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1.
The pre-steady state time dependence of Na+ accumulation by the Na(+)-H+ exchanger in renal brush border membrane vesicles was investigated at 0 degree C by a manual mixing technique using amiloride to quench the reaction. Dilution of acid-loaded (pHi 5.7) vesicles into an alkaline medium (pHo 7.7) containing 1 mM 22Na+ produced a time course of amiloride-sensitive Na+ uptake that consisted of three distinct phases: 1) a lag, 2) a monoexponential "burst," and 3) a linear or steady state phase. Experiments testing for the presence of 22Na+ backflux, residual Na+ binding to the membrane, and hysteresis were negative, lending support to the hypothesis that the burst phase corresponds to Na+ translocation during the initial turnover of Na(+)-H+ exchanger. Lowering the internal pH increased the amount of na+ uptake in each of the phases without affecting the apparent burst rate, whereas lowering the external pH inhibited Na+ uptake while increasing the duration of the lag phase. The pattern of inhibition produced by external H+ was of the simple competitive type, indicating that Na+ and H+ share a common binding site. Steady state Na+ uptake showed a sigmoidal dependence on internal pH (Hill coefficient = 1.67), consistent with the presence of an internal allosteric H+ activation site. Alkaline loading conditions (pHi 7.7), which favor desaturation of the internal H+ binding sites, completely abolished Na+ uptake in the steady state. In contrast, Na+ accumulation during the burst phase was reduced to 25% of an acid-loaded (pHi 5.7) control. The persistence of the burst phase and the disappearance of steady state Na+ uptake under alkaline loading conditions suggest that recycling of the H(+)-loaded exchanger is a late event in the transport cycle that follows Na+ translocation (ping-pong mechanism) and controls the steady state rate of Na+ accumulation. Activation of the recycling step involves sequential binding of H+ to the allosteric and transport sites, thus accounting for the cooperative dependence of steady state Na+ uptake on the internal [H+].  相似文献   

2.
Human erythrocyte gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase is inactivated by the disulfide cystamine (2,2'-dithiobis-(ethylamine)) at pH 8.2 with a rate constant of 1020 min-1 mM-1. Magnesium ion and various combinations of substrates and products confer differing degrees of protection against cystamine inactivation, thus allowing the detection and quantification of certain enzyme-ligand interactions. By measuring inactivation rates as a function of ligand concentrations in incomplete reaction mixtures, we have obtained evidence for the following complexes: enzyme . Mg2+; enzyme . Mg2+ . MgATP2-; enzyme . Mg2+ . L-glutamate; enzyme . Mg2+ . MgATP2- . L-glutamate; enzyme . Mg2+ . L-gamma-glutamyl-L-alpha-aminobutyrate. The data also imply the existence of enzyme . (Mg2+)2 . MgATP2- . L-glutamate and several enzyme forms resulting from the weak binding to L-alpha-aminobutyrate. The methods used permit the calculation of cystamine inactivation rates for most of these enzyme forms and also give values for the equilibrium constants describing their formation.  相似文献   

3.
The enzyme ketol acid reductoisomerase catalyzes the second common reaction in the biosynthesis of the branched chain amino acids. The reaction is complex as an alkyl migration and a ketone reduction apparently occur as separate steps during the conversion of acetolactate to 2,3-dihydroxy-3-methylbutyrate. This paper reports on the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters of the enzyme. The pH variation of log(V/K) for acetolactate was fit to an equation describing a bell-shaped curve, indicating an acid and a base catalyst for the reaction. In the reverse direction, V/K for 2,3-dihydroxy-3-methylbutyrate is constant over the pH range 8 to 10 and decreases below pH 8 with the ionization of two catalytic groups. The pH dependence of the V/K values for reduction of the kinetically competent intermediate and analogs of this intermediate are also described by a bell-shaped curve. The pH dependence of the V/K for alkyl migration of this intermediate indicates a single base catalyst for this reaction. We observe no deuterium kinetic isotope effect on V or V/K for the reaction of acetolactate at any pH. We observe a pH-dependent kinetic isotope effect on V/K for the reduction of the intermediate, the magnitude of which is metal ion dependent. Larger KIE's are observed in the presence of Mn2+ as opposed to Mg2+. In the reverse reaction there is a pH-dependent kinetic isotope effect on V/K. Based on the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters and the kinetic isotope effects, we propose a base-catalyzed proton shuttle mechanism for the alkyl migration reaction followed by an acid-assisted ketone reduction by NADPH.  相似文献   

4.
The kinetic properties of the [3H]ADP-ATP exchange reaction catalyzed by Na+, K+-dependent ATPase [EC 3.6.1,3] were investigated, using NaI-treated microsomes from bovine brain, and the following results were obtained. 1. The rates of the Na+-dependent exchange reaction in the steady state were measured in a solution containing 45 micronM free Mg2+, 100 mMNaCl, 80 micronM ATP, and 160 micronM ADP at pH 6.5 and 4-5 degrees. The rate and amount of decrease in phosphorylated intermediate on adding ADP, i.e., the amount of ADP-sensitive EP, were measured while varying one of the reaction parameters and fixing the others mentioned above. Plots of the exchange rate and the amount of ADP-sensitive EP against the logarithm of free Mg2+ concentration gave bell-shaped curves with maximum values at 50-60 micronM free Mg2+. Plots of the exchange rate and the amount of ADP-sensitive EP against pH also gave bell-shaped curves with maximum values at pH 6.9-7. They both increased with increase in the concentration of NaCl to maximum values at 150-200 mM NaCl, and then decreased rapidly with increase in the NaCl concentration above 200 mM. The dependences of the exchange rate and the amount of ADP-sensitive EP on the concentration of ADP followed the Michaelis-Menten equation, and the Michaelis constants Km, for both were 43 micronM. The dependence of the exchange rate on the ATP concentration also followed the Michaelis-Menten equation, and the Km value was 30 micronM. The amount of ADP-sensitive EP increased with increase in the ATP concentration, and reached a maximum value at about 5 micronM ATP. 2. The N+-dependent [3H]ADP-ATP exchange reaction was started by adding [3H]ADP to EP at low Mg2+-concentration. The reaction consisted of a rapid initial phase and a slow steady phase. The amount of [3H]ATP formed during the rapid initial phase, i.e. the size of the ATP burst, was equal to that of ADP-sensitive EP, and was proportional to the rate in the steady state. At high Mg2+ concentration, the rate of Na+-dependent exchange in the steady state was almost zero, and EP did not show any ADP sensitivity. However, rapid formation of [3H]ATP was observed in the pre-steady state, and the size of the ATP burst increased with increase in the KCl concentration. From these findings, we concluded that an enzyme-ATP complex (E2ATP) formed at low Mg2+ concentration is in equilibrium with EP + ADP, that the rate-limiting step for the exchange reaction is the release of ATP from the enzyme-ATP complex, that the ADP-insensitive EP (formula: see text) produced at high Mg2+ concentration is in equilibrium with the enzyme-ATP complex, and that the equilibrium shifts towards the enzyme-ATP complex on adding KCl. Actually, the ratio of the size of the ATP burst to the amount of EP was equal to the reciprocal of the equilibrium constant of step (formula: see text), determined by a method previously reported by us.  相似文献   

5.
The hydrolysis of [gamma-32P]ATP by porcine brain (Na+ + K+)-stimulated ATP phosphohydrolase (EC 3.6.1.3) has been studied at 28 degree C in a rapid mixing quenched-flow apparatus. An "early burst" in the release of Pi from ATP has been observed when the enzyme is mixed with ATP, Na+ and a relatively high concentration of K+ (10 mM) but the burst is less pronounced with 0.5 mM K+. This "early burst" of Pi release is suppressed when the enzyme is pre-mixed with 10 mM K+ or 20% (v/v) dimethylsulphoxide before mixing with ATP and Na+, and premixing of enzyme with Na+ antagonizes this effect of dimethylsulphoxide. The results have been analysed by a non-linear least squares regression treatment and are consistent with a mechanism involving three steps, one of which may be a relatively slow change in enzyme conformation following release of Pi from its covalent linkage with the enzyme, in addition to formation of the enzyme-substrate complex. Rate constants (and S.E.) for these steps have been calculated and the roles of phospho-enzyme and other intermediates in the reaction mechanism of the transport ATPase are dicussed.  相似文献   

6.
The glutamate dehydrogenase catalyzed reduction of delta 1-pyrroline-2-carboxylic acid (PCA; an alpha-imino acid) with reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) to give L-proline and NADP+ is employed as a model for the redox step of the corresponding enzyme-catalyzed reductive amination of alpha-ketoglutarate. We demonstrate the reversibility of the model reaction and measure its equilibrium constant. The pH profiles for the model reactions show that the active substrates are the N-protonated imino acid in one direction and the proline anion with a neutral amino group in the other. The V/K value for the imino acid reduction is enhanced by a group Z of pK = 8.6 in the enzyme-NADPH complex, while that for the proline reaction is unaffected by any such group in the enzyme-NADP+ complex. The following conclusions emerge from a comparison of the pH dependence of the rates for the model reactions with that for the oxidative deamination of L-glutamate [Rife, J. E., & Cleland, W. W. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 2328]. The N-protonated form of alpha-iminoglutarate and the conjugate base of glutamate are the active substrates. The redox step is not sensitive to the protonation state of the groups that catalyze the hydrolysis of bound alpha-iminoglutarate. The group Z, which facilitates the PCA reaction, plays no role in the binding of alpha-ketoglutarate. We propose a chemical mechanism for the glutamate reaction where an unprotonated enzyme group of pK = 5.2 in enzyme-NADPH catalyzes the conversion of the alpha-iminoglutarate to the carbinolamine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
A Brown  A H Colen  H F Fisher 《Biochemistry》1979,18(26):5924-5928
Ammonia is known to inhibit the steady-state rate of oxidation of L-glutamate catalyzed by glutamate dehydrogenase. We reported previously [Brown, A., Colen, A. H., & Fisher, H. F. (1978) Biochemistry 17, 2031] kinetic evidence supporting the formation in the initial rapid phase of a complex which is composed of enzyme, reduced coenzyme, alpha-ketoglutarate, and ammonia. We show here that the effects of ammonia on the steady-state reaction can be correlated with transient-state kinetic effects related to the concentration of that ammonia-containing complex. These results indicate the existence of alternate reaction pathways which become important at high ammonia concentrations. These new pathways provide an additional route for the release of NADPH from the enzyme surface. The expanded mechanism shows that the noncompetitive product inhibition by ammonia can occur without the simultaneous presence of ammonia and L-glutamate on the enzyme. This mechanism also accommodates the observed substrate inhibition by L-glutamate.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of ATP hydrolysis was studied at 0 degrees C and pH 7.5 using purified leaky vesicles of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase and enzyme solubilized in monomeric form with high concentrations of octaethylene glycol monododecyl ether (C12E8). The enzyme reaction of membranous Ca2+-ATPase was characterized by an initial burst in the hydrolysis of ATP and modulated by millimolar concentrations of ATP. For detergent-solubilized Ca2+-ATPase no burst and moderate low affinity modulation was observed, but the reaction was activated both at low (phosphorylating) and intermediate (K0.5 = 0.06 mM) ATP concentrations. A study of the partial reactions indicated that the effects of detergent and ATP were attributable to activation of the E1P----E2P transition which was rate-limiting. E32P dephosphorylation of membranous Ca2+-ATPase and the detergent-solubilized monomer comprised both a slow and a rapid component. The inhibitory effect of high Ca2+ was correlated with the development of a dominant contribution of slow phase dephosphorylation and with ATP-induced extra binding of Ca2+ binding which presumably takes place at the phosphorylation site (ECaP). Ca2+ was bound with lesser affinity to detergent-solubilized Ca2+-ATPase but with qualitatively the same characteristics as to membranous ECaP. Either Ca2+ or Mg2+ was required for dephosphorylation, also after detergent solubilization. It is concluded that ATP hydrolysis occurs by the same steps for membranous and monomeric Ca2+-ATPase and involves formation of either EMgP or ECaP as reaction intermediates, leading to biphasic kinetics, which, therefore, cannot be taken as evidence of an oligomeric function of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Rate and bromine-81 nmr spectroscopic investigations of the binding of bromide and chloride ions to bacterial L-glutamate decarboxylase have been carried out. A mild acceleration of the decarboxylation reaction by these anions is observed and the nmr results suggest that bromide and chloride bind competitively to the enzyme. Bromide ion binding appears to have the same pH dependence as the rate of the enzymatic reaction.  相似文献   

10.
J K Johnson  Z X Wang  D K Srivastava 《Biochemistry》1992,31(43):10564-10575
The CoA derivative 3-indolepropionyl-CoA (IPCoA) serves as a competent pseudosubstrate for the medium-chain fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD)-catalyzed reaction. The reaction product trans-3-indoleacryloyl-CoA (IACoA) exhibits a characteristic UV-vis absorption spectrum with lambda max = 367 nm and epsilon 367 = 26,500 M-1 cm-1. The chromophoric nature of IACoA allows us to measure the direct conversion of substrate to product (at 367 nm) without recourse to absorption signals for either the enzyme-bound flavin or the coupling electron acceptors, as well as probe the enzyme site environment. The interaction of IACoA with medium chain fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD)-FAD is characterized by resultant (spectra of the mixture minus the individual components) absorption peaks at 490, 417, and 355 nm. These absorption peaks increase in magnitude as the pH of the buffer media decreases. Transient kinetic analysis for the interaction of MCAD-FAD with IACoA suggests that the formation of the enzyme-IACoA complex proceeds in two steps. The first (fast) step involves the formation of an E-IACoA collision complex, which [formula: see text] is isomerized (concomitant with changes in the protein structure) to an E*-IACoA complex in the second (slow) step. We have studied the effect of pH on Kc, k2, and k-2. While Kc shows practically no dependence on pH (within a 2-fold variation between pH 6.0 and 9.5), k2 and k-2 show a strong dependence on pH. Both k2 and k-2 exhibit a sigmoidal dependence on the pH of the buffer media, with pKa's of 7.53 and 8.30, respectively. In accordance with the model presented herein, the pKa of 7.53 represents an enzyme site group which is involved in the interaction with IACoA within the E-IACoA collision complex. This pKa is perturbed to 8.30 upon isomerization of the collision complex. The pH-dependent changes in k2 and k-2 are such that the equilibrium distribution between E-IACoA and E*-IACoA is favored to the latter complex (by about 20-fold) at lower pH than at higher pH. A cumulative account of the spectral, kinetic, and thermodynamic properties of the enzyme-IACoA complexes has allowed us delineate the microscopic pathway by which the E-IACoA isomerization (presumably via protein conformational changes) is coupled to the proton equilibration steps.  相似文献   

11.
1. The transient kinetics of reduction of the 470-nm absorption band in benzylamine oxidase by substrate at different pH values between 6 and 10 have been studied by stopped-flow techniques, and substituent effects on kinetic parameters for the reduction process have been examined using a series of ring-substituted benzylamine derivatives as the substrates. 2. Reduction of the enzyme by substrate takes place in two kinetically distinguishable steps, with the intermediate formation of an enzyme-substrate complex in which the substrate appears to be covalently bound through its amino group to the prosthetic group of the enzyme, possibly in the form of an amine-pyridoxal Schiff-base. 3. The apparent stability of the enzyme-substrate complex shows no obvious dependence on the electronic properties of the amine substrates, but is strongly pH-dependent in a way suggesting that substrate-binding involves the non-protonated amines, exclusively, and requires the presence of the acid form of an ionizing group in the enzyme with apparent pKa of 8.8. 4. Reduction of the enzymatic 470-nm chromophore and release of the aldehyde product of the catalytic process are rate-limited by the same monomolecular reaction step involving the enzyme-substrate complex. Rate constants for the rate-limiting reaction exhibit no significant dependence on pH between 6 and 10, but correlate with Hammett sigma-values for the ring-substituted benzylamine derivatives tested, yielding a phi-value of + 0.3.  相似文献   

12.
Stopped flow studies of D2O kinetic solvent isotope effects on the reaction catalyzed by L-glutamate dehydrogenase reveal, in addition to several effects apparently attributable simply to pKa shifts, a 2-fold pH-independent effect on the velocity of the steady state oxidative deamination of L-glutamate by enzyme and NADP. Comparable pH-independent D2O kinetic solvent isotope effects are seen both in a transient phase of the reaction in which alpha-ketoglutarate is displaced by L-glutamate from an enzyme-NADPH-alpha-ketoglutarate (product) complex and in an analogous model reaction in which alpha-ketoglutarate is displaced by D-glutamate. These results suggest that alpha-ketoglutarate dissociation from an enzyme-NADPH-alpha-ketoglutarate complex is rate-limiting in the steady state.  相似文献   

13.
The existence of an endogenous Na(+)-glutamate cotransporter in the oocytes of Xenopus laevis is demonstrated. The transporter does not accept D-glutamate as substrate. The dependence on substrate displays two saturating components with low (K1/2 = 9 mM) and high (K1/2 = 0.35 microM) affinities for L-glutamate. The dependence on external Na+ exhibits a saturating component with a K1/2 value of about 5 mM and a component that has not saturated up to 110 mM Na+. In voltage-clamped oocytes, it is possible to demonstrate that Na(+)-dependent L-glutamate transport is directly coupled to countertransport of Rb+. The analysis of the voltage dependence of the Na+,K(+)-dependent L-glutamate uptake suggests that positive charges are moved inwardly during the transport cycle.  相似文献   

14.
1. The transient-state kinetics of ligand-displacement reactions have been analyzed. Methods based on this analysis have been used to obtain reliable estimates of on-velocity and off-velocity constants for coenzyme binding to liver alcohol dehydrogenase at different pH values between 6 and 10. 2. The rate of NADH dissociation from the enzyme shows no pronounced dependence on pH. The rate of NAD+ dissociation is controlled by a group with a pKa of 7.6, agreeing with the pKa reported to regulate the binding of certain inhibitory substrate analogues to the enzyme . NAD+ complex. 3. Critical experiments have been performed to test a recent proposal that on-velocity constants for the binding of NADH and NAD+ are controlled by proton equilibria exhibiting different pKa values. The results show that association rates for NADH and NAD+ exhibit the same pH dependence corresponding to a pKa of 9.2. Titrimetric evidence is presented indicating that the latter effect of pH derives from ionization of a group which affects the anion-binding capacity of the coenzyme-binding site.  相似文献   

15.
In the presence of electrochemical energy, several branched-chain neutral and acidic amino acids were found to accumulate in membrane vesicles of Bacillus stearothermophilus. The membrane vesicles contained a stereo-specific transport system for the acidic amino acids L-glutamate and L-aspartate, which could not translocate their respective amines, L-glutamine and L-asparagine. The transport system was thermostable (Ti = 70 degrees C) and showed highest activities at elevated temperatures (60 to 65 degrees C). The membrane potential or pH gradient could act as the driving force for L-glutamate uptake, which indicated that the transport process of L-glutamate is electrogenic and that protons are involved in the translocation process. The electrogenic character implies that the anionic L-glutamate is cotransported with at least two monovalent cations. To determine the mechanistic stoichiometry of L-glutamate transport and the nature of the cotranslocated cations, the relationship between the components of the proton motive force and the chemical gradient of L-glutamate was investigated at different external pH values in the absence and presence of ionophores. In the presence of either a membrane potential or a pH gradient, the chemical gradient of L-glutamate was equivalent to that specific gradient at different pH values. These results cannot be explained by cotransport of L-glutamate with two protons, assuming thermodynamic equilibrium between the driving force for uptake and the chemical gradient of the substrate. To determine the character of the cotranslocated cations, L-glutamate uptake was monitored with artificial gradients. It was established that either the membrane potential, pH gradient, or chemical gradient of sodium ions could act as the driving force for L-glutamate uptake, which indicated that L-glutamate most likely is cotranslocated in symport with one proton and on sodium ion.  相似文献   

16.
Previous work using human jejunal brush-border membrane vesicles has demonstrated the existence of a distinct transport system in man for acidic amino acids. This system is energized by an inwardly directed Na+ gradient and an outwardly directed K+ gradient. These studies further characterize the transport of L-glutamate in the human jejunal brush-border membrane vesicles. Efflux studies were performed by loading the brush-border membrane vesicles with radiolabeled L-glutamate and sodium chloride. Extravesicular K+ accelerated the efflux of L-glutamate when compared to extravesicular Na+ or choline, indicating that potassium serves to recycle the carrier. Unlabeled extravesicular L-glutamate (but not D-glutamate) also enhanced the efflux of radiolabeled L-glutamate demonstrating that there is a bidirectional similarity to the transport system. The effect of pH on the transport system was also investigated by varying the intravesicular and extravesicular pH from 5.5 to 9. A pH environment of 6.5 produced the highest initial uptake rates as well as the greatest overshoots for transport of L-glutamate into brush-border membrane vesicles. The imposition of an inwardly directed pH gradient (5.5 outside, 7.5 inside) accelerated both the influx and efflux of L-glutamate. These results demonstrate that the L-glutamate carrier system in human jejunum appears to have similar energizing characteristics in either direction across the brush-border membrane. In addition, the system operates at an optimal pH of 6.5 and protonation of the system may enhance its mobility.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanism of the reduction of 2.oxoglutarate by NADPH and addition of NH4+ catalyzed by L-glutamate dehydrogenase was investigated with the stopped flow technique, following dihydronicotinamide absorbance and fluorescence changes. We make conspicuous, as in the reverse reaction, the existence of prestationnary events, the characteristics of which strongly depend on the ligand addition order. If the E-NADPH-2.oxoglutarate complex is preformed, saturated with regard to each ligand, there is a burst associated with the oxidation of 0.7 mole of NADPH per mole of protomer, a first order process with a velocity constant of 300 ± 50 sec?1. If this complex is not preformed, the burst has reduced amplitude and velocity constants, differences that suggest an isomerization step following the binding processes. Whichever the incubation order, the later evolution follows an exponential decrease towards equilibrium with a velocity constant depending on the ligand concentration up to an extrapolated value of 27 sec?1, a step corresponding to the dissociation of the reaction products.  相似文献   

18.
The photoreduction of ubiquinone in the electron acceptor complex (QIQII) of photosynthetic reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, R26, was studied in a series of short, saturating flashes. The specific involvement of H+ in the reduction was revealed by the pH dependence of the electron transfer events and by net H+ binding during the formation of ubiquinol, which requires two turnovers of the photochemical act. On the first flash QII receives an electron via QI to form a stable ubisemiquinone anion (QII-); the second flash generates QI-. At low pH the two semiquinones rapidly disproportionate with the uptake of 2 H+, to produce QIIH2. This yields out-of-phase binary oscillations for the formation of anionic semiquinone and for H+ uptake. Above pH 6 there is a progressive increase in H+ binding on the first flash and an equivalent decrease in binding on the second flash until, at about pH 9.5, the extent of H+ binding is the same on all flashes. The semiquinone oscillations, however, are undiminished up to pH 9. It is suggested that a non-chromophoric, acid-base group undergoes a pK shift in response to the appearance of the anionic semiquinone and that this group is the site of protonation on the first flash. The acid-base group, which may be in the reaction center protein, appears to be subsequently involved in the protonation events leading to fully reduced ubiquinol. The other proton in the two electron reduction of ubiquinone is always taken up on the second flash and is bound directly to QII-. At pH values above 8.0, it is rate limiting for the disproportionation and the kinetics, which are diffusion controlled, are properly responsive to the prevailing pH. Below pH 8, however, a further step in the reaction mechanism was shown to be rate limiting for both H+ binding electron transfer following the second flash.  相似文献   

19.
Strain OKM-9 is a mesophilic, mixotrophic iron-oxidizing bacterium that absolutely requires ferrous iron as its energy source and L-amino acids (including L-glutamate) as carbon sources for growth. The properties of the L-glutamate transport system were studied with OKM-9 resting cells, plasma membranes, and actively reconstituted proteoliposomes. L-Glutamate uptake into resting cells was totally dependent on ferrous iron that was added to the reaction mixture. Potassium cyanide, an iron oxidase inhibitor, completely inhibited the activity at 1 mM. The optimum pH for Fe2+-dependent uptake activity of L-glutamate was 3.5-4.0. Uptake activity was dependent on the concentration of the L-glutamate. The Km and Vmax for L-glutamate were 0.4 mM and 11.3 nmol x min(-1) x mg(-1), respectively. L-Aspartate, D-aspartate, D-glutamate, and L-cysteine strongly inhibited L-glutamate uptake. L-Aspartate competitively inhibited the activity, and the apparent Ki for this amino acid was 75.9 microM. 2,4-Dinitrophenol, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, gramicidin D, valinomycin, and monensin did not inhibit Fe2+-dependent L-glutamate uptake. The OKM-9 plasma membranes had approximately 40% of the iron-oxidizing activity of the resting cells and approximately 85% of the Fe2+-dependent uptake activity. The glutamate transport system was solubilized from the membranes with 1% n-octyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside and reconstituted into a lecithin liposome. The L-glutamate transport activity of the reconstituted proteoliposomes was 8-fold than that of the resting cells. The Fe2+-dependent L-glutamate uptake observed here seems to explain the mixotrophic nature of this strain, which absolutely requires Fe2+ oxidation when using amino acids as carbon sources.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of certain physicochemical parameters on the formation and stability of a complex between Streptomyces proteinaceous metalloprotease inhibitor (SMPI) and thermolysin were investigated. SMPI had its lowest Ki value at a pH of around 6.5 (similar to the pH dependence of the kcat/K(m) of thermolysin catalysis), reflecting the splitting mechanism of the SMPI inhibition of thermolysin. This Ki increased with an increase in pressure, and in (Ki-1) was almost linear with respect to pressure. The volume of the reaction (delta Vcomp), which is the volume change accompanying enzyme-inhibitor complex formation, was calculated as +8.1 +/- 0.3 mL.mol-1, which has a sign opposite to delta Vcomp for neutral peptide inhibitors and acyl-peptide substrates. The temperature dependence of Ki-1 gave the reaction enthalpy (delta Hcomp) and reaction entropy (delta Scomp) of the complex formation as 34.6 +/- 1.4 kJ.mol-1 and 298 +/- 5 J.mol-1.K-1, respectively. These positive reaction volumes and reaction entropies were related to the electrostatic interactions and ionic strength dependence of Ki which corresponded to the key ionic interaction during complex formation. Complex formation with SMPI stabilized thermolysin against pressure perturbation as observed by the changes in the Trp fluorescence of thermolysin with increasing pressure. Thermal stability, however, was affected very little by complex formation with SMPI. Phosphoramidon, Cbz-Phe-Gly-NH2 and Cbz-Phe also positively affected the pressure-tolerance of thermolysin, in the following order: Cbz-Gly-Phe-NH2 < Cbz-Phe < phosphoramidon. The third compound exhibited stabilizing effects comparable with those of SMPI, which suggests that the interaction between SMPI and thermolysin was localized to the reactive site.  相似文献   

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