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1.
Nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) is not only an intermediate for the biosynthesis but also a degradation product of pyridine cofactors in animal tissues. Among the animal tissues tested, the highest NMN catabolizing activity was detected in beef liver (5.6 mumol/min/g tissue). This activity was 16 times higher than the NAD hydrolysis catalyzed by the liver NAD glycohydrolase. As a result of enzymatic analysis of the NMN splitting process, two types of enzyme responsible for this catabolism were partially purified and identified as a membrane-bound 5'-nucleotidase and a cytoplasmic nicotinamide riboside (NR) phosphorylase. No specific NMN glycohydrolase could be found in contrast to results observed in bacterial systems. The 5'-nucleotidase and NR phosphorylase constitute an obligatory process of the pyridine nucleotide cycle. The dephosphorylation and phosphorolysis catalyzed suggest that these enzymes could serve as an important mechanism for salvaging the ribose and nicotinamide moieties of NMN and pyridine nucleotides in the cell and a process that could be regulated at the mononucleotide level by this "NMN cycle" rather than by a NAD glycohydrolase cycle. In addition to the enzymatic properties of these enzymes, a regulatory mechanism by nucleotides such as ATP was also demonstrated.  相似文献   

2.
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1) from bovine spleen is allosterically regulated. With the substrate inosine the enzyme displayed complex kinetics: positive cooperativity vs inosine when this substrate was close to physiological concentrations, negative cooperativity at inosine concentrations greater than 60 microM, and substrate inhibition at inosine greater than 1 mM. No cooperativity was observed with the alternative substrate, guanosine. The activity of purine nucleoside phosphorylase toward the substrate inosine was sensitive to the presence of reducing thiols; oxidation caused a loss of cooperativity toward inosine, as well as a 10-fold decreased affinity for inosine. The enzyme also displayed negative cooperativity toward phosphate at physiological concentrations of Pi, but oxidation had no effect on either the affinity or cooperativity toward phosphate. The importance of reduced cysteines on the enzyme is thus specific for binding of the nucleoside substrate. The enzyme was modestly inhibited by the pyrimidine nucleotides CTP (Ki = 118 microM) and UTP (Ki = 164 microM), but showed greater sensitivity to 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (Ki = 5.2 microM).  相似文献   

3.
1. Phosphorolysis and phosphorylation rates of inosine, guanosine and deoxyguanosine were determined in disrupted and intact human and ovine lymphocytes and rat thymocytes and related with their effect on mitogenic stimulation. 2. Activity of purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1) was about 10 times higher in extracts of human lymphocytes than in those of ovine lymphocytes and rat thymocytes. Apparent Km values for inosine and guanosine were higher in human lymphocytes (about 100 microM) than in ovine lymphocytes (50 microM). Apparent Km values for deoxyguanosine were about 100 microM in the extracts of all three cell types. 3. In extracts of human and ovine lymphocytes the presence of guanosine kinase activity was established. Deoxyguanosine kinase activity was detected in all three cell types. 4. The rate of phosphorylation of deoxyguanosine was much lower than the rate of phosphorolysis both in extracts and in intact cells. 5. Deoxyguanosine, guanosine and inosine were incorporated by intact cells into nucleotides and nucleic acids. This incorporation of deoxyguanosine and guanosine was only partially due to phosphorolysis and subsequent conversion by hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.8). The incorporation of inosine appeared to be due completely to this route. 6. Inosine (0.5 mM) did not inhibit thymidine incorporation of phytohemagglutinin-stimulated human and ovine lymphocytes. At the same concentration deoxyinosine caused 50% inhibition, but guanosine and deoxyguanosine inhibited almost completely. Thymidine incorporation of concanavalin A-stimulated rat thymocytes was hardly inhibited by 0.5 mM inosine, deoxyinosine and guanosine, but 50 microM and 0.5 mM deoxyguanosine caused 25% and complete inhibition, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
Uridine phosphorylase is the only pyrimidine nucleoside cleaving activity that can be detected in extracts of Schistosoma mansoni. The enzyme is distinct from the two purine nucleoside phosphorylases contained in this parasite. Although Urd is the preferred substrate, uridine phosphorylase can also catalyze the reversible phosphorolysis of dUrd and dThd, but not Cyd, dCyd, or orotidine. The enzyme was purified 170-fold to a specific activity of 2.76 nmol/min/mg of protein with a 16% yield. It has a Mr of 56,000 as determined by molecular sieving on Sephadex G-100. The mechanism of uridine phosphorylase is sequential. When Urd was the substrate, the KUrd = 13 microM and the KPi = 533 +/- 78 microM. When dThd was used as a substrate, the KdThd = 54 microM and the KPi = 762 +/- 297 microM. The Vmax with dThd was 53 +/- 9.8% that of Urd. dThd was a competitive inhibitor when Urd was used as a substrate. The enzyme showed substrate inhibition by Urd, dThd (greater than 0.125 mM) and phosphate (greater than 10 mM). 5-(Benzyloxybenzyloxybenzyl)acyclouridine was identified as a potent and specific inhibitor of parasite (Ki = 0.98 microM) but not host uridine phosphorylase. Structure-activity relationship studies suggest that uridine phosphorylase from S. mansoni has a hydrophobic pocket adjacent to the 5-position of the pyrimidine ring and indicate differences between the binding sites of the mammalian and parasite enzymes. These differences may be useful in designing specific inhibitors for schistosomal uridine phosphorylase which will interfere selectively with nucleic acids synthesis in this parasite.  相似文献   

5.
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase from Hyalomma dromedarii, the camel tick, was purified to apparent homogeneity. A molecular weight of 56,000 - 58,000 was estimated for both the native and denatured enzyme, suggesting that the enzyme is monomeric. Unlike purine nucleoside phosphorylase preparations from other tissues, the H. dromedarii enzyme was unstable in the presence of beta-mercaptoethanol. The enzyme had a sharp pH optimum at pH 6.5. It catalyzed the phosphorolysis and arsenolysis of ribo- and deoxyribo-nucleosides of hypoxanthine and guanine, but not of adenine or pyrimidine nucleosides. The Km values of the enzyme at the optimal pH for inosine, deoxyinosine, guanosine, and deoxyguanosine were 0.31, 0.67, 0.55, and 0.33 mM, respectively. Inactivation and kinetic studies suggested that histidine and cysteine residues were essential for activity. The pKa values determined for catalytic ionizable groups were 6-7 and 8-9. The enzyme was completely inactivated by thiol reagents and reactivated by excess beta-mercaptoethanol. The enzyme was also susceptible to pH-dependent photooxidation in the presence of methylene blue, implicating histidine. Initial velocity studies showed an intersecting pattern of double-reciprocal plots of the data, consistent with a sequential mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
The sequential hydrolysis of purines is present in rat CSF and generates nucleosides as inosine and guanosine that are usual substrates for purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP). PNP catalyzes phosphorolysis of the purine nucleosides and deoxynucleosides releasing purine bases. Here we investigated the presence of PNP in CSF of rats using: i) a specific chromophoric analogue of nucleosides, 2-amino-6-mercapto-7-methylpurine ribonucleoside (MESG), and ii) an inhibitor of PNP activity, immucillin-H. Additionally, we performed a preliminary kinetic characterization (K(M): Henry-Michaelis-Menten constant; V: maximal velocity) for MESG and inorganic phosphate (Pi). The values of K(M) and V for MESG (n = 3, mean+/-SD) were 142.5+/-29.5 microM and 0.0102+/-0.0006 U mg(-1), respectively. For Pi (n=3, mean+/-SD), the K(M) values and V were 186.8+/-43.7 microM and 0.0104+/-0.0016 U mg(-1), respectively. The results indicated that PNP is present in rat CSF and provided a preliminary kinetic characterization.  相似文献   

7.
An enzymatic orthophosphate removal system is described which can be effectively used to continuously remove orthophosphate from biochemical samples. The phosphorolysis of nicotinamide riboside is catalyzed by calf spleen nucleoside phosphorylase to give ribose-1-PO4 and nicotinamide along with a proton. At pH 8 the production of ribose-1-PO4 from orthophosphate is essentially quantitative. This reaction can be monitored optically or by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Equations are given for determining the time required to remove a given amount of phosphate from a typical NMR sample with a known amount of nucleoside phosphorylase. The effects of a competing orthophosphate-producing reaction are considered.  相似文献   

8.
E R Mably  E Fung  F F Snyder 《Génome》1989,32(6):1026-1032
Two independent mutations of purine nucleoside phosphorylase were identified in the first-generation progeny of male mice that had been treated with the mutagen N-ethylnitrosourea and mated to untreated females. The common allele in inbred strains is Np-1a and the mutants are assigned the gene symbols Np-1e and Np-1f. Heterozygotes had approximately half normal purine nucleoside phosphorylase activity in erythrocytes and activity of homozygotes was 17 and 5% of NP-1A for NP-1E and NP-1F, respectively. The following properties are consistent with both Np-1e and Np-1f being point mutations: the expression of residual but markedly reduced activity with normal Michaelis constants for inosine and phosphate, altered isoelectric points, and increased thermal lability. The reduction in erythrocyte activity was also evident in other tissues. A metabolic consequence of the mutations was increased purine nucleoside excretion. Inosine and guanosine, total 150 +/- 84 microM, and inosine, deoxyinosine, guanosine, and deoxyguanosine, total 1490 +/- 190 microM, were present in urine of Np-1e/Np-1e and Np-1f/Np-1f mice, respectively, but not in normal urine, less than 10 microM.  相似文献   

9.
Ribose 1-phosphate, phosphate, and acyclovir diphosphate quenched the fluorescence of purine nucleoside phosphorylase at pH 7.1 and 25 degrees C. The fluorescence of enzyme-bound guanine was similar to that of anionic guanine in ethanol. Guanine and ribose 1-phosphate bound to free enzyme, whereas inosine and guanosine were not bound to free enzyme in the absence of phosphate. Thus, synthesis proceeded by a random mechanism, and phosphorolysis proceeded by an ordered mechanism. Steady-state kinetic data for the phosphorolysis of 100 microM guanosine were fitted to a bifunctional kinetic model with catalytic rate constants of 22 and 1.3 s-1. The dissociation rate constants for guanine from the enzyme-guanine complex at high and low phosphate concentrations were similar to the catalytic rate constants. Fluorescence changes of the enzyme during phosphorolysis suggested that ribose 1-phosphate dissociated from the enzyme ribose 1-phosphate-guanine complex rapidly and that guanine dissociated from the enzyme-guanine complex slowly. The association and dissociation rate constants for acyclovir diphosphate, a potent inhibitor of the enzyme (Tuttle, J. V., and Krenitsky, T. A. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 4065-4069), were also dependent on phosphate concentration. The effects of phosphate are discussed in terms of a dual functional binding site for phosphate.  相似文献   

10.
Uridine phosphorylase activity was detected in sonic extracts of six different mammalian cell lines and, in conjunction with uridine kinase, provides a route for the conversion of uracil to UMP via uridine. Uracil phosphoribosyl transferase activity was not detected in any of eight different mammalian cell lines. Uridine phosphorylase was purified 5,330-fold from Novikoff rat hepatoma cells by ammonium sulfate precipitation, DEAE-Sephadex chromatography, hydroxyapatite chromatography, and Sephadex G-200 fractionation. The molecular weight of the enzyme by gel filtration was approximately 45,000. The kinetics of the purified enzyme were analyzed with respect to all four substrates at saturating cosubstrate concentration, yielding the parameters KmUra = 360 microM, KmRib-1-P = 88 microM, KmUrd = 16 micron, and KmPi = 130 microM. However, in intact cells the phosphorolysis of uridine proceeded with an apparent Km of 231 microM. Novikoff cells treated with 0.5 mM inosine exhibited an increase in uracil uptake rate which was proportional to an observed increase in intracellular ribose-1-phosphate. Nevertheless, in cells whose de novo synthesis of pyrimidines was blocked by pyrazofurin or N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate ("PALA"), the uptake of uracil was insufficient to support proliferation, even when enhanced by inosine. These observations are consistent with the kinetic characteristics of the enzyme and provide evidence that the intracellular level of ribose-1-phosphate plays a rate-limiting role in the uptake of uracil mediated by uridine phosphorylase.  相似文献   

11.
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1, purine nucleoside:orthophosphate ribosyltransferase) was purified and characterized from the malarial parasite, Plasmodium lophurae, using a chromatofocusing (Pharmacia) column and a formycin B affinity column. The apparent isoelectric point of the native protein, as determined by chromatofocusing, was 6.80. By gel filtration and both native and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the native enzyme appeared to be a pentamer with a native molecular weight of 125,300 and a subunit molecular weight of 23,900. The enzyme had a broad pH optimum, pH 5.5-7.5, with maximum activity at pH 6.0-6.5. The enzyme reaction was readily reversible with a Km for inosine of 33 microM and a Km for hypoxanthine of 82 microM. Thioinosine, guanosine, and guanine were also substrates for the plasmodial enzyme, but allopurinol and adenine were not. The parasite enzyme was competitively inhibited by formycin B (Ki = 0.39 microM). Formycin A, azaguanine, and 8-aminoguanosine were not inhibitors of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Homogeneous preparations of purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1) from rabbit kidney, spleen, liver and embryos were studied. The enzyme preparations do not differ in electrophoretic mobility. The molecular weight of the enzyme obtained from various sources was determined by gel filtration on Sephadex G-150 superfine and is about 90-92 kD. The enzyme subunits are identical in terms of molecular weight, as can be evidenced from sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Mr approximately 31 kD). The pH optima of these enzyme preparations for guanosine and xanthosine phosphorolysis are 6.2 and 5.7, respectively. The isoelectric point of purine nucleoside phosphorylase from rabbit kidney was determined in the presence of 9 M urea and is equal to 5.55. The enzyme is the most stable at pH 7.7; it is specific towards hypoxanthine and guanine nucleosides as well as towards xanthosine, but does not cleave adenine nucleosides. The Km values for guanosine and inosine are 1.4.10(-4) M and 1.2.10(-4) M, respectively. The enzyme does not catalyze the ribosyl transfer reaction in the absence of Pi.  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of this study was to determine the mechanism by which inosine activates pyrimidine salvage in CNS. The levels of cerebral inosine, hypoxanthine, uridine, uracil, ribose 1-phosphate and inorganic phosphate were determined, to evaluate the Gibbs free energy changes (deltaG) of the reactions catalyzed by purine nucleoside phosphorylase and uridine phosphorylase, respectively. A deltaG value of 0.59 kcal/mol for the combined reaction inosine+uracil <==> uridine+hypoxanthine was obtained, suggesting that at least in anoxic brain the system may readily respond to metabolite fluctuations. If purine nucleoside phosphorolysis and uridine phosphorolysis are coupled to uridine phosphorylation, catalyzed by uridine kinase, whose activity is relatively high in brain, the three enzyme activities will constitute a pyrimidine salvage pathway in which ribose 1-phosphate plays a pivotal role. CTP, presumably the last product of the pathway, and, to a lesser extent, UTP, exert inhibition on rat brain uridine nucleotides salvage synthesis, most likely at the level of the kinase reaction. On the contrary ATP and GTP are specific phosphate donors.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of acyclovir and its metabolites on purine nucleoside phosphorylase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Acyclovir (9-(2-hydroxyethoxymethyl)guanine), the clinically useful antiherpetic agent, is an "acyclic" analogue of 2'-deoxyguanosine. Purine nucleoside phosphorylase partially purified from human erythrocytes did not catalyze detectable phosphorolysis of this drug or any of its metabolites (less than 0.07% of the rate with Guo). However, these compounds were competitive inhibitors of this enzyme with Ino as the variable substrate. Acyclovir per se was a relatively weak inhibitor. Its Ki value (91 microM) was much greater than that for its 8-hydroxy metabolite (Ki = 4.7 microM) but less than that for its carboxylic acid metabolite (9-carboxymethoxy-methylguanine) (K'i = 960 microM). The phosphorylated metabolites of acyclovir were more potent inhibitors than were their guanine nucleotide counterparts. At a phosphate concentration of 50 mM, the apparent Ki values for the mono- (120 microM), di- (0.51 microM), and tri (43 microM)-phosphate esters of acyclovir were 1/2, 1/1200, and 1/26 those for dGMP, dGDP, and dGTP, respectively. The concentration of phosphate did not markedly affect the Ki value of acyclovir but dramatically affected those of its phosphorylated metabolites and their nucleotide counterparts. Decreasing phosphate to a physiological concentration (1 mM) decreased the apparent Ki values for the mono-, di-, and triphosphate esters of acyclovir to 6.6, 0.0087, and 0.31 microM, respectively. Inhibition of the enzyme by acyclovir diphosphate was also influenced by pH. This metabolite of acyclovir is the most potent inhibitor of purine nucleoside phosphorylase reported to date. It has some features of a "multisubstrate" analogue inhibitor.  相似文献   

15.
H Mori  A Iida  S Teshiba    T Fujio 《Journal of bacteriology》1995,177(17):4921-4926
We attempted to clone an inosine kinase gene of Escherichia coli. A mutant strain which grows slowly with inosine as the sole purine source was used as a host for cloning. A cloned 2.8-kbp DNA fragment can accelerate the growth of the mutant with inosine. The fragment was sequenced, and one protein of 434 amino acids long was found. This protein was overexpressed. The overexpressed protein was purified and characterized. The enzyme had both inosine and guanosine kinase activity. The Vmaxs for guanosine and inosine were 2.9 and 4.9 mumol/min/mg of protein, respectively. The Kms for guanosine and inosine were 6.1 microM and 2.1 mM, respectively. This enzyme accepted ATP and dATP as a phosphate donor but not p-nitrophenyl phosphate. These results show clearly that this enzyme is not a phosphotransferase but a guanosine kinase having low (Vmax/Km) activity with inosine. The sequence of the gene we have cloned is almost identical to that of the gsk gene (K.W. Harlow, P. Nygaard, and B. Hove-Jensen, J. Bacteriol. 177:2236-2240, 1995).  相似文献   

16.
The intraerythrocytic human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, requires a source of hypoxanthine for nucleic acid synthesis and energy metabolism. Adenosine has been implicated as a major source for intraerythrocytic hypoxanthine production via deamination and phosphorolysis, utilizing adenosine deaminase and purine nucleoside phosphorylase, respectively. To study the expression and characteristics of human malaria purine nucleoside phosphorylase, P. falciparum was successfully cultured in purine nucleoside phosphorylase-deficient human erythrocytes to an 8% parasitemia level. Purine nucleoside phosphorylase activity was undetectable in the uninfected enzyme-deficient host red cells but after parasite infection rose to 1.5% of normal erythrocyte levels. The parasite purine nucleoside phosphorylase was not cross-reactive with antibody against human enzyme, exhibited a calculated native molecular weight of 147,000, and showed a single major electrophoretic form of pI 5.4 and substrate specificity for inosine, guanosine and deoxyguanosine but not xanthosine or adenosine. The Km values for substrates, inosine and guanosine, were 4-fold lower than that for the human erythrocyte enzyme. In these studies we have identified two novel potent inhibitors of both human erythrocyte and parasite purine nucleoside phosphorylase, 8-amino-5'-deoxy-5'-chloroguanosine and 8-amino-9-benzylguanine. These enzyme inhibitors may have some antimalarial potential by limiting hypoxanthine production in the parasite-infected erythrocyte.  相似文献   

17.
Inhibition of gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis by 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
2,5-Anhydro-D-mannitol (100 to 200 mg/kg) decreased blood glucose by 17 to 58% in fasting mice, rats, streptozotocin-diabetic mice, and genetically diabetic db/db mice. Serum lactate in rats was elevated 56% by 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol, but this could be prevented by dichloroacetate (200 mg/kg) or thiamin (200 mg/kg). In hepatocytes from fasted rats, 1 mM 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol inhibited gluconeogenesis from a mixture of alanine, lactate, and pyruvate. It also inhibited glucose production and stimulated lactate formation from glycerol or dihydroxyacetone. Glycogenolysis in hepatocytes from fed rats was markedly inhibited by 1 mM 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol both in the presence or absence of 1 microM glucagon. 2,5-Anhydro-D-mannitol can be phosphorylated by fructokinase or hexokinase to the 1-phosphate and then by phosphofructokinase to the 1,6-bisphosphate. Rat liver glycogen phosphorylase was inhibited by 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol 1-phosphate (apparent Ki = 0.66 +/- 0.09 mM) but was little affected by 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol 1,6-bisphosphate. Rat liver phosphoglucomutase was inhibited by 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol 1-phosphate (apparent Ki = 2.8 +/- 0.2 mM), whereas 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol 1,6-bisphosphate served as an alternative activator (apparent K alpha = 7.0 +/- 0.5 microM). Rabbit liver pyruvate kinase was activated by 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol 1,6-bisphosphate (apparent K alpha = 9.5 +/- 0.9 microM), whereas rabbit liver fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase was inhibited by 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol 1,6-bisphosphate (apparent Ki = 3.6 +/- 0.3 microM). The phosphate esters of 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol would, therefore, be expected to inhibit glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis and stimulate glycolysis in liver.  相似文献   

18.
The inhibitory action of nicotinic acid, nicotinamide, N-nicotinoyl-gamma-aminobutyric acid, NAD, NADH, NADP, and NADPH on the rabbit skeletal muscle glycogen phosphorylase b has been studied. The inhibition is reversible and positively cooperative (the value of Hill coefficients were determined for the following compounds: nicotinic acid (28 mM; 1.4), nicotinamide (4.4 mM; 1.2), N-nicotinoyl-gamma-aminobutyric acid (9.5 mM; 1.4), NAD (4.4 mM; 1.2), NADH (0.93 mM; 1.2). NADH-binding site of glycogen phosphorylase b subunit was characterized by the sedimentation velocity method. Microscopic dissociation constant was found to be 86 +/- 9 microM (pH 6.8; 20 degrees C). AMP-induced association of glycogen phosphorylase b is hindered by NADH.  相似文献   

19.
A particulate NMN glycohydrolase of rabbit spleen was solubilized with Triton X100 and purified approximately 100-fold. The enzyme was shown to have a pH maximum of 6.5, a Km of 0.25 mM, a Vmax of 5.3 mumol/min/mg protein, an activation energy of 7.9 kcal/mol, and a molecular weight of approximately 400,000. Both of the purified and the particulate enzymes exhibited identical catalytic properties with respect to substrate specificity, activation energy, pH profile and exchange reaction with nicotinic acid, except that the purified enzyme was highly activated with Triton X100 as compared with the particulate enzyme; it appears that the purified enzyme possesses the same catalytic properties as the enzyme present in the tissue and that solubilization does not significantly alter the native protein. In addition to catalytic activity with NMN, the rabbit spleen enzyme catalyzed an irreversible hydrolysis with NAD and NADP, exhibiting catalyzing activity ratios of NMN:NAD:NADP = 1.00:1.45:0.44 and Vmax/Km ratios of 1.00:1.7:2.3, respectively. These ratios of activity remained constant throughout purification of the enzyme and no separation of these activities was detected. Mutually competitive inhibition of the enzyme with Ki values similar to Km, and identical rates of thermal denaturation of the enzyme and activity-pH profiles with NMN or NAD indicated the hydrolysis of the C-N glycosidic linkage of the pyridine nucleotides to be catalyzed by the same enzyme. The enzyme was less specific for the purine structure of the substrate dinucleotides but was stereospecific for the glycosidic linkage cleaved. Nicotinamide riboside, the nicotinic acid analogs and the reduced forms were not hydrolyzed. A linear noncompetitive inhibition of NMN hydrolysis with nicotinamide indicated an ordered Uni-Bi mechanism in which nicotinamide was the first product released from the enzyme. A property that the rabbit spleen enzyme appears to share with other NAD glycohydrolases is the transglycosidation reaction. The ratio of transglycosidation reaction vs. hydrolysis catalyzed by the enzyme in the presence of NMN and nicotinic acid indicated that the enzyme could function as a primary transglycosidase rather than a hydrolytic enzyme in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
An NADP-linked glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.4) was found in the soluble fraction of Trichomonas vaginalis. Its molecular weight was about 230,000 (gel filtration). The enzyme, partially purified by diafiltration and hydroxyapatite column chromatography, was heat stable (1 hr at 57 C). It catalyzed both the amination of alpha-ketoglutarate (mean Km 0.6 mM) and the deamination of glutamate (mean Km 1.2 mM) The optimum pH of the amination reaction was 6.7, and that of the deamination reaction was 8. Glutamate was a competitive inhibitor of the amination reaction (mean Ki 5.6 mM) and alpha-ketoglutarate a partially competitive inhibitor of the deamination reaction (mean Ki 0.45 mM). Both guanosine and inosine diphosphates (1 mM) increased the Km alpha-ketoglutarate fivefold (mean Ki's 0.3 and 0.4 mM, respectively). Guanosine diphosphate reduced the Km glutamate 40%. Adenosine di- and triphosphate (1 mM) were ineffective. Because the amination reaction displayed substrate inhibition, guanosine and inosine diphosphates were potent natural inhibitors, and ammonia released by deamination reactions would tend to raise pH (amination operative at acid pH), we hypothesize that the deamination reaction may predominate in the living organism.  相似文献   

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