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1.
Carmen Lluis  Jorge Bozal 《BBA》1977,461(2):209-217
Chicken liver lactate dehydrogenase (l-lactate: NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.27) catalyses the reversible reduction reaction of hydroxypyruvate to l-glycerate. It also catalyses the oxidation reaction of the hydrated form of glyoxylate to oxalate and the reduction of the non-hydrated form to glycolate. At pH 8, these latter two reactions are coupled. The coupled system equilibrium is attained when the NAD+/NADH ratio is greater than unity.Hydroxypyruvate binds to the enzyme at the same site as the pyruvate. When there are substances with greater affinity to this site in the reaction medium and their concentration is very high, hydroxypyruvate binds to the enzyme at the l-lactate site. In vitro and with purified preparation of lactate dehydrogenase, hydroxypyruvate stimulates the production of oxalate from glyoxylate-hydrated form and from NAD; the effect is due to the fact that hydroxypyruvate prevents the binding of non-hydrated form of glyoxylate to the lactate dehydrogenase in the pyruvate binding site. At pH 8, the l-glycerate stimulates the production of glycolate from glyoxylate-non-hydrated form and NADH since hydroxypyruvate prevents the binding of glyoxylate-hydrated form to the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Chicken liver lactate dehydrogenase (L-lactate : NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.27) irreversibly catalyses the oxidation of glyoxylate (hydrated form) (I) to oxalate (pH = 9.6) and the reduction of (non-hydrated form) (II) to glycolate (pH = 7.4). (I) attaches to the enzyme in the pyruvate binding site and (II) attaches to the enzyme at the L-lactate binding site. The oxidation of (I) (pH = 9.6) is adapted to the following mechanism: (see book). The abortive complexes, E-NADH-I and E-NAD+-II, are responsible for the inhibition by excess substrate in the reduction and oxidation systems, respectively. When lactate dehydrogenase and NAD+ are preincubated, E-NAD+- NAD+ appears and causes inhibition by excess NAD+ in the glyoxylate-lactate dehydrogenase-NAD+ and L-lactate-lactate dehydrogenase-NAD+ systems; the second NAD+ molecule attaches to the enzyme at the L-lactate binding site.  相似文献   

3.
Chicken liver lactate dehydrogenase L-lactate : NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC1.1.1.27) reversibly catalyses the conversion of hydroxypyruvate to L-glycerate. The variation of the initial reaction rate with the substrate or coenzyme (NADH) concentration together with the inhibition caused by the reaction products and excess substrates, reveal that the kinetic mechanism of the reaction, with hydroxypyruvate as substrate, is of the rapid-equilibrium, ordered-ternary-complex type; NADH is the first substrate in the reaction sequence. Rate equations have been developed for the hydroxypyruvate.E.NADH system without inhibitors, with excess substrates, and with reaction products. Comparison of the rate equations obtained with those calculated theoretically from an ordered-ternary-complex mechanism reveals the existence of E.NAD.NADH,E.NAD-hydroxypyruvate and E.hydroxypyruvate complexes.  相似文献   

4.
1. L-Lactate dehydrogenase from lettuce (Lactuca sativa) leaves was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity by affinity chromatography. 2. In addition to its NAD(H)-dependent activity with L-lactate and pyruvate, the enzyme also catalyses the reduction of hydroxypyruvate and glyoxylate. The latter activities are not due to a contamination of the enzyme preparations with hydroxypyruvate reductase. 3. The enzyme shows allosteric properties that are markedly by the pH. 4. ATP is a potent inhibitor of the enzyme. The kinetic data suggest that the inhibition by ATP is competitive with respect to NADH at pH 7.0 and 6.2. The existence of regulatory binding sites for ATP and NADH is discussed. 5. Bivalent metal cations and fructose 6-phosphate relieve the ATP inhibition of the enzyme. 6. A function of leaf L-lactate dehydrogenase is proposed as a component of the systems regulating the cellular pH and/or controlling the concentration of reducing equivalents in the cytoplasm of leaf cells.  相似文献   

5.
Human lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is thought to contribute to the oxidation of glyoxylate to oxalate and thus to the pathogenesis of disorders of endogenous oxalate overproduction. Glyoxylate reductase (GRHPR) has a potentially protective role metabolising glyoxylate to the less reactive glycolate. In this paper, the kinetic parameters of recombinant human LDHA, LDHB and GR have been compared with respect to their affinity for glyoxylate and related substrates. The Km values and specificity constants (Kcat/K(M)) of purified recombinant human LDHA, LDHB and GRHPR were determined for the reduction of glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate. K(M) values with glyoxylate were 29.3 mM for LDHA, 9.9 mM for LDHB and 1.0 mM for GRHPR. For the oxidation of glyoxylate, K(M) values were 0.18 mM and 0.26 mM for LDHA and LDHB respectively with NAD+ as cofactor. Overall, under the same reaction conditions, the specificity constants suggest there is a fine balance between the reduction and oxidation reactions of these substrates, suggesting that control is most likely dictated by the ambient concentrations of the respective intracellular cofactors. Neither LDHA nor LDHB utilised glycolate as substrate and NADPH was a poor cofactor with a relative activity less than 3% that of NADH. GRHPR had a higher affinity for NADPH than NADH (K(M) 0.011 mM vs. 2.42 mM). The potential roles of LDH isoforms and GRHPR in oxalate synthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Coenzyme specificity of mammalian liver D-glycerate dehydrogenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
D-Glycerate dehydrogenase (glyoxylate reductase) was partially purified from rat liver by anion- and cation-exchange chromatography. When assayed in the direction of D-glycerate or glycolate formation, the enzyme was inhibited by high (greater than or equal to 0.5 mM), unphysiological concentrations of hydroxypyruvate or glyoxylate much more potently in the presence of NADPH than in the presence of NADH. However, the dehydrogenase displayed a much greater affinity for NADPH (Km less than 1 microM) than for NADH (Km = 48-153 microM). Furthermore, NADP was over 1000-fold more potent than NAD in inhibiting the enzyme competitively with respect to NADH. NADP also inhibited the reaction competitively with respect to NADPH whereas NAD, at concentrations of up to 10 mM had no inhibitory effect. When measured by the formation of hydroxypyruvate from D-glycerate, the enzyme also displayed a much greater affinity for NADP than for NAD. These properties indicate that liver D-glycerate dehydrogenase functions physiologically as an NADPH-specific reductase. In agreement with this conclusion, the addition of hydroxypyruvate or glyoxylate to suspensions of rat hepatocytes stimulated the pentose-phosphate pathway. The coenzyme specificity of D-glycerate dehydrogenase is discussed in relation to the biochemical findings made in D-glyceric aciduria and in primary hyperoxaluria type II (L-glyceric aciduria).  相似文献   

7.
T. Betsche  K. Bosbach  B. Gerhardt 《Planta》1979,146(5):567-574
By ammonium sulfate fractionation and gel filtration an enzyme preparation which catalyzed NAD+-dependent L-lactate oxidation (10-4 kat kg-1 protein), as well as NADH-dependent pyruvate reduction (10-3 kat kg-1 protein), was obtained from leaves of Capsella bursa-pastoris. This lactate dehydrogenase activity was not due to an unspecific activity of either glycolate oxidase, glycolate dehydrogenase, hydroxypyruvate reductase, alcohol dehydrogenase, or a malate oxidizing enzyme. These enzymes could be separated from the protein displaying lactate dehydrogenase activity by gel filtration and electrophoresis and distinguished from it by their known properties. The enzyme under consideration does not oxidize D-lactate, and reduces pyruvate to L-lactate (the configuration of which was determined using highly specific animal L-lactate dehydrogenase). Based on these results the studied Capsella leaf enzyme is classified as L-lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27). It has a Km value of 0.25 mmol l-1 (pH 7.0, 0.3 mmol l-1 NADH) for pyruvate and of 13 mmol l-1 (pH 7.8, 3 mmol l-1 NAD+) for L-lactate. Lactate dehydrogenase activity was also detected in the leaves of several other plants.Abbreviation FMN flavin adenine mononucleotide  相似文献   

8.
L-Serine alone is not gluconeogenic in isolated rabbit hepatocytes, whereas in rat liver this amino acid has been reported to yield as much glucose as does L-lactate itself. The current study has been an investigation into the explanation of the difference between the two species. Hepatocytes were isolated from 48-h-starved, 750- to 1000-g male rabbits, and the viability of each preparation was judged by ATP levels (2.4 +/- 0.2 mumol/g wet wt) at the beginning and end of the incubation as well as gluconeogenesis from 10 mM L-lactate (0.83 +/- 0.08 mumol/min/g wet wt). L-Serine alone produced virtually no glucose or pyruvate accumulation above baseline. Hydroxypyruvate, however, did appear in the incubation mixture. When L-serine and pyruvate were combined to test the functional activity of L-serine:pyruvate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.51), however, gluconeogenesis remained at the rate produced by pyruvate alone (0.61 +/- 0.04 mumol/min/g wet wt). On the other hand, the combination of L-serine and L-lactate produced rates of glucose accumulation 35% above that of L-lactate alone. The combination of L-lactate plus hydroxypyruvate produced nearly maximal rates (1.39 +/- 0.08 mumol/min/g wet wt), approaching those achieved by a physiologic ratio (10:1) of L-lactate and pyruvate. Hydroxypyruvate itself was only moderately gluconeogenic (0.44 +/- 0.04 mumol/min/g wet wt). That a reduction of the cytoplasmic free [NAD+]/[NADH] ratio by L-lactate was not its only contribution to L-serine utilization was suggested by the fact that ethanol completely eliminated gluconeogenesis from virtually all precursors (or combinations) tested, with the exception of hydroxypyruvate. It has been concluded from the data that, probably in contrast to the rat, the major pathway for the entrance of L-serine into gluconeogenesis in rabbit hepatocytes is through the pathway initiated by L-serine: pyruvate aminotransferase and that L-lactate is an important participant (i) by generating cytoplasmic reducing equivalents (NADH), (ii) by supplying pyruvate for the transaminating reaction itself, and, perhaps, (iii) by preventing hydroxypyruvate from being reduced by L-lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) to L-glycerate.  相似文献   

9.
乙醇酸、乙醛酸和草酸能明显促进烟草(Nicotiana rustica)叶片在黑暗中的硝酸还原,光呼吸抑制剂a-羟基吡啶甲烷磺酸能消除前二者的促进作用而不能完全消除草酸的作用。草酸+NAD~+能显著促进离体的硝酸还原。烟叶提取液加入草酸和NAD~+后生成NADH和CO_2认为活体内由乙醛酸氧化生成的草酸是经脱氢生成NADH供硝酸还原之用。未能证明在烟叶内存在乙醇酸脱氨酶,因此排除由乙醇酸直接脱氢以还原硝酸的可能。  相似文献   

10.
P A Tipton  J Peisach 《Biochemistry》1991,30(3):739-744
Mn2+.tartrate dehydrogenase.substrate complexes have been examined by electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopy. The occurrence of dipolar interactions between Mn2+ and 2H on [2H]pyruvate and [4-2H]NAD(H) confirms that Mn2+ binds at the enzyme active site. The 2H signal arising from labeled pyruvate was lost if the sample was incubated at room temperature, indicating that the enzyme catalyzes exchange between the pyruvate methyl protons and solvent protons. Mn-133Cs dipolar coupling was also observed, which suggests that the monovalent cation cofactor also binds in the active site. The tartrate analogue oxalate was observed to have a significant effect on the binding of NAD(H). Oxalate appears to constrain the binding of NAD(H) so that the nicotinamide portion of the cofactor is held in close proximity to Mn2+. Spectra of enzyme complexes prepared with (R)-[4-2H]NADH showed a more intense 2H signal than analogous complexes prepared with (S)-[4-2H]NADH, demonstrating that the pro-R position of NADH is closer to Mn2+ than the pro-S position and suggesting that tartrate dehydrogenase is an A-side-specific dehydrogenase. Oxalate also affected Cs+ binding; the intensity of the 133Cs signal increased in the presence of oxalate, which suggest that oxalate facilitates binding of Cs+ to the active site or that Cs+ binds closer to Mn2+ when oxalate is present. In addition to signals from substrates, electron spin echo envelope modulation spectra revealed 14N signals that arose from coordination to Mn2+ by nitrogen-containing ligands from the protein; however, the identity of this ligand or ligands remains obscure.  相似文献   

11.
Cell-free extracts of Chlorella pyrenoidosa contained two enzymes capable of oxidizing d-lactate; these were glycolate dehydrogenase and NAD(+)-dependent d-lactate dehydrogenase. The two enzymes could be distinguished by differential centrifugation, glycolate dehydrogenase being largely particulate and NAD(+)-d-lactate dehydrogenase being soluble. The reduction of pyruvate by NADH proceeded more rapidly than the reverse reaction, and the apparent Michaelis constants for pyruvate and NADH were lower than for d-lactate and NAD(+). These data indicated that under physiological conditions, the NAD(+)-linked d-lactate dehydrogenase probably functions to produce d-lactate from pyruvate.Lactate dehydrogenase activity dependent on NAD(+) was found in a number of other green algae and in the green tissues of a few lower land plants. When present in species which contain glycolate oxidase rather than glycolate dehydrogenase, the enzyme was specific for l-lactate rather than d-lactate. A cyclic system revolving around the production and utilization of d-lactate in some species and l-lactate in certain others is proposed.  相似文献   

12.
The metabolism of hydroxypyruvate to oxalate was studied in isolated rat hepatocytes. [14C]Oxalate was produced from [2-14C]- and [3-14C]- but not [1-14C]hydroxypyruvate. No oxalate was produced from similarly labeled pyruvate. The mechanism by which hydroxypyruvate is metabolized to oxalate involves decarboxylation at the carbon 1 position as the initial step. This activity was distinct from that which produced CO2 from the carbon 1 position of pyruvate. Hydroxypyruvate decarboxylase activity was found mainly in the mitochondria, with the remainder (25%) in the cytosol. No activity was present in the peroxisomes, the probable site of oxalate production from glycolate and glyoxylate. Hydroxypyruvate, but not pyruvate stimulated [14C]oxalate production from [U-14C]fructose, suggesting that hydroxypyruvate is either an intermediate in the fructose-oxalate pathway, or that it prevents carbon from leaving that pathway. The lack of effect of pyruvate in this regard is evidence against redox being the primary effect of hydroxypyruvate and focuses attention on hydroxypyruvate and its precursors as important sources of carbon for oxalate synthesis from both carbohydrate and protein.  相似文献   

13.
In photorespiration, leaf peroxisomes convert serine to glycerate via serine-glyoxylate aminotransferase and NADH-hydroxypyruvate reductase. We isolated intact spinach leaf peroxisomes in 0.25 M sucrose, and characterized their enzymatic conversion of serine to glycerate using physiological concentrations of substrates and coenzymes. In the presence of glycolate (glyoxylate), and NADH and NAD alone or together in physiological proportions, the rate of serine-to-glycerate conversion was enhanced and sustained by the addition of malate. The rate was similar at 1 and 5 mM serine, but was two to three times higher in 50 mM than 5 mM malate. In the presence of NAD and malate, there was 1:1 stoichiometric formation of glycerate and oxaloacetate. Addition of 1 or 5 mM glutamate resulted in a negligible enhancement of the conversion of hydroxypyruvate to glycerate. Intact peroxisomes produced glycerate from either serine or hydroxypyruvate at a rate two times higher than osmotically lysed peroxisomes. These results suggest that under physiological conditions, the peroxisomal malate dehydrogenase operates independent of aspartate-alpha-ketoglutarate aminotransferase in supplying NADH for hydroxypyruvate reduction. This supply of NADH is the rate-limiting step in the conversion of serine to glycerate. The compartmentation of hydroxypyruvate reductase and malate dehydrogenase in the peroxisomes confers a higher efficiency in the supply of NADH for hydroxypyruvate reduction under a normal, high NAD/NADH ratio in the cytosol.  相似文献   

14.
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) endosperm from developing seeds was found to contain relatively high activities of cytosolic NAD(P)H-dependent hydroxypyruvate reductase (HPR-2) and isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH). In contrast, activities of peroxisomal NADH-dependent hydroxypyruvate reductase (HPR-1) and glycolate oxidase as well as cytosolic NAD(P)H-dependent glyoxylate reductase were very low or absent in the endosperm both during maturation and seed germination, indicating the lack of a complete glycolate cycle in this tissue. In addition, activities of cytosolic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase were low or absent in the endosperm. The endosperm HPR-2 exhibited similar properties to those of an earlier described HPR-2 from green leaves, e.g. activities with both hydroxypyruvate and glyoxylate, utilization of both NADPH and NADH as cofactors, and a strong uncompetitive inhibition by oxalate (Ki in the order of micromolar). In etiolated leaves, both HPR-1 and HPR-2 were present with the same activity as in green leaves, indicating that the lack of HPR-1 in the endosperm is not a general feature of non-photosynthetic tissues. We conclude that the endosperm has considerable capacity for cytosolic NADP/NADPH cycling via HPR-2 and ICDH, the former being possibly involved in the utilization of a serine-derived carbon.  相似文献   

15.
Glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate are metabolites involved in the pathway of carbon in photorespiration. The chief glyoxylate-reducing enzyme in leaves is now known to be a cytosolic glyoxylate reductase that uses NADPH as the preferred cofactor but can also use NADH. Glyoxylate reductase has been isolated from spinach leaves, purified to homogeneity, and characterized kinetically and structurally. Chloroplasts contain lower levels of glyoxylate reductase activity supported by both NADPH and NADH, but it is not yet known whether a single chloroplastic enzyme catalyzes glyoxylate reduction with both cofactors. The major hydroxypyruvate reductase activity of leaves has long been known to be a highly active enzyme located in peroxisomes; it uses NADH as the preferred cofactor. To a lesser extent, NADPH can also be used by the peroxisomal enzyme. A second hydroxypyruvate reductase enzyme is located in the cytosol; it preferentially uses NADPH but can also use NADH as cofactor. In a barley mutant deficient in peroxisomal hydroxypyruvate reductase, the NADPH-preferring cytosolic form of the enzyme permits sufficient rates of hydroxypyruvate reduction to support continued substrate flow through the terminal stages of the photosynthetic carbon oxidation (glycolate/glycerate) pathway. The properties and metabolic significance of the cytosolic and organelle-localized glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate reductase enzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
In concurrence with earlier results, the following enzymes showed latency in intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf peroxisomes: malate dehydrogenase (89%), hydroxypyruvate reductase (85%), serine glyoxylate aminotransferase (75%), glutamate glyoxylate aminotransferase (41%), and catalase (70%). In contrast, glycolate oxidase was not latent. Aging of peroxisomes for several hours resulted in a reduction in latency accompanied by a partial solubilization of the above mentioned enzymes. The extent of enzyme solubilization was different, being highest with glutamate glyoxylate aminotransferase and lowest with malate dehydrogenase. Osmotic shock resulted in only a partial reduction of enzyme latency. Electron microscopy revealed that the osmotically shocked peroxisomes remained compact, with smaller particle size and pleomorphic morphology but without a continuous boundary membrane. Neither in intact nor in osmotically shocked peroxisomes was a lag phase observed in the formation of glycerate upon the addition of glycolate, serine, malate, and NAD. Apparently, the intermediates, glyoxylate, hydroxypyruvate, and NADH, were confined within the peroxisomal matrix in such a way that they did not readily leak out into the surrounding medium. We conclude that the observed compartmentation of peroxisomal metabolism is not due to the peroxisomal boundary membrane as a permeability barrier, but is a function of the structural arrangement of enzymes in the peroxisomal matrix allowing metabolite channeling.  相似文献   

17.
Lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) catalyzes the NAD-dependent oxidation to (oxalate) and reduction (to glycollate) of glyoxylate. The kinetics of this disproportionation are in accord with the usual reaction pathway of lactate dehydrogenase:substrate inhibition with appropriate pH dependence occurs; a steady state in the ratio of NADH to NAD+ is set up during the reaction, has the expected dependence on pH, and is independent of the initial glyoxylate, coenzyme, and enzyme concentration. At pH 7 the lactate dehydrogenase-NADH complex is about fivefold more likely to react with and reduce glyoxylate (at a concentration of 100 mm) than to dissociate to produce free NADH, and the ratio of the fraction of the enzyme-NADH complex which dissociates to the fraction which reacts with and reduces glyoxylate varies with glyoxylate concentration and with pH in a manner in agreement with the normal reaction pathway of the enzyme. With all concentrations of glyoxylate and over the pH range 7–9.6 both free (not enzyme bound) NAD+ and free NADH are formed in the steady state of the disproportionation. From these results it is apparent that lactate dehydrogenase, like alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1), catalyzes a disproportionation within the bounds of its normal kinetic reaction pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Synthesis of oxalic Acid by enzymes from lettuce leaves   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A rapid purification of lactate dehydrogenase and glycolate oxidase from lettuce (Lactuca sativa) leaves is described. The kinetics of both enzymes are reported in relation to their possible roles in the production of oxalate. Lettuce lactate dehydrogenase behaves like mammalian dehydrogenase, catalyzing the dismutation of glyoxylate to glycolate and oxalate. A model is proposed in which glycolate oxidase in the peroxisomes and lactate dehydrogenase in the cytosol are involved in the production of oxalate. The effect of pH on the balance between oxalate and glycolate produced from glyoxylate suggests that in leaves lactate dehydrogenase may function as part of an oxalate-based biochemical, pH-stat.  相似文献   

19.
Human glyoxylate reductase/hydroxypyruvate reductase (GRHPR) is a D-2-hydroxy-acid dehydrogenase that plays a critical role in the removal of the metabolic by-product glyoxylate from within the liver. Deficiency of this enzyme is the underlying cause of primary hyperoxaluria type 2 (PH2) and leads to increased urinary oxalate levels, formation of kidney stones and renal failure. Here we describe the crystal structure of human GRHPR at 2.2 A resolution. There are four copies of GRHPR in the crystallographic asymmetric unit: in each homodimer, one subunit forms a ternary (enzyme+NADPH+reduced substrate) complex, and the other a binary (enzyme+NADPH) form. The spatial arrangement of the two enzyme domains is the same in binary and ternary forms. This first crystal structure of a true ternary complex of an enzyme from this family demonstrates the relationship of substrate and catalytic residues within the active site, confirming earlier proposals of the mode of substrate binding, stereospecificity and likely catalytic mechanism for these enzymes. GRHPR has an unusual substrate specificity, preferring glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate, but not pyruvate. A tryptophan residue (Trp141) from the neighbouring subunit of the dimer is projected into the active site region and appears to contribute to the selectivity for hydroxypyruvate. This first crystal structure of a human GRHPR enzyme also explains the deleterious effects of naturally occurring missense mutations of this enzyme that lead to PH2.  相似文献   

20.
The gene encoding D-lactate dehydrogenase (D-lactate: NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.28) of Lactobacillus plantarum has been sequenced, and expressed in Escherichia coli cells with an inducible expression plasmid, in which the 5'-noncoding region of the gene was replaced with the tac promoter. Comparison of the sequence of D-lactate dehydrogenase with L-lactate dehydrogenases, including the L. plantarum L-lactate dehydrogenase, showed no significant homology. In contrast, the D-lactate dehydrogenase is homologous to E. coli D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase and Lactobacillus casei D-2-hydroxyisocaproate dehydrogenase. This indicates that D-lactate dehydrogenase is a member of a new family of 2-hydroxyacid dehydrogenases recently proposed, being distinct from L-lactate dehydrogenase and L-malate dehydrogenase, and strongly suggests that the new family consists of D-isomer-stereospecific enzymes. In the reductive reaction, the enzyme showed a broad substrate specificity, although pyruvate was the most favorable of all 2-ketocarboxylic acids tested. In particular, hydroxypyruvate is effectively reduced by the enzyme, the reaction rate, and Km value being comparable to those in the case of pyruvate, indicating that the enzyme has not only D-lactate dehydrogenase activity but also D-glycerate dehydrogenase activity. The conserved residues in this family appear to be the residues involved in the substrate binding and the catalytic reaction, and thus to be targets for site-directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

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