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1.
The flavoprotein p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas fluorescens was modified by several arginine-specific reagents. Modifications by 2,3-butanedione led to the loss of activity of the enzyme, but the binding of p-hydroxybenzoate and NADPH to the enzyme was little or not at all affected. However the formation of the enzyme-substrate complex of the modified enzyme was accompanied by an increase of the fluorescence of protein-bound FAD, in contrast to that of native enzyme which leads to quenching of the fluorescence. Enzyme modified by phenylglyoxal did not bind p-hydroxybenzoate nor NADPH. Quantification and protection experiments showed that two arginine residues are essential and a model is described which accounts for the results. Modification by 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenylglyoxal reduced the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate and NADPH. The ligands offered no protection against inactivation. From this it is concluded that one arginine residue is essential at some stage of the catalysis. This residue is not associated with the substrate- or NADPH-binding site of the enzyme. Time-resolved fluorescence studies showed that the average fluorescence lifetime and the mobility of protein-bound FAD are affected by modification of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Aldehyde reductase (alcohol:NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.2), aldose reductase (alditol:NAD(P)+ 1-oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.21) and carbonyl reductase (secondary-alcohol:NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.184) constitute the enzyme family of the aldo-keto reductases, a classification based on similar physicochemical properties and substrate specificities. The present study was undertaken in order to obtain information about the structural relationships between the three enzymes. Treatment of human aldehyde and carbonyl reductase with phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione caused a complete and irreversible loss of enzyme activity, the rate of loss being proportional to the concentration of the dicarbonyl reagents. The inactivation of aldehyde reductase followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, whereas carbonyl reductase showed a more complex behavior, consistent with protein modification cooperativity. NADP+ partially prevented the loss of activity of both enzymes, and an even better protection of aldehyde reductase was afforded by the combination of coenzyme and substrate. Aldose reductase was partially inactivated by phenylglyoxal, but insensitive to 2,3-butanedione. The degree of inactivation with respect to the phenylglyoxal concentration showed saturation behavior. NADP+ partially protected the enzyme at low phenylglyoxal concentrations (0.5 mM), but showed no effect at high concentrations (5 mM). These findings suggest the presence of an essential arginine residue in the substrate-binding domain of aldehyde reductase and the coenzyme-binding site of carbonyl reductase. The effect of phenylglyoxal on aldose reductase may be explained by the modification of a reactive thiol or lysine rather than an arginine residue.  相似文献   

3.
The mercuric reductase from Yersinia enterocolitica 138A14 was inactivated by the arginine modifying reagents 2,3-butanedione and phenylglyoxal. The inactivation by 2,3-butanedione exhibited second order kinetics with rate constant of 32 min-1 M-1. In the case of phenylglyoxal, biphasic kinetics were observed. The oxidized coenzyme (NADP+) prevented inactivation of the enzyme by the alpha-dicarbonyl reagents, whereas the reduced coenzyme (NADPH) enhanced the inactivation rate. The loss of enzyme activity was related to the incorporation of [2-14C] phenylglyoxal; when two arginines per subunit were modified the enzyme was completely inactivated.  相似文献   

4.
Pigeon liver fatty acid synthetase was inactivated by arginine modifying reagent, phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione. The inactivation of overall fatty acid synthetase was accompanied by the loss of beta-ketoacyl reductase and enoyl-CoA reductase activity. The inactivation followed a pseudo-first order kinetics and sum of the second order rate constants for the two reductase reactions equaled that for the synthetase reaction. Inactivation of all three activities was prevented by NADPH or its analogs 2',5'-ADP and 2'-AMP but not by the corresponding nucleotides containing the 5'-phosphate. These results suggest that binding of NADPH to fatty acid synthetase involves specific interaction of the 2'-phosphate with the guanidino group of arginine residues at the active site of the two reductases. pH-Dependent inactivation by phenylglyoxal indicated that a group with a pka 7.5 is involved in the loss of enzyme activity. Stoichiometric results showed that 4 out of 164 arginine residues per enzyme molecule were essential for the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

5.
Peptidyl dipeptidase-4 from Pseudomonas maltophilia was modified with the arginine reagents p-hydroxyphenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione. The enzyme was inactivated in a pseudo-first-order manner by p-hydroxyphenylglyoxal with a half-time of 72 min. Inactivation by 2,3-butanedione was biphasic with a rapid phase followed by a slower inactivation to less than 10% activity within 24h. The competitive inhibitor thiorphan protected against inactivation by phydroxyphenylglyoxal and by 2,3-butanedione also but to a lesser degree. Inhibitory anions chloride and phosphate did not protect against inactivation by either reagent. These data support the conclusion that an active site arginine is essential for substrate hydrolysis. Furthermore, arginine is not the binding site for the inhibitors chloride and phosphate.  相似文献   

6.
Arginyl residues in the NADPH-binding sites of phenol hydroxylase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Phenol hydroxylase was inactivated by the arginine reagents 2,3-butanedione, 1,2-cyclohexanedione, and phenylglyoxal. The cosubstrate NADPH, as well as NADP+ and several analogues thereof, protected the enzyme against inactivation. Phenol did not protect the activity against any of the reagents used, nor did modification by 2,3-butanedione affect the binding of phenol. We propose the presence of arginyl residues in the binding sites for the adenosine phosphate part of NADPH.  相似文献   

7.
Incubation of homogeneous preparations of L-threonine dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli with 2,3-butanedione, 2,3-pentanedione, phenylglyoxal, or 1,2-cyclohexanedione causes a time- and concentration-dependent loss of enzymatic activity; plots of log percent activity remaining versus time are linear to greater than 90% inactivation, indicative of pseudo-first order inactivation kinetics. The reaction order with respect to the concentration of modifying reagent is approximately 1.0 in each case suggesting that the loss of catalytic activity is due to one molecule of modifier reacting with each active unit of enzyme. Controls establish that this inactivation is not due to modifier-induced dissociation or photoinduced nonspecific alteration of the dehydrogenase. Essentially the same Km but decreased Vmax values are obtained when partially inactivated enzyme is compared with native. NADH (25 mM) and NAD+ (70 mM) give full protection against inactivation whereas much higher concentrations (i.e. 150 mM) of L-threonine or L-threonine amide provide a maximum of 80-85% protection. Amino acid analyses coupled with quantitative sulfhydryl group determinations show that enzyme inactivated 95% by 2,3-butanedione loses 7.5 arginine residues (out of 16 total)/enzyme subunit with no significant change in other amino acid residues. In contrast, only 2.4 arginine residues/subunit are modified in the presence of 80 mM NAD+. Analysis of the course of modification and inactivation by the statistical method of Tsou (Tsou, C.-L. (1962) Sci. Sin. 11, 1535-1558) demonstrates that inactivation of threonine dehydrogenase correlates with the loss of 1 "essential" arginine residue/subunit which quite likely is located in the NAD+/NADH binding site.  相似文献   

8.
Chemical modifications of spinach leaf nitrate reductase, and its 28,000 M(r) fragment with phenylglyoxal, 2,3-butanedione and pyridoxal phosphate reduce the catalytic activity of the enzyme. The kinetics of the modification indicate a rapid inactivation followed by a slower rate of inactivation. NADH-nitrate reductase, NADH-cytochrome c reductase and NADH-ferricyanide reductase activities of the nitrate reductase complex are inactivated at a faster rate when compared to the loss of FMNH2-nitrate reductase and reduced methyl viologen (MVH)-nitrate reductase activities. NADH protects the inactivation of NADH-ferricyanide reductase activity of the 28,000 M(r) fragment of nitrate reductase. These data suggest that nitrate reductase contains active sites of arginine and lysine residues that are involved in the NADH binding site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Two arginine modifying reagents, phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione, inactivated fatty acid synthetase from goose uropygial gland. This inactivation could be partially prevented by NADP, 2′-AMP, and 2′,5′-ADP, whereas acetyl-CoA and/or malonyl-CoA provided very little protection. Ketoacyl reductase and enoyl reductase activities of fatty acid synthetase showed similar inactivation by phenylglyoxal and butanedione and protection by only NADP and its 2′-phosphate-containing analogs. Furthermore, 2′-AMP was found to be a competitive inhibitor of overall fatty acid synthetase, ketoacyl reductase, and enoyl reductase with apparent Ki values of 1.4, 0.2, and 14 mm, respectively. These results suggest that binding of NADPH to fatty acid synthetase involves specific interaction of the 2′-phosphate with the guanidino group of arginine residues at the active site of the two reductases. Quantitation of the number of arginine residues modified revealed that 4 out of 106 arginine residues per subunit of the synthetase showed high reactivity toward phenylglyoxal. Scatchard analysis showed that two rapidly reacting arginine residues had no effect on the catalytic activity, while modification of two additional arginine residues resulted in complete loss of enzyme activity. Under these conditions, of the seven partial reactions of fatty acid synthetase, only the ketoacyl reductase and enoyl reductase activities were inhibited by phenylglyoxal. The differential reversal of inhibition of the two reductases and the overall activity of fatty acid synthetase, resulting from dialysis of the modified enzyme, suggested that both ketoacyl reductase sites and enoyl reductase sites are required for the full expression of fatty acid synthetase activity. The results of the present chemical modification studies are consistent with the hypothesis that each subunit of fatty acid synthetase contains one ketoacyl reductase and one enoyl reductase and suggest that one essential arginine is present at each of these active sites.  相似文献   

10.
Estradiol 17 beta-dehydrogenase of human placenta was rapidly inactivated by 2,3-butanedione under u.v. light, and no protection against the inactivation was observed in the presence of sodium azide. Under ordinary laboratory illumination, the inactivation was biphasically progressed in time-dependent and concentration-dependent manners, while a partial protection from the inactivation was indicated by sodium azide. These results suggest that the inactivation mechanism of the dehydrogenase by 2,3-butanedione under laboratory illumination is different from that under u.v. light. Therefore, the inactivation under laboratory illumination proceeded by a reaction with excited singlet molecular oxygen (1 delta g or 1 sigma +g states), and that under u.v. light was caused by a reaction of substrate with triplet sensitizer. In the presence of NADP+, the inactivation of the enzyme by 2,3-butanedione was markedly reduced. The maximum protection by NADP+ was about 80% of the initial enzyme activity. Amino acid analysis of the enzyme treated with 2,3-butanedione under laboratory illumination showed that the modified enzyme contained considerably less of the following amino acids than the native enzyme: histidine, arginine, threonine, methionine, tyrosine and leucine. In addition, other dicarbonyl reagents, 1,4-dibromo-2,3-butanedione, 1-phenyl-1,2-propanedione, phenylglyoxal, 16-oxoestrone, 1,2-cyclohexanedione, 2,4-pentanedione and glyoxal were found to decrease the dehydrogenase activity in various degree.  相似文献   

11.
Rat liver ATP citrate lyase was inactivated by 2, 3-butanedione and phenylglyoxal. Phenylglyoxal caused the most rapid and complete inactivation of enzyme activity in 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazine-ethanesulphonic acid buffer, pH 8. Inactivation by both butanedione and phenylglyoxal was concentration-dependent and followed pseudo- first-order kinetics. Phenylglyoxal also decreased autophosphorylation (catalytic phosphate) of ATP citrate lyase. Inactivation by phenylglyoxal and butanedione was due to the modification of enzyme arginine residues: the modified enzyme failed to bind to CoA-agarose. The V declined as a function of inactivation, but the Km values were unaltered. The substrates, CoASH and CoASH plus citrate, protected the enzyme significantly against inactivation, but ATP provided little protection. Inactivation with excess reagent modified about eight arginine residues per monomer of enzyme. Citrate, CoASH and ATP protected two to three arginine residues from modification by phenylglyoxal. Analysis of the data by statistical methods suggested that the inactivation was due to modification of one essential arginine residue per monomer of lyase, which was modified 1.5 times more rapidly than were the other arginine residues. Our results suggest that this essential arginine residue is at the CoASH binding site.  相似文献   

12.
Treatment of purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1), from either calf spleen or human erythrocytes, with 2,3-butanedione in borate buffer or with phenylglyoxal in Tris buffer markedly decreased the enzyme activity. At pH 8.0 in 60 min, 95% of the catalytic activity was destroyed upon treatment with 33 mM phenylglyoxal and 62% of the activity was lost with 33 mm 2,3-butanedione. Inorganic phosphate, ribose-1-phosphate, arsenate, and inosine when added prior to chemical modification all afforded protection from inactivation. No apparent decrease in enzyme catalytic activity was observed upon treatment with maleic anhydride, a lysine-specific reagent. Inactivation of electrophoretically homogeneous calf-spleen purine nucleoside phosphorylase by butanedione was accompanied by loss of arginine residues and of no other amino acid residues. A statistical analysis of the inactivation data vis-à-vis the fraction of arginines modified suggested that one essential arginine residue was being modified.  相似文献   

13.
Treatment of chicken liver fatty acid synthetase with the arginine-specific reagent phenylglyoxal resulted in the pseudo-first-order loss of synthetase, beta-ketoacyl reductase and enoyl reductase activities. The sum of the second-order rate constants for the two reductase reactions equalled that for the synthetase reaction, suggesting that inactivation of either reductase was responsible for the loss of fatty acid synthetase activity. Double-log plots of pseudo-first-order rate constant versus reagent concentration yielded straight lines with slopes of unity for all three activities tested, suggesting the reaction of one reagent molecule in the inactivation process. In parallel experiments, complete inactivation of synthetase activity was accompanied by the incorporation of 4.5 [14C]phenylglyoxal, and the loss of 2.3 arginine residues per subunit. Reaction of essential sulfhydryl groups was not involved, since inactivation by phenylglyoxal was unaffected by reversible protection of these groups with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid). Inactivation of all three activities by phenylglyoxal was prevented by saturating amounts of the coenzyme NADPH, or its analogs 2',5'-ADP and 2'-AMP, but not by the corresponding nucleotides containing only the 5'-phosphate. Conversely, the ability of this enzyme to bind NADPH was abolished upon inactivation. These results are consistent with the presence of an essential arginine residue at the binding site for the 2'-phosphate group of NADPH at each of the two reductase domains of the multifunctional fatty acid synthetase subunit.  相似文献   

14.
Human liver arylsulfatase A was treated with arginine-specific reagents (diones), resulting in a loss of enzyme activitity with apparent first-order kinetics. Sulfite and borate—competitive inhibitors of the enzyme—provided complete protection from inactivation by phenylglyoxal. Sulfite and substrate each likewise protected against enzyme inactivation by 2,3-butanedione. A plot of pseudo-first-order rate constants of enzyme inactivation versus 2,3-butanedione concentrations suggests that an essential arginine residue is modified with a loss in function of the binding site or of the active site of the protein. Chemical analysis of the butanedione-treated sulfatase indicates that complete enzyme inactivation corresponds to a modification of only about 2 of the 20 arginine residues per enzyme subunit. Taken together, all of the results strongly suggest that arginine residues are essential for the activity of arylsulfatase A. An incidental discovery in this work is that borate ion is a competitive inhibitor of human arylsulfatase A with a Ki of 2.5 × 10?4 M.  相似文献   

15.
The apoenzyme of diol dehydrase was inactivated by two arginine-specific reagents, 2,3-butanedione and phenylglyoxal, in borate buffer. In both cases, the inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. Kinetic data show that the incorporation of a single reagent molecule per active site of the enzyme is necessary for the complete inactivation. The modification with 2,3-butanedione was reversed by dilution of the reagent and borate concentrations (65% activity recovered). 1,2-Propanediol (substrate) partially protected the enzyme against inactivation. The holoenzyme was almost insensitive to 2,3-butanedione and phenylglyoxal, indicating that the essential arginine residue is prevented from the attack of these reagents either by direct blockage with the bound coenzyme or by an indirect conformational change caused by coenzyme binding. The inactivation of diol dehydrase by 2,3-butanedione did not result in dissociation of the enzyme into subunits. From these results, we concluded that the essential arginine residue is located at or in close proximity to the active site of diol dehydrase.  相似文献   

16.
Treatment of highly purified sheep kidney medulla (Na+ + K+)-ATPase with 2,3-butanedione results in a rapid inactivation of the enzyme. Contrary to a previous report using rabbit kidney enzyme (DePont et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1977) 482, 213), the inactivation is biphasic under a variety of experimental conditions, with a rapid, initial inactivation which is followed by a slower loss of activity. The second, slower phase of the inhibition obeys pseudo-first order kinetics, with a second order rate constant for inhibition of 20 min?1M?1. ATP and ADP provide no protection in the initial phase of the inhibition, but protect the enzyme completely from the second phase of the inhibition. AMP, while less effective than ATP and ADP, provides a partial protection of the enzyme activity from inhibition by 2,3-butanedione. Inorganic phosphate provides partial protection in both phases of the inactivation. Adenosine alone is without effect, but adenosine plus inorganic phosphate provides a greater protection than phosphate alone. The results indicate that either (1) two or more active site residues or (2) a single arginine, experiencing different reactivities in two different active site conformations, are essential to (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

17.
Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase reacts rapidly with 2,3-butanedione to yield modified enzyme with 29% of its original maximum activity, but no change in its Michaelis constants for substrates and coenzymes. No significant reduction in the inactivation rate is produced by the addition of the allosteric activator ADP or inhibitor GTP, while partial protection against inactivation is provided by the coenzyme NAD+ or substrate 2-oxoglutarate when added separately. The most marked decrease in the rate of inactivation (about 10-fold) is provided by the combined addition of NAD+ and 2-oxoglutarate, suggesting that modification takes place in the region of the active site. Reaction with 2,3-butanedione also results in loss of the ability of the enzyme to be activated by ADP. Addition of ADP (but not NAD+, 2-oxoglutarate or GTP) to the incubation mixture protects markedly against the loss of activatability of ADP. It is concluded that 2,3-butanedione produces two distinguishable effects on glutamate dehydrogenase: a relatively specific modification of the regulatory ADP site and a distinct modification in the active center. Reaction of two arginyl residues per peptide chain appears to be responsible for disruption of the ADP activation property of the enzyme, while alteration of a maximum of five arginyl residues can be related to the reduction of maximum catalytic activity. Electrostatic interactions between the positively charged arginine groups and the negatively charged substrate, coenzyme and allosteric purine nucleotide may be important for the normal function of glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

18.
Rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase is inactivated by 2,3-butanedione in borate buffer. The inactivation follows pseudo-first-order kinetics with a calculated second-order rate constant of 4.6 m?1 min?1. The modification can be reversed with almost total recovery of activity by elimination of the butanedione and borate buffer, suggesting that only arginyl groups are modified; this result agrees with the loss of arginine detected by amino acid analysis of the modified enzyme. Using the kinetic data, it was estimated that the reaction of a single butanedione molecule per subunit of the enzyme is enough to completely inactivate the protein. The inactivation is partially prevented by phosphoenolpyruvate in the presence of K+ and Mg2+, but not by the competitive inhibitors lactate and bicarbonate. These findings point to an essential arginyl residue being located near the phosphate binding site of phosphoenolpyruvate.  相似文献   

19.
The H+-translocating adenosine-5'-triphosphatase (ATPase) purified from the yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is inactivated upon incubation with the arginine modifier 2,3-butanedione. The inactivation of the enzyme is maximal at pH values above 8.5. The modified enzyme is reactivated when incubated in the absence of borate after removal of 2,3-butanedione. The extent of inactivation is half maximal at 10 mM 2,3-butanedione for an incubation of 30 min at 30 degrees C at pH 7.0. Under the same conditions, the time-dependence of inactivation is biphasic in a semi-logarithmic plot with half-lives of 10.9 min and 65.9 min. Incubation with 2,3-butanedione lowering markedly the maximal rate of ATPase activity does not modify the Km for MgATP. These data suggest that two classes of arginyl residues play essential role in the plasma membrane ATPase activity. Magnesium adenosine 5'-triphosphate (MgATP) and magnesium adenosine 5'-diphosphate (MgADP), the specific substrate and product, protect partially against enzyme inactivation by 2,3-butanedione. Free ATP or MgGTP which are not enzyme substrates do not protect. Free magnesium, another effector of enzyme activity, exhibits partial protection at magnesium concentrations up to 0.5 mM, while increased inactivation is observed at higher Mg2+ concentrations. These protections indicate either the existence of at least one reactive arginyl in the substrate binding site or a general change of enzyme conformation induced by MgATP, MgADP or free magnesium.  相似文献   

20.
Escherichia coli acetate kinase (ATP: acetate phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.2.1.) was inactivated in the presence of either 2,3-butanedione in borate buffer or phenylglyoxal in triethanolamine buffer. When incubated with 9.4 mM phenylglyoxal or 5.1 mM butanedione, the enzyme lost its activity with an apparent rate constant of inactivation of 0.079 min-1, respectively. The loss of enzymatic activity was concomitant with the loss of an arginine residue per active site. Phosphorylated substrates of acetate kinase, ATP, ADP and acetylphosphate as well as AMP markedly decreased the rate of inactivation by both phenylglyoxal and butanedione. Acetate neither provided any protection nor affected the protection rendered by the adenine nucleotides. However, it interfered with the protection afforded by acetylphosphate. These data suggest that an arginine residue is located at the active site of acetate kinase and is essential for its catalytic activity, probably as a binding site for the negatively charged phosphate group of the substrates.  相似文献   

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