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1.
The enzyme L-alanine:4,5-dioxovalerate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.43), which catalyzes the synthesis of 5-aminolevulinic acid, was purified 161-fold from Chlorella regularis. The enzyme also showed L-alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase activity (EC 2.6.1.44). The activity of glyoxylate aminotransferase was 56-fold greater than that of 4,5-dioxovalerate aminotransferase. The ratio of the two activities remained nearly constant during purification, and when the enzyme was subjected to a variety of treatments. 4,5-Dioxovalerate aminotransferase activity was competitively inhibited by glyoxylate, with a Ki value of 0.5 mM. Double-reciprocal plots of velocity versus 4,5-dioxovalerate with varying L-alanine concentrations indicate a ping-pong reaction mechanism. The apparent Km values for 4,5-dioxovalerate and L-alanine were 0.12 and 3.5 mM, respectively. The enzyme is an acidic protein having an isoelectric point of 4.8. The molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 126,000, with two identical subunits. These results suggest that, in Chlorella, as in bovine liver mitochondria and Euglena, both 4,5-dioxovalerate and glyoxylate aminotransferase activities are associated with the same protein. From the activity ratio of transamination and catalytic properties, it is concluded that this enzyme does not function primarily as a part of the 5-carbon pathway to 5-aminolevulinic acid synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Kynurenine pyruvate aminotransferase was purified from rat kidney. The purified enzyme had an isoelectric point of pH 5.2 and a pH optimum of 9.3. The enzyme was active with pyruvate as amino acceptor but not with 2-oxoglutarate, and utilized various aromatic amino acids as amino donors. L-Amino acids were effective in the following order of activity: histidine greather than phenylalanine greater than kynurenine greater than tyrosine greater than tryptophan greater than 5-hydroxytryptophan. The apparent Km values were about 0.63 mM, 1.4 mM and 0.09 mM for histidine, kynurenine and phenylalanine, respectively. Km values for pyruvate were 5.5 mM with histidine as amino donor, 1.3 mM with kynurenine and 8.5 mM with phenylalanine. Kynurenine pyruvate aminotransferase activity of the enzyme was inhibited by the addition of histidine or phenylalanine. The molecular weights determined by gel filtration and sucrose density gradient centrifugation were approximately 76000 and 79000, respectively. On the basis of purification ratio, substrate specificity, inhibition by common substrates, subcellular distribution, isoelectric focusing and polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, it is suggested that kynurenine pyruvate aminotransferase is identical with histidine pyruvate aminotransferase and also with phenylalanine pyruvate aminotransferase. The physiological significance of the enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
1. Histidine-pyruvate aminotransferase (isoenzyme 1) was purified to homogeneity from the mitochondrial and supernatant fractions of rat liver, as judged by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and isolectric focusing. Both enzyme preparations were remarkably similar in physical and enzymic properties. Isoenzyme 1 had pI8.0 and a pH optimum of 9.0. The enzyme was active with pyruvate as amino acceptor but not with 2-oxoglutarate, and utilized various aromatic amino acids as amino donors in the following order of activity: phenylalanine greater than tyrosine greater than histidine. Very little activity was found with tryptophan and 5-hydroxytryptophan. The apparent Km values were about 2.6mM for histidine and 2.7 mM for phenylalanine. Km values for pyruvate were about 5.2mM with phenylalanine as amino donor and 1.1mM with histidine. The aminotransferase activity of the enzyme towards phenylalanine was inhibited by the addition of histidine. The mol.wt. determined by gel filtration and sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation was approx. 70000. The mitochondrial and supernatant isoenzyme 1 activities increased approximately 25-fold and 3.2-fold respectively in rats repeatedly injected with glucagon for 2 days. 2. An additional histidine-pyruvate aminotransferase (isoenzyme 2) was partially purified from both the mitochondrial and supernatant fractions of rat liver. Nearly identical properties were observed with both preparations. Isoenzyme 2 had pI5.2 and a pH optimum of 9.3. The enzyme was specific for pyruvate and did not function with 2-oxoglutarate. The order of effectiveness of amino donors was tyrosine = phenylalanine greater than histidine greater than tryptophan greater than 5-hydroxytryptophan. The apparent Km values for histidine and phenylalanine were about 0.51 and 1.8 mM respectively. Km values for pyruvate were about 3.5mM with phenylalanine and 4.7mM with histidine as amino donors. Histidine inhibited phenylalanine aminotransferase activity of the enzyme. Gel filtration and sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation yielded a mol.wt. of approx. 90000. Neither the mitochondrial nor the supernatant isoenzyme 2 activity was elevated by glucagon injection.  相似文献   

4.
The photorespiratory enzyme L-serine:glyoxylate amino- transferase (SGAT; EC 2.6.1.45) was purified from Arabidopsis thaliana leaves. The f'mal enzyme was approximately 80 % pure as revealed by sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with silver staining. The identity of the enzyme was confirmed by LC/MS/MS analysis. The molecular mass estimated by gel filtration chromato- graphy on Sephadex G-150 under non-denaturing conditions, mass spectrometry (matrix-assisted laser desorption/ ionization/time of flight technique) and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was 82.4 kDa, 42.0 kDa, and 39.8 kDa, respectively, indicating dimer as the active form. The optimum pH value was 9.2. The enzyme activity was inhibited by aminooxyacetate and β-chloro-L-alanine both compounds reacting with the carbonyl group of pyridoxal phosphate. The enzyme's transaminating activity with L-alanine and glyoxylate as substrates was approximately 55 % of that observed with L-serine and glyoxylate. The lower Kmvalue (1.25 mM) for L-alanine, compared with that of other plant SGATs, and the kcat/Km(Ala) ratio being approxi- mately 2-fold higher than kcat/Km(Ser) suggested that, during photorespiration, Ala and Ser are used by Arabidopsis SGAT with equal efficiency as amino group donors for glyoxylate. The equilibrium constant (Keq), derived from the Haldane relation, for the transamination reaction between L-serine and glyoxylate with the formation of hydroxypyruvate and glycine was 79.1, strongly favoring glycine synthesis. However, it was accompanied by a low Km value of 2.83 mM for glycine. A comparison of some kinetic properties of the studied enzymes with the recombinant Arabidopsis SGATs previously obtained revealed substantial differences. The ratio of the velocity of the transamination reaction with L-alanine and glyoxylate as substrates versus that with L-serine and glyoxylate was 1:1.8 for the native enzyme, whereas it was 1:7 for the recombinant SGAT. Native SGAT showed a much lower Km value for L-alanine compared to the recombinant enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Aromatic-amino-acid-glyoxylate aminotransferase was highly purified from the mitochondrial fraction of livers from monkey and glucagon-injected rats. The two enzyme preparations showed physical and enzymic properties different from a kynurenine aminotransferase previously described. The two enzymes had nearly identical molecular weights (approximate 80 000), isoelectric points (pH 8.0) and pH optima (pH 8.0 - 8.5). However, a difference in substrate specificity was observed between the two enzymes. Both enzymes utilized glyoxylate, pyruvate, hydroxypyruvate and 2-oxo-4-methyl-thiobutyrate as effective amino acceptors. 2-Oxoglutarate was active for rat enzyme but not for monkey enzyme. With glyoxylate, amino donors were effective in the following order of activity; phenylalanine greater than histidine greater than tyrosine greater than tryptophan greater than 5-hydroxytrypotphan greater than kynurenine for the rat enzyme, and phenylalanine greater than kynurenine greater than histidine greater than tryptophan greater than 5-hydroxy-tryptophan for the monkey enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
An enzyme which catalyzes the transamination of L-alanine with 2-oxoglutarate has been purified 157-fold to electrophoretic homogeneity from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 6145c. The enzyme showed maximal activity at pH 7.3 and 50 degrees C, has an apparent molecular mass of 105 kDa as estimated by gel filtration, and consists of two identical subunits of 45 kDa each as deduced from PAGE/SDS studies. A stoichiometry of two moles pyridoxal 5-phosphate/mole enzyme was calculated. The enzyme has an isoelectric point of 8.3 and its absorption spectrum exhibits a maximum at 412 nm which is shifted to 330 nm upon addition of L-alanine. Pyridoxal 5-phosphate protected activity against heat inactivation and, to a minor extent, L-alanine and 2-oxoglutarate, but not L-glutamate. Spectral data and activity inhibition and protection studies strongly support the involvement of pyridoxal 5-phosphate in enzyme catalysis through a Schiff's base formation. The purified enzyme was able to transaminate only L-alanine and L-glutamate with glyoxylate out of ten amino acids tested. L-Alanine aminotransferase exhibited hyperbolic kinetic for 2-oxoglutarate, pyruvate, and L-glutamate, and nonhyperbolic behaviour for L-alanine. Apparent Km values were 0.054 mM for 2-oxoglutarate, 0.52 for L-glutamate, 0.24 mM for pyruvate, and 2.7 mM for L-alanine. Transamination of L-alanine in C. reinhardtii is a bisubstrate reaction with a bi-bi ping-pong mechanism, and is not inhibited by substrates.  相似文献   

7.
Alanine: glyoxylate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.44), which is involved in the glyoxylate pathway of glycine and serine biosynthesis from tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was highly purified and characterized. The enzyme had Mr about 80 000, with two identical subunits. It was highly specific for L-alanine and glyoxylate and contained pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as cofactor. The apparent Km values were 2.1 mM and 0.7 mM for L-alanine and glyoxylate respectively. The activity was low (10 nmol/min per mg of protein) with glucose as sole carbon source, but was remarkably high with ethanol or acetate as carbon source (930 and 430 nmol/min per mg respectively). The transamination of glyoxylate is mainly catalysed by this enzyme in ethanol-grown cells. When glucose-grown cells were incubated in medium containing ethanol as sole carbon source, the activity markedly increased, and the increase was completely blocked by cycloheximide, suggesting that the enzyme is synthesized de novo during the incubation period. Similarity in the amino acid composition was observed, but immunological cross-reactivity was not observed among alanine: glyoxylate aminotransferases from yeast and vertebrate liver.  相似文献   

8.
Pyruvate (glyoxylate) aminotransferase from rat liver peroxisomes was highly purified and characterized. The enzyme preparation has a mol.wt. of approx. 80,000 with two identical subunits, and isoelectric point of 8.0 and a pH optimum between 8.0 and 8.5. The enzyme catalysed transamination between a number of L-amino acids and pyruvate or glyoxylate. The effective amino acceptors were pyruvate, phenylpyruvate and glyoxylate with serine, and glyoxylate and phenylpyruvate with alanine as amino donor. These properties and kinetic parameters of the enzyme are remarkably similar to those previously described for mitochondrial alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase isoenzyme 1 from glucagon-injected rat liver [Noguchi, Okuno, Takada, Minatogawa, Okai & Kido (1978, Biochem. J. 169, 113-122].  相似文献   

9.
Glutamine transaminase from rat brain was purified to a high degree. The isolated enzyme appeared to be homogeneous by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gel. The molecular weight was found to be approximately 98 000; the enzyme is probably composed of two subunits. The absorbance maximum at 410 nm and the inhibition by carbonyl reagents are strong indications for the presence of pyridoxal phosphate. The enzyme showed maximal activity at pH 9.0 to 9.2. Of the amino acids tested, none could replace glutamine in the transamination reaction. Glyoxylate and phenylpyruvate was found to be the best amino acceptors. The Km values for glutamine and glyoxylate were 0.6 and 1.5 mM, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
A cold-labile glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH, EC 1.4.1.3) has been purified to homogeneity from the crude extracts of Azospirillum brasilense. The purified enzyme shows a dual coenzyme specificity, and both the NADPH and NADH-dependent activities are equally cold-sensitive. The enzyme is highly specific for the substrates 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate. Kinetic studies with GDH indicate that the enzyme is primarily designed to catalyse the reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate. The NADP+-linked activity of GDH showed Km values 2.5 X 10(-4) M and 1.0 X 10(-2) M for 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate respectively. NAD+-linked activity of GDH could be demonstrated only for the amination of 2-oxoglutarate but not for the deamination of glutamate. The Lineweaver-Burk plot with ammonia as substrate for NADPH-dependent activity shows a biphasic curve, indicating two apparent Km values (0.38 mM and 100 mM) for ammonia; the same plot for NADH-dependent activity shows only one apparent Km value (66 mM) for ammonia. The NADPH-dependent activity shows an optimum pH from 8.5 to 8.6 in Tris/HCl buffer, whereas in potassium phosphate buffer the activity shows a plateau from pH 8.4 to 10.0. At high pH (greater than 9.5) amino acids in general strongly inhibit the reductive amination reaction by their competition with 2-oxoglutarate for the binding site on GDH. The native enzyme has a Mr = 285000 +/- 20000 and appears to be composed of six identical subunits of Mr = 48000 +/- 2000. The GDH level in A. brasilense is strongly regulated by the nitrogen source in the growth medium.  相似文献   

11.
Two membrane-bound glutamate dehydrogenases were found in adult Dirofilaria immitis, an NAD-linked enzyme (EC 1.4.1.2) in the cytosol (C-GDH) and an enzyme equally reactive with NAD or NADP (EC 1.4.1.3) in the mitochondria (M-GDH). The cytosolic enzyme had a pH optimum of 7.8-8.0 and exhibited 30% more activity at 25 C than at 37 C (pH 8.0). The mitochondrial enzyme had a pH optimum at 8.4 and exhibited 27% more activity at 37 C than at 25 C (pH 8.4); it was also more sensitive to heat denaturation. Gel filtration of worm subfractions separated four peaks of C-GDH activity with molecular weights of approximately 610, 285, 180, and less than 100 thousand, and a single major peak of M-GDH activity with a molecular weight of about 335,000. When assayed at pH 8, 37 C, and 200 microM NADH, the Km for the substrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, was equivalent for the two enzymes, but the Km for ADP (activator) was five times greater for M-GDH. When the two enzymes were assayed at pH 8.0, 37 C, and 100 microM NADH, 1 mM ADP approximately doubled and 1 mM ATP halved the velocity observed for each enzyme with no effector present. Under these assay conditions AMP, IDP, GDP, and GTP had opposite effects on the reaction velocities for the two enzymes. When the assay conditions were changed, the effects of added purine nucleotides varied, even directionally. Addition of up to 5 mM glutamate (product) had no significant effect on C-GDH kinetics, nor on the substrate Km of M-GDH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
1. Serine-pyruvate aminotransferase was purified from mouse, rat, dog and cat liver. Each enzyme preparation was homogeneous as judged by polyacrylamide-disc-gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate. However, isoelectric focusing resulted in the detection of two or more active forms from enzyme preparations from dog, cat and mouse. A single active form was obtained with the rat enzyme. All four enzyme preparations had similar pH optima and molecular weights. 2. Both mouse and rat preparations catalysed transamination between a number of L-amino acids (serine, leucine, asparagine, methionine, glutamine, ornithine, histidine, phenylalanine or tyrosine) and pyruvate. Effective amino acceptors were pyruvate, phenylpyruvate and glyoxylate with serine as amino donor. The reverse transamination activity, with hydroxypyruvate and alanine as subtrates, was lower than with serine and pyruvate for both species. Serine-pyruvate aminotransferase activities were inhibited by isonicotinic acid hydrazide. 3. In contrast, both dog and cat enzyme preparations were highly specific for serine as amino donor with pyruvate, and utilized pyruvate and glyoxylate as effective amino acceptors. A little activity was detected with phenylpyruvate. The reverse activity was higher than with serine and pyruvate for both species. Serine-pyruvate amino-transferase activities were not inhibited by isonicotinic acid hydrazide.  相似文献   

13.
1. A procedure is described for purifying the enzyme L-alanine:4,5-dioxovaleric acid aminotransferase (DOVA transaminase) from chicken liver. The enzyme catalyzes a transamination reaction between L-alanine and 4,5-dioxovaleric acid (DOVA), yielding delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA). 2. In cell fractionation studies, DOVA transaminase activities were detected in mitochondria and in the post-mitochondrial supernatant fraction from liver homogenates. 3. For the mitochondrial enzyme, any of most L-amino acids could serve as a source for the amino group transferred to DOVA, but L-alanine appeared the preferred substrate. At pH 7.0, the enzyme had an apparent Km of 60 microM for DOVA and of 400 microM for L-alanine. 4. The enzyme was purified from disrupted mitoplasts in three steps: chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, gel filtration through Sephadex G-150, and chromatography on hydroxyapatite. The yield was approx. 100 micrograms of enzyme protein per 10 g wet wt of liver. 5. The purified enzyme had a subunit mol. wt of 63,000 as determined by gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions. 6. The activity of DOVA transaminase was also measured in embryonic chicken liver, and based on activity, the enzyme's capacity to produce ALA was significantly greater than that of ALA synthase. Unlike ALA synthase, however, DOVA transaminase activity did not increase in liver mitochondria of chicken embryos exposed for 18 hr to two potent porphyrogenic agents.  相似文献   

14.
1. The apparent Michaelis constants of the glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3), the glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase (EC 2.6.1.1) and the glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2) of rat brain mitochondria derived from non-synaptic (M) and synaptic (SM2) sources were studied. 2. The kinetics of oxygen uptake of both populations of mitochondria in the presence of a fixed concentration of malate and various concentrations of glutamate or glutamine were investigated. 3. In both mitochondrial populations, glutamate-supported respiration in the presence of 2.5 mM-malate appears to be biphasic, one system (B) having an apparent Km for glutamate of 0.25 +/- 0.04 mM (n=7) and the other (A) of 1.64 +/- 0.5 mM (n=7) [when corrected for low-Km process, Km=2.4 +/- 0.75 mM (n=7)]. Aspartate production in these experiments followed kinetics of a single process with an apparent Km for glutamate of 1.8-2 mM, approximating to the high-Km process. 4. Oxygen-uptake measurement with both mitochondrial populations in the presence of malate and various glutamate concentrations in which amino-oxyacetate was present showed kinetics approximating only to the low-Km process (apparent Km for glutamate approximately 0.2 mM). Similar experiments in the presence of glutamate alone showed kinetics approximating only to the high-Km process (apparent Km for glutamate approximately 1-1.3 mM). 5. Oxygen uptake supported by glutamine (0-3 mM) and malate (2.5 mM) by the free (M) mitochondrial population, however, showed single-phase kinetics with an apparent Km for glutamine of 0.28 mM. 6. Aspartate and 2-oxoglutarate accumulation was measured in 'free' nonsynaptic (M) brain mitochondria oxidizing various concentrations of glutamate at a fixed malate concentration. Over a 30-fold increase in glutamate concentration, the flux through the glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase increased 7--8-fold, whereas the flux through 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase increased about 2.5-fold. 7. The biphasic kinetics of glutamate-supported respiration by brain mitochondria in the presence of malate are interpreted as reflecting this change in the relative fluxes through transamination and 2-oxoglutarate metabolism.  相似文献   

15.
Phenylalanine pyruvate aminotransferase in rat liver was found in both the mitochondrial and supernatant fractions. Phenylalanine pyruvate aminotransferase was purified from rat liver mitochondria. The purified enzyme was specific for pyruvate, exhibiting no activity with 2-oxoglutarate as aminoacceptor, and utilized a wide range of amino acids as amino donors. Amino acids were effective in the following order of activity: L-phenylalanine > L-tyrosine > L-histidine > 3,4-dihydroxy-DL-phenylalanine. Very little activity was observed with L-tryptophan and 5-hydroxy-L-tryptophan. The apparent Km values for L-phenylalanine and L-histidine were 2.6 mM and 2.7 mM, respectively. The Km values for pyruvate were 5.0 mM and 1.5 mM with phenylalanine and histidine as amino donors, respectively. The pH optimum was near 9.0. Sucrose density gradient centrifugation gave a molecular weight of approximately 68,000. On the basis of subcellular distributions, substrate specificities, substrate inhibition, pH optima, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and some other properties, it was suggested that mitochondrial phenylalanine pyruvate aminotransferase was identical with mitochondrial histidine pyruvate aminotransferase.  相似文献   

16.
1. The distribution of l-alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase activity between subcellular fractions prepared from rat liver homogenates was investigated. The greater part of the homogenate activity (about 80%) was recovered in the ;total-particles' fraction sedimented by high-speed centrifugation and the remainder in the cytosol fraction. 2. Subfractionation of the particles by differential sedimentation and on sucrose density gradients revealed a specific association between the aminotransferase and the mitochondrial enzymes glutamate dehydrogenase and rhodanese. 3. The aminotransferase activities in the cytosol and the mitochondria are due to isoenzymes. The solubilized mitochondrial enzyme has a pH optimum of 8.6, an apparent K(m) of 0.24mm with respect to glyoxylate and is inhibited by glyoxylate at concentrations above 5mm. The cytosol aminotransferase shows no distinct pH optimum (over the range 7.0-9.0) and has an apparent K(m) of 1.11mm with respect to glyoxylate; there is no evidence of inhibition by glyoxylate. 4. The mitochondrial location of the bulk of the rat liver l-alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase activity is discussed in relation to a pathway for gluconeogenesis involving glyoxylate.  相似文献   

17.
Serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.45) from rye seedlings catalysed transamination between L-serine and glyoxylate according to the Ping Pong Bi Bi mechanism with double substrate inhibition. As judged from the Km values, L-serine, L-alanine, and L-asparagine served as substrates for the enzyme with glyoxylate, whereas L-alanine and L-asparagine underwent transamination with hydroxypyruvate as acceptor. Pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) seems to be rather loosely bound to the enzyme protein. Aminooxyacetate and D-serine were found to be pure competitive inhibitors of the enzyme, with Ki values of 0.12 microM and 1.6 mM, respectively. Among the PLP inhibitors isonicotinic acid hydrazide and hydroxylamine were far less effective than aminooxyacetate (20% and 70% inhibition at 0.1 mM concentration, respectively). Inhibition by the SH group inhibitors at 1 mM concentration did not exceed 50%. L-Serine distinctly diminished the inhibitory effect of this type inhibitors. Preincubation of the enzyme with glyoxylate distinctly diminished transamination. Glyoxylate limited the inhibitory action of formaldehyde probably by competing for the reactive groups present in the active centre.  相似文献   

18.
Galactan: galactan galactosyltransferase (GGT), an enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of the long-chain raffinose family of oligosaccharides (RFOs) in Ajuga reptans, catalyses the transfer of an alpha-galactosyl residue from one molecule of RFO to another one resulting in the next higher RFO oligomer. This novel galactinol (alpha-galactosyl-myo-inositol)-independent alpha-galactosyltransferase is responsible for the accumulation of long-chain RFOs in vivo. Warm treatment (20 degrees C) of excised leaves resulted in a 34-fold increase of RFO concentration and a 200-fold increase of GGT activity after 28 days. Cold treatment (10 degrees C/3 degrees C day/night) resulted in a 26- and 130-fold increase, respectively. These data support the role of GGT as a key enzyme in the synthesis and accumulation of long-chain RFOs. GGT was purified from leaves in a 4-step procedure which involved fractionated precipitation with ammonium sulphate as well as lectin affinity, anion exchange, and size-exclusion chromatography and resulted in a 200-fold purification. Purified GGT had an isoelectric point of 4.7, a pH optimum around 5, and its transferase reaction displayed saturable concentration dependence for both raffinose (Km = 42 mM) and stachyose (Km = 58 mM). GGT is a glycoprotein with a 10% glycan portion. The native molecular mass was 212 kDa as determined by size-exclusion chromatography. Purified GGT showed one single active band after native PAGE or IEF separation, respectively, which separated into three bands on SDS-PAGE at 48 kDa, 66 kDa, and 60 kDa. The amino acid sequence of four tryptic peptides obtained from the major 48-kDa band showed a high homology to plant alpha-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.22) sequences. GGT differed, however, in its substrate specificity from alpha-galactosidases; it neither hydrolysed nor transferred alpha-galactosyl-groups from melibiose, galactinol, UDP-galactose, manninotriose, and manninotetrose. Galactinol, sucrose, and galactose inhibited the GGT reaction considerably at 10-50 mM.  相似文献   

19.
Two different aminotransferases, that have glyoxylate as the amino acceptor, have specific activities of 1 to 2 mumol . min-1 . mg of protein-1 in the isolated peroxisomal fraction from spinach leaves. Their properties were evaluated after separation on a hydroxylapatite column. Both enzymes had a Km for glyoxylate of 0.15 mM and an amino acid Km of 2 to 3 mM. Reactions proceeded by a Ping Pong Bi Bi mechanism. Serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase was relatively specific for both substrates and could only be slightly reversed with 100 mM glycine, although the Ki of glycine was 33 mM. The glutamate:glyoxylate amino-transferase protein was equally active in catalyzing an alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase reaction, but the reverse reactions with 100 mM glycine were hardly measureable, although the Ki (glycine) was 8.7 mM. Protection against hydroxylamine inhibition from reaction with pyridoxal phosphate was used to investigate the specificity of amino acid binding. Substrate amino acids protected at about the same concentration as their Km, while glycine protected at its Ki concentration. Thus, the nearly irreversible catalysis with glycine is not due to a failure to bind glycine. The significance of a peroxisomal alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase activity has not been incorporated into schemes for the oxidative photosynthetic carbon cycle.  相似文献   

20.
Purification and characterization of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase [EC 1.1.1.37] from unfertilized eggs of the sea urchin, Anthocidaris crassispina, are described. The purification method consisted of dextran sulfate fractionation, Blue Dextran Sepharose chromatography, Phenyl-Sepharose hydrophobic chromatography and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The enzyme was purified 771-fold with a 7% yield from the crude extract. The purified enzyme appeared homogeneous on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under both native and denatured conditions. After incubation at 45 degrees C for 50 min, the enzyme lost about 90% of its activity. In the presence of NADH, however, the enzyme was protected against the heat denaturation. The native enzyme had a molecular weight of about 65,000 and probably consisted of two identical subunits. In the reduction of oxaloacetate with NADH, a broad optimum pH ranging from 8.2 to 9.4 was found with 50 mM Tris-HCl and glycine-NaOH buffers. Sodium phosphate buffer apparently activated the enzyme. The apparent Km values for oxaloacetate and NADH were 19 microM and 30 microM, respectively. The optimum pH for malate oxidation with NAD+ was 10.2 in 50 mM NaHCO3-Na2CO3 buffer. The apparent Km values for malate and NAD+ were 7.0 mM and 0.6 mM, respectively. Zinc ion, sulfite ion, p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonate and adenine nucleotides strongly inhibited the enzyme.  相似文献   

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