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1.
The enzyme L-aspartase from Escherichia coli has an absolute specificity for its amino acid substrate. An examination of a wide range of structural analogues of L-aspartic acid did not uncover any alternate substrates for this enzyme. A large number of competitive inhibitors of the enzyme have been characterized, with inhibition constants ranging over 2 orders of magnitude. A divalent metal ion is required for enzyme activity above pH 7, and this requirement is met by many transition and alkali earth metals. The binding stoichiometry has been established to be one metal ion bound per subunit. Paramagnetic relaxation studies have shown that the divalent metal ion binds at the recently discovered activator site on L-aspartase and not at the enzyme active site. Enzyme activators are bound within 5 A of the enzyme-bound divalent metal ion. The activator site is remote from the active site of the enzyme, since the relaxation of inhibitors that bind at the active site is not affected by paramagnetic metal ions bound at the activator site.  相似文献   

2.
The pH dependence of the kinetic parameters of the L-aspartase-catalyzed reaction have been examined in both the amination and the deamination directions. The enzyme isolated from Escherichia coli exists in a pH-dependent equilibrium between a higher pH form that has an absolute requirement for a divalent metal ion and for substrate activation, and a low pH form that does not require activation by either substrate or metal ions. The interconversion between these enzyme forms is observed near neutral pH in the profiles examined for the reaction in either direction. This pH-dependent activation has not been observed for other bacterial aspartases. Loss of activity is observed at high pH with a pK value of 9. The pH profiles of competitive inhibitors such as 3-nitropropionic acid and succinic acid have shown that the enzyme group responsible for this activity loss must be protonated for substrate binding at the active site. An enzymatic group has also been identified that must be protonated in the amination reaction, with a pK value near 6.5, and deprotonated in the deamination reaction. This group, tentatively assigned as a histidyl residue, fulfills the criteria for the acid-base catalyst at the active site of L-aspartase.  相似文献   

3.
The wound-inducible lipoxygenase obtained from maize is one of the nontraditional lipoxygenases that possess dual positional specificity. In this paper, we provide our results on the determination and comparison of the kinetic constants of the maize lipoxygenase, with or without detergents in the steady state, and characterization of the dependence of the kinetic lag phase or initial burst, on pH, substrate, and detergent in the pre-steady state of the lipoxygenase reaction. The oxidation of linoleic acid showed a typical lag phase in the pre-steady state of the lipoxygenase reaction at pH 7.5 in the presence of 0.25% Tween-20 detergent. The reciprocal correlation between the induction period and the enzyme level indicated that this lag phenomenon was attributable to the slow oxidative activation of Fe (II) to Fe (III) at the active site of the enzyme as observed in other lipoxygenase reactions. Contrary to the lagging phenomenon observed at pH 7.5 in the presence of Tween-20, a unique initial burst was observed at pH 6.2 in the absence of detergents. To our knowledge, the initial burst in the oxidation of linoleic acid at pH 6.2 is the first observation in the lipoxygenase reaction. Kinetic constants (K(m) and k(cat) values) were largely dependent on the presence of detergent. An inverse correlation of the initial burst period with enzyme levels and interpretations on kinetic constants suggested that the observed initial burst in the oxidation of linoleic acid could be due to the availability of free fatty acids as substrates for binding with the lipoxygenase enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Pig heart NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase is inactivated by reaction with iodoacetate at pH 6.0. Loss of activity can be attributed to the formation of 1-2 mol of carboxymethyl-cysteine per peptide chain. The rate of inactivation is markedly decreased by the combined addition of Mn2+ and isocitrate, but not by alpha-ketoglutarate, the coenzyme NAD or the allosteric activator ADP. The substrate concentration dependence of the decreased rate of inactivation yields a dissociation constant of 1.6 mM for the enzyme-manganous-dibasic isocitrate complex, a value that is 50 times higher than the Km for this substrate. This result suggests that in protecting the enzyme against iodoacetate, isocitrate may bind to a region distinct from the catalytic site. Isocitrate and Mn2+ also prevent thermal denaturation, with an affinity for the enzyme close to that observed for the iodoacetate-sensitive site. The alkylatable cysteine residues may contribute to a manganous-isocitrate binding site which is responsible for stabilizing an active conformation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase. An analysis of transient kinetics   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1  
1. The hydrolysis of 2,4-dinitrophenyl phosphate by Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase at pH5.5 was studied by the stopped-flow technique. The rate of production of 2,4-dinitrophenol was measured both in reactions with substrate in excess of enzyme and in single turnovers with excess of enzyme over substrate. It was found that the step that determined the rate of the transient phase of this reaction was an isomerization of the enzyme occurring before substrate binding. 2. No difference was observed between the reaction after mixing a pre-equilibrium mixture of alkaline phosphatase and inorganic phosphate, with 2,4-dinitrophenyl phosphate at pH5.5 in the stopped-flow apparatus, and the control reaction in which inorganic phosphate was pre-equilibrated with the substrate. Since dephosphorylation is the rate-limiting step of the complete turnover at pH5.5, this observation suggests that alkaline phosphatase can bind two different ligands simultaneously, one at each of the active sites on the dimeric enzyme, even though only one site is catalytically active at any given time. 3. Kinetic methods are outlined for the distinction between two pathways of substrate binding, which include an isomerization either of the free enzyme or of the enzyme-substrate complex.  相似文献   

6.
The cleavage specificities of typical aspartic proteinases: pepsin A, gastricsin, cathepsin D and rhizopuspepsin, were examined at different pH values with oxidized insulin B chain as a substrate with special attention to the specificities near neutral pH. Significant differences in relative specificity for scissile bonds were observed between pH 2.0 and 5.5-6.5, which may be partly related with the changes in dissociation states of the His and Glu residues in the substrate and the ionizable residues in the active site of each enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Aspartic proteinases are present in a variety of organisms including plants. Common features of aspartic proteases include an active site cleft that contains two catalytic aspartic residues, acid pH optima for enzymatic activity, inhibition by pepstatin A. Plant aspartic proteinases occur in seeds and may be involved in the processing of storage proteins. Many of them have been purified and characterized. The presence of aspartic proteases in seeds of Centaurea calcitrapa during germination was investigated by measuring the activity on enzyme extracts. The aspartic proteases are present mainly in the beginning of seed germination suggesting that they could initiate the degradation of protein reserves in germinating seeds.

These proteases were purified by salt precipitation followed by anion-exchange chromatography. Purified aspartic proteases have an optimal pH between 3.5 and 4.5, using FTC-hemoglobin as substrate and an optimal temperature at 52 °C. The ability of seed extracts for milk clotting was tested and the clotting time that was achieved is in the same range found for flower extracts appropriated for special cheeses in which weak clotting agents are required.  相似文献   


8.
Catecholamines (adrenaline, noradrenaline and dopamine) are potent inhibitors of phenylalanine 4-monooxygenase (phenylalanine hydroxylase, EC 1.14.16.1). The amines bind to the enzyme by a direct coordination to the high-spin (S = 5/2) Fe(III) at the active site (charge transfer interaction), as seen by resonance Raman and EPR spectroscopy. Experimental evidence is presented that a group with an apparent pKa value of about 5.1 (20 degrees C) is involved in the interaction between the catecholamine and the enzyme. The high-affinity binding of L-noradrenaline to phenylalanine hydroxylase, as studied by equilibrium microdialysis (anaerobically) and ultrafiltration (aerobically), shows positive cooperativity (h = 1.9); at pH 7.2 and 20 degrees C the rat enzyme binds about 0.5 mol L-noradrenaline/mol subunit with a half-maximal binding (S50) at 0.25 microM L-noradrenaline. No binding to the ferrous form of the enzyme was observed. The affinity decreases with decreasing pH, by phosphorylation and by preincubation of the enzyme with the substrate L-phenylalanine, while it increases after alkylation of the enzyme with the activator N-ethylmaleimide. Preincubation of the enzyme with L-phenylalanine also leads to a complete loss of the cooperativity of L-noradrenaline binding (h = 1.0). The many similarities in binding properties of the inhibitor L-noradrenaline and the activator/substrate L-phenylalanine makes it likely that the cooperative interactions of these effectors are due to their binding to the same site. The high-affinity of catecholamines to phenylalanine hydroxylase is a valuable probe to study the active site of this enzyme and is also relevant for the homologous enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase, which is purified as a stable catecholamine-Fe(III) complex.  相似文献   

9.
The reaction of trimethylamine dehydrogenase with trimethylamine   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The reductive half-reaction of trimethylamine dehydrogenase with its physiological substrate trimethylamine has been examined by stopped-flow spectroscopy over the pH range 6.0-11.0, with attention focusing on the fastest of the three kinetic phases of the reaction, the flavin reduction/substrate oxidation process. As in previous work with the slow substrate diethylmethylamine, the reaction is found to consist of three well resolved kinetic phases. The observed rate constant for the fast phase exhibits hyperbolic dependence on the substrate concentration with an extrapolated limiting rate constant (klim) greater than 1000 s-1 at pH above 8.5, 10 degrees C. The kinetic parameter klim/Kd for the fast phase exhibits a bell-shaped pH dependence, with two pKa values of 9.3 +/- 0.1 and 10. 0 +/- 0.1 attributed to a basic residue in the enzyme active site and the ionization of the free substrate, respectively. The sigmoidal pH profile for klim gives a single pKa value of 7.1 +/- 0. 2. The observed rate constants for both the intermediate and slow phases are found to decrease as the substrate concentration is increased. The steady-state kinetic behavior of trimethylamine dehydrogenase with trimethylamine has also been examined, and is found to be adequately described without invoking a second, inhibitory substrate-binding site. The present results demonstrate that: (a) substrate must be protonated in order to bind to the enzyme; (b) an ionization group on the enzyme is involved in substrate binding; (c) an active site general base is involved, but not strictly required, in the oxidation of substrate; (d) the fast phase of the reaction with native enzyme is considerably faster than observed with enzyme isolated from Methylophilus methylotrophus that has been grown up on dimethylamine; and (e) a discrete inhibitory substrate-binding site is not required to account for excess substrate inhibition, the kinetic behavior of trimethylamine dehydrogenase can be readily explained in the context of the known properties of the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Members of the aspartic proteinase family of enzymes have very similar three-dimensional structures and catalytic mechanisms. Each, however, has unique substrate specificity. These distinctions arise from variations in amino acid residues that line the active site subsites and interact with the side chains of the amino acids of the peptides that bind to the active site. To understand the unique binding preferences of plasmepsin II, an enzyme of the aspartic proteinase class from the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, chromogenic octapeptides having systematic substitutions at various positions in the sequence were analyzed. This enabled the design of new, improved substrates for this enzyme (Lys-Pro-Ile-Leu-Phe*Nph-Ala/Glu-Leu-Lys, where * indicates the cleavage point). Additionally, the crystal structure of plasmepsin II was analyzed to explain the binding characteristics. Specific amino acids (Met13, Ser77, and Ile287) that were suspected of contributing to active site binding and specificity were chosen for site-directed mutagenesis experiments. The Met13Glu and Ile287Glu single mutants and the Met13Glu/Ile287Glu double mutant gain the ability to cleave substrates containing Lys residues.  相似文献   

11.
Specificity and pH dependence for acylproline cleavage by prolidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Catalytic pH dependence for the hydrolytic activity of the enzyme prolidase with a series of dipeptide substrates is found to be generally bell-shaped (kcat/Km) or simple sigmoidal (kcat). An enzymic residue with a pKa value of 6.6 is found to be critically involved in the catalytic mechanism, as is the substrate amino group. Significant catalysis at a pH of 6.6 is also observed for prolidase with (alkylthio)acetylprolines and with haloacetylprolines. A reverse-protonation state mechanism for substrate binding and activation is postulated, involving a chelative interaction of the aminoacylamide portion of substrate with a strongly Lewis-acidic active site metal ion.  相似文献   

12.
Prohormones mature to biologically active peptide hormones through posttranslational modifications, which include endoproteolytic cleavages. Cleavages at mono- and dibasic sites are well characterized, and several of the responsible prohormone convertases have been identified. There is, however, evidence that endoproteolytic maturation occurs also at other sites. Among these, post-Phe cleavage occurs in the maturation of chicken progastrin, where the processing to gastrin-30 has been examined in detail. In this study we have characterized an endoprotease of the aspartic acid protease family in chicken and human tissue capable of cleaving at the Phe site. Enzymatic activity was monitored by radioimmunoassays using antibodies specific for the N- and C-termini exposed after cleavage. Analysis showed that only pepstatin, a specific inhibitor of aspartic proteases, inhibited the enzyme. The pH optimum of the enzyme ranged from pH 2 to pH 5. Amino acid substitution from Phe to Ala in the substrate completely abolished enzyme activity. The endoproteolytic activity was identified in chicken antrum and pectoral muscle as well as human cardiac and prostate extracts, suggesting that the enzyme has widespread biological functions. Experiments using recombinant cathepsin D and E indicated that neither is responsible for the endoproteolytic cleavage of chicken progastrin at post-Phe bonds.  相似文献   

13.
An activation study of mammalian carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) isoforms I-XIV with D- and L-tryptophan has been performed both by means of kinetic and X-ray crystallographic techniques. These compounds show a time dependent activity against isozyme CA II, with activation constants of 1.13 microM for L-Trp and 0.37 microM for D-Trp, respectively, after 24 h of incubation between enzyme and activator. The high resolution X-ray crystal structure of the hCA II-D-Trp adduct revealed the activator to bind in a totally unprecedented way to the enzyme active site as compared to histamine, L-/D-Phe, L-/D-His or L-adrenaline. D-Trp is anchored at the edge of the CA II active site entrance, strongly interacting with amino acid residues Asp130, Phe131 and Gly132 as well as with a loop of a second symmetry related protein molecule from the asymmetric unit, by means of hydrogen bonds and several weak van der Waals interactions involving Glu234, Gly235, Glu236 and Glu238. Thus, a second activator binding site (B) within the CA II cavity has been detected, where only D-Trp was shown so far to bind, in addition to the activator binding site A, in which histamine, L-/D-Phe, and L-/D-His are bound. These findings explain the strong affinity of D-Trp for CA II and may be useful for designing novel classes of CA activators by using this compound as lead molecule.  相似文献   

14.
Murine melanoma melanosomal tyrosinase, solubilised at pH 6.8 and 1% Igepal, exhibits a lag in cresolase activity which increases with increasing concentration of tyrosine. The enzyme, solubilised at pH 5.0 and assayed at pH 5.0, does not exhibit lag even at inhibitory concentrations of tyrosine while the same enzyme when assayed at pH 6.8 exhibits characteristic lag. When the enzyme was solubilised from a melanosomal fraction with detergent/water without any buffer, significant linear activity for 2 h was seen at an inhibitory concentration of tyrosine, indicating for the first time the presence of a form of tyrosinase without lag and inhibition by excess tyrosine. Exposure of the enzyme solubilised in buffer/detergent at pH 6.8 to rapid decrease in pH to 5.0 or 4.7 makes the enzyme remain irreversibly in the form without characteristic lag, even at an inhibitory concentration of tyrosine and at pH 6.8. These results may be interpreted as follows. The enzyme at pH 6.8 exists in the E form with an allosteric site for tyrosine. Decrease of the pH of the enzyme solution from 6.8 to 5.0 or 4.7 by dialysis results in the reversible protonation of the enzyme, which no longer binds tyrosine at its allosteric site and consequently inhibition by excess tyrosine and lag were not observed at acidic pH. However, if the enzyme was rapidly brought to pH 5.0 from 6.8 it remains irreversibly in the protonated form even at pH 6.8. Ascorbic acid acts as an effective reductant for the hydroxylation of tyrosine by tyrosinase, while 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine is both an effective reductant and counteracts the inhibition by tyrosine at pH 6.8.  相似文献   

15.
Catalytic properties of the HhaII restriction endonuclease   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The catalytic properties of the HhaII restriction endonuclease were studied using plasmid pSK11 DNA containing a single 5'-G-A-N-T-C HhaII cleavage site as substrate. Reactions were followed by two methods: 1) gel electrophoretic analysis of nicked circular and linear DNA products, or 2) release of 32P-labeled inorganic phosphate from specifically labeled HhaII sites in a reaction coupled with bacterial alkaline phosphatase. The enzyme is optimally active at 37 degrees C in 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 9.1) and 4-10 mM MgCl2 without added NaCl. Activity is stabilized by the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol and 0.2% Triton X-100 or 50 microgram/ml bovine serum albumin. At enzyme concentrations below 10 nM and using pSK11 as substrate, initial kinetic rates were dependent on the order of mixing of reactants. A lag of 3-4 min was observed if enzyme or substrate was added last. Preincubation of substrate and enzyme followed by initiation of the reaction with MgCl2 or preincubation of the enzyme with nonspecific DNA followed by initiation with substrate eliminated or reduced the lag, respectively, and speeded up the reactions. Under a wide range of reaction conditions, nicked pSK11 DNA accumulated early, while linear molecules appeared later, suggesting that HhaII cleaves one strand at a time in separate binding events. The apparent Km for covalently closed pSK11 DNA molecules was approximately 17 nM, and the turnover number for the conversion of covalent to nicked sites was 1.1 single strand scissions/min. Pre-steady state kinetic analysis indicated that cleavage of the first phosphodiester bond in a site is first order with a rate constant of about 0.8 min-1, while cleavage of the second phosphodiester bond is first order with a rate constant of about 0.2 min-1.  相似文献   

16.
Acylaminoacyl peptidase from Aeropyrum pernix is a homodimer that belongs to the prolyl oligopeptidase family. The monomer subunit is composed of one hydrolase and one propeller domain. Previous crystal structure determinations revealed that the propeller domain obstructed the access of substrate to the active site of both subunits. Here we investigated the structure and the kinetics of two mutant enzymes in which the aspartic acid of the catalytic triad was changed to alanine or asparagine. Using different substrates, we have determined the pH dependence of specificity rate constants, the rate-limiting step of catalysis, and the binding of substrates and inhibitors. The catalysis considerably depended both on the kind of mutation and on the nature of the substrate. The results were interpreted in terms of alterations in the position of the catalytic histidine side chain as demonstrated with crystal structure determination of the native and two mutant structures (D524N and D524A). Unexpectedly, in the homodimeric structures, only one subunit displayed the closed form of the enzyme. The other subunit exhibited an open gate to the catalytic site, thus revealing the structural basis that controls the oligopeptidase activity. The open form of the native enzyme displayed the catalytic triad in a distorted, inactive state. The mutations affected the closed, active form of the enzyme, disrupting its catalytic triad. We concluded that the two forms are at equilibrium and the substrates bind by the conformational selection mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
The DPN-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase of pig heart is totally and irreversibly inactivated by 0.05 M potassium cyanate at pH 7.4 A plot of the rate constant versus cyanate concentration is not linear, but rather exhibits saturation kinetics, implying that cyanate may bind to the enzyme to give an enzyme-cyanate complex (K equal 0.125 M) prior to the covalent reaction. In the presence of manganous ion the addition of isocitrate protects the enzyme against cyanate inactivation, indicating that chemical modification occurs in the active site region of the enzyme. The dependence of the decrease of the rate constant for inactivation on the isocitrate concentration yields a dissociation constant for the enzyme-manganese-isocitrate complex which agrees with the Michaelis constant. The allosteric activator ADP, which lowers the Michaelis constant for isocitrate, does not itself significantly affect the cyanate reaction; however, it strikingly enhances the protection by isocitrate. The addition of the chelator EDTA essentially prevents protection by isocitrate and manganous ion, demonstrating the importance of the metal ion in this process. The substrate alpha-ketoglutarate and the coenzymes DPN and DPNH do not significantly affect the rate of modification of the enzymes by cyanate. Incubation of isocitrate dehydrogenase with 14C-labeled potassium cyanate leads to the incorporation of approximately 1 mol of radioactive cyanate per peptide chain concomitant with inactivation. Analysis of acid hydrolysates of the radioactive enzyme reveals that lysyl residues are the sole amino acids modified. These results suggest that cyanate, or isocyanic acid, may bind to the active site of this enzyme as an analogue of carbon dioxide and carbamylate a lysyl residue at the active site.  相似文献   

18.
Aspartic proteases are the focus of recent research interest in understanding the physiological importance of this class of enzymes in plants. This is the first report of an aspartic protease from the seeds of Vigna radiata. The aspartic protease was purified to homogeneity by fractional ammonium sulfate precipitation and pepstatin-A agarose affinity column. It was found to have a molecular weight of 67,406 Da by gel filtration chromatography. SDS-PAGE analysis revealed the presence of a heterodimer with subunits of molecular weights of 44,024 and 23,349 Da respectively. The enzyme was pH stable with the amino acid analysis confirming the molecular weight of the protein. The substrate cleavage site as analyzed by using the synthetic substrate was found to be the Phe-Tyr bond. The kinetic interactions of the enzyme were studied with the universal inhibitor, pepstatin A. This is the first report on the interactions of a plant aspartic protease with pepstatin-A, an inhibitor from a microbial source. A competitive one-step mechanism of binding is observed. The progress curves are time-dependent and consistent with tight binding inhibition. The K(i) value of the reversible complex of pepstatin with the enzyme was 0.87 microM whereas the overall inhibition constant K(i)* was 0.727 microM.  相似文献   

19.
Sergienko EA  Jordan F 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):3952-3967
Pyruvate decarboxylase from yeast (YPDC, EC 4.1.1.1) exhibits a marked lag phase in the progress curves of product (acetaldehyde) formation. The currently accepted kinetic model for YPDC predicts that, only upon binding of substrate in a regulatory site, a slow activation step converts inactive enzyme into the active form. This allosteric behavior gives rise to sigmoidal steady-state kinetics. The E477Q active site variant of YPDC exhibited hyperbolic initial rate curves at low pH, not consistent with the model. Progress curves of product formation by this variant were S-shaped, consistent with the presence of three interconverting conformations with distinct steady-state rates. Surprisingly, wild-type YPDC at pH < or =5.0 also possessed S-shaped progress curves, with the conformation corresponding to the middle steady state being the most active one. Reexamination of the activation by substrate of wild-type YPDC in the pH range of 4.5-6.5 revealed two characteristic transitions at all pH values. The values of steady-state rates are functions of both pH and substrate concentration, affecting whether the progress curve appears "normal" or S-shaped with an inflection point. The substrate dependence of the apparent rate constants suggested that the first transition corresponded to substrate binding in an active site and a subsequent step responsible for conversion to an asymmetric conformation. Consequently, the second enzyme state may report on "unregulated" enzyme, since the regulatory site does not participate in its generation. This enzyme state utilizes the alternating sites mechanism, resulting in the hyperbolic substrate dependence of initial rate. The second transition corresponds to binding a substrate molecule in the regulatory site and subsequent minor conformational adjustments. The third enzyme state corresponds to the allosterically regulated conformation, previously referred to as activated enzyme. The pH dependence of the Hill coefficient suggests a random binding of pyruvate in a regulatory and an active site of wild-type YPDC. Addition of pyruvamide or acetaldehyde to YPDC results in the appearance of additional conformations of the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
Experiments using equilibrium dialysis and fluorescence quenching provided direct evidence that approximately four moles of L-aspartic acid were bound per mole of tetrameric L-asparaginase from Escherichia coli, with a dissociation constant on the order of 60-160 microM. In addition, a set of weaker binding sites with a dissociation constant in the millimolar range were detected. Kinetic studies also revealed that L-aspartic acid inhibited L-asparaginase competitively, with an inhibition constant of 80 microM at micromolar concentrations of L-asparagine; at millimolar concentrations of the amide, an increase in maximal velocity but a decrease in affinity for L-asparagine were observed. L-Aspartic acid at millimolar levels again displayed competitive inhibition. These and other observations suggest that L-aspartic acid binds not only to the active site but also a second site with lower intrinsic affinity for it. The observed "substrate activation" is most likely attributable to the binding of a second molecule of L-asparagine rather than negative cooperativity among the tight sites of the subunits of this tetrameric enzyme. Further support for L-aspartic acid binding to the active site comes from experiments in which the enzyme, when exposed to various group-specific reagents suffered parallel loss of catalytic activity and in its ability to bind L-aspartic acid. Different commercial preparations of Escherichia coli L-asparaginase were found to contain approximately 2-4 moles of L-aspartic acid; these were incompletely removed by dialysis, but could be removed by transamination or decarboxylation. Efficiency of dialysis increased with increasing pH. Taken together, this set of results is consistent with the existence of a covalent beta-aspartyl enzyme intermediate.  相似文献   

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