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1.
1. Yeast alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1) is inhibited in the presence of 1,10-phenanthroline. 2. A conformational change in the enzyme's structure is induced by 1,10-phenanthroline, and is abolished in the presence of NADH. 1,10-Phenanthroline binds to the enzyme competitively with respect to NADH, with a stoicheiometry of 2 mol of 1,10-phenanthroline/144000g of enzyme. 3. 1,10-Phenanthroline induces a time-dependent dissociation of Zn2+ from the enzyme, which is in correlation with its inhibitions. 4. Spectrophotometric measurement indicates that the dissociation of half (2 zinc atoms/tetramer) of the total zinc content of the enzyme correlates with the full inhibition of its activity. Measurement of the tightly bound Zn2+ by atomic absorption photometry confirms this. 5. A proposition is advanced that the tetrameric molecule of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase possesses an inherent asymmetry, with four monomeric subunits being arranged in two mutually symmetrical pairs.  相似文献   

2.
We have studied the binding of 1,10-phenanthroline to specifically active-site cobalt(II)-substituted horse-liver alcohol dehydrogenase [Co(II)-LADH]. The dissociation constant is a factor of 6500 smaller than in the native enzyme. Spectral evidence is given which shows that 1,10-phenanthroline does not remove the catalytic Co(II) ion and that binding of 1,10-phenanthroline renders the catalytic metal ion pentacoordinate. The maximum limiting rate constant for the association of 1,10-phenanthroline to Co(II)-LADH is about 60 s-1. This is about a third of the value (169 s-1) determined for native horse-liver alcohol dehydrogenase, Zn(II)LADH [Frolich et al. (1978) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 189, 471-480]. For cadmium(II)-substituted horse-liver alcohol dehydrogenase, [Cd(II)LADH] the maximum limiting rate constant for association of 1,10-phenanthroline increased to 590 s-1. These findings demonstrate that the rate-limiting step is strongly dependent on the chemical nature of the catalytic metal ion and its immediate environment. 1,10-Phenanthroline is shown to bind to the Co(II)-LADH.NAD+ complex in the open conformation. The maximum limiting rate constant remains unchanged in the presence of NAD+. The data have been used to derive a kinetic scheme for the formation of ternary complexes including NAD+ that involves a slow intermediary step.  相似文献   

3.
Purification and properties of sorbitol dehydrogenase from mouse liver   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
1. The sorbitol dehydrogenase (L-iditol: NAD oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.14) from mouse liver has been purified to homogeneity. 2. The enzyme has a mol. wt of 140,000 and is composed of four identical subunits of mol. wt 35,000. 3. the purified enzyme catalyses both sorbitol oxidation and fructose reduction. 4. It is specific for NAD+ (NADH) and does not function with NADP+ (NADPH). 5. The Michaelis constants for sorbitol, fructose, NAD+ and NADPH are 1.54 and 154 mM, 58.8 and 15 microM, respectively. 6. The enzyme is SH-group reagent sensitive and is strongly inhibited by 1,10-phenanthroline.  相似文献   

4.
The interactions of the essential divalent cation, Zn2+, with the binary complex formed between glycerol dehydrogenase (glycerol:NAD+ 2-oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.6) and its coenzyme NADH have been examined by fluorescence spectroscopy. Both the metallo and non-metallo form of the enzyme bind the coenzyme NADH. The addition of Zn2+ ions to a solution of the binary complex formed between metal-depleted enzyme and NADH results in a rapid increase in fluorescence emission at 430 nm. This has been used to determine the on rate for Zn2+ to the enzyme/binary complex. A dissociation constant of 3.02 +/- 0.25.10(-9) M for the equilibrium between Zn2+ ions and the enzyme has been determined.  相似文献   

5.
1. The kinetics of oxidation of ethanol, propan-1-ol, butan-1-ol and propan-2-ol by NAD(+) and of reduction of acetaldehyde and butyraldehyde by NADH catalysed by yeast alcohol dehydrogenase were studied. 2. Results for the aldehyde-NADH reactions are consistent with a compulsory-order mechanism with the rate-limiting step being the dissociation of the product enzyme-NAD(+) complex. In contrast the results for the alcohol-NAD(+) reactions indicate that some dissociation of coenzyme from the active enzyme-NAD(+)-alcohol ternary complexes must occur and that the mechanism is not strictly compulsory-order. The rate-limiting step in ethanol oxidation is the dissociation of the product enzyme-NADH complex but with the other alcohols it is probably the catalytic interconversion of ternary complexes. 3. The rate constants describing the combination of NAD(+) and NADH with the enzyme and the dissociations of these coenzymes from binary complexes with the enzyme were measured.  相似文献   

6.
Isoenzyme 2 of cinnamyl-alcohol dehydrogenase from soybean suspension cultures was purified about 3800-fold to apparent homogeneity by an improved purification procedure involving biospecific elution of the enzyme from a NADP+-agarose column. On sodium dodecylsulfate gels the dehydrogenase showed only one protein band with Mr 40 000 +/- 500. The enzyme is strongly inhibited by thiol reagents. Various metal chelators as well as the nonchelating 7,8-benzoquinoline also inhibited enzyme activity. Inhibition by 10 mM 1,10-phenanthroline could be partially reversed by addition of Zn2+. 1,10-Phenanthroline and 7,8-benzoquinoline are non-competitive inhibitors with respect to NADP+. The presence of zinc in the dehydrogenase was proved by atomic absorption spectroscopy and by specific incorporation of 65Zn into the enzyme. In steady-state kinetics inhibition patterns were obtained which are consistent with an ordered bi-bi mechanism in which NADP(H) is the first substrate to bind and the last product released. The cinnamyl-alcohol dehydrogenase belongs to the A-specific dehydrogenases and removes the pro-R hydrogen from coniferyl alcohol. The enzyme shows many similarities with alcohol dehydrogenases from horse and rat liver and from yeast.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of K+ on assays of the enzyme was studied and it appears that the activation occurs slowly by a two-step process. Kinetic measurements suggest that the enzyme-catalysed reaction can proceed slowly (0.4%) in the complete absence of K+. The enzyme exhibits a K+-activated esterase activity, which is further activated by NAD+ or NADH. Stopped-flow studies indicated that the principal effect of K+ on the dehydrogenase reaction is to accelerate a step (possibly acyl-enzyme hydrolysis) associated with a fluorescence and small absorbance transient that occurs after hydride transfer and before NADH dissociation from the terminal E-NADH complex. The variation of activity of the enzyme with pH was studied. An enzyme group with pKa approx. 7.1 apparently promotes enzyme activity when in its alkaline form.  相似文献   

8.
The pH-dependent dissociation of porcine heart mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (L-malate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.37) has been further characterized using the technique of sedimentation velocity ultracentrifugation. The increased rate and specificity of the inactivation of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase by the sulfhydryl reagent N-ethylmaleimide has been correlated with the pH-dependent dissociation of the enzyme. Data obtained using NAD+ and its component parts to reassociate the enzyme and also to protect the enzyme from inactivation by N-ethylmaleimide suggest that the sulfhydryl residues being modified by N-ethylmaleimide are inaccessible when the enzyme is in its dimeric form. A dissociation curve for the pH-dependent dissociation suggests that a limited number of residues are being protonated concomitant with dissociation of the enzyme. An apparent pKa of 5.3 has been determined for this phenomenon. Studies using enzyme modified by the sulfhydryl reagent N-ethylmaleimide indicate that selective modification of essential sulfhydryl residues alters the proper binding of NADH.  相似文献   

9.
Sheep liver cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase was purified to homogeneity to give a sample with a specific activity of 380 nmol NADH min(-1) mg(-1). An amino acid analysis of the enzyme gave results similar to those reported for aldehyde dehydrogenases from other sources. The isoelectric point was at pH 5.25 and the enzyme contained no significant amounts of metal ions. On the binding of NADH to the enzyme there is a shift in absorption maximum of NADH to 344 nm, and a 5.6-fold enhancement of nucleotide fluorescence. The protein fluorescence (lambdaexcit = 290 nm, lambdaemisson = 340 nm) is quenched on the binding of NAD+ and NADH. The enhancement of nucleotide fluorescence on the binding of NADH has been utilised to determine the dissociation constant for the enzyme . NADH complex (Kd = 1.2 +/- 0.2 muM). A Hill plot of the data gave a straight line with a slope of 1.0 +/- 0.3 indicating the absence of co-operative effects. Ellman's reagent reacted only slowly with the enzyme but in the presence of sodium dodecylsulphate complete reaction occurred within a few minutes to an extent corresponding to 36 thiol groups/enzyme. Molecular weights were determined for both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenases and were 212 000 +/- 8 000 and 205 000 respectively. Each enzyme consisted of four subunits with molecular weight of 53 000 +/- 2 000. Properties of the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenases from sheep liver were compared with other mammalian liver aldehyde dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

10.
Stopped-flow studies of oxidation of butan-1-ol and propan-2-ol by NAD(+) in the presence of Phenol Red and large concentrations of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase give no evidence for the participation of a group of pK(a) approx. 7.6 in alcohol binding. Such a group has been implicated in ethanol binding to horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase [Shore, Gutfreund, Brooks, Santiago & Santiago (1974) Biochemistry13, 4185-4190]. The present result supports previous findings based on steady-state kinetic studies with the yeast enzyme. Stopped-flow studies of the yeast alcohol dehydrogenase-catalysed reduction of acetaldehyde by NADH in the presence of ethanol as product inhibitor indicate that the rate-limiting step is NAD(+) release from the enzyme-NAD(+)-ethanol product complex. This finding permits calculation of K(3), the dissociation constant for ethanol from the enzyme-NAD(+)-ethanol complex, by using the product-inhibition data of Dickenson & Dickinson (1978) (Biochem. J.171, 613-627). The calculations show that K(3) varies very little with pH in the range 5.95-8.9, and this agrees with the findings of the stopped-flow experiments described above. Absorption and fluorescence measurements on mixtures of substrates and coenzymes in the presence of high concentrations of alcohol dehydrogenase have been used to estimate values for the ratio [enzyme-NADH-acetaldehyde]/ [enzyme-NAD(+)-ethanol] at equilibrium. The values obtained were in the range 0.11+/-0.04, and this value together with estimates of K(3) was used to provide estimates of values for rate constants and dissociation constants for steps within the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
1. DL-alpha-Bromo-beta(5-imidazolyl)-propionic acid is a potential affinity labelling reagent for metallo-enzymes. It has been used with the alcohol dehydrogenases from liver and yeast. The liver enzyme is chemically modified and inactivated in a Michaelis-Menten-type reaction, where one molecule of the reagent is bound per subunit. The enzyme is protected from the inhibitor in a competitive manner by imidazole, 2,2'-dipyridyl, 1,10-phenanthroline and cyclohexanone, which all combine with the active-site zinc. The protection by chloride, acetate and NADH, which are considered to bind at the general anion binding site, is not strictly competitive. Inactivation has an optimum at pH 8.5. For the liver enzyme, the reagent was found to decrease the initial rate of ethanol oxidation. Prior to the irreversible alkylation of Cys-46, reversible binding is shown to occur at the active-site zinc atom. The yeast enzyme was extremely resistant to the reagent and no specific modification was found. 2. The potential affinity labelling and crosslinking reagent, symmetrical 1,3-dibromoacetone although unstable, has also been used for chemical modification. With the liver enzyme, concentrations below 5 mM gave a reaction of the Michaelis-Menten-type at pH 7.0. Several ligands known to complex with the active-site region protect the enzyme against the reagent. Dibromoacetone gave rapid inactivation of the yeast enzyme. Despite the fact that a pseudo-first-order reaction was observed with respect to enzyme as well as inhibitor, no saturating effect was found. In this work, dibromoacetone reacted like a monofunctional reagent.  相似文献   

12.
Alkylation at N-1 of the NAD+ adenine ring with 3,4-epoxybutanoic acid, followed by chemical reduction to the alkali-stable NADH form and alkaline Dimroth rearrangement, gave the NADH derivative alkylated at the exocyclic adenine amino group. Enzymic reoxidation of the latter derivative gave nicotinamide-6-(2-hydroxy-3-carboxypropylamino)purine dinucleotide, a functionalized NAD+ analogue carrying an omega-carboxyalkyl side-chain at the exocyclic adenine amino group. Carbodiimide coupling of the latter derivative to high-molecular-weight water-soluble (polyethyleneimine, polylysine) and insoluble (aminohexyl-Sepharose) polymers gave the corresponding macromolecularized NAD+ analogues. These derivatives have been shown to be enzymically reducible. The polyethyleneimine and polylysine analogues showed a substantial degree of efficiency relative to free NAD+ with rabbit muscle lactate dehydrogenase (60 and 25% respectively) but a lower one with yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and Bacillus subtilis alanine dehydrogenase (2-7%). The polyethyleneimine derivative entrapped in cellulose triacetate fibres together with the lactate dehydrogenase was operationally stable during repetitive use.  相似文献   

13.
L-histidinol dehydrogenase, a Zn2+-metalloenzyme   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The enzymatic activity of L-histidinol dehydrogenase from Salmonella typhimurium was stimulated by the inclusion of 0.5 mM MnCl2 in the assay medium. At pH 9.2 the stimulation was correlated with binding of 1 g-atom of 54Mn2+/mol dimer, KD = 37 microM. ZnCl2, which prevented the MnCl2 stimulation, also bound to the enzyme, 1.2 g-atom/mol dimer, KD = 51 microM, and prevented Mn2+ binding. Enzyme activity was lost when histidinol dehydrogenase was incubated in 8 M urea. Reactivation was observed when urea-denatured enzyme was diluted into buffer containing 2-mercaptoethanol but required either MnCl2 or ZnCl2. Histidinol dehydrogenase was inactivated by the transition metal chelator 1,10-phenanthroline or by high levels of 2-mercaptoethanol. The nonchelating 1,7-phenanthroline was not an inactivator, and inactivation by either 1,10-phenanthroline or 2-mercaptoethanol was prevented by MnCl2. Enzyme inactivated by 1,10-phenanthroline could be reactivated by addition of MnCl2 or ZnCl2 in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol. Reactivation was correlated with the binding of 1.5 g-atom 54Mn2+/mol dimer. Atomic absorption analysis of the native enzyme indicated the presence of 1.65 g-atom Zn/mol dimer, and no Mn was detected. The results demonstrate, therefore, that histidinol dehydrogenase contains two metal binding sites per enzyme dimer, which normally bind Zn2+, but which may bind Mn2+ while retaining enzyme function. Histidinol dehydrogenase is thus the third NAD-linked oxidoreductase in which Zn2+ fulfills an essential structural and/or catalytic role.  相似文献   

14.
Pure L-threonine dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli is a tetrameric protein (Mr = 148,000) with 6 half-cystine residues/subunit; its catalytic activity as isolated is stimulated 5-10-fold by added Mn2+ or Cd2+. The peptide containing the 1 cysteine/subunit which reacts selectively with iodoacetate, causing complete loss of enzymatic activity, has been isolated and sequenced; this cysteine residue occupies position 38. Neutron activation and atomic absorption analyses of threonine dehydrogenase as isolated in homogeneous form now show that it contains 1 mol of Zn2+/mol of enzyme subunit. Removal of the Zn2+ with 1,10-phenanthroline demonstrates a good correlation between the remaining enzymatic activity and the zinc content. Complete removal of the Zn2+ yields an unstable protein, but the native metal ion can be exchanged by either 65Zn2+, Co2+, or Cd2+ with no change in specific catalytic activity. Mn2+ added to and incubated with the native enzyme, the 65Zn2(+)-, the Co2(+)-, or the Cd2(+)- substituted form of the enzyme stimulates dehydrogenase activity to the same extent. These studies along with previously observed structural homologies further establish threonine dehydrogenase of E. coli as a member of the zinc-containing long chain alcohol/polyol dehydrogenases; it is unique among these enzymes in that its activity is stimulated by Mn2+ or Cd2+.  相似文献   

15.
Initial velocity and product inhibition studies were carried out on UDP-glucose dehydrogenase (UDPglucose: NAD+ 6-oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.22) from beef liver to determine if the kinetics of the reaction are compatible with the established mechanism. An intersecting initial velocity pattern was observed with NAD+ as the variable substrate and UDPG as the changing fixed substrate. UDPglucuronic acid gave competitive inhibition of UDPG and non-competitive inhibition of NAD+. Inhibition by NADH gave complex patterns.Lineweaver-Burk plots of 1/upsilon versus 1/NAD+ at varied levels of NADH gave highly non-linear curves. At levels of NAD+ below 0.05 mM, non-competitive inhibition patterns were observed giving parabolic curves. Extrapolation to saturation with NAD+ showed NADH gave linear uncompetitive inhibition of UDPG if NAD+ was saturating. However, at levels of NAD+ above 0.10 mM, NADH became a competitive inhibitor of NAD+ (parabolic curves) and when NAD+ was saturating NADH gave no inhibition of UDPG. NADH was non-competitive versus UDPG when NAD+ was not saturating. These results are compatible with a mechanism in which UDPG binds first, followed by NAD+, which is reduced and released. A second mol of NAD+ is then bound, reduced, and released. The irreversible step in the reaction must occur after the release of the second mol of NADH but before the release of UDPglucuronic acid. This is apparently caused by the hydrolysis of a thiol ester between UDPglucoronic acid and the essential thiol group of the enzyme. Examination of rate equations indicated that this hydrolysis is the rate-limiting step in the overall reaction. The discontinuity in the velocities observed at high NAD+ concentrations is apparently caused by the binding of NAD+ in the active site after the release of the second mol of NADH, eliminating the NADH inhibition when NAD+ becomes saturating.  相似文献   

16.
Horse-liver alcohol dehydrogenase was carboxymethylated with iodoacetate, which is known to selectively alkylate cysteine-46 in the polypeptide sequence. Carboxymethyl and native enzyme had the same electrophoretic mobility on starch or polyacrylamide gel, but some separation was achieved when isobutyramide and a low concentration of NADH were present (under these conditions NADH was bound by native enzyme but not by Carboxymethyl enzyme).The Carboxymethyl enzyme formed ternary complexes with NAD+ and pyrazole or decanoate. The fluorescence emission of NADH was enhanced 7- to 8-fold (at 410 nm), and a dissociation-constant of 1.7 μM was calculated at pH 7.4; but, in contrast to native enzyme, neither the affinity nor fluorescence were increased by amides (acetamide or isobutyramide).Carboxymethyl alcohol dehydrogenase possesses catalytic activity. Higher alcohols gave maximum velocities up to 7-fold higher than ethanol (reaching nearly 20% of the activity of native enzyme) while [2H]ethanol showed an isotope-rate effect of 3.3. Although the affinity for aldehydes was considerably increased, the maximum velocity of aldehyde-reduction was always at least 20% of that shown by native enzyme, and at pH 9.9 it was almost 2-fold greater than with native enzyme. The rate-limiting step in alcohol-oxidation is likely to be the interconversion of ternary complexes (possibly the hydride-transfer step), while in aldehyde-reduction it could still be the dissociation of the enzyme/NAD+ complex. This is also indicated by inhibition experiments with decanoate, pyrazole, and isobutyramide.These results suggest that a major effect of carboxymethylation is upon ternary complexes of enzyme and NADH, which become much more reluctant to form, either by combination of NADH and ligand with the modified enzyme, or by catalytic conversion of the enzyme/NAD +/alcohol complex.  相似文献   

17.
The rate-limiting step of ethanol oxidation by alcohol dehydrogenase (E) at substrate inhibitory conditions (greater than 500 mM ethanol) is shown to be the dissociation rate of NADH from the abortive E-ethanol-NADH complex. The dissociation rate constant of NADH decreased hyperbolically from 5.2 to 1.4 s-1 in the presence of ethanol causing a decrease in the Kd of NADH binding from 0.3 microM for the binary complex to 0.1 microM for the abortive complex. Correspondingly, ethanol binding to E-NADH (Kd = 37 mM) was tighter than to enzyme (Kd = 109 mM). The binding rate of NAD+ (7 X 10(5) M-1s-1) to enzyme was not affected by the presence of ethanol, further substantiating that substrate inhibition is totally due to a decrease in the dissociation rate constant of NADH from the abortive complex. Substrate inhibition was also observed with the coenzyme analog, APAD+, but a single transient was not found to be rate limiting. Nevertheless, the presence of substrate inhibition with APAD+ is ascribed to a decrease in the dissociation rate of APADH from 120 to 22 s-1 for the abortive complex. Studies to discern the additional limiting transient(s) in turnover with APAD+ and NAD+ were unsuccessful but showed that any isomerization of the enzyme-reduced coenzyme-aldehyde complex is not rate limiting. Chloride increases the rate of ethanol oxidation by hyperbolically increasing the dissociation rate constant of NADH from enzyme and the abortive complex to 12 and 2.8 s-1, respectively. The chloride effect is attributed to the binding of chloride to these complexes, destabilizing the binding of NADH while not affecting the binding of ethanol.  相似文献   

18.
R M Gould  B V Plapp 《Biochemistry》1990,29(23):5463-5468
Molecular modeling of alcohol dehydrogenase suggests that His-47 in the yeast enzyme (His-44 in the protein sequence, corresponding to Arg-47 in the horse liver enzyme) binds the pyrophosphate of the NAD coenzyme. His-47 in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae isoenzyme I was substituted with an arginine by a directed mutation. Steady-state kinetic results at pH 7.3 and 30 degrees C of the mutant and wild-type enzymes were consistent with an ordered Bi-Bi mechanism. The substitution decreased dissociation constants by 4-fold for NAD+ and 2-fold for NADH while turnover numbers were decreased by 4-fold for ethanol oxidation and 6-fold for acetaldehyde reduction. The magnitudes of these effects are smaller than those found for the same mutation in the human liver beta enzyme, suggesting that other amino acid residues in the active site modulate the effects of the substitution. The pH dependencies of dissociation constants and other kinetic constants were similar in the two yeast enzymes. Thus, it appears that His-47 is not solely responsible for a pK value near 7 that controls activity and coenzyme binding rates in the wild-type enzyme. The small substrate deuterium isotope effect above pH 7 and the single exponential phase of NADH production during the transient oxidation of ethanol by the Arg-47 enzyme suggest that the mutation makes an isomerization of the enzyme-NAD+ complex limiting for turnover with ethanol.  相似文献   

19.
Alkylation at the N-1 position of the adenine moiety of NAD+, ADP or ATP with 2,3-epoxypropyl acrylate, followed by polymerization with or without acrylamide at pH 8, gave water-soluble polymers of NAD+ and ADP where the alkyl chain was located at the exocyclic adenine C-6 amino group. Cofactor incorporations were good to high: 145-447 mumol NAD+/g polymer and 667 mumol ADP/g polymer. About 30% of the bound NAD+ could be reduced with rabbit muscle lactae dehydrogenase, yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and Bacillus subtilis alanine dehydrogenase; 84% of the bound ADP was phosphorylated with rabbit muscle creatine kinase. High cofactor activities were obtained with polymerized NAD+ with alcohol dehydrogenase as enzyme: the initial rate of NAD+ polymer reduction was 35-81% that of free NAD+. These values remained substantially high with agarose-immobilized alcohol dehydrogenase (15-36%) and should eventually allow their use in continuous enzymatic reactors. Enzymatic phosphorylation of ADP polymer by creatine kinase gave an ATP polymer with high biological activity: 480 mumol ATP/g polymer were transformed with yeast hexokinase.  相似文献   

20.
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