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1.
Thiophosphatidic acid (1,2-diacyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorothioate; thioPA) was chemically synthesized from egg phosphatidylcholine-derived 1,2-diacylglycerol and PSCl3 and tested for its effects on enzymes which utilize phosphatidic acid (PA) in phospholipid biosynthesis. The compound was not a substrate for rat liver cytosolic PA phosphatase and strongly inhibited this enzyme activity. ThioPA was also a potent inhibitor of purified membrane-associated PA phosphatase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae in a competitive manner and exhibited an apparent Ki = 60 microM. In contrast, purified CDPdiacylglycerol synthase (PA:CTP cytidylyltransferase) from this organism was able to convert thioPA to CDP-diacylglycerol. The apparent Vmax for thioPA was 7-fold lower than that for PA, whereas the apparent Km for thioPA (70 microM) was 4-fold lower than that for PA. Calculation of the specificity constant (Vmax/Km) demonstrated that PA was the preferred substrate. These properties of thioPA indicate that this substance may prove useful in studies of phospholipid metabolism and function.  相似文献   

2.
The kinetics of the Ca2+-dependent, alkaline pH optimum, membrane-bound phospholipase A2 from the P388D1 macrophage-like cell line were studied using various phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) substrates. This enzyme exhibits "surface dilution kinetics" toward PC in Triton X-100 mixed micelles, and the "dual phospholipid model" was found to adequately describe its kinetic behavior. With substrate in the form of sonicated vesicles, the dual phospholipid model should give rise to Michaelis-Menten type kinetics. However, the hydrolysis of dipalmitoyl-PC, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PC, and 1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl-PC vesicles exhibited two distinct activities. Below 10 microM, the data appeared to follow Michaelis-Menten behavior, while at higher concentrations, the data could best be fit to a Hill equation with a Hill coefficient of 2. These PCs had Vmax values for the low substrate concentration range of 0.2-0.6 nmol min-1 mg-1 and Km values of 1-2 microM. At the high substrate concentration range, the Vmax values were between 5 and 7 nmol min-1 mg-1. PC containing unsaturated fatty acids had an apparent Km, determined from the Hill equation, of about 15 microM, while the apparent Km of dipalmitoyl-PC was 0.6 microM. When 70% glycerol was included in the assays, a single Michaelis-Menten curve was obtained for both dipalmitoyl-PC and 1-stearoyl,2-arachidonoyl-PC. Possible explanations for these kinetic results include reconstitution of the membrane-bound phospholipase A2 in the phospholipid vesicle or the enzyme has tow distinct phospholipid binding function. The kinetics for both dipalmitoyl-PC and dipalmitoyl-PE hydrolysis in vesicles was very similar, indicating that the enzyme does not greatly prefer one of these head groups over the other. The enzyme also showed no preference for arachidonoyl containing phospholipid. Enzymatic activity toward PC containing saturated fatty acids was linear to about 15% hydrolysis while the hydrolysis of PC containing unsaturated fatty acids was linear to only about 5%. This loss of linearity was due to inhibition by released unsaturated fatty acids. Arachidonic acid was found to be a competitive inhibitor of dipalmitoyl PC hydrolysis with a K1 of 5 microM. This tight binding suggests a possible in vivo regulatory role for arachidonic acid. Three compounds of the arachidonic acid cascade, prostaglandin F2 alpha, 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha, and thromboxane B2, showed no inhibition of enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of the substrate properties on the catalytic activity of lysosomal cholesteryl ester hydrolase from rat liver have been examined with three standard substrate types: vesicle, micelle and emulsion. The pH optimum of the enzyme coincided to 4.5--5.0 with the substrate types employed. The apparent Km values were 15.3, 14.3 and 7.3 microM for vesicle, micelle and emulsion substrates, respectively. In the systems used in this study reaction products, cholesterol and oleic acid, and the nonionic surfactant Tween 80 and Triton X-100 Had an inhibitory effect. The emulsifier phosphatidylcholine and the charged phospholipid phosphatidic acid stimulated the activity. The mixed micelle of sodium taurocholate and phosphatidylcholine was the most potent substrate vehicle. With dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles the enzyme showed maximal activity at the gel-liquid-crystalline transition temperature of the phospholipid. The possible physiological significance of the lysosomal cholesteryl ester hydrolase is discussed with special reference to the form of the substrate.  相似文献   

4.
In order to acquire an understanding of phospholipase C-delta3 (PLC-delta3) action on substrate localized in lipid membrane we have studied the binding of human recombinant PLC-delta3 to large, unilamellar phospholipid vesicles (LUVs). PLC-delta3 bound weakly to vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) or PtdCho plus phosphatidylethanolamine (PtdEtn) or phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns). The enzyme bound strongly to LUVs composed of PtdEtn + PtdCho and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PtdInsP2). The binding affinity (molar partition coefficient) of PLC-delta3 to PtdEtn + PtdCho + PtdInsP2 vesicles was 7.7 x 105 m-1. High binding of PLC-delta3 was also observed for LUVs composed of phosphatidic acid (PA). Binding of PLC-delta3 to phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) vesicles was less efficient. Calculated molar partition coefficient for binding of PLC-delta3 to PA and PtdSer vesicles was 1.6 x 104 m-1 and 9.4 x 102 m-1, respectively. Presence of PA in the LUVs containing PtdInsP2 considerably enhanced the binding of PLC-delta3 to the phospholipid membrane. Binding of PLC-delta3 to phospholipid vesicles was not dependent on Ca2+ presence. In the liposome assay PA caused a concentration-dependent increase in activity of PLC-delta3. The stimulatory effect of PA on PLC-delta3 was calcium-dependent. At Ca2+ concentrations lower than 1 microm, no effect of PA on the activity of PLC-delta3 was observed. PA enhanced PLC-delta3 activity by increasing the Vmax and lowering Km for PtdInsP2. As the mol fraction of PA increased from 0-40 mol% the enzyme Vmax increased 2.3-fold and Km decreased threefold. Based on the results presented, we assume that PA supports binding of PLC-delta3 to lipid membranes by interaction with the PH domain of the enzyme. The stimulatory effect of PA depends on calcium-dependent interaction with the C2 domain of PLC-delta3. We propose that binding of PLC-delta3 to PA may serve as a mechanism for dynamic membrane association and modulation of PLC-delta3 activity.  相似文献   

5.
Acid phosphatase-1 (orthophosphoric monoester phosphohydrolase, acid optimum, EC 3.1.3.2), the major phosphatase in adult Drosophila melanogaster, has been purified to apparent homogeneity. The final product is a glycoprotein homodimer with a subunit molecular weight of about 50,000, as measured by its electrophoretic mobility in denaturing conditions on polyacrylamide gels containing sodium dodecyl sulfate. It has a turnover number of 1720 1-naphthyl phosphate molecules hydrolyzed/s by each acid phosphatase-1 molecule at 37 degrees C, pH 5.0. An average fly contains about 5 ng of enzyme. Pure acid phosphatase-1 displays heterogeneity in isoelectric focusing, with a major band at pH 5.3. The enzyme hydrolyzes a wide variety of phosphate monoesters, including AMP, glucose 6-phosphate, ATP, choline phosphate, or phosphoproteins. The maximum reaction rates are different for all substrates, and some substrates appear to inhibit the reaction at high substrate concentrations. The Michaelis constants for 1-naphthyl phosphate and p-nitrophenyl phosphate are 79 microM and 68 microM, respectively, at pH 5.0 and 37 degrees C. The optimum pH level for 1-naphthyl phosphate is 4.5. Acid phosphatase-1 is inhibited by L(+)-tartrate (but not D(-)-tartrate), phosphate, and fluoride. The reaction rate increases 2.1-fold for every 10 degrees C rise in temperature. Above 48 degrees C, the rate of thermal denaturation is greater than the rate of the enzyme reaction.  相似文献   

6.
Potato 5-lipoxygenase. Kinetics of linoleic acid oxidation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The role of main factors influencing the rate of potato 5-lipoxygenase oxidation of linoleic acid was investigated. It was found that nonionic detergent lubrol PX inhibited the potato lipoxygenase. Optimal pH for the linoleic acid oxidation was 6.3 temperature--45 degrees C and substrate concentration--3 x 10(-4) M (if lubrol PX was 0.02%). It was shown that potato 5-lipoxygenase was allosteric enzyme which possessed positive cooperativity for linoleic acid. The Hill coefficient was calculated (n = 1.40 +/- 0.15) with S0.5 = 75 +/- 10 microM.  相似文献   

7.
GTP cyclohydrolase I, an enzyme that catalyzes the first step in the biosynthetic pathway of tetrahydrobiopterin, has been purified about 38,000-fold to apparent homogeneity from rat liver extract with a yield of 5%. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 300,000 by gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA 34. The purified enzyme gave a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at a position corresponding to a molecular weight of 30,000. N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis gave a single amino acid at every step of the Edman degradation up to residue 10. These results suggest that the enzyme is probably a homopolymer. The enzyme showed positive cooperativity with a Hill coefficient of 2.4 at a substrate (GTP) concentration of 10-50 microM. The Vmax value of the enzyme was 45 nmol/min.mg protein. The GTP concentration producing half-maximal velocity was 30 microM at a KCl concentration of 0.1 M. This value increased as the KCl concentration rose, without any change in Vmax or Hill number. Biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin may be controlled by the intracellular level of GTP.  相似文献   

8.
Soybean nodule xanthine dehydrogenase: a kinetic study   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Xanthine dehydrogenase was purified from soybean nodules and the kinetic properties were studied at pH 7.5. Km values of 5.0 +/- 0.6 and 12.5 +/- 2.5 microM were obtained for xanthine and NAD+, respectively. The pattern of substrate dependence suggested a Ping-Pong mechanism. Reaction with hypoxanthine gave Km's of 52 +/- 3 and 20 +/- 2.5 microM for hypoxanthine and NAD+, respectively. The Vmax for this reaction was twice that for the xanthine-dependent reaction. The pH dependence of Vmax gave a pKa of 7.6 +/- 0.1 for either xanthine or hypoxanthine oxidation. In addition the Km for xanthine had a pKa of 7.5 consistent with the protonated form of xanthine being the true substrate. Km for hypoxanthine varied only 2.5-fold between pH 6 and 10.7. Product inhibition studies were carried out with urate and NADH. Both products gave mixed inhibition with respect to both substrates. Xanthine dehydrogenase was able to use APAD+ as an electron acceptor for xanthine oxidation, with a Km at pH 7.5 of 21.2 +/- 2.5 microM and Vmax the same as that obtained with NAD+. Reduction of APAD+ by NADH was also catalyzed by xanthine dehydrogenase with a Km of 102 +/- 15 microM; Vmax was approximately 2.5 times that for the xanthine-dependent reaction, and was independent of pH between 6 and 9. Reaction with group-specific reagents indicated the possibility of an essential histidyl group. A thiol-modifying reagent did not cause inactivation of the enzyme. A role for the histidyl side chain in catalysis is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
Polyamines with diamine structures of chain length longer than 3C were essential for the synthesis of phosphatidic acid (PA) from ricinoleoyl-CoA and lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) by the castor LPA acyltransferase reaction, suggesting that polyamines modulate enzyme affinity for the acyl-CoA substrate in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
An overexpression system was recently developed to produce and purify recombinant, human acid ceramidase. In addition to ceramide hydrolysis, the purified enzyme was able to catalyze ceramide synthesis using [14C]lauric acid and sphingosine as substrates. Herein we report detailed characterization of this acid ceramidase-associated "reverse activity" and provide evidence that this reaction occurs in situ as well as in vitro. The pH optimum of the reverse reaction was approximately 5.5, as compared with approximately 4.5 for the hydrolysis reaction. Non-ionic detergents and zinc cations inhibited the activity, whereas most other cations were stimulatory. Of note, sphingomyelin also was very inhibitory toward this reaction, whereas the anionic lipids, phosphatidic acid and phosphatidylserine, were stimulatory. Of various sphingosine stereoisomers tested in the reverse reaction, only the natural, D-erythro form could efficiently serve as a substrate. Using D-erythro-sphingosine and lauric acid as substrates, the reaction followed normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The Km and Vmax values toward sphingosine were 23.75 microM and 208.3 pmol/microg/h, respectively, whereas for lauric acid they were 73.76 microM and 232.5 pmol/microg/h, respectively. Importantly, the reverse activity was reduced in cell lysates from a Farber disease patient to the same extent as the acid ceramidase activity. Furthermore, when 12-(N-methyl-N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)) (NBD)-conjugated lauric acid and sphingosine were added to cultured lymphoblasts from a Farber disease patient in the presence of fumonisin B (1), the conversion to NBD-ceramide was reduced approximately 30% when compared with normal cells. These data provide important new information on human acid ceramidase and further document its central role in sphingolipid metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
Phosphatidic acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.4) was purified 30-fold by ammonium sulfate fractionation and hydroxyapatite chromatography from the soluble fraction of rat liver. ADP was found to stimulate the enzyme activity with half-maximal stimulation at 0.2 mM. Similar effects were seen when ADP was replaced by GDP or CDP. In contrast, ATP inhibited the enzyme; half-maximal inhibition observed at 0.2 mM. Again, the degree of inhibition did not differ when GTP or CTP replaced ATP. Thus, the structure of the base part of the nucleotide was not critical for mediating these effects. The positions of the phosphate groups in the nucleotide structure were however found to be of importance for the enzyme activity. Variations in the structure of the phosphate ester bound at the 5'-position had a pronounced effect on phosphatidic acid phosphatase activity. The effect of nucleotides depended on pH, and the inhibition by ATP was more pronounced at pH levels lower than 7.0, whereas the stimulatory effect of ADP was virtually the same from pH 6.0 to pH 8.0. The enzyme showed substrate saturation kinetics with respect to phosphatidic acid, with an apparent Km of 0.7 mM. Km increased in the presence of ATP, whereas both apparent Vmax and Km increased in the presence of ADP, suggesting different mechanisms for the action of the two types of nucleotides. The results indicated that physiological levels of nucleotides with a diphosphate or a triphosphate ester bound at the 5'-position of the ribose moiety influenced the activity of phosphatidic acid phosphatase. The possibility is discussed that these effects might be of importance for the regulation of triacylglycerol biosynthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Hydrolysis of adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) and p-nitrophenyl phosphate by the hydrogen ion-transporting potassium-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase (H,K-ATPase) was investigated. Hydrolysis of ATP was studied at pH 7.4 in vesicles treated with the ionophore nigericin. The kinetic analysis showed negative cooperativity with one high affinity (Km1 = 3 microM) and one low affinity (Km2 = 208 microM) site for ATP. The rate of hydrolysis decreased at 2000 microM ATP indicating a third site for ATP. When the pH was decreased to 6.5 the experimental results followed Michaelis-Menten enzyme kinetics with one low affinity site (Km = 116 microM). Higher concentrations than 750 microM ATP were inhibitory. Proton transport was measured as accumulation of acridine orange in vesicles equilibrated with 150 mM KCl. The transport at various concentrations of ATP in the pH interval from 6.0 to 8.0 correlated well with the Hill equation with a Hill coefficient between 1.5-1.9. The concentration of ATP resulting in half-maximal transport rate (S0.5) increased from 5 microM at pH 6.0 to 420 microM at pH 8.0. At acidic pH the rate of proton transport decreased at 1000 microM ATP. The K+-stimulated p-nitrophenylphosphatase (pNPPase) activity resulted in a Hill coefficient close to 2 indicating cooperative binding of substrate. The pNPPase was noncompetitively inhibited by ATP and ADP; half-maximal inhibition was obtained at 2 and 100 microM, respectively. Phospholipase C-treated vesicles lost 80% of the pNPPase activity, but the Hill coefficient did not change. These kinetic results are used for a further development of the reaction scheme of the H,K-ATPase.  相似文献   

13.
Steady state kinetic studies have been performed to investigate the formation of thrombin from prothrombin by human coagulation Factor Xa in the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid. The concentration of ligand which gives 50% of the maximum velocity (K0.5) is 2.3 mM for Ca2+, 7.4 microM for phospholipid, and 0.006 microM for prothrombin. Hill plots of the Ca2+ enhancement of the reaction give a Hill coefficient of 3.1, indicating positive cooperativity. The initial velocity patterns are consistent with an ordered addition of reactants with phospholipid as the second reactant to bind to the enzyme. Although our results do not differentiate between Ca2+ or the prothrombin substrate as the first reactant to bind to Factor Xa, it is established that Ca2+ can bind to Factor Xa in the absence of the other reactants. Thus, the most probable order of addition of reactants is Ca2+, phospholipid, and the prothrombin substrate. Plots of (v)-1 versus (prothrombin)-1 or (v)-1 versus [(Ca2+)3]-1 at several constant concentrations of phospholipid indicate that the major effect of phospholipid is to increase the turnover number of Factor Xa.  相似文献   

14.
We have previously purified a membrane-bound ceramidase from rat brain and recently cloned the human homologue. We also observed that the same enzyme is able to catalyze the reverse reaction of ceramide synthesis. To obtain insight into the biochemistry of this enzyme, we characterized in this study this reverse activity. Using sphingosine and palmitic acid as substrates, the enzyme exhibited Michaelis-Menten kinetics; however, the enzyme did not utilize palmitoyl-CoA as substrate. Also, the activity was not inhibited in vitro and in cells by fumonisin B1, an inhibitor of the CoA-dependent ceramide synthase. The enzyme showed a narrow pH optimum in the neutral range, and there was very low activity in the alkaline range. Substrate specificity studies were performed, and the enzyme showed the highest activity with d-erythro-sphingosine (Km of 0.16 mol %, and Vmax of 0.3 micromol/min/mg), but d-erythro-dihydrosphingosine and the three unnatural stereoisomers of sphingosine were poor substrates. The specificity for the fatty acid was also studied, and the highest activity was observed for myristic acid with a Km of 1.7 mol % and a Vmax of 0.63 micromol/min/mg. Kinetic studies were performed to investigate the mechanism of the reaction, and Lineweaver-Burk plots indicated a sequential mechanism. Two competitive inhibitors of the two substrates were identified, l-erythro-sphingosine and myristaldehyde, and inhibition studies indicated that the reaction followed a random sequential mechanism. The effect of lipids were also tested. Most of these lipids showed moderate inhibition, whereas the effects of phosphatidic acid and cardiolipin were more potent with total inhibition at around 2.5-5 mol %. Paradoxically, cardiolipin stimulated ceramidase activity. These results define the biochemical characteristics of this reverse activity. The results are discussed in view of a possible regulation of this enzyme by the intracellular pH or by an interaction with cardiolipin and/or phosphatidic acid.  相似文献   

15.
1. Comparisons of the activity and kinetics of the branched-chain 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase in cultured skin fibroblasts from normal and classical maple-syrup-urine-disease (MSUD) subjects provide a kinetic explanation for the enzyme defect. 2. In the intact cell assays, normal fibroblasts demonstrated hyperbolic kinetics with 3-methyl-2-oxo[1-14C]butyrate as a substrate. Intact fibroblasts from four classical MSUD patients showed no decarboxylation over a substrate concentration range of 0.25 to 5.0 mM, and thiamin (4 mM) was without effect. 3. The overall reaction of the multienzyme complex was efficiently reconstituted by using a disrupted-cell system. Normals again showed typical hyperbolic kinetics at the 2-oxo acid concentrations of 0.1 to 5 mM. The Vmax. and apparent Km values were 0.10 +/- 0.02 m-unit/mg of protein and 0.05-0.1 mM respectively, with 3-methyl-2-oxobutyrate. In contrast, classical MSUD patients exhibited sigmoidal kinetics (Hill coefficient, 2.5) with activity approaching 40-60% of the normal value at 5 mM substrate. The K0.5 values from the Hill plots for MSUD patients were 4-7 mM. 4. The E1 (branched-chain 2-oxo acid decarboxylase) component of the multienzyme complex was measured in disrupted-particulate preparations. Normals again showed hyperbolic kinetics with the 2-oxo acid, whereas MSUD preparations exhibited sigmoidal kinetics with the activity of E1 strictly dependent on substrate concentration. Apparent Km or K0.5 were 0.1 and 1.0 mM for normal and MSUD subjects respectively. 5. Measurements of E2 (dihydrolipoyl transacylase) and E3 (dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase) in MSUD preparations showed them to be in the normal range. 6. The above data suggest a defect in the E1 step of branched-chain 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase in classical MSUD patients.  相似文献   

16.
Sphingosine kinase 1 is an intracellular effector of phosphatidic acid   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Sphingosine kinase 1 (SK1) phosphorylates sphingosine to generate sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P). Because both substrate and product of the enzyme are potentially important signaling molecules, the regulation of SK1 is of considerable interest. We report that SK1, which is ordinarily a cytosolic enzyme, translocates in vivo and in vitro to membrane compartments enriched in phosphatidic acid (PA), the lipid product of phospholipase D. This translocation depends on direct interaction of SK1 with PA, because recombinant purified enzyme shows strong affinity for pure PA coupled to Affi-Gel. The SK1-PA interaction maps to the C terminus of SK1 and is independent of catalytic activity or of the diacylglycerol kinase-like domain of the enzyme. Thus SK1 constitutes a novel, physiologically relevant PA effector.  相似文献   

17.
On the substrate specificity of rat liver phospholipase A1   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The substrate specificity of purified phospholipase A1 was studied using mixed micelles of phospholipid and Triton X-100. The kinetic analysis employed determined Vmax, Ks (a dissociation constant for the phospholipase A1-mixed micelle complex), and Km (the Michaelis constant for the catalytic step which reflects the binding of the enzyme to the substrate in the interface). The order of Vmax values was phosphatidic acid greater than phosphatidylethanolamine greater than phosphatidylcholine greater than phosphatidylserine. The order of Ks values was phosphatidylcholine greater than phosphatidylethanolamine greater than phosphatidic acid greater than phosphatidylserine; the order of Km values was phosphatidic acid greater than phosphatidylethanolamine = phosphatidylserine greater than phosphatidylcholine. When present together, phosphatidylcholine inhibited the hydrolysis of phosphatidylethanolamine but phosphatidylethanolamine did not affect the hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine. Sphingomyelin, phosphatidylcholine plasmalogen, and phosphatidylethanolamine plasmalogen had no effect on the hydrolysis of phosphatidylethanolamine. The effects of the reaction products, lysolipids and/or fatty acids, were also considered for their influence on phosphatidylethanolamine hydrolysis catalyzed by phospholipase A1. Free fatty acid was found to inhibit, whereas lysophospholipids stimulated hydrolysis of phosphatidylethanolamine. In a mixture of 1,2- and 1,3-diacylglycerides in mixed micelles, only the acyl chain at the sn-1 position of the 1,2 compound was hydrolyzed. Surface charge did not modulate the hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine vesicles or mixed micelles. In conclusion, it is hypothesized that steric hindrance at position 3 of the glycerol regulates substrate binding in the active site and that an acyl group in position 1 is favored over a vinyl ether linkage for binding.  相似文献   

18.
The apicomplexan Cryptosporidium parvum possesses a unique 1500-kDa polyketide synthase (CpPKS1) comprised of 29 enzymes for synthesising a yet undetermined polyketide. This study focuses on the biochemical characterization of the 845-amino acid loading unit containing acyl-[ACP] ligase (AL) and acyl carrier protein (ACP). The CpPKS1-AL domain has a substrate preference for long chain fatty acids, particularly for the C20:0 arachidic acid. When using [3H]palmitic acid and CoA as co-substrates, the AL domain displayed allosteric kinetics towards palmitic acid (Hill coefficient, h=1.46, K50=0.751 microM, Vmax=2.236 micromol mg(-1) min(-1)) and CoA (h=0.704, K50=5.627 microM, Vmax=0.557 micromol mg(-1) min(-1)), and biphasic kinetics towards adenosine 5'-triphosphate (Km1=3.149 microM, Vmax1=373.3 nmol mg(-1) min(-1), Km2=121.0 microM, and Vmax2=563.7 nmol mg(-1) min(-1)). The AL domain is Mg2+-dependent and its activity could be inhibited by triacsin C (IC50=6.64 microM). Furthermore, the ACP domain within the loading unit could be activated by the C. parvum surfactin production element-type phosphopantetheinyl transferase. After attachment of the fatty acid substrate to the AL domain for conversion into the fatty-acyl intermediate, the AL domain is able to transfer palmitic acid to the activated holo-ACP in vitro. These observations ultimately validate the function of the CpPKS1-AL-ACP unit, and make it possible to further dissect the function of this megasynthase using recombinant proteins in a stepwise procedure.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated effects of pH on the catalytic and allosteric properties of the cGMP-stimulated cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase purified from calf liver. In the "activated" state, i.e., with 0.5 microM [3H]cAMP plus 1 microM cGMP or at saturating substrate concentrations (250 microM [3H]cAMP or [3H]cGMP), hydrolysis was maximal at pH 7.5-8.0 in assays of different pH. Hydrolysis of concentrations of substrate not sufficient to saturate regulatory sites and below the apparent Michaelis constant (Kmapp), i.e., 0.5 microM [3H]cAMP or 0.01 microM [3H]cGMP, was maximal at pH 9.5. Although hydrolysis of 0.5 microM [3H]cAMP increased with pH from 7.5 to 9.5, cGMP stimulation of cAMP hydrolysis decreased. As pH increased or decreased from 7.5, Hill coefficients (napp) and Vmax for cAMP decreased. Thus, assay pH affects both catalytic (Vmax) and allosteric (napp) properties. Enzyme was therefore incubated for 5 min at 30 degrees C in the presence of MgCl2 at various pHs before assay at pH 7.5. Prior exposure to different pHs from pH 6.5 to 10.0 did not alter the Vmax or cGMP-stimulated activity (assayed at pH 7.5). Incubation at high (9.0-10.0) pH did, in assays at pH 7.5, markedly increase hydrolysis of 0.5 microM [3H]cAMP and reduce Kmapp and napp. After incubation at pH 10, hydrolysis of 0.5 microM [3H]cAMP was maximally increased and was similar in the presence or absence of cGMP. Thus, after incubation at high pH, the phosphodiesterase acquires characteristics of the cGMP-stimulated form. Activation at high pH occurs at 30 degrees C but not 5 degrees C, requires MgCl2, and is prevented but not reversed by ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Mixed micelles of 32P-labeled phosphatidylcholine or phosphatidic acid (PA) and the nonionic detergent octylphenol polyethylene oxide (NP-40 Nonidet) were used to assay the activities of phospholipase D and PA phosphatase in crude extracts of mung bean (Vigna radiata) cotyledons. Together these enzymes degrade phosphatidylcholine to free choline, inorganic phosphate, and sn-1,2-diacylglycerol. Both enzymes have pH optima around 5.0. The enzymes are present in fully imbibed cotyledons and increase in activity during seedling growth. Fractionation of cotyledon extracts on sucrose gradients showed that the cells contain two PA phosphatases. One enzyme with a pH optimum of 7.5 has the same distribution on sucrose gradient as the endoplasmic reticulum marker enzyme NADH-cytochrome c reductase. The other, PA phosphatase, with a pH optimum of 5.0, was present in a protein body-rich fraction and in the load portion of the gradient. Fractionation of broken protoplasts on Ficoll gradients (a method which allows for the isolation of a high proportion of intact protein bodies) indicates that most of the cellular phospholipase D and PA phosphatase (pH 5.0) are associated with the protein bodies. Using column chromatography (DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex G-200), PA phosphatase (pH 5.0) was found to be a different enzyme from the major acid phosphatase in the cotyledons. Apparent molecular weights of phospholipase D and PA phosphatase were 150,000 and 37,000, respectively. The activity of phospholipase D was not affected by free choline, but was markedly inhibited by the choline analog and plant growth retardant isopropyl 4′-(trimethylammonium chloride-5′-methylphenyl piperidine-1-carboxylate (AMO 1618). The finding that these acid hydrolases are located in the protein bodies supports the conclusion that protein bodies form the general lytic compartment in the storage parenchyma cells.  相似文献   

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