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1.
The kinetic mechanism of S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase was investigated by stopped-flow spectrofluorometry at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. Pre-steady-state kinetic steps were identified with chemical steps proposed for the mechanism of this enzyme (Palmer, J.L., and Abeles, R.H. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 1217-1226). The steady-state kinetic constants for the hydrolysis or synthesis of S-adenosylhomocysteine were in good agreement with those values calculated from the pre-steady-state rate constants. The equilibrium constant for dehydration of 3'-ketoadenosine to 3'-keto-4',5'-dehydroadenosine on the enzyme was 3. The analogous equilibrium constant for addition of L-homocysteine to S-3'-keto-4',5'-dehydroadenosylhomocysteine on the enzyme was 0.3. The elimination of H2O from adenosine in solution had an equilibrium constant of 1.4 (aH2O = 1). Thus, the equilibrium constants for these elimination reactions on the enzyme were probably not perturbed significantly from those in solution. The equilibrium constant for the reduction of enzyme-bound NAD+ by adenosine was 8, and the analogous constant for the reduction of the enzyme by S-adenosylhomocysteine was 4. The equilibrium constant for the reduction of NAD+ by a secondary alcohol in solution was 5 x 10(-5) at pH 7.0. Consequently, the reduction of enzyme-bound NAD+ by adenosine was 10(5)-fold more favorable than the reduction of free NAD+. The magnitude of the first-order rate constants for the interconversion of enzyme-bound intermediates varied over a relatively small range (3-80 s-1). Similarly, the magnitude of the equilibrium constants among enzyme-bound intermediates varied over a narrow range (0.3-10). These results were consistent with the overall reversibility of the reaction.  相似文献   

2.
The kinetic mechanism of the reaction catalyzed by cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase from Escherichia coli K12 has been investigated by both steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic analyses. The reaction catalyzed by methionine synthase involves the transfer of a methyl group from methyltetrahydrofolate to homocysteine to generate tetrahydrofolate and methionine. The postulated reaction mechanism invokes an initial transfer of the methyl group to the enzyme to generate enzyme-bound methylcobalamin and tetrahydrofolate. Enzyme-bound methylcobalamin then donates its methyl group to homocysteine to generate methionine and cob(I)alamin. The key questions that were addressed in this study were the following: (1) Does the reaction involve a sequential or ping-pong mechanism? (2) Is enzyme-bound cob(I)alamin a kinetically competent intermediate? (3) If the reaction does involve a sequential mechanism, what is the nature of the "free" enzyme to which the substrates bind; i.e., is the prosthetic group in the cob(I)alamin or methylcobalamin state? Both the steady-state and rapid reaction studies were conducted at 25 degrees C under anaerobic conditions. Initial velocity analysis under steady-state conditions revealed a family of parallel lines suggesting either a ping-pong mechanism or an ordered sequential mechanism. Steady-state product inhibition studies provided evidence for an ordered sequential mechanism in which the first substrate to bind is methyltetrahydrofolate and the last product to be released is tetrahydrofolate. Pre-steady-state kinetic studies were then conducted to determine the rate constants for the various reactions. Enzyme-bound cob(I)alamin was shown to react very rapidly with methyltetrahydrofolate (with an observed rate constant of 250 s-1 versus a turnover number under maximal velocity conditions of 19 s-1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
A kinetic scheme is presented for Lactobacillus casei dihydrofolate reductase that predicts steady-state kinetic parameters. This scheme was derived from measuring association and dissociation rate constants and pre-steady-state transients by using stopped-flow fluorescence and absorbance spectroscopy. Two major features of this kinetic scheme are the following: (i) product dissociation is the rate-limiting step for steady-state turnover at low pH and follows a specific, preferred pathway in which tetrahydrofolate (H4F) dissociation occurs after NADPH replaces NADP+ in the ternary complex; (ii) the rate constant for hydride transfer from NADPH to dihydrofolate (H2F) is rapid (khyd = 430 s-1), favorable (Keq = 290), and pH dependent (pKa = 6.0), reflecting ionization of a single group. Not only is this scheme identical in form with the Escherichia coli kinetic scheme [Fierke et al. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 4085] but moreover none of the rate constants vary by more than 40-fold despite there being less than 30% amino acid homology between the two enzymes. This similarity is consistent with their overall structural congruence. The role of Trp-21 of L. casei dihydrofolate reductase in binding and catalysis was probed by amino acid substitution. Trp-21, a strictly conserved residue near both the folate and coenzyme binding sites, was replaced by leucine. Two major effects of this substitution are on (i) the rate constant for hydride transfer which decreases 100-fold, becoming the rate-limiting step in steady-state turnover, and (ii) the affinities for NADPH and NADP+ which decrease by approximately 3.5 and approximately 0.5 kcal mol-1, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
J Thillet  J A Adams  S J Benkovic 《Biochemistry》1990,29(21):5195-5202
A kinetic mechanism is presented for mouse dihydrofolate reductase that predicts all the steady-state parameters and full time-course kinetics. This mechanism was derived from association and dissociation rate constants and pre-steady-state transients by using stopped-flow fluorescence and absorbance measurements. The major features of this kinetic mechanism are as follows: (1) the two native enzyme conformers, E1 and E2, bind ligands with varying affinities although only one conformer, E1, can support catalysis in the forward direction, (2) tetrahydrofolate dissociation is the rate-limiting step under steady-state turnover at low pH, and (3) the pH-independent rate of hydride transfer from NADPH to dihydrofolate is fast (khyd = 9000 s-1) and favorable (Keq = 100). The overall mechanism is similar in form to the Escherichia coli kinetic scheme (Fierke et al., 1987), although several differences are observed: (1) substrates and products predominantly bind the same form of the E. coli enzyme, and (2) the hydride transfer rate from NADPH to either folate or dihydrofolate is considerably faster for the mouse enzyme. The role of Glu-30 (Asp-27 in E. coli) in mouse DHFR has also been examined by using site-directed mutagenesis as a potential source of these differences. While aspartic acid is strictly conserved in all bacterial DHFRs, glutamic acid is conserved in all known eucaryotes. The two major effects of substituting Asp for Glu-30 in the mouse enzyme are (1) a decreased rate of folate reduction and (2) an increased rate of hydride transfer from NADPH to dihydrofolate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
A kinetic scheme is presented for Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase that predicts steady-state kinetic parameters and full time course kinetics under a variety of substrate concentrations and pHs. This scheme was derived from measuring association and dissociation rate constants and pre-steady-state transients by using stopped-flow fluorescence and absorbance spectroscopy. The binding kinetics suggest that during steady-state turnover product dissociation follows a specific, preferred pathway in which tetrahydrofolate (H4F) dissociation occurs after NADPH replaces NADP+ in the ternary complex. This step, H4F dissociation from the E X NADPH X H4F ternary complex, is proposed to be the rate-limiting step for steady-state turnover at low pH because koff = VM. The rate constant for hydride transfer from NADPH to dihydrofolate (H2F), measured by pre-steady-state transients, has a deuterium isotope effect of 3 and is rapid, khyd = 950 s-1, essentially irreversible, Keq = 1700, and pH dependent, pKa = 6.5, reflecting ionization of a single group in the active site. This scheme accounts for the apparent pKa = 8.4 observed in the steady state as due to a change in the rate-determining step from product release at low pH to hydride transfer above pH 8.4. This kinetic scheme is a necessary background to analyze the effects of single amino acid substitutions on individual rate constants.  相似文献   

6.
M C Brenner  J P Klinman 《Biochemistry》1989,28(11):4664-4670
Chemical- and freeze-quench EPR techniques have allowed single-turnover studies of the copper-containing enzyme dopamine beta-monooxygenase. Reduction of enzyme by a stoichiometric amount of ascorbate followed by rapid mixing with tyramine leads to oxidation of bound copper and formation of hydroxylated product in the expected 2:1 ratio. The tyramine dependence of single turnovers yields a limiting rate of 82 +/- 9 s-1 and Km of 3 +/- 1 mM, in agreement with kinetic modeling based on steady-state parameters. Together these results show that the reduced enzyme is a catalytically competent species, with bound copper acting as the sole reservoir of reducing equivalents. The correlation of copper oxidation and substrate hydroxylation rules out significant antiferromagnetic spin coupling in the enzyme-product complex. Since the enzyme-product complex's Cu2+ EPR signal is absent in the transient approach to the steady state [Brenner, M. C., Murray, C. J., & Klinman, J. P. (1989) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)], this result implies that ascorbate reduces copper in the enzyme-product complex. These findings have important consequences for catalysis and active site structure in dopamine beta-monooxygenase.  相似文献   

7.
1. In anaerobic reduction studies on fungal laccase B (p-diphenol:O2 oxidoreductase, EC 1.14.18.1) with the EPR and stopped-flow techniques it was found that the type 2 copper of the enzyme is rapidly undergoing a reduction-oxidation cycle which is followed by a slower reduction in a couple of seconds. An intermediate EPR signal of unknown origin is formed in the same time-range as the initial reduction of type 2 copper and disappears again when this copper ion is reoxidized. 2. The rate of the anaerobic reoxidation of type 2 copper is similar to the reduction rate of the two-electron acceptor, suggesting that they are interacting in the electron transfer of the enzyme. 3. The changes in the reaction rates of both type 2 and type 3 copper appear to be affected in a similar way by changes in pH. 4. The EPR signal of the type 2 Cu2+ suggests that this ion is liganded to one or more nitrogens.  相似文献   

8.
The question of the stoichiometry of copper bound to dopamine beta-hydroxylase and the number of copper atoms required for maximal activity was addressed in this study. Incubation of tetrameric enzyme from bovine adrenal medulla with 64Cu2+ followed by rapid gel filtration yielded an enzyme containing 8.3-8.9 mol of Cu/mol of tetramer. An identical stoichiometry was obtained by analysis of bound copper by atomic absorption methods. NMR and EPR were used to monitor titrations of the enzyme with Cu2+ and showed that the longitudinal relaxation rate of solvent water protons and the amplitude of the signal at g approximately 2 increased linearly up to a copper to protein ratio of approximately 8. Additional titrations also indicate that an enzyme-Cu2+-tyramine-CN- inhibitory complex was formed when 8 mol of Cu2+ are bound per mol of enzyme. The rate of inactivation of dopamine beta-hydroxylase by the mechanism-based inhibitor 2-Br-3-(p-hydroxyphenyl)-1-propene was measured and used as a method to follow enzymatic catalysis. An increase in rate was observed with increasing Cu2+ up to a protein to Cu2+ ratio of 8 Cu/tetramer. The rate becomes constant after this ratio is achieved. These data indicate that dopamine beta-hydroxylase specifically binds 8 mol of Cu/tetramer and that this stoichiometry is required for maximal activity.  相似文献   

9.
H2O2 was shown to reduce the copper ion of native bovine Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (superoxide:superoxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.15.1.1) (ECu2+) and to oxidize the reduced enzyme (ECu+). The time-course of these processes was monitored by NMR measurement of the longitudinal relaxation rate of the water protons. A steady-state characterized by the same ratio [ECu2+]/[( EC2+] + [ECu+]) was obtained either by starting from the oxidized or the reduced enzyme. The kinetics of these processes appear to be quite complex, since different reactions between H2O2, or its reaction products, and the enzyme-bound copper control the reaction rate. The solution of the differential equations describing the kinetic processes showed that the oxidation and the reduction of the copper ion by H2O2 are first-order with respect to the copper ion itself only when these processes approach the steady-state. The rate constants of the reduction and oxidation reactions were calculated according to these equations and were found to have comparable values which are in the range 5-80 and 5-45 M-1.min-1, respectively, changing the pH from 5.6 to 7 at 0.21 M ionic strength. This result, together with the dependence of the reaction rates on pH and ionic strength, points to HO2- as the reactive species in both processes, and indicates that the electrostatic control of the access of the peroxide to the active site is the rate-determining step of the two redox reactions.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Transient kinetics of reduction of zucchini squash ascorbate oxidase (AO) by lumiflavin semiquinone have been studied by using laser flash photolysis. Second-order kinetics were obtained for reduction of the type I copper with a rate constant of 2.7 X 10(7) M-1 s-1, which is comparable to that obtained with other blue copper proteins such as plastocyanin. Following reduction, the type I copper was reoxidized in a protein concentration independent (i.e., intramolecular) reaction (kobs = 160 s-1). Comparison with literature values for limiting rate constants in transient single-turnover kinetic experiments suggests that intramolecular electron transfer probably is the rate-limiting step in enzyme catalysis. The extent of reoxidation of type I copper was approximately 55%, which is consistent with the approximately equal redox potentials of the type I and type III copper centers. Neither azide nor fluoride caused any significant changes in kinetics, although they are enzyme inhibitors and are thought to bind to the type II copper. In contrast, cyanide caused a concentration-dependent decrease in the extent of intramolecular electron transfer (with no change in rate constant), and decreased the rate constant for reduction of the type I copper by a factor of 2. The apparent dissociation constant for cyanide (0.2-0.4 mM) is similar to that reported for inhibition of enzyme activity. Removal of the type II copper from AO only marginally affected the kinetics of electron transfer to type I copper (k = 3.2 x 10(7) M-1 s-1) and slightly increased the extent but did not alter the rate constant of intramolecular electron transfer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
C Ghose  F M Raushel 《Biochemistry》1985,24(21):5894-5898
The reactions catalyzed by argininosuccinate synthetase have been examined by the use of static and dynamic quench techniques. The time course of the forward reaction (22 degrees C) at pH 8.0 is characterized by a "burst" of AMP formation upon quenching with acid that is equivalent to 0.59 mol of enzyme. The pre-steady-state rate is followed by a slower steady-state rate of 0.60 s-1. The rate constant for the transient phase is 9.7 s-1. The time course for the formation of argininosuccinate is linear and shows neither a "lag" nor a burst phase. These results have been interpreted to mean that the mechanism for the formation of argininosuccinate consists of at least two distinct chemical steps with the formation of citrulline adenylate as a reactive intermediate. In the presence of aspartate the rate constant for the formation of citrulline adenylate (6.2 s-1) from ATP and citrulline is 7 times faster than the rate of formation of argininosuccinate from aspartate and citrulline adenylate (0.9 s-1). This suggests that the second step is predominantly rate limiting. The rate constant for the formation of citrulline adenylate in the absence of enzyme-bound aspartate (0.01 s-1) is 600 times slower than when aspartate is present. This indicates that the binding of aspartate to the enzyme regulates the formation of the intermediate. These results are in complete accord with our previously published steady-state kinetic scheme showing sequential addition of substrates.  相似文献   

13.
R Hiller  C Carmeli 《Biochemistry》1990,29(26):6186-6192
The kinetics of Mn2+ binding to three cooperatively interacting sites in chloroplast H(+)-ATPase (CF1) were measured by EPR following rapid mixing of the enzyme with MnCl2 with a time resolution of 8 ms. Mixing of the enzyme-bound Mn2+ with MgCl2 gave a measure of the rate of exchange. The data could be best fitted to a kinetic model assuming three sequential, positively cooperative binding sites. (1) In the latent CF1, the binding to all three sites had a similar on-rate constants of (1.1 +/- 0.04) X 10(4) M-1s-1. (2) Site segregation was found in the release of ions with off-rate constants of 0.69 +/- 0.04 s-1 for the first two and 0.055 +/- 0.003 s-1 for the third. (3) Addition of one ADP per CF1 caused a decrease in the off-rate constants to 0.31 +/- 0.02 and 0.033 +/- 0.008 s-1 for the first two and the third sites, respectively. (4) Heat activation of CF1 increased the on-rate constant to (4.2 +/- 0.92) X 10(4) M-1s-1 and the off-rate constants of the first two and the third site to 1.34 +/- 0.08 and 0.16 +/- 0.07 s-1, respectively. (5) The calculated thermodynamic dissociation constants were similar to those previously obtained from equilibrium binding studies. These findings were correlated to the rate constants obtained from studies of the catalysis and regulation of the H(+)-ATPase. The data support the suggestion that regulation induces sequential progress of catalysis through the three active sites of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
S-Adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase (SAHase) was resolved into apoenzyme and NAD+ by acidic ammonium sulfate treatment. The apoenzyme was catalytically inactive, but could be reconstituted to active enzyme with NAD+. Reduced SAHase (ENADH) that was prepared by reconstitution of the apoenzyme with NADH was catalytically inactive. ENADH was oxidized by 3'-ketoadenosine to active SAHase. The recovery of activity paralleled the oxidation of enzyme-bound NADH. The association rate constant for ENADH and 3'-ketoadenosine was 6.1 x 10(2) M-1 s-1, and the dissociation rate constant was calculated to be 4 x 10(-7) s-1. This association rate constant was considerably smaller than the association rate constant for adenosine and SAHase (greater than 10(7) M-1 s-1). However, the observed pseudo first-order rate constant for reaction of 3'-ketoadenosine with ENADH (0.6 s-1 with 1 mM 3'-ketoadenosine) approached kcat for the hydrolytic reaction (1.2 s-1). Thus, bound 3'-ketoadenosine probably reacted sufficiently rapidly with ENADH to be considered a kinetically competent intermediate. The dissociation constants of SAHase for adenosine and 4',5'-dehydroadenosine, substrates for the enzyme, were 9 and 14 microM, respectively. In contrast, the dissociation constants of ENADH for 3'-ketoadenosine and 4',5'-dehydro-3'-ketoadenosine, intermediates of the catalytic reaction, were significantly lower with values of 600 and 300 pM, respectively. The equilibrium constant for reduction of enzyme-bound NAD+ in the absence of an adenosine analogue, as estimated from cyanide binding studies, was 10-fold more favorable than that for free NAD+. ENADH was highly fluorescent (emission maximum 428 nm, excitation 340 nm) with a quantum yield that was six times that of free NADH. Since SAHase reduced by adenosine was not highly fluorescent, enzyme-bound intermediates quenched the fluorescence of enzyme-bound NADH. Adenosine and adenine quenched the fluorescence of ENADH. Cyanide formed a complex with SAHase that was analogous to ENADH. Adenine stabilized this complex sufficiently that addition of 65 microM adenine and 25 mM cyanide to SAHase caused total complex formation with loss of over 95% of the catalytic activity.  相似文献   

15.
用电子顺磁共振EPR技术研究铜锌超氧化物歧化酶(Cu·Zn-SOD)与底物(O_2~(·-)反应达到平衡态时铜离子的EPR波谱表明,在平衡态时的铜离子处于还原态。用还原剂H_2O_2、NaBH_4处理Cu·Zn-SOD后,酶活力变化不同,电泳行为也不同。用NaBH_4处理SOD其活性及电泳行为接近天然酶,但经H_2O_2还原后的酶活性损失严重,电泳后出现多条色带。  相似文献   

16.
In reoxidation experiments with cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) in the presence of both reducing substrate and molecular oxygen, a new EPR signal from Cu2+ has been observed. The new signal corresponds to 0.45 Cu per functional unit. It is concluded that the new EPR signal originates from CuB2+, the copper which is EPR-nondetectable in the resting enzyme. Optical absorption changes in the 500-700 nm region accompanies the decay of the new Cu2+ EPR signal. Based on the results in this investigation a catalytic cycle for cytochrome oxidase is proposed.  相似文献   

17.
Nitrite reductase of Alcaligenes xylosoxidans contains three blue type 1 copper centers with a function in electron transfer and three catalytic type 2 copper centers. The mutation H139A, in which the solvent-exposed histidine ligand of the type 1 copper ion was changed to alanine, resulted in the formation of a colorless protein containing 4.4 Cu atoms per trimer. The enzyme was inactive with reduced azurin as the electron donor, and in contrast to the wild-type enzyme, no EPR features assignable to type 1 copper centers were observed. Instead, the EPR spectrum of the H139A enzyme, with parameters of g(1) = 2.347 and A(1) = 10 mT, was typical of type 2 copper centers. On the addition of nitrite, the EPR features developed spectral features with increased rhombicity, with g(1) = 2.29 and A(1) = 11 mT, arising from the type 2 catalytic site. As assessed by visible spectroscopy, ferricyanide (E degree = +430 mV) was unable to oxidize the H139A enzyme, and this required a 30-fold excess of K(2)IrCl(6) (E degree = +867 mV). Oxidation resulted in the EPR spectrum developing additional axial features with g(1) = 2.20 and A(1) = 9.5 mT, typical of type 1 copper centers. The oxidized enzyme after separation from the excess of K(2)IrCl(6) by gel filtration was a blue-green color with absorbance maxima at 618 and 420 nm. The instability of the protein prevented the precise determination of the midpoint potential, but these properties indicate that it is in the range 700-800 mV, an increase of at least approximately 470 mV compared with the native enzyme. This high potential, which is consistent with a trigonal planar geometry of the Cu ion, effectively prevents azurin-mediated electron transfer from the type 1 center to the catalytic type 2 Cu site. However, with dithionite as reductant, 20% of the activity of the wild-type enzyme was observed, indicating that the direct reduction of the catalytic site by dithionite can occur. When CuSO(4) was added to the crude extract before isolation of the enzyme, the Cu content of the purified H139A enzyme increased to 5.7 Cu atoms per trimer. The enzyme remained colorless, and the activity with dithionite as a donor was not significantly increased. The additional copper in such preparations was associated with an axial type 2 Cu EPR signal with g(1) = 2.226 and A(1) = 18 mT, and which were not changed by the addition of nitrite, consistent with the activity data.  相似文献   

18.
Shaffer J  Adams JA 《Biochemistry》1999,38(17):5572-5581
The kinetic mechanism for the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A was evaluated using physiological concentrations of free magnesium (0.5 mM) and a rapid quench flow technique. When the enzyme is pre-equilibrated with ATP, the peptide substrate, LRRASLG (Kemptide), is phosphorylated in a biphasic manner with a rapid, exponential "burst" phase (kb) followed by a slower, linear phase (kL) that corresponds to the steady-state kinetic rate. Both the amplitude and the substrate-rate dependence of the initial, burst phase indicate that the rate of phosphoryl transfer is fast (approximately 500 s-1) and does not limit turnover (45 s-1). Viscosity studies indicate that, while Kemptide is in rapid equilibrium, ATP does not exchange rapidly with the active site and kcat/KATP is limited by the rate constant for nucleotide encounter. When the pre-steady-state kinetic experiments are initiated with ATP, a lag phase is observed at low ATP concentrations consistent with rate-limiting association. At high ATP concentrations (>1 mM), a burst phase is observed but the rate and amplitude are low on the basis of the bimolecular rate constant for ATP association and the rate constant for phosphoryl transfer. The kinetic data indicate that the phosphoryl transfer step is fast at physiological magnesium concentrations, but an ATP-linked conformational change precedes this step, limiting the burst phase rate constant. Simulations of the pre-steady-state kinetic transients indicate that turnover (45 s-1) is limited both by net product release (70 s-1) and by this structural change (170 s-1). This structural change may also occur at high free magnesium concentrations, but it must be significantly faster than 170 s-1 and, consequently, not rate-limiting for turnover (kcat = 20 s-1 at 10 mM free Mg2+). We propose that this conformational event is an obligatory component of the kinetic pathway and includes a movement of the catalytic residues necessary for supporting phosphoryl group donation.  相似文献   

19.
The following reactions catalyzed by chicken liver fatty acid synthase have been studied with the stopped-flow method in 0.1 M potassium phosphate (pH 7.0) and 1 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid at 25 degrees C by monitoring the change in NADPH fluorescence: the transfer of acetoacetyl from acetoacetyl coenzyme A to the enzyme, reduction of the enzyme-bound acetoacetyl by NADPH (beta-ketoacyl reductase), and reduction of enzyme-bound D-hydroxybutyryl/crotonyl by NADPH (enoyl reductase). The first two reactions were studied by mixing enzyme-NADPH with acetoacetyl-CoA under conditions where the kinetics can be analyzed as two consecutive pseudo-first-order processes: a mechanism consistent with the aceto-acetyl-CoA dependence of the pseudo-first-order rate constant associated with formation of the aceto-acetyl-enzyme is a relatively rapid binding of substrate to the enzyme, with a dissociation constant of 650 microM, followed by formation of covalently bound acetoacetyl, with a rate constant of 10.2 s-1. The aceto-acetyl-enzyme is reduced by enzyme-bound NADPH with a rate constant of 20 s-1, and the NADPH binding is characterized by a dissociation constant of 5.3 microM. Reduction of the D-hydroxybutyryl-/crotonyl-enzyme was studied by mixing NADPH with enzyme that was equilibrated with D-hydroxybutyryl-CoA or crotonyl-CoA; the rate constant for reduction of an equilibrium mixture of D-hydroxybutyryl- and crotonyl-enzyme is 36.6 s-1. Steady-state kinetic studies of the reduction of acetoacetyl-CoA and crotonyl-CoA by NADPH also have been carried out.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The kinetics of glucose-fructose oxidoreductase from Zymomonas mobilis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Glucose-fructose oxidoreductase operates by a classic ping-pong mechanism with a single site for all substrates: glucose, fructose, gluconolactone and sorbitol. The Km values for these substrates were determined. The values of kcat are 200 s-1 and 0.8 s-1 for the forward and reverse directions respectively. The overall catalytic process consists of two half-reactions with alternate reduction of NADP+ and oxidation of NADPH tightly bound to the enzyme. Reduction of enzyme-NADP+ by glucose and oxidation of enzyme-NADPH by gluconolactone involve single first-order processes. The values of the rate constants at saturating substrate are 2100 s-1 and 8 s-1 respectively; deuterium isotope effects indicate that these are for the hydrogen transfer step. Oxidation of enzyme-NADPH by fructose is first order with a limiting rate constant of at least 430 s-1. The reaction of enzyme-NADP+ with sorbitol is biphasic, with rate constants for both phases less than 1 s-1. This behaviour is explained by a mechanism in which the slow cyclisation of the acyclic form of fructose follows its dissociation from the enzyme. The rate-determining steps for the overall reaction are probably dissociation of gluconolactone in the forward direction and hydrogen transfer from sorbitol to enzyme-bound NADP+ in the reverse direction.  相似文献   

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