly(ethylene glycol)-NAD+ conjugate (EP+-PEG-NAD+) was prepared by linking 1-(3-carboxypropyloxy)-5-ethylphenazine (I) to poly(ethylene glycol)-bound NAD+ (PEG-NAD+) and its kinetic properties were studied. As a reference compound, poly(ethylene glycol)-bound 5-ethylphenazine derivative (III) was also prepared and the effects of poly(ethylene glycol) on the reaction rate of the 5-ethylphenazine moiety with NADH was investigated. The second-order rate constant, k1, of the reaction of III with NADH is 2.78 mM-1 s-1 and is about 1.7 times that of 1-(3-ethoxycarbonylpropyloxy)-5-ethylphenazine (II) with NADH. A similar effect of the attached poly(ethylene glycol) was observed for the reaction of PEG-NADH with I or II. The second-order rate constants, k2 and k3, of the reactions of the reduced form of III with oxygen and with 3-(4',5'-dimethylthiazole-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium ion, respectively, were k2 = 1.22 mM-1 s-1 and k3 = 32 mM-1 s-1; the k2 value is not changed but the k3 value is decreased by the attachment of the polymer. EP+-PEG-NAD+ works as a unique catalyst having an intramolecular reaction step within its turnover cycle in a coupled multi-step reaction system containing malate dehydrogenase, malate, EP+-PEG-NAD+, a tetrazolium salt and oxygen. The first-order rate constant, k4, of the intramolecular reaction was 1.1 s-1. The effects of the covalent linking of the 5-ethylphenazine and the NAD+ moieties were estimated by comparing the value of k4 with that of k1 for the reaction of III with NADH; the effective concentration of the NADH moiety for the 5-ethylphenazine moiety on the same EP+-PEG-NADH molecule (or vice versa) was calculated to be 0.40 mM from the ratio of k4/k1. The values of the rate constants in the coupled multi-step reaction system enable us to understand the dynamic features of the system and the characteristics of EP+-PEG-NAD+ as a catalyst are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The transient state kinetics of the oxidation of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) by horseradish peroxidase compound I and II (HRP-I and HRP-II) was investigated as a function of pH at 25.0 degrees C in aqueous solutions of ionic strength 0.11 using both a stopped-flow apparatus and a conventional spectrophotometer. In agreement with studies using many other substrates, the pH dependence of the HRP-I-NADH reaction can be explained in terms of a single ionization of pKa = 4.7 +/- 0.5 at the active site of HRP-I. Contrary to studies with other substrates, the pH dependence of the HRP-II-NADH reaction can be interpreted in terms of a single ionization with pKa of 4.2 +/- 1.4 at the active site of HRP-II. An apparent reversibility of the HRP-II-NADH reaction was observed. Over the pH range of 4-10 the rate constant for the reaction of HRP-I with NADH varied from 2.6 X 10(5) to 5.6 X 10(2) M-1 s-1 and of HRP-II with NADH varied from 4.4 X 10(4) to 4.1 M-1 s-1. These rate constants must be taken into consideration to explain quantitatively the oxidase reaction of horseradish peroxidase with NADH.  相似文献   

9.
The sarcoplasmic calcium-binding protein (SCP) of the sandworm Nereis possesses three Ca2(+)-Mg2+ sites but no Ca2(+)-specific site. Binding of Mg2+, but not of Ca2+, displays a marked positive cooperativity. The apparent cooperativity of Ca2+ binding in the presence of Mg2+ results from the allostery in Mg2+ dissociation. Binding of the first Ca2+ or Mg2+ induces all the conformational change, monitored by Trp fluorescence. In displacement reactions the conformational changes occur in the step SCP.Mg3----SCP.Ca1Mg2. Stopped-flow experiments indicate that Trp fluorescence changes upon Ca2(+)-binding are instantaneous whereas Mg2(+)-binding involves a fast pre-equilibrium (Keq = 28 M-1), followed by two slow consecutive conformational changes with k1 = 13.5 s-1 and k2 = 0.21 s-1. The fluorescence change after dissociation of Ca2+ from SCP is monophasic with k = 0.02 s-1; that after Mg2+ dissociation is biphasic with k1 = 0.8 s-1 and k2 = 0.1 s-1. Trp life time measurements also indicate that Ca2(+)- and Mg2(+)-induced conformational changes are completely different. Displacement of bound Ca2+ by Mg2+ can be described by two consecutive reactions in which the first (without fluorescence change) corresponds to the dissociation of the last Ca2+ (k1 = 2.4 s-1) and the second (k2 = 0.45 s-1) to the final conformational change observed upon direct Mg2+ binding. Displacement of bound Mg2+ by Ca2+ follows the kinetic scheme of simple competition; the conformational rate constant approaches asymptotically (up to the limit of 129 s-1) the dissociation rate of Mg2+ as the concentration of Ca2+ increases. In summary, after fast dissociation of Ca2+ or Mg2+, Nereis SCP slowly converts to the metal-free configuration, but in Ca2(+)-Mg2+ exchange reactions, the conformational changes are nearly as fast as the cation dissociation reactions.  相似文献   

10.
The binding of NADH to porcine mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase in phosphate buffer at pH 7.5 has been studied by equilibrium and kinetic methods. Hyperbolic binding was obtained by fluorimetric titration of enzyme with NADH, in the presence or absence of hydroxymalonate. Identical results were obtained for titrations of NADH with enzyme in the presence or absence of hydroxymalonate, measured either by fluorescence emission intensity or by the product of intensity and anisotropy. The equilibrium constant for NADH dissociation was 3.8 +/- 0.2 micrometers, over a 23-fold range of enzyme concentration, and the value in the presence of saturating hydroxymalonate was 0.33 +/- 0.02 micrometer over a 10-fold range of enzyme concentration. The rate constant for NADH binding to the enzyme in the presence of hydroxymalonate was 3.6 X 10(7) M-1 s-1, while the value for dissociation from the ternary complex was 30 +/- 1 s-1. No limiting binding rate was obtained at pseudo-first order rate constants as high as 200 s-1, and the rate curve for dissociation was a single exponential for at least 98% of the amplitude. In addition to demonstrating that the binding sites are independent and indistinguishable, the absence of effects of enzyme concentration on the KD value indicates that NADH binds with equal affinity to monomeric and dimeric enzyme forms.  相似文献   

11.
The complete time course of the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate catalyzed by the low molecular weight (acid) phosphotyrosyl protein phosphatase from bovine heart was elucidated and analyzed in detail. Burst titration kinetics were demonstrated for the first time with this class of enzyme. At pH 7.0, 4.5 degrees C, a transient pre-steady-state "burst" of p-nitrophenol was formed with a rate constant of 48 s-1. The burst was effectively stoichiometric and corresponded to a single enzyme active site/molecule. The burst was followed by a slow steady-state turnover of the phosphoenzyme intermediate with a rate constant of 1.2 s-1. Product inhibition studies indicated an ordered uni-bi kinetic scheme for the hydrolysis. Partition experiments conducted for several substrates revealed a constant product ratio. Vmax was constant for these substrates, and the overall rate of hydrolysis was increased greatly in the presence of alcohol acceptors. An enzyme-catalyzed 18O exchange between inorganic phosphate and water was detected and occurred with kcat = 4.47 x 10(-3) s-1 at pH 5.0, 37 degrees C. These results were all consistent with the existence of a phosphoenzyme intermediate in the catalytic pathway and with the breakdown of the intermediate being the rate-limiting step. The true Michaelis binding constant Ks = 6.0 mM, the apparent Km = 0.38 mM, and the rate constants for phosphorylation (k2 = 540 s-1) and dephosphorylation (k3 = 36.5 s-1) were determined under steady-state conditions with p-nitrophenyl phosphate at pH 5.0 and 37 degrees C in the presence of phosphate acceptors. The energies of activation for the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis at pH 5.0 and 7.0 were 13.6 and 14.1 kcal/mol, respectively. The activation energy for the enzyme-catalyzed medium 18O exchange between phosphate and water was 20.2 kcal/mol. Using the available equilibrium and rate constants, an energetic diagram was constructed for the enzyme-catalyzed reaction.  相似文献   

12.
Kinetic studies were carried out on mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) isolated from sheep liver. Steady-state studies over a wide range of acetaldehyde concentrations gave a non-linear double-reciprocal plot. The dissociation of NADH from the enzyme was a biphasic process with decay constants 0.6s-1 and 0.09s-1. Pre-steady-state kinetic data with propionaldehyde as substrate could be fitted by using the same burst rate constant (12 +/- 3s-1) over a wide range of propionaldehyde concentrations. The quenching of protein fluorescence on the binding of NAD+ to the enzyme was used to estimate apparent rate constants for binding (2 X 10(4) litre.mol-1.s-1) and dissociation (4s-1). The kinetic properties of the mitochondrial enzyme, compared with those reported for the cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase from sheep liver, show significant differences, which may be important in the oxidation of aldehydes in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Both cyclooxygenase and peroxidase reactions of prostaglandin H synthase were studied in the presence and absence of diethyldithiocarbamate and glycerol at 4 degrees C in phosphate buffer (pH 8.0). Diethyldithiocarbamate reacts with the high oxidation state intermediates of prostaglandin H synthase; it protects the enzyme from bleaching and loss of activity by its ability to act as a reducing agent. For the reaction of diethyldithiocarbamate with compound I, the second-order rate constant k2,app, was found to fall within the range of 5.8 x 10(6) +/- 0.4 x 10(6) M-1.s-1 less than k2,app less than 1.8 x 10(7) +/- 0.1 x 10(7) M-1.s-1. The reaction of diethyldithiocarbamate with compound II showed saturation behavior suggesting enzyme-substrate complex formation, with kcat = 22 +/- 3 s-1, Km = 67 +/- 10 microM, and the second-order rate constant k3,app = 2.0 x 10(5) +/- 0.2 x 10(5) M-1.s-1. In the presence of both diethyldithiocarbamate and 30% glycerol, the parameters for compound II are kcat = 8.8 +/- 0.5 s-1, Km = 49 +/- 7 microM, and k3,app = 1.03 x 10(5) +/- 0.07 x 10(5) M-1.s-1. The spontaneous decay rate constants of compounds I and II (in the absence of diethyldithiocarbamate) are 83 +/- 5 and 0.52 +/- 0.05 s-1, respectively, in the absence of glycerol; in the presence of 30% glycerol they are 78 +/- 5 and 0.33 +/- 0.02 s-1, respectively. Neither cyclooxygenase activity nor the rate constant for compound I formation using 5-phenyl-4-pentenyl-1-hydroperoxide is altered by the presence of diethyldithiocarbamate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Acylation of the aldehyde dehydrogenase.NADH complex by acetic anhydride leads to the production of acetaldehyde and NAD+. By monitoring changes in nucleotide fluorescence, the rate constant for acylation of the active site of the *enzyme.NADH complex was found to be 11 +/- 3 s-1. The rate of acylation by acetic anhydride at the group that binds aldehydes on the oxidative pathway is clearly rapid enough to maintain significant steady-state concentrations of the required active-site-acylated *enzyme.NADH intermediate despite the rapid hydrolysis of this *enzyme.acyl.NADH intermediate (5-10 s-1) [Blackwell, Motion, MacGibbon, Hardman & Buckley (1987) Biochem. J. 242, 803-808]. Hence reversal of the normal oxidative pathway can occur. However, although acylation of the aldehyde dehydrogenase.NADH complex by 4-nitrophenyl acetate also occurs rapidly with a rate constant of 10.9 +/- 0.6 s-1, even under the most extreme trapping conditions only very small amounts of acetaldehyde are detected [Loomes & Kitson (1986) Biochem. J. 235, 617-619]. Furthermore enzyme-catalysed hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate is limited by the rate of deacylation of a group on the enzyme (0.4 s-1), which is an order of magnitude less than deacylation of the group at the active site (5-10 s-1). It is concluded that the enzyme-catalysed 4-nitrophenyl ester hydrolysis involves a group on the enzyme that is different from the active-site group that binds aldehydes on the normal oxidative pathway.  相似文献   

15.
J Tsuzuki  J A Kiger 《Biochemistry》1978,17(15):2961-2970
Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and its regulatory subunit were isolated from Drosophila melanogaster embryos. The profiles of cyclic AMP binding by these proteins were significantly different. In order to explain such a difference and to find the mode of enzyme activation by cyclic AMP, a kinetic study of cyclic AMP binding was carried out. First, the association rate constant k1 and dissociation rate constant k-1 in the cyclic AMP-regulatory subunit interaction at 0 degrees C were estimated to be 2.3 X 10(6)M-1s-1 and 1.1 X 10(-3)s-1, respectively. Secondly, the three possible modes of enzyme activation by cyclic AMP were mathematically considered and could be described by a unique formula: r=APt + BQt (A + B=1) in which the parameters A, B, P, and Q are equivalent to rate constants in the sense that the rate constants are simply expressed by these parameters. Thirdly, the values of the parameters and subsequently the values of rate constants involved in the possible mechanisms were evaluated using a curve-fitting technique and compared with experimental observation. It was then found that the following mechanism was the only one which fitted the experimental observations. Namely, RC + L k3 equilibrium k-3 LRC k4 equilibrium k-4 RL + C where R, C, and L represent the regulatory and catalytic subunits and cyclic AMP as a ligand. Thus, our results indicate that in the presence of cyclic AMP the active enzyme (C) is released from a ternary intermediate which is the primary product of the cyclic AMP-holoenzyme interaction. The estimated values of the rate constants are: k3=3.5 X 10(6)M-1s-1;k-3=7.3 X 10(-1)s-1;and k4=3.8 X 10(-2)s. These estimates indicate that the reaction LRC leads to RL + C is relatively slow and limits the rate of the overall reaction. By comparing k-3 and k4, it is apparent that a large part of newly formed ternary intermediate reverts to the holoenzyme.  相似文献   

16.
The process of phosphate dissociation during the muscle cross-bridge cycle has been investigated by photoliberation of inorganic phosphate (Pi) within skinned fibers of rabbit psoas muscle. This permitted a test of the idea that Ca2+ controls muscle contraction by regulating the Pi release step of the cycle. Photoliberation of Pi from structurally distinct "caged" Pi precursors initiated a rapid tension decline of up to 12% of active tension, and this was followed by a slower tension decline. The apparent rate constant of the fast phase, kPi, depended on both [Pi] and [Ca2+], whereas the slow phase generally occurred at 2-4 s-1. At maximal Ca2+, kPi increased in a nonlinear manner from 43 +/- 2 s-1 to 118 +/- 7 s-1, as Pi was raised from 0.9 to 12 mM. This was analyzed in terms of a three-state kinetic model in which a force-generating transition is coupled to Pi dissociation from the cross-bridge. As Ca(2+)-activated tension was reduced from maximal (Pmax) to 0.1 Pmax, (i) kPi decreased by up to 2.5-fold, (ii) the relative amplitude of the rapid phase increased 2-fold, and (iii) the relative amplitude of the slow phase increased about 6-fold. Changes in the rapid phase are compatible with Ca2+ influencing an apparent equilibrium constant for the force-generating transition. By comparison, kPi was faster than the rate constant of tension redevelopment, ktr, and was influenced less by Ca2+. Ca2+ effects on the caged Pi transient cannot account for the large effects of Ca2+ on actomyosin ATPase rates or cross-bridge cycling kinetics but may be a manifestation of reciprocal interactions between the thin filament and force-generating cross-bridges, and may represent Ca2+ regulation of the distribution of cross-bridges between non-force-and force-generating states.  相似文献   

17.
The reductant dependence of iron mobilization from isolated rabbit reticulocyte endosomes containing diferric transferrin is reported. The kinetic effects of acidification by a H(+)-ATPase are eliminated by incubating the endosomes at pH 6.0 in the presence of 15 microM FCCP to acidify the intravesicular milieu and to dissociate 59Fe(III) from transferrin. In the absence of reductants, iron is not released from the vesicles, and iron leakage is negligible. The second-order dependence of rate constants and amounts of 59Fe mobilized from endosomes using ascorbate, ferrocyanide, or NADH are consistent with reversible mechanisms. The estimated apparent first-order rate constant for mobilization by ascorbate is (2.7 +/- 0.4) x 10(-3) s-1 in contrast to (3.2 +/- 0.1) x 10(-4) s-1 for NADH and (3.5 +/- 0.6) x 10(-4) s-1 for ferrocyanide. These results support models where multiple reactions are involved in complex processes leading to iron transfer and membrane translocation. A type II NADH dehydrogenase (diaphorase) is present on the endosome outer membrane. The kinetics of extravesicular ferricyanide reduction indicate a bimolecular-bimolecular steady-state mechanism with substrate inhibition. Ferricyanide inhibition of 59Fe mobilization is not detected. Significant differences between mobilization and ferricyanide reduction kinetics indicate that the diaphorase is not involved in 59Fe(III) reduction. Sequential additions of NADH followed by ascorbate or vice versa indicate a minimum of two sites of 59Fe(III) residence; one site available to reducing equivalents from ascorbate and a different site available to NADH. Sequential additions using ferrocyanide and the other reductants suggest interactions among sites available for reduction. Inhibition of ascorbate-mediated mobilization by DCCD and enhancement of ferrocyanide and NADH-mediated mobilization suggest a role for a moiety with characteristics of a proton pore similar to that of the H(+)-ATPase. These data provide significant constraints on models of iron reduction, translocation, and mobilization by endocytic vesicles.  相似文献   

18.
Malic enzyme of pigeon liver binds NADPH at four equivalent enzyme sites and binds Mn2+ and malate each at two sets of "tight" and "weak" sites with negative cooperativity [Pry, T. A., & Hsu, R. Y. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 951-962]. Stopped-flow studies on the displacement of NADPH from the malate-enzyme complexes E4-NADPH4, E4-Mn2(2+)-NADPH4, E4-Mn2(2+)-NADPH4-dimalate, and E4-Mn2(2+)-NADPH4-tetramalate by large excess NADP+ or its analogue phosphoadenosine(2')diphospho(5')ribose show that NADPH dissociates from the binary complex rapidly with a first-order rate constant of 427 s-1. Dissociation from the ternary E4-Mn2(2+)-NADPH4 complex containing two tightly bound Mn2+ ions can be described by a single first-order process with a rate constant of 135 s-1, or more satisfactorily by two simultaneous first-order processes attributable to the reactions of Mn2+-deficient (k congruent to 427 s-1) and Mn2+-liganded (k = 96 s-1) subunits. The latter equals twice the maximum steady-state turnover rate of 53.2 + 3.0 s-1 assigned to dissociation of the reduced nucleotide from transient E-Mn2+-NADPH, and this 2:1 ratio strongly supports our proposed "half-of-the-sites" model [Hsu, R. Y., & Pry, T. A. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 962-968]. Dissociation from the E4-Mn2(2+)-NADPH4-dimalate complex (k = 100 s-1) follows only the slower process, suggesting that occupancy of malate at two sites tightens enzyme-bound NADPH on the adjacent sites. Binding of malate at two additional weak sites yields E4-Mn2(2+)-NADPH4-tetramalate and a NADPH dissociation rate constant of 2.69 s-1. The 97% decrease in NADPH dissociation parallels the observed 93% maximal inhibition by malate and is the cause of substrate inhibition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Nidetzky B  Klimacek M  Mayr P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(34):10371-10381
Microbial xylose reductase, a representative aldo-keto reductase of primary sugar metabolism, catalyzes the NAD(P)H-dependent reduction of D-xylose with a turnover number approximately 100 times that of human aldose reductase for the same reaction. To determine the mechanistic basis for that physiologically relevant difference and pinpoint features that are unique to the microbial enzyme among other aldo/keto reductases, we carried out stopped-flow studies with wild-type xylose reductase from the yeast Candida tenuis. Analysis of transient kinetic data for binding of NAD(+) and NADH, and reduction of D-xylose and oxidation of xylitol at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C provided estimates of rate constants for the following mechanism: E + NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH + D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NADH.D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+).xylitol right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E + NAD(+). The net rate constant of dissociation of NAD(+) is approximately 90% rate limiting for k(cat) of D-xylose reduction. It is controlled by the conformational change which precedes nucleotide release and whose rate constant of 40 s(-)(1) is 200 times that of completely rate-limiting E.NADP(+) --> E.NADP(+) step in aldehyde reduction catalyzed by human aldose reductase [Grimshaw, C. E., et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 14356-14365]. Hydride transfer from NADH occurs with a rate constant of approximately 170 s(-1). In reverse reaction, the E.NADH --> E.NADH step takes place with a rate constant of 15 s(-1), and the rate constant of ternary-complex interconversion (3.8 s(-1)) largely determines xylitol turnover (0.9 s(-1)). The bound-state equilibrium constant for C. tenuis xylose reductase is estimated to be approximately 45 (=170/3.8), thus greatly favoring aldehyde reduction. Formation of productive complexes, E.NAD(+) and E.NADH, leads to a 7- and 9-fold decrease of dissociation constants of initial binary complexes, respectively, demonstrating that 12-fold differential binding of NADH (K(i) = 16 microM) vs NAD(+) (K(i) = 195 microM) chiefly reflects difference in stabilities of E.NADH and E.NAD(+). Primary deuterium isotope effects on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(xylose) were, respectively, 1.55 +/- 0.09 and 2.09 +/- 0.31 in H(2)O, and 1.26 +/- 0.06 and 1.58 +/- 0.17 in D(2)O. No deuterium solvent isotope effect on k(cat)/K(xylose) was observed. When deuteration of coenzyme selectively slowed the hydride transfer step, (D)()2(O)(k(cat)/K(xylose)) was inverse (0.89 +/- 0.14). The isotope effect data suggest a chemical mechanism of carbonyl reduction by xylose reductase in which transfer of hydride ion is a partially rate-limiting step and precedes the proton-transfer step.  相似文献   

20.
The reaction of myeloperoxidase compound I (MPO-I) with chloride ion is widely assumed to produce the bacterial killing agent after phagocytosis. Two values of the rate constant for this important reaction have been published previously: 4.7 x 106 M-1.s-1 measured at 25 degrees C [Marquez, L.A. and Dunford, H.B. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 30434-30440], and 2.5 x 104 M-1.s-1 at 15 degrees C [Furtmüller, P.G., Burner, U. & Obinger, C. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 17923-17930]. The present paper is the result of a collaboration of the two groups to resolve the discrepancy in the rate constants. It was found that the rate constant for the reaction of compound I, generated from myeloperoxidase (MPO) and excess hydrogen peroxide with chloride, decreased with increasing chloride concentration. The rate constant published in 1995 was measured over a lower chloride concentration range; the 1998 rate constant at a higher range. Therefore the observed conversion of compound I to native enzyme in the presence of hydrogen peroxide and chloride ion cannot be attributed solely to the single elementary reaction MPO-I + Cl- --> MPO + HOCl. The simplest mechanism for the overall reaction which fit the experimental data is the following: MPO+H2O2 ⇄k-1k1 MPO-I+H2O MPO-I+Cl- ⇄k-2k2 MPO-I-Cl- MPO-I-Cl- -->k3 MPO+HOCl where MPO-I-Cl- is a chlorinating intermediate. We can now say that the 1995 rate constant is k2 and the corresponding reaction is rate-controlling at low [Cl-]. At high [Cl-], the reaction with rate constant k3 is rate controlling. The 1998 rate constant for high [Cl-] is a composite rate constant, approximated by k2k3/k-2. Values of k1 and k-1 are known from the literature. Results of this study yielded k2 = 2.2 x 106 M-1.s-1, k-2 = 1.9 x 105 s-1 and k3 = 5.2 x 104 s-1. Essentially identical results were obtained using human myeloperoxidase and beef spleen myeloperoxidase.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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