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1.
The carbon monoxide dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/ACS) from Methanosarcina thermophila is part of a five-subunit complex consisting of alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon subunits. The multienzyme complex catalyzes the reversible oxidation of CO to CO(2), transfer of the methyl group of acetyl-CoA to tetrahydromethanopterin (H(4)MPT), and acetyl-CoA synthesis from CO, CoA, and methyl-H(4)MPT. The alpha and epsilon subunits are required for CO oxidation. The gamma and delta subunits constitute a corrinoid iron-sulfur protein that is involved in the transmethylation reaction. This work focuses on the beta subunit. The isolated beta subunit contains significant amounts of nickel. When proteases truncate the beta subunit, causing the CODH/ACS complex to dissociate, the amount of intact beta subunit correlates directly with the EPR signal intensity of Cluster A and the activity of the CO/acetyl-CoA exchange reaction. Our results strongly indicate that the beta subunit harbors Cluster A, a NiFeS cluster, that is the active site of acetyl-CoA cleavage and assembly. Although the beta subunit is necessary, it is not sufficient for acetyl-CoA synthesis; interactions between the CODH and the ACS subunits are required for cleavage or synthesis of the C-C bond of acetyl-CoA. We propose that these interactions include intramolecular electron transfer reactions between the CODH and ACS subunits.  相似文献   

2.
 CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/ACS) is one of the four known nickel enzymes. It is a bifunctional protein that catalyzes the oxidation of CO to CO2 at a nickel iron-sulfur cluster (Cluster C) and a remarkable condensation reaction between a methyl group (donated from a methylated corrinoid iron-sulfur protein), carbon monoxide, and coenzyme A to form acetyl-CoA at a separate nickel iron-sulfur cluster (Cluster A). This review focuses on the current understanding of the structure and function of Cluster A and on related model chemistry. It describes studies that uncovered the first example of a biological organometallic reaction sequence. The mechanism of acetyl-CoA synthesis includes enzymebound methylnickel, iron-carbonyl, and acylmetal intermediates. Discovery of the methylnickel species constituted the first example of an alkylnickel species in biology and unveiled a new biological role for nickel. Received: 10 April 1996 / Accepted: 4 July 1996  相似文献   

3.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/ACS) is a bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes the reversible reduction of carbon dioxide into carbon monoxide and the coupled synthesis of acetyl-CoA from the carbon monoxide produced. Exposure of CODH/ACS from Moorella thermoacetica to carbon monoxide gives rise to several infrared bands in the 2100-1900 cm(-1) spectral region that are attributed to the formation of metal-coordinated carbon monoxide species. Infrared bands attributable to M-CO are not detected in the as-isolated enzyme, suggesting that the enzyme does not contain intrinsic metal-coordinated CO ligands. A band detected at 1996 cm(-1) in the CO-flushed enzyme is assigned as arising from CO binding to a metal center in cluster A of the ACS subunit. The frequency of this band is most consistent with it arising from a terminally coordinated Ni(I) carbonyl. Multiple infrared bands at 2078, 2044, 1970, 1959, and 1901 cm(-1) are attributed to CO binding at cluster C of the CODH subunit. All infrared bands attributed to metal carbonyls decay in a time-dependent fashion as CO(2) appears in the solution. These observations are consistent with the enzyme-catalyzed oxidation of carbon monoxide until it is completely depleted from solution during the course of the experiments.  相似文献   

4.
CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/ACS), a key enzyme in the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway of anaerobic CO(2) fixation, is a bifunctional enzyme containing CODH, which catalyzes the reversible two-electron oxidation of CO to CO(2), and ACS, which catalyzes acetyl-CoA synthesis from CoA, CO, and a methylated corrinoid iron-sulfur protein (CFeSP). ACS contains an active site nickel iron-sulfur cluster that forms a paramagnetic adduct with CO, called the nickel iron carbon (NiFeC) species, which we have hypothesized to be a key intermediate in acetyl-CoA synthesis. This hypothesis has been controversial. Here we report the results of steady-state kinetic experiments; stopped-flow and rapid freeze-quench transient kinetic studies; and kinetic simulations that directly test this hypothesis. Our results show that formation of the NiFeC intermediate occurs at approximately the same rate as, and its decay occurs 6-fold faster than, the rate of acetyl-CoA synthesis. Kinetic simulations of the steady-state and transient kinetic results accommodate the NiFeC species in the mechanism and define the rate constants for the elementary steps in acetyl-CoA synthesis. The combined results strongly support the kinetic competence of the NiFeC species in the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway. The results also imply that the methylation of ACS occurs by attack of the Ni(1+) site in the NiFeC intermediate on the methyl group of the methylated CFeSP. Our results indicate that CO inhibits acetyl-CoA synthesis by inhibiting this methyl transfer reaction. Under noninhibitory CO concentrations (below 100 microM), formation of the NiFeC species is rate-limiting, while at higher inhibitory CO concentrations, methyl transfer to ACS becomes rate-limiting.  相似文献   

5.
Life with carbon monoxide   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
  相似文献   

6.
Many anaerobic bacteria fix CO2 via the Wood pathway of acetyl-CoA synthesis. Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH), also called acetyl-CoA synthase, accepts the methyl group from the methylated corrinoid/iron-sulfur protein (C/Fe-SP), binds a carbonyl group from CO, CO2, or the carboxyl of pyruvate, and binds coenzyme A. Then CODH catalyzes the synthesis of acetyl-CoA from these enzyme-bound groups. Here, we have characterized the methyl transfer steps involved in acetyl-CoA synthesis. We have studied the reactions leading to methylation of CODH by methyl iodide and shown an absolute requirement of the C/Fe-SP in this reaction. In addition, we have discovered and partly characterized two previously unknown exchange reactions catalyzed by CODH: between the methylated C/Fe-SP and methylated CODH and between methylated CODH and the methyl moiety of acetyl-CoA. We have performed these two exchange reactions, methylation of the C/Fe-SP, and methylation of CODH at controlled potentials. The rates of all these reactions except the exchange between methylated C/Fe-SP and methylated CODH are accelerated (from 1 to 2 orders of magnitude) when run at low potentials. Our results provide strong evidence for a nucleophilic redox-active metal center on CODH as the initial acceptor of the methyl group from the methylated C/Fe-SP. This metal center also is proposed to be involved in the cleavage of acetyl-CoA in the reverse reaction.  相似文献   

7.
Acetyl coenzyme A synthase (ACS) acts in concert with carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) to catalyze the formation of acetyl-coenzyme A from CO2-derived CO and CH3+ molecules. Recent crystal structures have shown that the three globular domains constituting the ACS subunit may be arranged in either a closed or an open conformation. A long hydrophobic tunnel network allows diffusion of CO between the CODH and the ACS active sites in the closed form, but it is blocked in the open form. On the other hand, the active site of ACS is only accessible for coenzyme A and the methyl donating protein in the open domain conformation. Although several metal compositions have been observed for this active site, present consensus is that it consists of a Ni-Ni-[Fe4S4] cluster. The observed conformational changes of ACS and the resulting different substrate accessibilities of the catalytic central nickel are reviewed here in the context of a putative CO2/CO tunnel gating mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
Many anaerobic bacteria fix CO2 via the acetyl-CoA pathway. Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH), a key enzyme in the pathway, condenses a methyl group, a carbonyl group from CO, CO2, or the carboxyl group of pyruvate, and CoA to form acetyl-CoA. When treated with CO, CODH exhibits an EPR signal which results from an organometallic complex containing nickel, at least 3 iron, and CO and has been referred to as the NiFeC signal. Although this EPR signal has been presumed to be the spectroscopic signature of the enzyme-bound C-1 precursor of the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA, its catalytic relevance had not been rigorously studied. We have demonstrated the catalytic competence of this NiFeC species by showing that the rate of formation of the NiFeC EPR signal is faster than the rate of an isotope exchange reaction between CO and acetyl-CoA, a partial reaction in the overall synthesis. Generation of the NiFeC signal in the absence of CO by acetyl-CoA has been demonstrated and requires a one-electron reduction at a midpoint potential of -541 mV versus the standard hydrogen electrode. In addition, we have observed and characterized an isotope exchange reaction between the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA and the carbonyl group of the NiFeC complex, indicating that the C in the NiFeC complex is in the form of CO. These combined results demonstrate that the NiFeCO complex exhibits the characteristics expected of the precursor of the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA.  相似文献   

9.
Eight Ni proteins are known and three of these, CO dehydrogenase (CODH), acetyl-CoA synthase (ACS), and hydrogenase, are Ni-Fe-S proteins. In the last three years, the long-awaited structures of CODH and ACS have been solved. The bioinorganic community was shocked, as the structures of the active sites of CODH and ACS, the C- and A-cluster, respectively, which each had been predicted to consist of a [Fe4S4] cluster bridged to a single Ni, revealed unexpected compositions and arrangements. Crystal structures of ACS revealed major differences in protein conformation and in A-cluster composition; for example, a [Fe4S4] cluster bridged to a binuclear center in which one of the metal binding sites was occupied by Ni, Cu, or Zn. Recent studies have revealed Ni-Ni to be the active state, unveiled the source of the heterogeneity that had plagued studies of CODH/ACS for decades, and produced a metal-replacement strategy to generate highly active and nearly homogeneous enzyme.Abbreviations CFeSP corrinoid iron-sulfur protein - CH3H4folate methyltetrahydrofolate - CODH/ACS carbon monoxide dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthases - ENDOR electron nuclear double resonance - MeTr methyltransferase  相似文献   

10.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) plays a key role in acetate synthesis by the acetogenic bacterium, Clostridium thermoaceticum. Acetobacterium woodii, like C. thermoaceticum contains high levels of CODH. In this work we show that crude extracts of A. woodii synthesize acetate from methyl tetrahydrofolate or methyl iodide, carbon monoxide and coenzyme A (CoA). The purified CODH from A. woodii catalyzes an exchange reaction between CO and the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA even faster than the C. thermoaceticum enzyme, indicating the CODH of A. woodii, like that of C. thermoaceticum is an acetyl-CoA synthetase. Fluorescence and EPR studies further support this postulate by demonstrating that CODH binds CoA near the CO binding site involving a tryptophan residue. The UV absorption spectra and the amino acid compositions of A. woodii and C. thermoaceticum CODHs are very similar. Evidence is presented using purified enzymes from A. woodii that the synthesis of acetyl-CoA occurs by a pathway similar to that utilized by C. thermoaceticum.  相似文献   

11.
After activation with NiCl2, the recombinant alpha subunit of the Ni-containing alpha2beta2 acetyl-CoA synthase/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (ACS/CODH) catalyzes the synthesis of acetyl-CoA from CO, CoA, and a methyl group donated from the corrinoid-iron-sulfur protein (CoFeSP). The alpha subunit has two conformations (open and closed), and contains a novel [Fe4S4]-[Nip Nid] active site in which the proximal Nip ion is labile. Prior to Ni activation, recombinant apo-alpha contain only an Fe4S4 cluster. Ni-activated alpha subunits exhibit catalytic, spectroscopic and heterogeneity properties typical of alpha subunits contained in ACS/CODH. Evidence presented here indicates that apo-alpha is a monomer whereas Ni-treated alpha oligomerizes, forming dimers and higher molecular weight species including tetramers. No oligomerization occurred when apo-alpha was treated with Cu(II), Zn(II), or Co(II) ions, but oligomerization occurred when apo-alpha was treated with Pt(II) and Pd(II) ions. The dimer accepted only 0.5 methyl group/alpha and exhibited, upon treatment with CO and under reducing conditions, the NiFeC EPR signal quantifying to 0.4 spin/alpha. Dimers appear to consist of two types of alpha subunits, including one responsible for catalytic activity and one that provides a structural scaffold. Higher molecular weight species may be similarly constituted. It is concluded that Ni binding to the A-cluster induces a conformational change in the alpha subunit, possibly to the open conformation, that promotes oligomerization. These interrelated events demonstrate previously unrealized connections between (a) the conformation of the alpha subunit; (b) the metal which occupies the proximal/distal sites of the A-cluster; and (c) catalytic activity.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The final steps in the synthesis of acetyl-CoA by CO dehydrogenase (CODH) have been studied by following the exchange reaction between CoA and the CoA moiety of acetyl-CoA. This reaction had been studied earlier (Pezacka, E., and Wood, H. G. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 1609-1615 and Ramer, W. E., Raybuck, S. A., Orme-Johnson, W. H., and Walsh, C. T. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 4675-4680). The CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange activity was determined at various controlled redox potentials and was found to be activated by a one-electron reduction with half-maximum activity occurring at -486 mV. There is approximately 2000-fold stimulation of the exchange by performing the reaction at -575 mV relative to the rate at -80 mV. Binding of CoA to CODH is not sensitive to the redox potential; therefore, the reductive activation affects some step other than association/dissociation of CoA. We propose that a metal center on CODH with a midpoint reduction potential of less than or equal to -486 mV is activated by a one-electron reduction to cleave the carbonyl-sulfur bond and/or bind the acetyl group of acetyl-CoA. Based on a comparison of the redox dependence of this reaction with that for methylation of CODH (Lu, W-P., Harder, S. R., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3124-3133) and CO2 reduction and formation of the Ni-Fe-C EPR signal (Lindahl, P. A., Münck, E., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3873-3879), we propose that the assembly of the acetyl group of acetyl-CoA, i.e. binding the methyl group of the methylated corrinoid/iron-sulfur protein, binding CO, and methyl migration to form the acetyl-CODH intermediate, occur at the novel Ni-Fe3-4-containing site in CODH. CO has two effects on the CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange: it activates the reaction due to its reductive capacity and its acts as a noncompetitive inhibitor. We also discovered that the CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange was inhibited by nitrous oxide via an oxidative mechanism. In the presence of a low-potential electron donor, CODH becomes a nitrous oxide reductase which catalytically converts N2O to N2. This study combined with earlier results (Lu, W-P., Harder, S. R., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3124-3133) establishes that the two-subunit form of CODH is completely active in all reactions known to be catalyzed by CODH.  相似文献   

14.
Conversion of acetate to methane (aceticlastic methanogenesis) is an ecologically important process carried out exclusively by methanogenic archaea. An important enzyme for this process as well as for methanogenic growth on carbon monoxide is the five-subunit archaeal CO dehydrogenase/acetyl coenzyme A (CoA) synthase multienzyme complex (CODH/ACS) catalyzing both CO oxidation/CO(2) reduction and cleavage/synthesis of acetyl-CoA. Methanosarcina acetivorans C2A contains two very similar copies of a six-gene operon (cdh genes) encoding two isoforms of CODH/ACS (Cdh1 and Cdh2) and a single CdhA subunit, CdhA3. To address the role of the CODH/ACS system in M. acetivorans, mutational as well as promoter/reporter gene fusion analyses were conducted. Phenotypic characterization of cdh disruption mutants (three single and double mutants, as well as the triple mutant) revealed a strict requirement of either Cdh1 or Cdh2 for acetotrophic or carboxidotrophic growth, as well as for autotrophy, which demonstrated that both isoforms are bona fide CODH/ACS. While expression of the Cdh2-encoding genes was generally higher than that of genes encoding Cdh1, both appeared to be regulated differentially in response to growth phase and to changing substrate conditions. While dispensable for growth, CdhA3 clearly affected expression of cdh1, suggesting that it functions in signal perception and transduction rather than in catabolism. The data obtained argue for a functional hierarchy and regulatory cross talk of the CODH/ACS isoforms.  相似文献   

15.
Bender G  Ragsdale SW 《Biochemistry》2011,50(2):276-286
Acetyl-CoA synthase (ACS), a subunit of the bifunctional CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/ACS) complex of Moorella thermoacetica requires reductive activation in order to catalyze acetyl-CoA synthesis and related partial reactions, including the CO/[1-(14)C]-acetyl-CoA exchange reaction. We show that the M. thermoacetica ferredoxin(II) (Fd-II), which harbors two [4Fe-4S] clusters and is an electron acceptor for CODH, serves as a redox activator of ACS. The level of activation depends on the oxidation states of both ACS and Fd-II, which strongly suggests that Fd-II acts as a reducing agent. By the use of controlled potential enzymology, the midpoint reduction potential for the catalytic one-electron redox-active species in the CO/acetyl-CoA exchange reaction is -511 mV, which is similar to the midpoint reduction potential that was earlier measured for other reactions involving ACS. Incubation of ACS with Fd-II and CO leads to the formation of the NiFeC species, which also supports the role of Fd-II as a reductant for ACS. In addition to being a reductant, Fd-II can accept electrons from acetylated ACS, as observed by the increased intensity of the EPR spectrum of reduced Fd-II, indicating that there is a stored electron within an "electron shuttle" in the acetyl-Ni(II) form of ACS. This "shuttle" is proposed to serve as a redox mediator during activation and at different steps of the ACS catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

16.
Acetogenic bacteria, as determined with Clostridium thermoaceticum, synthesize acetate by the acetyl-CoA pathway which involves the reduction of CO2 to a methyl group and then combination of the methyl with CoA and a carbonyl group formed from CO or CO2 (Wood, H.G., Ragsdale, S.W., and Pezacka, E. (1986) Trends Biochem. Sci. 11, 14-18). Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH), the key enzyme in this pathway not only catalyzes the oxidation of CO to CO2 but also the final step, the synthesis of acetyl-CoA from a methyl group, CO, and CoA. Previously, it has been shown that ferredoxin can stimulate exchange of CO with CH3 14COSCoA (Ragsdale, S.W., and Wood, H.G. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 3970-3977). In the present study, it has been observed that ferredoxin and CODH can form an electrostatically stabilized complex. In order to identify the ferredoxin binding region on CODH, the ferredoxin and CODH were cross-linked by using 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide. The cross-linked CODH-ferredoxin adduct was enzymatically as active as the uncross-linked complex. The native CODH and cross-linked CODH-ferredoxin complex were subjected to cyanogen bromide cleavage. By comparison of the high-performance liquid chromatography peptide profiles, it was observed that the mobility of at least one peptide is altered in the CODH-ferredoxin cross-linked complex. The peptide was identified with residues 229-239 of the alpha-subunit of CODH.  相似文献   

17.
Acetylcoenzyme A synthase/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (ACS/CODH) contains two Ni–Fe–S active-site clusters (called A and C) connected by a tunnel through which CO and CO2 migrate. Site-directed mutants A578C, L215F, and A219F were designed to block the tunnel at different points along the region between the two C-clusters. Two other mutant proteins F70W and N101Q were designed to block the region that connects the tunnel at the ββ interface with a water channel also located at that interface. Purified mutant proteins were assayed for Ni/Fe content and examined by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Analyses indicate that same metal clusters found in wild-type (WT) ACS/CODH (i.e., the A-, B-, C-, and probably D-clusters) are properly assembled in the mutant enzymes. Stopped-flow kinetics revealed that these centers in the mutants are rapidly reducible by dithionite but are only slowly reducible by CO, suggesting an impaired ability of CO to migrate through the tunnel to the C-cluster. Relative to the WT enzyme, mutant proteins exhibited little CODH or ACS activity (using CO2 as a substrate). Some ACS activity was observed when CO was a substrate, but not the cooperative CO inhibition effect characteristic of WT ACS/CODH. These results suggest that CO and CO2 enter and exit the enzyme at the water channel along the ββ subunit interface. They also suggest two pathways for CO during synthesis of acetylcoenzyme A, including one in which CO enters the enzyme and migrates through the tunnel before binding at the A-cluster, and another in which CO binds the A-cluster directly from the solvent.  相似文献   

18.
W Shin  P R Stafford  P A Lindahl 《Biochemistry》1992,31(26):6003-6011
Redox titrations of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) from Clostridium thermoaceticum were performed using the reductant CO and the oxidant thionin. Titrations were followed at 420 nm, a wavelength sensitive to redox changes of the iron-sulfur clusters in the enzyme. When CODH was oxidized by just enough thionin to maximize A420, two molecules of CO per mole of CODH dimer (4 equiv/mol) reduced the enzyme fully. Likewise, 4 equiv/mol of thionin oxidized the fully-reduced enzyme to the point where A420 maximized. The four n = 1 redox sites which titrated in this region were designated group I sites. They include at least two iron-sulfur clusters, [Fe/S]A and [Fe/S]B, and two other sites, A' and B'. The [Fe4S4]2+/1+ cluster in CODH is included in this group. [Fe/S]B and B' have reduction potentials (at pH 8) below -480 mV vs NHE; [Fe/S]A and A' have reduction potentials above that value. The reduction potential of either [Fe/S]B or B' is near to the CO/CO2 couple at pH 8 (-622 mV). When CODH was oxidized by more than enough thionin to maximize A420, some of the excess thionin oxidized the so-called group II redox sites. These sites have reduction potentials more positive than group I and do not exhibit changes at 420 nm when titrated. Titration of group II sites required 1-2 equiv/mol. EPR of reduced group II sites exhibited the gav = 1.82 signal. When these sites were oxidized, the only signal present had g values at 2.075, 2.036, and 1.983.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Acetyl-CoA synthase (ACS ACS/CODH CODH/ACS) from Moorella thermoacetica catalyzes the synthesis of acetyl-CoA from CO, CoA, and a methyl group of a corrinoid-iron-sulfur protein (CoFeSP). A time lag prior to the onset of acetyl-CoA production, varying from 4 to 20 min, was observed in assay solutions lacking the low-potential electron-transfer agent methyl viologen (MV). No lag was observed when MV was included in the assay. The length of the lag depended on the concentrations of CO and ACS, with shorter lags found for higher [ACS] and sub-saturating [CO]. Lag length also depended on CoFeSP. Rate profiles of acetyl-CoA synthesis, including the lag phase, were numerically simulated assuming an autocatalytic mechanism. A similar reaction profile was monitored by UV-vis spectrophotometry, allowing the redox status of the CoFeSP to be evaluated during this process. At early stages in the lag phase, Co2+FeSP reduced to Co+FeSP, and this was rapidly methylated to afford CH3-Co3+FeSP. During steady-state synthesis of acetyl-CoA, CoFeSP was predominately in the CH3-Co3+FeSP state. As the synthesis rate declined and eventually ceased, the Co+FeSP state predominated. Three activation reductive reactions may be involved, including reduction of the A- and C-clusters within ACS and the reduction of the cobamide of CoFeSP. The B-, C-, and D-clusters in the subunit appear to be electronically isolated from the A-cluster in the connected subunit, consistent with the ~70 Å distance separating these clusters, suggesting the need for an in vivo reductant that activates ACS and/or CoFeSP.Abbreviations ACS acetyl-CoA synthase, also known as CODH (carbon monoxide dehydrogenase) or CODH/ACS or ACS/CODH - CH3-Co3+FeSP, Co2+FeSP, and Co+FeSP corrinoid-iron-sulfur protein with the cobalamin in the methylated 3+, unmethylated 2+, and unmethylated 1+ states - CoA coenzyme A - DTT dithiothreitol - H-THF or THF tetrahydrofolic acid or tetrahydrofolate - MT methyl transferase - MV methyl viologen  相似文献   

20.
The carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) complex from Methanosarcina thermophila catalyzed the synthesis of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) from CH3I, CO, and coenzyme A (CoA) at a rate of 65 nmol/min/mg at 55 degrees C. The reaction ended after 5 min with the synthesis of 52 nmol of acetyl-CoA per nmol of CODH complex. The optimum temperature for acetyl-CoA synthesis in the assay was between 55 and 60 degrees C; the rate of synthesis at 55 degrees C was not significantly different between pHs 5.5 and 8.0. The rate of acetyl-CoA synthesis was independent of CoA concentrations between 20 microM and 1 mM; however, activity was inhibited 50% with 5 mM CoA. Methylcobalamin did not substitute for CH3I in acetyl-CoA synthesis; no acetyl-CoA or propionyl coenzyme A was detected when sodium acetate or CH3CH2I replaced CH3I in the assay mixture. CO could be replaced with CO2 and titanium(III) citrate. When CO2 and 14CO were present in the assay, the specific activity of the acetyl-CoA synthesized was 87% of the specific activity of 14CO, indicating that CO was preferentially incorporated into acetyl-CoA without prior oxidation to free CO2. Greater than 100 microM potassium cyanide was required to significantly inhibit acetyl-CoA synthesis, and 500 microM was required for 50% inhibition; in contrast, oxidation of CO by the CODH complex was inhibited 50% by approximately 10 microM potassium cyanide.  相似文献   

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