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1.
N S Rotberg  W W Cleland 《Biochemistry》1991,30(16):4068-4071
Secondary 15N isotope effects at the N-1 position of 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide have been determined, by using the internal competition technique, for horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) with cyclohexanol as a substrate and yeast formate dehydrogenase (FDH) with formate as a substrate. On the basis of less precise previous measurements of these 15N isotope effects, the nicotinamide ring of NAD has been suggested to adopt a boat conformation with carbonium ion character at C-4 during hydride transfer [Cook, P. F., Oppenheimer, N. J. & Cleland, W. W. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 1817]. If this mechanism were valid, as N-1 becomes pyramidal an 15N isotope effect of up to 2-3% would be observed. In the present study the equilibrium 15N isotope effect for the reaction catalyzed by LADH was measured as 1.0042 +/- 0.0007. The kinetic 15N isotope effect for LADH catalysis was 0.9989 +/- 0.0006 for cyclohexanol oxidation and 0.997 +/- 0.002 for cyclohexanone reduction. The kinetic 15N isotope effect for FDH catalysis was 1.004 +/- 0.001. These values suggest that a significant 15N kinetic isotope effect is not associated with hydride transfer for LADH and FDH. Thus, in contrast with the deformation mechanism previously postulated, the pyridine ring of the nucleotide apparently remains planar during these dehydrogenase reactions.  相似文献   

2.
Parikh SL  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2004,43(5):1204-1212
Bacterial protein toxins are the most powerful human poisons known, exhibiting an LD(50) of 0.1-1 ng kg(-)(1). A major subset of such toxins is the NAD(+)-dependent ADP-ribosylating exotoxins, which include pertussis, cholera, and diphtheria toxin. Diphtheria toxin catalyzes the ADP ribosylation of the diphthamide residue of eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF-2). The transition state of ADP ribosylation catalyzed by diphtheria toxin has been characterized by measuring a family of kinetic isotope effects using (3)H-, (14)C-, and (15)N-labeled NAD(+) with purified yeast eEF-2. Isotope trapping experiments yield a commitment to catalysis of 0.24 at saturating eEF-2 concentrations, resulting in suppression of the intrinsic isotope effects. Following correction for the commitment factor, intrinsic primary kinetic isotope effects of 1.055 +/- 0.003 and 1.022 +/- 0.004 were observed for [1(N)'-(14)C]- and [1(N)-(15)N]NAD(+), respectively; the double primary isotope effect was 1.066 +/- 0.004 for [1(N)'-(14)C, 1(N)-(15)N]NAD(+). Secondary kinetic isotope effects of 1.194 +/- 0.002, 1.101 +/- 0.003, 1.013 +/- 0.005, and 0.988 +/- 0.002 were determined for [1(N)'-(3)H]-, [2(N)'-(3)H]-, [4(N)'-(3)H]-, and [5(N)'-(3)H]NAD(+), respectively. The transition state structure was modeled using density functional theory (B1LYP/6-31+G) as implemented in Gaussian 98, and theoretical kinetic isotope effects were subsequently calculated using Isoeff 98. Constraints were varied in a systematic manner until the calculated kinetic isotope effects matched the intrinsic isotope effects. The transition state model most consistent with the intrinsic isotope effects is characterized by the substantial loss in bond order of the nicotinamide leaving group (bond order = 0.18, 1.99 A) and weak participation of the attacking imidazole nucleophile (bond order = 0.03, 2.58 A). The transition state structure imparts strong oxacarbenium ion character to the ribose ring even though significant bond order remains to the nicotinamide leaving group. The transition state model presented here is asymmetric and consistent with a dissociative S(N)1 type mechanism in which attack of the diphthamide nucleophile lags behind departure of the nicotinamide.  相似文献   

3.
Nidetzky B  Klimacek M  Mayr P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(34):10371-10381
Microbial xylose reductase, a representative aldo-keto reductase of primary sugar metabolism, catalyzes the NAD(P)H-dependent reduction of D-xylose with a turnover number approximately 100 times that of human aldose reductase for the same reaction. To determine the mechanistic basis for that physiologically relevant difference and pinpoint features that are unique to the microbial enzyme among other aldo/keto reductases, we carried out stopped-flow studies with wild-type xylose reductase from the yeast Candida tenuis. Analysis of transient kinetic data for binding of NAD(+) and NADH, and reduction of D-xylose and oxidation of xylitol at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C provided estimates of rate constants for the following mechanism: E + NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH + D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NADH.D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+).xylitol right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E + NAD(+). The net rate constant of dissociation of NAD(+) is approximately 90% rate limiting for k(cat) of D-xylose reduction. It is controlled by the conformational change which precedes nucleotide release and whose rate constant of 40 s(-)(1) is 200 times that of completely rate-limiting E.NADP(+) --> E.NADP(+) step in aldehyde reduction catalyzed by human aldose reductase [Grimshaw, C. E., et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 14356-14365]. Hydride transfer from NADH occurs with a rate constant of approximately 170 s(-1). In reverse reaction, the E.NADH --> E.NADH step takes place with a rate constant of 15 s(-1), and the rate constant of ternary-complex interconversion (3.8 s(-1)) largely determines xylitol turnover (0.9 s(-1)). The bound-state equilibrium constant for C. tenuis xylose reductase is estimated to be approximately 45 (=170/3.8), thus greatly favoring aldehyde reduction. Formation of productive complexes, E.NAD(+) and E.NADH, leads to a 7- and 9-fold decrease of dissociation constants of initial binary complexes, respectively, demonstrating that 12-fold differential binding of NADH (K(i) = 16 microM) vs NAD(+) (K(i) = 195 microM) chiefly reflects difference in stabilities of E.NADH and E.NAD(+). Primary deuterium isotope effects on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(xylose) were, respectively, 1.55 +/- 0.09 and 2.09 +/- 0.31 in H(2)O, and 1.26 +/- 0.06 and 1.58 +/- 0.17 in D(2)O. No deuterium solvent isotope effect on k(cat)/K(xylose) was observed. When deuteration of coenzyme selectively slowed the hydride transfer step, (D)()2(O)(k(cat)/K(xylose)) was inverse (0.89 +/- 0.14). The isotope effect data suggest a chemical mechanism of carbonyl reduction by xylose reductase in which transfer of hydride ion is a partially rate-limiting step and precedes the proton-transfer step.  相似文献   

4.
On- and off-velocity constants for NADH and NAD+ binding to liver alcohol dehydrogenase in the pH range 10-12 have been determined by stopped-flow kinetic methods. The results are consistent with previously reported equilibrium binding data and proposals attributing the main effects of pH on coenzyme binding to ionization of Lys-228 and zinc-bound water. Deprotonation of the group identified as Lys-228 decreases the NADH and NAD+ association rates by a factor exceeding 20 and has no detectable effect on the coenzyme dissociation rates in the examined pH range. Ionization of the group identified as zinc-bound water causes a 3-fold increase of the rate of NADH dissociation from the enzyme, and decreases the rate of NAD+ dissociation by a factor of 200. The NADH and NAD+ association rates are decreased by a factor of 30 and 5, respectively. The observed effects of pH can be rationalized in terms of electrostatic interactions of the ionizing groups with the charges present on the coenzyme molecules and lend support to the idea that binding of the coenzyme nicotinamide ring occurs subsequent to binding of the AMP portion of the coenzyme.  相似文献   

5.
R D LaReau  W Wan  V E Anderson 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3619-3624
The isotope effect on binding [4-2H]NAD+ and [4-3H]NAD+ to lactate dehydrogenase has been shown to be 1.10 +/- 0.03 by whole molecule isotope ratio mass spectrometry and 1.085 +/- 0.01 by 3H/14C scintillation counting. These values demonstrate that specific interactions of the nicotinamide ring with the enzyme make the C-H bond at C-4 less stiff in the binary complex.  相似文献   

6.
H Deng  J Zheng  D Sloan  J Burgner  R Callender 《Biochemistry》1989,28(4):1525-1533
The binding of the coenzymes NAD+ and NADH to lactate dehydrogenase causes significant changes in the Raman spectra of both of these molecules relative to spectra obtained in the absence of enzyme. The molecular motions of the bound adenine moiety of both NAD+ and NADH as well as adenine containing analogues of these coenzymes produce Raman bands that are essentially identical, suggesting that the binding of adenine to the enzyme is the same regardless of the nicotinamide head-group nature. We also have observed that the molecular motions of the bound adenine moiety are different from both those obtained when it is in either water, various hydrophobic solvents, or various other solvent compositions. Protonation of the bound adenine ring at the 3-position is offered as a possible explanation. Significant shifts are observed in both the stretching frequency of the carboxamide carbonyl of NAD+ and the rocking motion of the carboxamide NH2 group of NADH. These shifts are probably caused by hydrogen bonding with the enzyme. The interaction energies of these hydrogen-bonding patterns are discussed. The aromatic nature of the nicotinamide moiety of NAD+ appears to be unchanged upon binding. Pronounced changes in the Raman spectrum of the nicotinamide moiety of NADH are observed upon binding; some of these changes are understood and discussed. Finally, these results are compared to analogous results that were recently reported for liver alcohol dehydrogenase [Chen et al. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 4776-4784]. In general, the coenzyme binding properties are found to be quite similar, but not identical, for the two enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Rubach JK  Ramaswamy S  Plapp BV 《Biochemistry》2001,40(42):12686-12694
The participation of Val-292 in catalysis by alcohol dehydrogenase and the involvement of dynamics were investigated. Val-292 interacts with the nicotinamide ring of the bound coenzyme and may facilitate hydride transfer. The substitution of Val-292 with Ser (V292S) increases the dissociation constants for the coenzymes (NAD(+) by 50-fold, NADH by 75-fold) and the turnover numbers by 3-7-fold. The V292S enzyme crystallized in the presence of NAD(+) and 2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorobenzyl alcohol has an open conformation similar to the structure of the wild-type apo-enzyme, rather than the closed conformation observed for ternary complexes with wild-type enzyme. The V292S substitution perturbs the conformational equilibrium of the enzyme and decreases the kinetic complexity, which permits study of the hydride transfer step with steady-state kinetics. Eyring plots show that the DeltaH for the oxidation (V(1)) of the protio and deuterio benzyl alcohols is 13 kcal/mol and that the kinetic isotope effect of 4.1 is essentially temperature-independent. Eyring plots for the catalytic efficiency for reduction of benzaldehyde (V(2)/K(p)) with NADH or NADD are distinctly convex, being temperature-dependent from 5 to 25 degrees C and temperature-independent from 25 to 50 degrees C; the kinetic isotope effect of 3.2 for V(2)/K(p) is essentially independent of the temperature. The temperature dependencies and isotope effects for V(1) and V(2)/K(p) are not adequately explained by semiclassical transition state theory and are better explained by hydride transfer occurring through vibrationally assisted tunneling.  相似文献   

8.
J W Burgner  W J Ray 《Biochemistry》1984,23(16):3620-3626
The binary complex of NAD and lactate dehydrogenase reacts reversibly with cyanide to produce a complex (E X NAD-CN) whose noncovalent interactions are similar to those in the E X NADH complex (where E is one-fourth of the tetrameric dehydrogenase). The reaction apparently is a simple bimolecular nucleophilic addition at the 4 position of the bound nicotinamide ring; viz., cyanide does not bind to the enzyme prior to reaction. The value of the dissociation constant for E X NAD-CN is about 1 X 10(-6) M and is independent of pH over the range of 6-8. The equilibrium constant for the reaction of cyanide with E X NAD is about 400-fold larger than that for the nonenzymic process after a statistical correction. This increment in Ke is accounted for by a 220-fold increase in the rate of the forward enzymic reaction (20 M-1 s-1) as compared with an approximately 2-fold decrease for the reverse process (9 X 10(-5) s-1). Thus, the increased value of the rate constant for bond formation in the enzymic reaction is attributed to an equilibrium binding effect that is translated almost entirely into a rate effect on that step (bond formation). Since the nonenzymic reaction is sensitive to solvent composition, this equilibrium binding effect likely is produced by environmental effects at the nicotinamide/dehydronicotinamide part of the coenzyme binding site on the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
K H Dahl  M F Dunn 《Biochemistry》1984,23(26):6829-6839
Liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH) carboxymethylated at Cys-46 (CMLADH) forms two different ternary complexes with 4-trans-(N,N-dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde (DACA). The complex with reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) is characterized by a 38-nm red shift of the long-wavelength pi, pi* transition to 436 nm, while the complex with oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is characterized by a 60-nm red shift to 458 nm. CMLADH also forms a ternary complex with NAD+ and the Z isomer of 4-trans-(N,N-dimethylamino)cinnamaldoxime in which the absorption of the oxime (lambda max = 354 nm) is red shifted 80 nm to 434 nm. Pyrazole and 4-methylpyrazole are weak competitive inhibitors of ligand binding to the substrate site of native LADH. These inhibitors were found to form ternary complexes with CMLADH and NADH which are more stable than the corresponding complexes with the native enzyme. The transient reductions of the aldehydes DACA and p-nitrobenzaldehyde (NBZA) were studied under single-turnover conditions. Carboxymethylation decreases the DACA reduction rate 80-fold and renders the process essentially independent of pH over the region 5-9, whereas this process depends on a pKa of 6.0 in the native enzyme. At pH 7.0, the rate constant for NBZA reduction also is decreased at least 80-fold to a value of 7.7 +/- 0.3 s-1. Since primary kinetic isotope effects are observed when NADH is substituted with (4R)-4-deuterio-NADH (kH/kD = 3.0 for DACA and kH/kD = 2.3 for NBZA), the rate-limiting step for both aldehydes involves hydride transfer. The altered pH dependence is concluded to be due to an increase in the pK value of the zinc-coordinated DACA-alcohol in the ternary complex with NAD+ by more than 3 units. This perturbation is brought about by the close proximity of the negatively charged carboxymethyl carboxylate.  相似文献   

10.
The primary kinetic isotope effect of the reaction catalyzed by NAD+-dependent formate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.2.) from the methylotrophic bacterium Pseudomonas sp. 101 has been studied. Analysis of the ratios HVm/DVm and H(Vm/KM)/D(Vm/KM) in the pH range 6.1-7.9 showed that the transfer of hydride ion in ternary enzyme-substrate complex is a limiting step of the reaction, and the formate binding to the binary complex (formate dehydrogenase + NAD+) reached equilibrium when the pH of the medium was increased. An approach has been developed to determine the elementary constants of substrate association (kon) and dissociation (koff) at the stages of the binary--ternary enzyme-substrate complexes for the random equilibrium 2-substrate kinetic mechanism. The kon and koff values obtained for the bacterial formate dehydrogenase by using the proposed approach for NAD+ were (4.8 +/- 0.8)*10(5)M-1s-1 and (90 +/- 10) s-1, and for formate (2.0 +/- 1.0)*10(4) M-1s-1 and (60 +/- 20) s-1, respectively.  相似文献   

11.
We have synthesized phenyl adenine dinucleotide (P1-adenosine-5')-P2-(beta-D-ribofuranosylbenzene-5')-pyrophosphate (PhAD), a novel analog of pyridine nucleotide coenzymes. This compound contains a planar aromatic ring, as does NAD+, but lacks a positive charge. PhAD is an inhibitor of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase, competitive with NADH. PhAD is very similar to NAD+ sterically since both compounds have a planar aromatic ring. However, PhAD resembles NADH in binding to the enzyme because the dissociation constants of both compounds show a parallel increase as the pH is raised, whereas those of NAD+ behave in the opposite manner. These observations indicate that the enzyme differentiates between NAD+ and NADH on the basis of the positive charge on the molecule and not the stereochemical orientation of the reduced nicotinamide ring.  相似文献   

12.
Since hydride transfer is completely rate limiting for yeast formate dehydrogenase [Blanchard, J.S., & Cleland, W. W. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 3543], the intrinsic isotope effects on this reaction are fully expressed. Primary deuterium, 13C, and 18O isotope effects in formate and the alpha-secondary deuterium isotope effect at C-4 of the nucleotide have been measured for nucleotide substrates with redox potentials varying from -0.320 (NAD) to -0.258 V (acetylpyridine-NAD). As the redox potential gets more positive, the primary deuterium isotope effect increases from 2.2 to 3.1, the primary 13C isotope effect decreases from 1.042 to 1.036, the alpha-secondary deuterium isotope effect drops from 1.23 to 1.06, and Vmax decreases. The 18O isotope effects increase from 1.005 to 1.008 per single 18O substitution in formate (these values are dominated by the normal isotope effect on the dehydration of formate during binding; pyridinealdehyde-NAD gives an inverse value, possibly because it is not fully dehydrated during binding). These isotope effects suggest a progression toward earlier transition states as the redox potential of the nucleotide becomes more positive, with NAD having a late and acetyl-pyridine-NAD a nearly symmetrical transition state. By contrast, the I2 oxidation of formate in dimethyl sulfoxide has a very early transition state (13k = 1.0154; Dk = 2.2; 18k = 0.9938), which becomes later as the proportion of water in the solvent increases (13k = 1.0265 in 40% dimethyl sulfoxide and 1.0362 in water). alpha-secondary deuterium isotope effects with formate dehydrogenase are decreased halfway to the equilibrium isotope effect when deuterated formate is the substrate, showing that the bending motion of the secondary hydrogen is coupled to hydride transfer in the transition state and that tunneling of the two hydrogens is involved. The 15N isotope effect of 1.07 for NAD labeled at N-1 of the nicotinamide ring suggests that N-1 becomes pyramidal during the reaction. 18O fractionation factors for formate ion relative to aqueous solution are 1.0016 in sodium formate crystal, 1.0042 bound to Dowex-1, and 1.0040 as an ion pair (probably hydrated) in CHCl3. The CO2 analogue azide binds about 10(4) times better than the formate analogue nitrate to enzyme-nucleotide complexes (even though the Ki values for both and the affinity for formate vary by 2 orders of magnitude among the various nucleotides), but the ratio is not sensitive to the redox potential of the nucleotide. Thus, not the nature of the transition state but rather the shape of the initial binding pocket for formate is determining the relative affinity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Neutron activation analysis of UDP-galactose 4-epimerase from Escherichia coli for 53 metals shows that the enzyme does not contain any of these metals at significant levels. The substrate analog P1-5'-uridine-P2-glucose-6-yl pyrophosphate (UGP), a structural isomer of UDP-glucose with the sugar linked to UDP through the C-6 hydroxyl group, is an inactivator that irreversibly reduces epimerase.NAD+ to epimerase.NADH. The pH dependence of kobs reveals the essential involvement of an acidic group, kinetically measured pKa = 5.48 +/- 0.08, in unprotonated form and two weakly acidic or basic groups, apparent pKa values of 10.03 +/- 0.43, in protonated forms. Measurements of kobs as a function of [UGP] show that it is given by kobs = k[UGP]/(K + [UGP]) at a given pH, where K = 0.19 +/- 0.04 mM throughout the pH range 4.8-10.4. The pH-dependent first order rate constants range from 0.28 to 1.94 s-1, with the maximum value at pH 7.6 and decreasing at acidic and basic pH values. Reaction of [glucose-1-2H]UGP proceeds with kinetic isotope effects of 5.0, 2.1, 2.0, 1.9, and 3.5 at pH values 5.0, 6.2, 7.6, 9.0, and 10.0, respectively. Therefore, hydride transfer becomes rate-limiting at pH extremes but is not limiting at neutral pH, although deuteride transfer is significantly limiting at all pH values. The isotope effects facilitated correction of the kinetic pK values to the thermodynamic values 6.1-6.2 on the acid side and 9.0-9.6 on the alkaline side. We postulate that the group with pK1 = 5.5 (6.1-6.2 corrected) functions as an enzymic general base that abstracts the glucosyl C-1 hydroxyl proton in concert with transfer of the C-1 hydrogen and two electrons to NAD+. The pH dependence on the alkaline side may be related to the uridine nucleotide-dependent conformational transition that is an essential step in the reduction of epimerase.NAD+ to epimerase.NADH by sugars.  相似文献   

14.
The maximum redox potential difference between the NAD+/NADH couple and the succinate/fumarate couple generated during ATP-energized reduction of NAD+ by succinate in submitochondrial particles was measured, together with the electrochemical potential difference for protons (delta mu approximately H+). The presence of cyanide, the time-independence of the redox potential difference and the irrelevance of the initial redox state of the NAD+/NADH couple ensured that the experimental situation corresponded to a 'static-head condition' with delta mu approximately H+ as the input force and the redox potential difference as the output force, the flow of electrons having reached dynamic equilibrium. Consequently, the observed value of 1.6 for the ratio delta Ge/delta mu approximately H+ is interpreted as indicating that the leads to H+/e- stoicheiometry at 'site 1' is 1.5 and that therefore the mechanism of the proton pump at 'site 1' is not of the group-translocation type (no direct leads to e - leads to H+ coupling).  相似文献   

15.
Dihydrofolate reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtDHFR) catalyzes the NAD(P)-dependent reduction of dihydrofolate, yielding NAD(P)(+) and tetrahydrofolate, the primary one-carbon unit carrier in biology. Tetrahydrofolate needs to be recycled so that reactions involved in dTMP synthesis and purine metabolism are maintained. In this work, we report the kinetic characterization of the MtDHFR. This enzyme has a sequential steady-state random kinetic mechanism, probably with a preferred pathway with NADPH binding first. A pK(a) value for an enzymic acid of approximately 7.0 was identified from the pH dependence of V, and the analysis of the primary kinetic isotope effects revealed that the hydride transfer step is at least partly rate-limiting throughout the pH range analyzed. Additionally, solvent and multiple kinetic isotope effects were determined and analyzed, and equilibrium isotope effects were measured on the equilibrium constant. (D(2)O)V and (D(2)O)V/K([4R-4-(2)H]NADH) were slightly inverse at pH 6.0, and inverse values for (D(2)O)V([4R-4-(2)H]NADH) and (D(2)O)V/K([4R-4-(2)H]NADH) suggested that a pre-equilibrium protonation is occurring before the hydride transfer step, indicating a stepwise mechanism for proton and hydride transfer. The same value was obtained for (D)k(H) at pH 5.5 and 7.5, reaffirming the rate-limiting nature of the hydride transfer step. A chemical mechanism is proposed on the basis of the results obtained here.  相似文献   

16.
The heat of the reaction NAD(+)+propan-2-ol=NADH+acetone+H(+) was determined to be 42.5+/-0.6kJ/mol (10.17+/-0.15kcal/mol) from equilibrium measurements at 9-42 degrees C catalysed by yeast alcohol dehydrogenase. With the aid of thermochemical data for acetone and propan-2-ol the values of DeltaH=-29.2kJ/mol (-6.99kcal/mol) and DeltaG(0)=22.1kJ/mol (5.28kcal/mol) are derived for the reduction of NAD (NAD(+)+H(2)=NADH+H(+)). These values are consistent with analogous but less accurate data for the ethanol-acetaldehyde reaction. Thermodynamic data for the reduction of NAD and NADP are summarized.  相似文献   

17.
W M Atkins  S G Sligar 《Biochemistry》1988,27(5):1610-1616
The kinetics of NADH consumption, oxygen uptake, and hydrogen peroxide production have been studied for norcamphor metabolism by cytochrome P-450cam. The kinetic deuterium isotope effects on these processes, with specifically deuteriated norcamphor, are 0.77, 1.22, and 1.16, respectively. Steady-state UV-visible spectroscopy indicates that transfer of the second electron to the dioxy ferrous P-450 is the rate-limiting step, as it is when camphor is the substrate. The inverse deuterium isotope effect for NADH consumption is consistent with an isotope-dependent branching between monooxygenase and oxidase activity, where these reactivities differ in their NADH:oxygen stoichiometries. However, no isotope-dependent redistribution of steady-state intermediates was detected by isotopic difference UV-visible spectroscopy in the presence of norcamphor. The kinetic isotope effects and steady-state spectral results suggest that the high-valent iron-oxo hydroxylating intermediate [FeO]3+ is reduced by NADH and the physiological electron-transfer proteins to afford water.  相似文献   

18.
The content of NADH and NADPH was measured in the intact and regenerating rat liver. In the intact rat liver, the content of NAD+, NADH, NADP+ and NADPH was 235 +/- 6.4, 66.6 +/- 4.3, 73.3 +/- 2.5 and 148.0 +/- 4.6 micrograms/g crude liver weight, respectively. Seasonal alterations in the rat liver content of coenzymes were established. No changes were found in the content of nicotinamide coenzymes in the regenerating liver 4 and 18 h after operation. Twenty-four hours after operation, a 25.6% increase in the content of NAD+ and a 57.8% reduction in the NADH content were recorded in the liver of hepatectomized animals. At the same time the total content of NAD+ plus NADH changed but insignificantly (14.7%). The total content of NADP+ plus NADPH dropped by 29.8% (within the above period). Thirty-two hours after operation the content of all the nicotinamide coenzymes returned to the initial level.  相似文献   

19.
DNA is damaged in vivo by the Fenton reaction mediated by Fe2+ and cellular reductants such as NADH, which reduce Fe3+ to Fe2+ and allow the recycling of iron. To study the response of Escherichia coli to such cycling, the activities of several enzymes involved in nicotinamide nucleotide metabolism were measured following an H2O2 challenge. NADPH-dependent peroxidase, NADH/NADP+ transhydrogenase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were most strongly induced, increasing 2.5-3-fold. In addition, the cellular ratios of NADPH to NADH increased 6- or 92-fold 15 min after exposure to 0.5 or 5 mm H2O2, respectively. In vitro, NADH was oxidized by Fe3+ up to 16-fold faster than NADPH, despite their identical reduction potentials. To understand this rate difference, the interactions of Fe3+ and Ga3+ with NAD(P)H were examined by 1H, 13C, and 31P NMR spectroscopy. Association with NADH occurred primarily with adenine at N7 and the amino group, but for NADPH, strong metal interactions also occurred at the 2'-phosphate group. Interaction of M3+ (Fe3+ or Ga3+) with the adenine ring would bring it into close proximity to the redox-active nicotinamide ring in the folded form of NAD(P)H, but interaction of M3+ with the 2'-phosphate group would avoid this close contact. In addition, as determined by absorbance spectroscopy, the energy of the charge-transfer species was significantly higher for the Fe3+.NADPH complex than for the Fe3+.NADH complex. We therefore suggest that upon exposure to H2O2 the NADH pool is depleted, and NADPH, which is less reactive with Fe3+, functions as the major nicotinamide nucleotide reductant.  相似文献   

20.
The catalytic mechanism for the mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase activity of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A was investigated by steady-state and stopped-flow kinetic analyses. The rate constants for binding of the NAD(+) substrate to the enzyme were found to be 4.7 +/- 0.4 microM(-1) s(-1) and 194 +/- 15 s(-1) for k(on) and k(off), respectively. The k(on) and k(off) rate constants for the eEF-2 substrate binding to the enzyme were 320 +/- 39 microM(-1) s(-1) and 131 +/- 22 s(-1), respectively. A potent, competitive inhibitor against the enzyme, 1,8-naphthalimide, bound the enzyme with k(on) and k(off) rates of 82 +/- 9 microM(-1) s(-1) and 51 +/- 6 s(-1), respectively. Furthermore, the binding on and off rates for the reaction products, ADP-ribose and nicotinamide, were too rapid for detection with the stopped-flow technique. Investigation of the pre-steady-state kinetics for the ADP-ribose transferase activity of the toxin-enzyme showed that there is no pre-steady-state complex formed during the catalytic cycle. Binding of NAD+ and smaller compounds representing the various parts of this substrate were investigated by the fluorescence quenching of the intrinsic toxin fluorescence. The binding data revealed a significant structural change in the enzyme upon NAD+ binding that could not be accounted for on the basis of the sum of the structural changes induced by the various NAD+ constituents. Product inhibition studies were conducted with nicotinamide and eEF-2-ADP-ribose, and the results indicate that the reaction involves a random-order ternary complex mechanism. Detailed kinetic analysis revealed that the eEF-2 substrate shows sigmoidal kinetic behavior with the enzyme, and fluorescence resonance energy transfer measurements indicated that wheat germ eEF-2 is oligomeric in solution.  相似文献   

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