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1.
Diaminopimelate decarboxylase has been characterized in extracts of Bacillus subtilis and resolved from aspartokinases I and II. Under certain conditions, the enzyme is specifically inhibited by physiological concentrations of L-lysine, but less specificity and altered kinetics of inhibition are observed if lower ionic strengths are employed in the assay procedure. Diaminopimelate decarboxylase can be desensitized to lysine inhibition by either lowering the pH or diluting the enzyme in Tris buffer in the absence of pyridoxal phosphate. Evidence is presented to incidate that, under proper conditions, lysine inhibition involves an interaction of the amino acid with the enzyme rather than competition for available pyridoxal phosphate in the assay. Lysine, by affecting the level of meso-diaminopimelate, may thus regulate its biosynthesis through sequential feedback inhibition. Analysis of the diaminopimelate decarboxylase of 15 revertants of mutants that had originally lacked diaminopimelate decarboxylase activity indicates that as little as 5% of the specific activity of enzyme observed in the wild-type strain is sufficient to permit normal growth rates. In the growing cell, diaminopimelate decarboxylase may therefore exist largely in an inhibited state.  相似文献   

2.
The crude extracts of 3-day-old etiolated seedlings of Lathyrus sativus contained two S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase activities. The artifactual putrescine-dependent activity was due to the H2O2 generated by diamine oxidase (EC 1.4.3.6) of this plant system and was inhibited by catalase. This observation was confirmed by using an electrophoretically and immunologically homogeneous preparation of L. sativus diamine oxidase. In the presence of putrescine, diamine oxidase, in addition to S-adenosylmethionine, decarboxylated L-lysine, L-arginine, L-ornithine, L-methionine and L-glutamic acid to varying degrees. The decarboxylation was not metal-ion dependent. The biosynthetic S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.21) was detected after removing diamine oxidase specifically from the crude extracts by employing an immunoaffinity column. This Mg2+-dependent decarboxylase was not stimulated by putrescine or inhibited by catalase. The enzyme activity was inhibited by semicarbazide, 4-bromo-3-hydroxybenzoylamine dihydrogen phosphate and methylglyoxal-bis (guanylhydrazone). It was largely localized in the shoots of the etiolated seedlings and was purified 40-fold by employing a p-hydroxymercuribenzoate/AH-Sepharose affinity column, which also separated the decarboxylase activity from spermidine synthase.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract— Seven N-(5′-phosphopyridoxyl) amino acids, reduced analogs of the glutamate-pyridoxal phosphate Schiff base, were synthesized and purified. All of them inhibited mouse brain glutamate decarboxylase activity. The four most potent inhibitors were the aminooxyacetate, GABA, cysteinesul-finate and glutamate derivatives, and the effect of these compounds was studied kinetically. The inhibition produced was in all cases mixed function with respect to glutamate and competitive with respect to pyridoxal phosphate. The inhibition kinetics were non-linear. These results are interpreted in terms of an ordered binding of pyridoxal phosphate and glutamate to the enzyme. Furthermore, they are consistent with previous findings suggesting the existence of two kinds of glutamate decarboxylase activity differing in their dependence on free pyridoxal phosphate.  相似文献   

4.
Biosynthetic ornithine decarboxylase was purified 4300-fold from Escherichia coli to a purity of approximately 85% as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme showed hyperbolic kinetics with a Km of 5.6 mM for ornithine and 1.0 micronM for pyridoxal phosphate and it was competitively inhibited by putrescine and spermidine. The biosynthetic decarboxylase was compared with the biodegradative ornithine decarboxylase [Applebaum, D., et al. (1975), Biochemistry 14, 3675]. Both enzymes were dimers of 80 000-82 000 molecular weight and exhibited similar kinetic properties. However, they differed significantly in other respects. The pH optimum of the biosynthetic enzyme was 8.1, compared with 6.9 for the biodegradative. Both enzymes were activated by nucleotides, but with different specificity. Antibody to the purified biodegradative ornithine decarboxylase did not cross-react with the biosynthetic enzyme. The evolutionary relationship of these two decarboxylases to the other amino acid decarboxylases of E. coli is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Histidine decarboxylase from fetal rat liver was purified to near-homogeneity. The purified enzyme has a molecular weight of 210,000, and appears to contain two subunits with molecular weights of 145,000 and 66,000, respectively. The enzyme is inhibited by heavy metals such as Hg2+ and Zn2+ and sulfhydryl-reactive compounds such as 5,5'-dithiobis-2-nitrobenzoic acid. The enzyme is partially dependent on exogenous pyridoxal phosphate. Extensive dialysis results in 50% loss of enzyme activity which can be fully recovered by adding pyridoxal phosphate. Affinity of pyridoxal phosphate for the apoenzyme is 0.1 microM at pH 6.8. Antibody against purified histidine decarboxylase was raised in rabbits. The antibody has been employed in immunohistochemical studies to visualize histidine decarboxylase containing cells and neuronal processes in rat stomach and brain, respectively. Immunologic studies indicate that histidine decarboxylase from brain, gastric mucosa, and fetal rat liver share common antigenic properties.  相似文献   

6.
Arginine decarboxylase (E.C. 4.1.1) after purification from rice seedlings was separated into fractions A (MW 88000) and B (MW 174000) by gel chromatography. Fraction B was much more active than A. After DEAE cellulose chromatography, the active fraction of the enzyme (B) was purified to homogeneity, which appeared as a single band in gel electrophoresis. The optimal pH and temperature for the enzyme were 8.0 and 45°C, respectively. The enzyme followed typical Michaelis–Menten kinetics with a Km value of 0.28 mm. It had no dependence on a metal, and consisted of 16 amino acids of which proline was prominent. Pyridoxal-5-phosphate acted as a co-factor of the enzyme. The enzyme activity was inhibited by various amines and inhibitors, of which the highest inhibition was obtained with spermine and hydroxylamine. The plant hormones played a vital role in regulating the activity of the enzyme which was promoted by kinetin and inhibited by abscisic acid.  相似文献   

7.
1. Polyamine concentrations were decreased in rats fed on a diet deficient in vitamin B-6. 2. Ornithine decarboxylase activity was decreased by vitamin B-6 deficiency when assayed in tissue extracts without addition of pyridoxal phosphate, but was greater than in control extracts when pyridoxal phosphate was present in saturating amounts. 3. In contrast, the activity of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase was not enhanced by pyridoxal phosphate addition even when dialysed extracts were prepared from tissues of young rats suckled by mothers fed on the vitamin B-6-deficient diet. 4. S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase activities were increased by administration of methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) (1,1'-[(methylethanediylidine)dinitrilo]diguanidine) to similar extents in both control and vitamin B-6-deficient animals. 5. The spectrum of highly purified liver S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase did not indicate the presence of pyridoxal phosphate. After inactivation of the enzyme by reaction with NaB3H4, radioactivity was incorporated into the enzyme, but was not present as a reduced derivative of pyridoxal phosphate. 6. It is concluded that the decreased concentrations of polyamines in rats fed on a diet containing vitamin B-6 may be due to decreased activity or ornithine decarboxylase or may be caused by an unknown mechanism responding to growth retardation produced by the vitamin deficiency. In either case, measurements of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase and ornithine decarboxylase activity under optimum conditions in vitro do not correlate with the polyamine concentrations in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
Ornithine decarboxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in the polyamine biosynthetic pathway has been purified 7,600 fold from Plasmodium falciparum by affinity chromatography on a pyridoxamine phosphate column. The partially purified enzyme was specifically tagged with radioactive DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine and subjected to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions. A major protein band of 49 kilodalton was obtained while with the purified mouse enzyme, a typical 53 kilodalton band, was observed. The catalytic activity of parasite enzyme was dependent on pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and was optimal at pH 8.0. The apparent Michaelis constant for L-ornithine was 52 microM. DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine efficiently and irreversibly inhibited ornithine decarboxylase activity from P. falciparum grown in vitro or Plasmodium berghei grown in vivo. The Ki of the human malarial enzyme for this inhibitor was 16 microM. Ornithine decarboxylase activity in P. falciparum cultures was rapidly lost upon exposure to the direct product, putrescine. Despite the profound inhibition of protein synthesis with cycloheximide in vitro, parasite enzyme activity was only slightly reduced by 75 min of treatment, suggesting a relatively long half-life for the malarial enzyme. Ornithine decarboxylase activity from P. falciparum and P. berghei was not eliminated by antiserum prepared against purified mouse enzyme. Furthermore, RNA or DNA extracted from P. falciparum failed to hybridize to a mouse ornithine decarboxylase cDNA probe. These results suggest that ODC from P. falciparum bears some structural differences as compared to the mammalian enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
K M Yao  W F Fong    S F Ng 《The Biochemical journal》1984,222(3):679-684
The putrescine-biosynthesis pathway in Tetrahymena thermophila was delineated by studying crude extracts prepared from exponentially growing cultures. A pyridoxal phosphate-stimulated ornithine decarboxylase activity competitively inhibited by putrescine was detected. CO2 was also liberated from L-arginine, but analyses by t.l.c. and enzyme studies suggested that the activity was not due to arginine decarboxylase, nor could enzyme activities converting agmatine into putrescine be detected. We conclude that the decarboxylation of L-ornithine is probably the only major route for putrescine biosynthesis in this organism during exponential growth.  相似文献   

10.
The kinetics of the inhibition of mouse brain glutamate decarboxylase by pyri-doxaI-5′-phosphate oxime-O-acetic acid (PLPOAA) was studied. The inhibition was noncompetitive with regard to glutamic acid; it could be partially reversed by pyridoxal phosphate, but only when the concentration of the latter in the incubation medium was higher than that of pyridoxal-5′-phosphate oxime-O-acetic acid. The inhibition produced by aminooxyacetic acid, which is remarkably greater than that produced by PLPOAA, was also partially reversed only when an excess of pyridoxal phosphate was added. Both in the presence and in the absence of a saturating concentration of pyridoxal phosphate, the activity of the enzyme was decreased by PLPOAA at a 10?4m concentration to a value of about 50 per cent of the control value obtained without added coenzyme. This activity could not be further reduced even when PLPOAA concentration was increased to 5 × 10?3m . This same minimal activity of glutamate decarboxylase was obtained after dialysis of the enzymic preparation, or after incubation with glutamic acid in the cold followed by filtration through Sephadex G-25. The addition of pyridoxal phosphate to the dialysed or glutamic acid-treated enzyme restored the activity to almost the control values. PLPOAA did not affect the activity of glutamate decarboxylase from E. coli or that of DOPA decarboxylase and GABA transaminase from mouse brain. To account for the results obtained it is postulated that brain glutamate decarboxylase has two types of active site, one with firmly bound, non-dialysable pyridoxal phosphate and the other with loosely bound, dialysable coenzyme; PLPOAA behaves as a weak inhibitor probably because it can combine mainly with the loosely bound coenzyme site, while aminooxyacetic acid is a potent inhibitor probably because it can block both the ‘loosely bound coenzyme’ and the ‘firmly bound coenzyme’ sites.  相似文献   

11.
Glutamate decarboxylase has been purified from potato tubers. The final preparation was homogeneous as judged from native and sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Gel filtration on Sephadex G-200 gave a relative molecular mass Mr, of 91 000 for the native enzyme. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gave a subunit Mr of 43 000. Thus the enzyme appears to be a dimer of identical subunits. It has 2 mol pyridoxal 5'-phosphate/mol protein, which could not be removed by exhaustive dialysis or gel filtration on Sephadex G-25. The enzyme has an absorption maximum at 370 nm in sodium phosphate buffer, pH 5.8. Reduction of the enzyme with sodium borohydride abolished the absorption maximum at 370 nm with attendant loss of catalytic activity. The enzyme exhibited pH-dependent spectral changes. The enzyme was specific for L-glutamate and could not decarboxylate other amino acids tested. The enzyme was maximally active at pH 5.8 and a temperature of 37 degrees C. Isoelectric focussing gave a pI of 4.7 Km values for L-glutamate and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate were 5.6 mM and 2 microM respectively. Thiol-directed reagents and heavy metal ions inhibited the enzyme, indicating that an -SH group is required for activity. The nature of the functional groups at the active site of the enzyme was inferred from competitive inhibition studies. L-Glutamate promoted inactivation of the enzyme caused by decarboxylation-dependent transamination was demonstrated. The characteristics of potato enzyme were compared with enzyme from other sources.  相似文献   

12.
An arginine decarboxylase has been isolated from a Pseudomonas species. The enzyme is constitutive and did not appear to be repressed by a variety of carbon sources. After an approximately 40-fold purification, the enzyme appeared more similar in its properties to the Escherichia coli biosynthetic arginine decarboxylase than to the E. coli inducible (biodegradative) enzyme. The Pseudomonas arginine decarboxylase exhibited a pH optimum of 8.1 and an absolute requirement of Mg2+ and pyridoxal phosphate, and was inhibited significantly at lower Mg2+ concentrations by the polyamines putrescine, spermidine, and cadaverine. The Km for L-arginine was about 0.25 mM at pH 8.1 AND 7.2. The enzyme was completely inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzoate. The inhibition was prevented by dithiothreitol, a feature that suggests the involvement of an -SH group. Of a variety of labeled amino acids tested, only L-arginine, but not D-arginine was decarboxylated. D-Arginine was a potent inhibitor of arginine decarboxylase with a Ki of 3.2 muM.  相似文献   

13.
Lu TS  Mazelis M 《Plant physiology》1975,55(3):502-506
ORNITHINE: 2-oxoacid aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.13) has been purified over 400-fold with a total recovery of 14% from acetone powders of cotyledons of germinating squash (Cucurbita pepo, L.) seedlings. The pH optimum of the transamination between l-ornithine and alpha-ketoglutarate is 8 and the Michaelis constants are 4.7 mm and 6.3 mm, respectively. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 48,000 as determined by gel filtration. The reaction is essentially specific for alpha-ketoglutarate as the amino group acceptor. The enzyme is inhibited very strongly by hydroxylamine, and less severely by NaCN and isonicotinylhydrazide. No inhibition is observed in the presence of 10 mml-cysteine. The energy of activation is 7.6 kcal/mole. The stability of the enzyme preparation is enhanced by the presence of dithioerythritol and glycerol. The enzyme activity of the most purified fraction is stimulated 30% by the addition of pyridoxal phosphate; however, the evidence for the unequivocal involvement of pyridoxal phosphate was inconclusive.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract: Glutamic acid decarboxylase activity associated with cerebral blood vessels appears to be part of a specific cerebrovascular system involving γ-aminobutyric acid. This activity was characterized kinetically and pharmacologically and compared with that in brain and several nonneuronal tissues. Formation of γ-aminobutyric acid from [14C]glutamate was measured in a soluble extract of pia-arachnoid blood vessels isolated from bovine brain. The vascular activity was like brain glutamate decarboxylase in that it required pyridoxal phosphate, was completely inhibited by aminooxyacetic acid, and had a similar affinity for glutamate. Cerebrovascular decarboxylase activity differed, however, from brain decarboxylase in that it was less sensitive to sulfhydryl reagents, was stimulated by 3-mercaptopropionic and cysteic acids, and was competitively inhibited by cysteine sulfinic acid. The glutamate decarboxylase activity of the cerebral vessels was similar to that in renal cortex and mesenteric blood vessels in its responses to sulfhydryl reagents and 3-mercaptopropionic acid. These findings are consistent with previous suggestions of a nonneuronal form of the enzyme and offer the possibility that synthesis of γ-aminobutyric acid in cerebral blood vessels can be manipulated independently from that in neuronal tissue.  相似文献   

15.
A transamidinase was purified 463-fold from Lathyrus sativus seedlings by affinity chromatography on homoarginine--Sepharose. The enzyme exhibited a wide substrate specificity, and catalysed the reversible transfer of the amidino groups from donors such as arginine, homoarginine and canavanine to acceptors such as lysine, putrescine, agmatine, cadaverine and hydroxylamine. The enzyme could not be detected in the seeds, and attained the highest specific activity in the embryo axis on day 10 after seed germination. Its thiol nature was established by strong inhibition by several thiol blockers and thiol compounds in the presence of ferricyanide. In the absence of an exogenous acceptor, it exhibited weak hydrolytic activity towards arginine. It had apparent mol.wt. 210000, and exhibited Michaelis--Menten kinetics with Km 3.0 mM for arginine. Ornithine competitively inhibited the enzyme, with Ki 1.0 mM in the arginine--hydroxylamine amidino-transfer reaction. Conversion experiments with labelled compounds suggest that the enzyme is involved in homoarginine catabolism during the development of plant embryo to give rise to important amino acids and amine metabolites. Presumptive evidence is also provided for its involvement in the biosynthesis of the guanidino amino acid during seed development. The natural occurrence of arcain in L. sativus and mediation of its synthesis in vitro from agmatine by the transamidinase are demonstrated.  相似文献   

16.
—Glutamate decarboxylase (l -glutamate 1-carboxy-lyase EC 4.1.1.15; GAD) has been isolated from guinea pig brain and some of its properties studied. Many of its properties indicated that it was similar if not identical to the decarboxylase isolated from other species. It showed normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics (Km= 8 mM), had a pH optimum of 6.6–7.0 and was protected by sulphydryl reagents. Its activity was stimulated by pyridoxal phosphate and inhibited by a variety of anions, cations and carbonyl trapping agents. Allylglycine strongly inhibited GAD isolated from the brains of several different species. The mechanism of this inhibition has been studied kinetically and compared to chloride induced inhibition. The kinetic data presented is consistent with the idea that allylglycine inhibits the enzyme by a partially reversible inactivation rather than by reversible competitive inhibition.  相似文献   

17.
Previous studies from this laboratory have shown that pyridoxal-5-sulphate, the synthetic analogue of pyridoxal phosphate, causes epileptic seizures including tonic-clonic convulsions. These seizure activities are prevented or reversed by GABA or muscimol. In an attempt to delineate the biochemical basis of these seizure processes further, we have studied and shown that pyridoxal sulphate is a competitive inhibitor of glutamic acid decarboxylase. In addition, the chronic administration of pyridoxal sulphate was shown to reduce the concentration of pyridoxal phosphate in the cerebellum, the cerebrum, and basal ganglion, but not in the hippocampus. The activity of hippocampal glutamic acid decarboxylase was reduced after 1, 3, and 5 days of chronic application of pyridoxal sulphate. The inhibition was demonstrated, whether glutamic acid decarboxylase was assayed in the presence or absence of its coenzyme pyridoxal phosphate. Unlike findings in the hippocampus, the activity of glutamic acid decarboxylase in other brain regions was unaffected following chronic application of pyridoxal sulphate. The selective toxic effects of pyridoxal sulfate to the hippocampus, a brain area well known for its high susceptibility to seizure discharges, deserve additional indepth investigation.  相似文献   

18.
S. Sarawek  D. D. Davies 《Planta》1977,137(3):265-270
Lemna aldolase has been purified by ion-exchange and affinity chromatography. The enzyme is inhibited by pyridoxal phosphate in a manner which suggests that pyridoxal phosphate forms a non-covalent complex with the enzymes which is in equilibrium with the Schiff base covalently modified enzyme. The kinetics of the reversal of inhibition have been used to test the proposition that the fall in aldolase activity observed during periods of nitrogen starvation is due to inhibition by pyridoxal phosphate. It is concluded that the in vivo loss of aldolase activity is not due to pyridoxal phosphate and that the in vitro inhibition of glycolytic enzymes by pyridoxal phosphate is due to the reaction with lysine residues at the active sites which are necessary to bind the strongly acidic sugar phosphates.  相似文献   

19.
Glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) exists as two isoforms, GAD65 and GAD67. GAD activity is regulated by a cycle of activation and inactivation determined by the binding and release of its co-factor, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Holoenzyme (GAD with bound co-factor) decarboxylates glutamate to form GABA, but it also catalyzes a slower transamination reaction that produces inactive apoGAD (without bound co-factor). Apoenzyme can reassociate with pyridoxal phosphate to form holoGAD, thus completing the cycle. Within cells, GAD65 is largely apoenzyme (approximately 93%) while GAD67 is mainly holoenzyme (approximately 72%). We found striking kinetic differences between the GAD isoforms that appear to account for this difference in co-factor saturation. The glutamate dependent conversion of holoGAD65 to apoGAD was about 15 times faster than that of holoGAD67 at saturating glutamate. Aspartate and GABA also converted holoGAD65 to apoGAD at higher rates than they did holoGAD67. Nucleoside triphosphates (such as ATP) are known to affect the activation reactions of the cycle. ATP slowed the activation of GAD65 and markedly reduced its steady-state activity, but had little affect on the activation of GAD67 or its steady-state activity. Inorganic phosphate opposed the effect of ATP; it increased the rate of apoGAD65 activation but had little effect on apoGAD67 activation. We conclude that the apo-/holoenzyme cycle of inactivation and reactivation is more important in regulating the activity of GAD65 than of GAD67.  相似文献   

20.
W B Whitman  F R Tabita 《Biochemistry》1978,17(7):1282-1287
Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase isolated from Rhodospirillum rubrum was strongly inhibited by low concentrations of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. Activity was protected by the substrate ribulose bisphosphate and to a lesser extent by other phosphorylated compounds. Pyridoxal phosphate inhibition was enhanced in the presence of magnesium and bicarbonate, but not in the presence of either compound alone. Concomitant with inhibition of enzyme activity, pyridoxal phosphate forms a Schiff base with the enzyme which is reversible upon dialysis and reducible with sodium borohydride. Subsequent to reduction of the Schiff base with tritiated sodium borohydride, tritiated N6-pyridoxyllysine could be identified in the acid hydrolysate of the enzyme. Only small amounts of this compound were present when the reduction was performed in the presence of carboxyribitol bisphosphate, an analogue of the intermediate formed during the carboxylation reaction. Therefore, it is concluded that pyridoxal phosphate modifies a lysyl residue close to or at the active site of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase.  相似文献   

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