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1.
For the application of immobilized enzymes, the influence of immobilization on the activity of the enzyme should be Known. This influence can be obtained by determining the intrinsic kinetic parameters of the immobilized enzyme, and by comparing them with the kinetic parameters of the suspended enzyme. This article deals with the determination of the intrinsic kinetic parameters of an agarose-gel bead immobilized oxygen-consuming enzyme: L-lactate 2-monooxygenase. The reaction rate of the enzyme can be described by Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Batch conversion experiments using a biological oxygen monitor, as well as steady-state profile measurements within the biocatalyst particles using an oxygen microsensor, were performed. Two different mathematical methods were used for the batch conversion experiments, both assuming a pseudosteady-state situation with respect to the shape of the profile inside the bead. One of the methods used an approximate relation for the effectiveness factor for Michaelis-Menten kinetics which interpolates between the analytical solutions for zero- and first-order kinetics. The other mathematical method was based on a numerical solution and combined a mass balance over the reactor with a mass balance over the bead. The main difference in the application of the two methods is the computer calculation time; the completely numerical calculation procedure was about 20 times slower than the other calculation procedure.The intrinsic kinetic parameters resulting from both experimental methods were compared to check the reliability of the methods. There was no significant difference in the intrinsic kinetic parameters obtained from the two experimental methods. By comparison of the kinetic parameters for the suspended enzyme with the intrinsic kinetic parameters for the immobilized enzyme, it appeared that immobilization caused a decrease in the value of V(m) by a factor of 2, but there was no significant difference in the values obtained for K(m).  相似文献   

2.
When it is assumed that organic solvents do not interfere with the binding process nor with the catalytic mechanism, the contribution of substrate-solvent interactions to enzyme kinetics can be accounted for by just replacing substrate concentrations in the equations by thermodynamic activities. It appears from the transformation that only the affinity parameters (K(m), K(sp)) are affected by this. Thus, in theory, the values of these corrected, intrinsic parameters (K(m) (int), k(sp) (int)) and the maximal rate (V(1)) should be equal for all media. This was tested for hydrolysis, transesterification, and esterification reactions catalyzed by pig pancreas lipase and Pseudomonas cepacia lipase in various organic solvents. Correction was carried out via experimentally determined activity coefficients for the substrates in these solvents or, if not feasible, from values in data bases. However, although the kinetic performances of each enzyme in the solvents became much more similar after correction, differences still remained. Analysis of the enzyme suspensions revealed massive particles, which explains the low activity of enzymes in organic solvents. However, no correlation was found between estimates of the amount of catalytically available enzyme (present at the surface of suspended particles or immobilized on beads) and the maximal rates observed. Moreover, the solvents had similar effects on the intrinsic parameters of suspended and immobilized enzyme. The possible causes for the effects of the solvents on the catalytic performance of the enzymes, remaining after correction for solvent-substrate interactions and the amount of participating enzyme, are discussed with respect to the premises on which the correction method is based. (c) 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
An effective carrier matrix for diastase alpha amylase immobilization has been fabricated by gum acacia-gelatin dual templated polymerization of tetramethoxysilane. Silver nanoparticle (AgNp) doping to this hybrid could significantly enhance the shelf life of the impregnated enzyme while retaining its full bio-catalytic activity. The doped nanohybrid has been characterized as a thermally stable porous material which also showed multipeak photoluminescence under UV excitation. The immobilized diastase alpha amylase has been used to optimize the conditions for soluble starch hydrolysis in comparison to the free enzyme. The optimum pH for both immobilized and free enzyme hydrolysis was found to be same (pH=5), indicating that the immobilization made no major change in enzyme conformation. The immobilized enzyme showed good performance in wide temperature range (from 303 to 323 K), 323 K being the optimum value. The kinetic parameters for the immobilized, (K(m)=10.30 mg/mL, V(max)=4.36 μmol mL(-1)min(-1)) and free enzyme (K(m)=8.85 mg/mL, V(max)=2.81 μmol mL(-1)min(-1)) indicated that the immobilization improved the overall stability and catalytic property of the enzyme. The immobilized enzyme remained usable for repeated cycles and did not lose its activity even after 30 days storage at 40°C, while identically synthesized and stored silver undoped hybrid lost its ~31% activity in 48 h. Present study revealed the hybrids to be potentially useful for biomedical and optical applications.  相似文献   

4.
Gadda G  Fitzpatrick PF 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1400-1405
The flavoprotein nitroalkane oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of primary and secondary nitroalkanes to aldehydes and ketones, respectively, transferring electrons to oxygen to form hydrogen peroxide. The steady-state kinetic mechanism of the active flavin adenine dinucleotide-(FAD-) containing form of the enzyme has been determined with nitroethane at pH 7 to be bi-ter ping-pong, with oxygen reacting with the free reduced enzyme after release of the aldehyde product. The V(max) value is 5.5 +/- 0.3 s(-)(1) and the K(m) values for nitroethane and oxygen are 3.3 +/- 0.6 and 0.023 +/- 0.007 mM, respectively. The free reduced enzyme forms a dead-end complex with nitroethane, with a K(ai) value of 30 +/- 6 mM. Acetaldehyde and butyraldehyde are noncompetitive inhibitors versus nitroethane due to formation of a dead-end complex between the oxidized enzyme and the product. Acetaldehyde is an uncompetitive inhibitor versus oxygen, indicating that an irreversible isomerization of the free reduced enzyme occurs before the reaction with oxygen. Addition of unprotonated imidazole results in a 5-fold increase in the V(max) value, while the V/K values for nitroethane and oxygen are unaffected. A 5-fold increase in the K(ai) value for nitroethane and a 6.5-fold increase in the K(ii) value for butyraldehyde are observed in the presence of imidazole. These results are consistent with the isomerization of the free reduced enzyme being about 80% rate-limiting for catalysis and with a model in which unprotonated imidazole accelerates the rate of isomerization.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetic constants for an alkaline protease from Bacillus mojavensis were determined using a central composite circumscribed design (CCCD) where concentration of substrate (casein) and the assay temperature were varied around their center point. The K(m),V(max), K(cat), activation energy (E(a)) and temperature coefficient (q(10)) were determined and the values of these kinetic constants obtained were found comparable to that obtained with conventional methods. The Michaelis-Menten constant (K(m)) for casein decreased with corresponding increase in V(max), as reaction temperature was raised from 45-60 degrees C. The protease exhibited K(m) of 0.0357 mg/ml, 0.0270 mg/ml, 0.0259 mg/ml, and 0.0250 mg/ml at 45, 50, 55, and 60 degrees C, respectively, whereas V(max) values at these temperatures were 74.07, 99.01, 116.28, and 120.48 microg/ml/min, respectively, as determined by response surface methodology. The Arrhenius plot suggested that the enzyme undergoes thermal activation above 45 degrees C until 60-65 degrees C followed by thermal inactivation. Likewise, the energy of activation (E(a)) was more between 45-55 degrees C (9747 cal/mol) compared to E(a) between 50-60 degrees C (4162 cal/mol).  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of this study was to test the applicability of n-in-one (cocktail) incubations in the determination of intrinsic clearance (Cl(int)) as the slope of the linear portion of the Michaelis-Menten curve (velocity V vs. substrate concentration [S]) where substrate concentrations were low. A rapid, sensitive, and selective liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) method was developed for the analysis of samples produced by single-substrate and n-in-one (seven substrates: entacapone, 17beta-estriol, umbelliferone, 4-methylumbelliferone, tolcapone, hydroxyquinoline, and paracetamol) incubations conducted in 96-well plates with different recombinant UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs). The Cl(int) values obtained with n-in-one incubations were compared with those obtained in single-compound incubations and with V(max)/K(m) values determined by estimating the enzyme kinetic parameters V(max) and K(m) from the Michaelis-Menten curve. When substrate concentrations were well below their K(m) values, Cl(int) values determined as the slope of the linear part of the Michaelis-Menten fitting correlated well with the values determined as V(max)/K(m) ratios from the Michaelis-Menten curve. The correlation between Cl(int) values determined in single-substrate and n-in-one incubations was high as well. Together, the n-in-one incubations, the determination of Cl(int) values as the slope of the linear part of the Michaelis-Menten fitting, and LC/MS/MS as an analytical method proved to be effective approaches for increasing throughput in the first-phase screening of metabolic properties.  相似文献   

7.
β-Galactosidase is an important enzyme catalyzing not only the hydrolysis of lactose to the monosaccharides glucose and galactose but also the transgalactosylation reaction to produce galacto-oligosaccharides (GOS). In this study, β-galactosidase was immobilized by adsorption on a mixed-matrix membrane containing zirconium dioxide. The maximum β-galactosidase adsorbed on these membranes was 1.6 g/m2, however, maximal activity was achieved at an enzyme concentration of around 0.5 g/m2. The tests conducted to investigate the optimal immobilization parameters suggested that higher immobilization can be achieved under extreme parameters (pH and temperature) but the activity was not retained at such extreme operational parameters. The investigations on immobilized enzymes indicated that no real shift occurred in its optimal temperature after immobilization though the activity in case of immobilized enzyme was better retained at lower temperature (5 °C). A shift of 0.5 unit was observed in optimal pH after immobilization (pH 6.5 to 7). Perhaps the most striking results are the kinetic parameters of the immobilized enzyme; while the Michaelis constant (K(m)) value increased almost eight times compared to the free enzyme, the maximum enzyme velocity (V(max)) remained almost constant.  相似文献   

8.
In this study, a new matrix for immobilization of acetylcholinesterase was investigated by using alginate and kappa-carrageenan. The effects of pH, temperature, storage and thermal stability on the free and immobilized acetylcholinesterase activity were examined. Maximum reaction rate (V(max)) and Michaelis-Menten constant (K(m)) was also investigated for free and immobilized enzymes. For free and immobilized enzymes into Ca-alginate and alginate/kappa-carrageenan polymer blends, optimum pH and temperature was found to be 7 and 30 degrees C, respectively. For free enzyme, maximum reaction rate (V(max)) and Michaelis-Menten constant (K(m)) values were found to be 6.35 mM and 50 mM min(-1), respectively, the same values for immobilized enzymes were determined as 8.68, 12.7 mM and 39.7, 52.9 mM min(-1), respectively. Storage and thermal stability of acetylcholinesterase was increased by as a result of immobilization.  相似文献   

9.
Gadda G  Fitzpatrick PF 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1406-1410
Nitroalkane oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of nitroalkanes to aldehydes or ketones with production of nitrite and hydrogen peroxide. pH and kinetic isotope effects with [1, 1-(2)H(2)]nitroethane have been used to study the mechanism of this enzyme. The V/K(ne) pH profile is bell-shaped. A group with a pK(a) value of about 7 must be unprotonated and one with a pK(a) value of 9.5 must be protonated for catalysis. The lower pK(a) value is seen also in the pK(is) profile for the competitive inhibitor valerate, indicating that nitroethane has no significant external commitments to catalysis. The (D)(V/K)(ne) value is pH-independent with a value of 7.5, whereas the (D)V(max) value increases from 1.4 at pH 8.2 to a limiting value of 7.4 below pH 5. The V(max) pH profile decreases at low and high pH, with pK(a) values of 6.6 and 9.5, respectively. Imidazole, which activates the enzyme, affects the V(max) but not the V/K(ne) pH profile. In the presence of imidazole at pH 7 the (D)V(max) value increases to a value close to the intrinsic value, consistent with cleavage of the carbon-hydrogen bond of the substrate being fully rate-limiting for catalysis in the presence of imidazole.  相似文献   

10.
An immobilized Penicillin-V-acylase (commercial name, Novozym 217) with high specificity for the phenoxyacetyl-(V)- side chain was investigated in a recycle reactor and in a batch reactor to find the enzymatic reaction rate as a function of conversion, x, substrate concentration, c(A) (0) and pH. The reaction rate depends strongly on pH, and both products, phenoxy-acetic acid and 6-APA, inhibit the reaction. Nonspecific side reactions amount to only a few per cent when c(A) (0) <150mM and pH& gt; 6.5. The effectiveness factor for commercial-size particles is found to be about 0.65, and a value of 1.3mM is obtained for the equilibrium constant, K(eq), of the deacylation reaction. A kinetic model for the deacylation process which includes the effect of pH and of the reverse (acylation) reaction is proposed. Rate data for particles of different size are fitted to the nonlinear model. Five kinetic parameters and an effective diffusivity for the immobilized enzyme particles are determined.  相似文献   

11.
A kinetic analysis was made and a linear plot based on the general rate equation derived by Laidler [Can. J. Chem. 33, 1614-1624] is proposed. This linearization method allows determining the kinetic parameters (K(m), k(cat)) and [E](0) for enzymes with low catalytic activity. The method was applied to chloroperoxidase from Caldariomyces fumago [EC 1.11.1.10], whose kinetic parameters K(m)(app), k(cat)(app), and [E](0) with monochlorodimedone as substrate, were obtained by using the linearization plot and the V(max) value (calculated by Eadie-Hofstee plot). This plot could also be useful to the study of abenzyme kinetics provided the concentration of the latter is either higher or equal than K(m) value.  相似文献   

12.
A gene encoding an alditol oxidase was found in the genome of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). This newly identified oxidase, AldO, was expressed at extremely high levels in Escherichia coli when fused to maltose-binding protein. AldO is a soluble monomeric flavoprotein with subunits of 45.1 kDa, each containing a covalently bound FAD cofactor. From sequence alignments with other flavoprotein oxidases, it was found that AldO contains a conserved histidine (His(46)) that is typically involved in covalent FAD attachment. Covalent FAD binding is not observed in the H46A AldO mutant, confirming its role in covalent attachment of the flavin cofactor. Steady-state kinetic analyses revealed that wild-type AldO is active with several polyols. The alditols xylitol (K(m) = 0.32 mm, k(cat) = 13 s(-1)) and sorbitol (K(m) = 1.4 mm, k(cat) = 17 s(-1)) are the preferred substrates. From pre-steady-state kinetic analyses, using xylitol as substrate, it can be concluded that AldO mainly follows a ternary complex kinetic mechanism. Reduction of the flavin cofactor by xylitol occurs at a relatively high rate (99 s(-1)), after which a second kinetic event is observed, which is proposed to represent ring closure of the formed aldehyde product, yielding the hemiacetal of d-xylose. Reduced AldO readily reacts with molecular oxygen (1.7 x 10(5) m(-1) s(-1)), which confirms that the enzyme represents a true flavoprotein oxidase.  相似文献   

13.
The aim of this work was to study the hydroxylation of N, N-dimethyltyramine (DMTA) by tyrosinase in the presence of hydrogen peroxide, a reaction that does not take place without the addition of the hydrogen peroxide. Some properties of this hydroxylating activity are analyzed. The kinetic parameters of mushroom tyrosinase toward hydrogen peroxide (K(m) = 0.5 mM, V(m) = 11 microM/min, V(m)/K(m) = 2.2 x 10(-2) min(-1)) and toward DMTA (K(m) = 0.3 mM, V(m) = 4.8 microM/min, V(m)/K(m) = 16 x 10(-2) min(-1)) were evaluated. There was a lag period, which was similar to the characteristic lag of monophenolase activity at the expense of molecular oxygen. The length of this lag phase decreased with increasing hydrogen peroxide concentration, and disappeared at approximately 0.5 mM H(2)O(2). However, the lag was longer with higher DMTA concentrations. The pH optimum range for this hydroxylating activity was 6.0 to 7.0. The lag also varied with pH, increasing at pH values higher than 6.7. The presence of hydrogen peroxide is necessary for the oxidation of DMTA, as is the presence of active enzyme since the reaction was completely inhibited when selective tyrosinase inhibitors were added.  相似文献   

14.
In order to determine the order of substrate binding to dopamine beta-hydroxylase during catalysis, the effect of alternate substrates upon kinetic parameters was examined. The V/K value for ascorbate was unchanged when tyramine, phenylpropylamine, p-Cl-phenethylamine, p-CH3O-phenethylamine, or phenethylamine was the hydroxylated substrate. The V/K values for tyramine and oxygen were similarly unchanged when ferrocyanide was used as the reductant in place of ascorbate. In order to use ferrocyanide as reductant it was necessary to include copper to alleviate the substrate inhibition seen with this substrate. The pattern of substrate inhibition observed with ferrocyanide was consistent with a small amount of free cyanide present in the ferrocyanide. With ferrocyanide as reductant and [2,2-2H2]tyramine as substrate, there was a measurable isotope effect on the V/K value for oxygen, but none on the values of Vmax or V/K for tyramine. These results are consistent with a ping-pong mechanism in which tyramine binds to the enzyme after the release of oxidized ascorbate. Subsequently, oxygen binds to form a ternary complex.  相似文献   

15.
One-minimum U-shaped temperature profiles of the dissociation constant (K(m)) have been observed experimentally with a variety of enzyme-substrate (E-S) systems. The increase of E-S affinity with falling temperature ("positive thermal modulation of affinity"), which opposes the cold-induced reduction in catalytic velocity, has been often interpreted as significant for both immediate and evolutionary temperature compensations and of major importance in setting thermal limits in ectothermic organisms. This role was denied to enzymes from endotherms, on the ground that their minimal K(m) values were situated well below their normal body temperature. Evidence is presented in this report that affinity changes described by U-shaped profiles can simply be the consequence of intrinsic kinetic properties of the E-S system. Theoretical modeling is achieved by combining the classical expression for the Michaelis constant with Transition State Theory expressions for the three rate constants involved. It provides for the U-shape of the K(m) vs. T profile and allows for the derivation of an equation for identifying its inversion point. Modeling of V(max) and V(min) (reaction velocity under conditions of substrate saturation and of dilution, K(m)>[S], respectively) is also included. An expression was formulated for predicting the "critical temperature," T(C), corresponding to the low-temperature break in Arrhenius lines. Using existing K(m) data from literature, concerning a variety of E-S systems, our modeling proved to be highly satisfactory. Our own experiments show that glucose uptake by rat brain synaptosomes can be regarded as a special case of basically the same kinetic scheme, and that the U-shaped temperature modulation of apparent K(m) for glucose conversion is also in full agreement with our kinetic modeling. These experiments indicate that positive thermal modulation, although based on intrinsic kinetic properties of the underlying E-S system, may have an adaptive role in endotherms as well, linked, however, to their tolerance to hypothermia.  相似文献   

16.
J F Morrison  S R Stone 《Biochemistry》1988,27(15):5499-5506
The variations with pH of the kinetic parameters and primary deuterium isotope effects for the reaction of NADPH with dihydrofolate reductase from Escherichia coli have been determined. The aims of the investigations were to elucidate the chemical mechanism of the reaction and to obtain information about the location of the rate-limiting steps. The V and V/KNADPH profiles indicate that a single ionizing group at the active center of the enzyme must be protonated for catalysis, whereas the Ki profiles show that the binding of NADPH to the free enzyme and of ATP-ribose to the enzyme-dihydrofolate complex is pH independent. From the results of deuterium isotope effects on V/KNADPH, it is concluded that NADPH behaves as a sticky substrate. It is this stickiness that raises artificially the intrinsic pK value of 6.4 for the Asp-27 residue of the enzyme-dihydrofolate complex [Howell, E. E., Villafranca, J. E., Warren, M. S., Oatley, S. J., & Kraut, J. (1986) Science (Washington, D.C.) 231, 1123] to an observed value of 8.9. Thus, the binary enzyme complex is largely protonated at neutral pH. The elevation of the intrinsic pK value of 6.4 for the ternary enzyme-NADPH-dihydrofolate complex to 8.5 is not due to the kinetic effects of substrates. Rather, it is the consequence of the lower, pH-independent rate of product release and the faster pH-dependent catalytic step. At neutral pH, the proportion of enzyme present as a protonated ternary enzyme-substrate complex is sufficient to keep catalysis faster than product release.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
This study evaluates the kinetic parameters of biochemical reaction in three-phase fluidized bed biofilm reactor from the steady state values of the response of the system to step changes in inlet concentration. It was observed from the outlet biological oxygen demand (BOD(5)) plot of the response of the system that as the inlet BOD(5) was increased, the outlet BOD(5) also increased, reached a peak value and then decreased until it leveled to a new steady state value corresponding to the new inlet concentration level. The increase in BOD(5) was attributed to the accumulation of substrate within the reactor as well as the decrease in biofilm substrate consumption rate as the microorganisms adjusted to the new environment. Using the substrate balance at steady state and assuming Monod kinetics, an equation relating the substrate consumption rate to substrate concentration (BOD(5)) and total biofilm surface area had been established. Monod kinetic parameters were found to be K=2.20g/m(2)/day, K(m)=17.41g/m(3) and K/K(m)=0.13m/day. The ratio K/K(m) can be taken as the indicator for biofilm substrate degradation effectiveness at low substrate concentrations.  相似文献   

18.
Catalase was immobilized on the chitosan film that is a natural polymer. Studies were done on free catalase and immobilized catalase on chitosan film concerning the determination of optimum temperature, optimum pH, thermal stability, storage stability, operational stability, and kinetic parameters. It was determined that optimum temperature for free catalase and immobilized catalase on chitosan film is 25 degrees C, and optimum pH is 7.0. It was found as K(m) = 25.16 mM, V(max) = 24042 μmole/min mg protein for free catalase, K(m) = 27.67 mM, V(max) = 1022 μmole/min mg protein for immobilized catalase on chitosan. It was observed that there was a big difference between V(max) value of the free catalase and V(max) value of immobilized catalase on chitosan film whereas there were minor changes in the value of K(m) for free catalase and immobilized catalase. It was found that storage stability at 5 degrees C for immobilized catalase stored wet is greater than free catalase and immobilized catalase stored dry, and immobilized catalase showed a operational stability.  相似文献   

19.
The basidiomycete Phanerochaete chrysosporium produces two glycoside hydrolase family 1 intracellular beta-glucosidases, BGL1A and BGL1B, during the course of cellulose degradation. In order to clarify the catalytic difference between two enzymes, in spite of their high similarity in amino acid sequences (65%), five amino acids around the catalytic site of BGL1A were individually mutated to those of BGL1B (V173C, M177L, D229N, H231D, and K253A), and the effects of the mutations on cellobiose hydrolysis were evaluated. When the kinetic parameters (K(m) and k(cat)) were compared at the optimum pH for the wild-type enzyme, the kinetic efficiency was decreased in the cases of D229N, H231D, and K253A, but not V173C or M177L. The pH dependence of cellobiose hydrolysis showed a significantly more acidic pH profile for the D229N mutant, compared with the wild-type enzyme. Since D229 is located between K253 and the putative acid/base catalyst E170, we prepared the double mutant D229N/K253A, and found that its hydrolytic activity at neutral pH was restored to that of the wild-type enzyme. Our results indicate that the interaction between D229 and K253 is critical for the pH dependence and catalytic activity of BGL1A. Biotechnol. Bioeng.  相似文献   

20.
To elucidate the mechanism by which apolipoprotein C-II (apoC-II) enhances the activity of lipoprotein lipase (LpL), discoidal phospholipid complexes were prepared with apoC-III and di[(14)C]palmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) and containing various amounts of apoC-II. The rate of DPPC hydrolysis catalyzed by purified bovine milk LpL was determined on the isolated complexes. The rate of hydrolysis was optimal at pH 8.0. Analysis of enzyme kinetic data over a range of phospholipid concentrations revealed that the major effect of apoC-II was to increase the maximal velocity (V(max)) some 50-fold with a limited effect on the Michaelis constant (K(m)). V(max) of the apoC-III complex containing no apoC-II was 9.2 nmol/min per mg LpL vs. 482 nmol/min per mg LpL for the complex containing only apoC-II. The effect of apoC-II on enzyme kinetic parameters for LpL-catalyzed hydrolysis of DPPC complexes was compared to that on the parameters for hydrolysis of DPPC and trioleoylglycerol incorporated into guinea pig very low density lipoproteins (VLDL(p)) which lack the equivalent of human apoC-II. Tri[(3)H]oleoylglycerol-labeled VLDL(p) were obtained by perfusion of guinea pig liver with [(3)H]oleic acid. Di[(14)C]palmitoyl phosphatidylcholine was incorporated into the VLDL(p) by incubation of VLDL(p) with sonicated vesicles of di[(14)C]palmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and purified bovine liver phosphatidylcholine exchange protein. The rates of LpL-catalyzed hydrolysis of trioleoylglycerol and DPPC were determined at pH 7.4 and 8.5 in the presence and absence of apoC-II. In the presence of apoC-II, the V(max) for DPPC hydrolysis in guinea pig VLDL(p) increased at both pH 7.4 and pH 8.5 (2.4- and 3.2-fold, respectively); the value of K(m) did not change at either pH (0.23 mm). On the other hand, the kinetic value of K(m) for triacylglycerol hydrolysis in the presence of apoC-II decreased at both pH 7.4 (3.05 vs. 0.54 mm) and pH 8.5 (2.73 vs. 0.62 mm). These kinetic studies suggest that apoC-II enhances phospholipid hydrolysis by LpL in apoC-III-DPPC discoidal complexes and VLDL(p) mainly by increasing the V(max) of the enzyme for the substrates, whereas the activator protein primarily causes a decrease in the apparent K(m) for triacylglycerol hydrolysis.-Shirai, K., T. J. Fitzharris, M. Shinomiya, H. G. Muntz, J. A. K. Harmony, R. L. Jackson and D. M. Quinn. Lipoprotein lipase-catalyzed hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine of guinea pig very low density lipoproteins and discoidal complexes of phospholipid and apolipoprotein: effect of apolipoprotein C-II on the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

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