首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Regulation of heart muscle pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase   总被引:31,自引:25,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
1. The activity of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase was assayed by the incorporation of [(32)P]phosphate from [gamma-(32)P]ATP into the dehydrogenase complex. There was a very close correlation between this incorporation and the loss of pyruvate dehydrogenase activity with all preparations studied. 2. Nucleoside triphosphates other than ATP (at 100mum) and cyclic 3':5'-nucleotides (at 10mum) had no significant effect on kinase activity. 3. The K(m) for thiamin pyrophosphate in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction was 0.76mum. Sodium pyrophosphate, adenylyl imidodiphosphate, ADP and GTP were competitive inhibitors against thiamin pyrophosphate in the dehydrogenase reaction. 4. The K(m) for ATP of the intrinsic kinase assayed in three preparations of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase was in the range 13.9-25.4mum. Inhibition by ADP and adenylyl imidodiphosphate was predominantly competitive, but there was nevertheless a definite non-competitive element. Thiamin pyrophosphate and sodium pyrophosphate were uncompetitive inhibitors against ATP. It is suggested that ADP and adenylyl imidodiphosphate inhibit the kinase mainly by binding to the ATP site and that the adenosine moiety may be involved in this binding. It is suggested that thiamin pyrophosphate, sodium pyrophosphate, adenylyl imidodiphosphate and ADP may inhibit the kinase by binding through pyrophosphate or imidodiphosphate moieties at some site other than the ATP site. It is not known whether this is the coenzyme-binding site in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction. 5. The K(m) for pyruvate in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction was 35.5mum. 2-Oxobutyrate and 3-hydroxypyruvate but not glyoxylate were also substrates; all three compounds inhibited pyruvate oxidation. 6. In preparations of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase free of thiamin pyrophosphate, pyruvate inhibited the kinase reaction at all concentrations in the range 25-500mum. The inhibition was uncompetitive. In the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate (endogenous or added at 2 or 10mum) the kinase activity was enhanced by low concentrations of pyruvate (25-100mum) and inhibited by a high concentration (500mum). Activation of the kinase reaction was not seen when sodium pyrophosphate was substituted for thiamin pyrophosphate. 7. Under the conditions of the kinase assay, pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase forms (14)CO(2) from [1-(14)C]pyruvate in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate. Previous work suggests that the products may include acetoin. Acetoin activated the kinase reaction in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate but not with sodium pyrophosphate. It is suggested that acetoin formation may contribute to activation of the kinase reaction by low pyruvate concentrations in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate. 8. Pyruvate effected the conversion of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate into pyruvate dehydrogenase in rat heart mitochondria incubated with 5mm-2-oxoglutarate and 0.5mm-l-malate as respiratory substrates. It is suggested that this effect of pyruvate is due to inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase reaction in the mitochondrion. 9. Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity was inhibited by high concentrations of Mg(2+) (15mm) and by Ca(2+) (10nm-10mum) at low Mg(2+) (0.15mm) but not at high Mg(2+) (15mm).  相似文献   

2.
Tetrahydrothiamin pyrophosphate, an analogue of thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP) in which the thiazolium ring has been reduced to a thiazolidine ring, was prepared by borohydride reduction of TPP. It consists of four stereoisomers, comprising two diastereomers each of which is a racemic mixture, generated by the introduction of two chiral centers on the thiazolidine ring. The major and minor diastereomers were separated and inferred to be of the cis and trans configurations, respectively, from a study of the nuclear Overhauser effects in the 1H NMR spectrum of the simpler tetrahydrothiamin. Tetrahydro-TPP behaves as a mixture of potent inhibitors of the pyruvate decarboxylase (E1) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex from Escherichia coli. The site of binding is probably the TPP-binding site on E1, and the Kd for each of the four stereoisomers was estimated. The cis isomers of tetrahydro-TPP bind more tightly than does TPP, whereas the trans isomers appear to bind with about the same Kd as TPP. Sodium borohydride caused a rapid inhibition of E1 activity in the presence of TPP, believed to be due to reaction of borohydride with enzyme-bound TPP. The experiments are consistent with an enhancement of the reactivity of the thiazole ring of TPP when bound to the catalytic site of E1, which could be due to polarization of the greater than +N=C bond near a hydrophobic or positively charged region of the protein. A spontaneous reactivation occurred after the initial inhibition by borohydride, attributable to a weakly binding inhibitor, not tetrahydro-TPP, being formed at the catalytic site.  相似文献   

3.
Tryptophan synthase, which catalyzes the final step of tryptophan biosynthesis, is a multifunctional protein that requires pyridoxal phosphate for two of its three distinct enzyme activities. Tryptophan synthase from Neurospora crassa, a homodimer of two 75-kDa subunits, was shown to bind 1 mol of pyridoxal phosphate/mol of subunit with a calculated dissociation constant for pyridoxal phosphate of 1.1 microM. The spectral properties of the holoenzyme, apoenzyme, and reconstituted holoenzyme were characterized and compared to those previously established for the heterotetrameric (alpha 2 beta 2) enzyme from Escherichia coli. The Schiff base formed between pyridoxal phosphate and the enzyme was readily reduced by sodium borohydride, but not sodium cyanoborohydride. The active site residue that binds pyridoxal phosphate, labeled by reduction of the Schiff base with tritium-labeled sodium borohydride, was determined to be lysine by high performance liquid chromatography analysis of the protein hydrolysate. A 5400-dalton peptide containing the reduced pyridoxal phosphate moiety was generated by cyanogen bromide treatment, purified and sequenced. The sequence is 85% homologous with the corresponding sequence obtained for yeast tryptophan synthase (Zalkin, H., and Yanofsky, C. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 1491-1500); the lysine derivatized by pyridoxal phosphate is located at the same relative position as that in the yeast and E. coli enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
1. A method was devised for preparing pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase free of thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP), permitting studies of the binding of [35S]TPP to pyruvate dehydrogenase and pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate. The Kd of TPP for pyruvate dehydrogenase was in the range 6.2-8.2 muM, whereas that for pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate was approximately 15 muM; both forms of the complex contained about the same total number of binding sites (500 pmol/unit of enzyme). EDTA completely inhibited binding of TPP; sodium pyrophosphate, adenylyl imidodiphosphate and GTP, which are inhibitors (competitive with TPP) of the overall pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction, did not appreciably affect TPP binding. 2. Initial-velocity patterns of the overall pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction obtained with varying TPP, CoA and NAD+ concentrations at a fixed pyruvate concentration were consistent with a sequential three-site Ping Pong mechanism; in the presence of oxaloacetate and citrate synthase to remove acetyl-CoA (an inhibitor of the overall reaction) the values of Km for NAD+ and CoA were 53+/- 5 muM and 1.9+/-0.2 muM respectively. Initial-velocity patterns observed with varying TPP concentrations at various fixed concentrations of pyruvate were indicative of either a compulsory order of addition of substrates to form a ternary complex (pyruvate-Enz-TPP) or a random-sequence mechanism in which interconversion of ternary intermediates is rate-limiting; values of Km for pyruvate and TPP were 25+/-4 muM and 50+/-10 nM respectively. The Kia-TPP (the dissociation constant for Enz-TPP complex calculated from kinetic plots) was close to the value of Kd-TPP (determined by direct binding studies). 3. Inhibition of the overall pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction by pyrophosphate was mixed non-competitive versus pyruvate and competitive versus TPP; however, pyrophosphate did not alter the calculated value for Kia-TPP, consistent with the lack of effect of pyrophosphate on the Kd for TPP. 4. Pyruvate dehydrogenase catalysed a TPP-dependent production of 14CO2 from [1-14C]pyruvate in the absence of NAD+ and CoA at approximately 0.35% of the overall reaction rate; this was substantially inhibited by phosphorylation of the enzyme both in the presence and absence of acetaldehyde (which stimulates the rate of 14CO2 production two- or three-fold). 5. Pyruvate dehydrogenase catalysed a partial back-reaction in the presence of TPP, acetyl-CoA and NADH. The Km for TPP was 4.1+/-0.5 muM. The partial back-reaction was stimulated by acetaldehyde, inhibited by pyrophosphate and abolished by phosphorylation. 6. Formation of enzyme-bound [14C]acetylhydrolipoate from [3-14C]pyruvate but not from [1-14C]acetyl-CoA was inhibited by phosphorylation. Phosphorylation also substantially inhibited the transfer of [14C]acetyl groups from enzyme-bound [14C]acetylhydrolipoate to TPP in the presence of NADH. 7...  相似文献   

5.
Limited proteolysis of the pyruvate decarboxylase (E1, alpha2beta2) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) multienzyme complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus has indicated the importance for catalysis of a site (Tyr281-Arg282) in the E1alpha subunit (Chauhan, H.J., Domingo, G.J., Jung, H.-I. & Perham, R.N. (2000) Eur. J. Biochem. 267, 7158-7169). This site appears to be conserved in the alpha-subunit of heterotetrameric E1s and multiple sequence alignments suggest that there are additional conserved amino-acid residues in this region, part of a common pattern with the consensus sequence -YR-H-D-YR-DE-. This region lies about 50 amino acids on the C-terminal side of a 30-residue motif previously recognized as involved in binding thiamin diphosphate (ThDP) in all ThDP-dependent enzymes. The role of individual residues in this set of conserved amino acids in the E1alpha chain was investigated by means of site-directed mutagenesis. We propose that particular residues are involved in: (a) binding the 2-oxo acid substrate, (b) decarboxylation of the 2-oxo acid and reductive acetylation of the tethered lipoyl domain in the PDH complex, (c) an "open-close" mechanism of the active site, and (d) phosphorylation by the E1-specific kinase (in eukaryotic PDH and branched chain 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complexes).  相似文献   

6.
When the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli is reduced by NADH and alkylated by N-[14C]ethylmaleimide, 19-20 nmol of N-[14C]ethylmaleimide are bound per mg of complex. This is in accord with the presence of 10 nmol of functional lipoyl moieties per mg of complex as previously reported. Thus the lipoyl groups are all coupled via dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase (E3) to reduction by NADH. As previously reported, the complex reductively acetylated by pyruvate and containing 10 nmol of acetyldihydrolipoyl groups per mg of complex produces about 5 nmol of NADH/mg of complex when challenged with CoA and NAD+ in a fast burst. Under anaerobic conditions a slow secondary process extending over 1 h produces another 5 nmol of NADH/mg of complex. The relationship between the two classes of acetyldihydrolipoyl groups is unknown but could reflect either intrinsic structural inequivalence of lipoyl groups (2/subunit of dihydrolipoyl transacetylase, E2). Alternatively, the acetyldihydrolipoyl groups may undergo reversible isomerization to structurally distinct forms. The purified complex catalyzes the cleavage of acetyl-CoA by two processes. The trace contaminant phosphotransacetylase catalyzes cleavage by phosphate to acetyl-P. The complex itself catalyzes hydrolysis of acetyl-CoA in a reaction that requires all three enzymes, NADH, thiamin pyrophosphate, and the lipoyl groups of E2. The hydrolytic pathway evidently involves overall reversal of the reaction, leading ultimately to the formation of acetyl-thiamin pyrophosphate, which undergoes hydrolysis to acetate.  相似文献   

7.
Bromopyruvate behaves as an active-site-directed inhibitor of the pyruvate decarboxylase (E1) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli. It requires the cofactor thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP) and acts initially as an inhibitor competitive with pyruvate (Ki ca. 90 microM) but then proceeds to react irreversibly with the enzyme, probably with the thiol group of a cysteine residue. E1 catalyzes the decomposition of bromopyruvate, the enzyme becoming inactivated once every 40-60 turnovers. Bromopyruvate also inactivates the intact pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in a TPP-dependent process, but the inhibition is more rapid and is mechanistically different. Under these conditions, bromopyruvate is decarboxylated, and the lipoic acid residues in the lipoate acetyltransferase (E2) component become reductively bromoacetylated. Further bromopyruvate then reacts with the new thiol groups thus generated in the lipoic acid residues, inactivating the complex. If reaction with the lipoic acid residues is prevented by prior treatment of the complex with N-ethylmaleimide in the presence of pyruvate, the mode of inhibition reverts to irreversible reaction with the E1 component. In both types of inhibition of E1, reaction of 1 mol of bromopyruvate/mol of E1 chain is required for complete inactivation, and all the evidence is consistent with reaction taking place at or near the pyruvate binding site.  相似文献   

8.
Purified bovine heart pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was used to investigate the effects of monovalent cations and alpha-ketoisovalerate on pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) kinase inhibition by thiamin pyrophosphate. Initial velocity patterns for thiamin pyrophosphate inhibition were consistent with hyperbolic non-competitive or hyperbolic uncompetitive inhibition at various K+ concentrations between 0 and 120 mM. The Kis, Kid, and Kin for thiamin pyrophosphate were in the range of 0.009 to 5.1 microM over the range of K+ concentrations tested. In the absence of K+, 1 mM alpha-ketoisovalerate had no effect on PDH kinase inhibition by thiamin pyrophosphate, whereas in the presence of 20 mM K+, alpha-ketoisovalerate stimulated PDH kinase activity almost 2-fold over the range of 0-80 microM thiamin pyrophosphate. Half-maximal stimulation by alpha-ketoisovalerate occurred at about 200 microM in the presence of 100 microM thiamin pyrophosphate and 20 mM K+. Similar but less extensive changes occurred in the presence of 100 microM thiamin pyrophosphate and 1 mM NH4+. Initial velocity patterns for PDH kinase inhibition by thiamin pyrophosphate in the presence of 2 mM alpha-ketoisovalerate were mixed noncompetitive, but alpha-ketoisovalerate increased the Vm and Km for adenosine 5'-triphosphate in the presence of inhibitor. In the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate, PDH kinase remained stimulated after chromatography on Sephadex G-25 to remove alpha-ketoisovalerate. The results indicate that acylation of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex by alpha-ketoisovalerate results in PDH kinase stimulation but only in the presence of monovalent cations and thiamin pyrophosphate.  相似文献   

9.
In the progress curve of the reaction of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, a lag phase was observed when the concentration of thiamin diphosphate was lower than usual (about 0.2-1 mM) in the enzyme assay. The length of the lag phase was dependent on thiamin diphosphate concentration, ranging from 0.2 min to 2 min as the thiamin diphosphate concentration varied from 800 nM to 22 nM. The lag phase was also observed in the elementary steps catalyzed by the pyruvate dehydrogenase component. A Km value of 107 nM was found for thiamin diphosphate with respect to the steady-state reaction rate following the lag phase. The pre-steady-state kinetic data indicate that the resulting lag phase was the consequence of a slow holoenzyme formation from apoenzyme and thiamin diphosphate. The thiamin diphosphate can bind to the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in the absence of pyruvate, but the presence of 2 mM pyruvate increases the rate constant of binding from 1.4 X 10(4) M-1 S-1 to 1.3 X 10(5) M-1 S-1 and decreases the rate constant of dissociation from 2.3 X 10(-2) S-1 to 4.1 X 10(-3) S-1. On the other hand, the effect of pyruvate on the thiamin diphosphate binding revealed the existence of a thiamin-diphosphate-independent pyruvate-binding site in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Direct evidence was also obtained with fluorescence techniques for the existence of this binding site and the dissociation constant of pyruvate was found to be 0.38 mM. On the basis of these data we have proposed a random mechanism for the binding of pyruvate and thiamin diphosphate to the complex. Binding of substrates to the enzyme complex caused an increase in the fluorescence of the dansylaziridine-labelled pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, showing that binding of substrates to the complex is accompanied by structural changes.  相似文献   

10.
1. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate is a cofactor essential for the enzymic activity of aminolaevulinate synthetase from Rhodopseudomonas spheroides. It also aids activation of the low-activity enzyme by trisulphides such as cystine trisulphide, whereas inactivation of enzyme is facilitated by its absence. 2. The fluorescence spectrum of purified high-activity enzyme is that expected for a pyridoxal phosphate--Schiff base, but the firmly bound cofactor does not appear to be at the active centre. In dilute solutions of enzyme this grouping is inaccessible to nucleophiles such as glycine, hydroxylamine, borohydride and cyanide, at pH 7.4. 3. An active-centre Schiff base is formed between enzyne and added pyridoxal phosphate, which is accessible to nucleophiles. Concentrated solutions of this enzyme--Schiff base on treatment with glycine yield apo- and semi-apoenzyme, which can re-bind pyridoxal phosphate. 4. Two types of binding of pyridoxal phosphate are distinguishable in dilute solution of enzyme, but these become indistinguishable when concentrated solutions are treated with cofactor. A change occurs in the susceptibility towards borohydride of the fluorescence of the "structural" pyridoxal phosphate. 5. One or two molecules of cofactor are bound per subunit of mol. wt. 50 000 in semiapo- or holo-enzyme. The fluorescence of pyridoxamine phosphate covalently bound to enzyme also indicates one to two nmol of reducible Schiff base per 7000 units of activity in purified and partially purified samples of enzyme. 6. Cyanide does not convert high-activity into low-activity enzyme, but with the enzyme-pyridoxal phosphate complex it forms a yellow fluorescent derivative that is enzymically active.  相似文献   

11.
The pyruvate dehydrogenase component of the bovine kidney pyruvate dehydrogenase complex has two thiamin-PP binding sites per α2β2 tetramer. Titration of these binding sites with the transition state analog, thiamin thiazolone pyrophosphate, strongly inhibits phosphorylation of pyruvate dehydrogenase by pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase and ATP. The analog has little effect, if any, on dephosphorylation of phosphorylated pyruvate dehydrogenase by pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase. Phosphorylation of pyruvate dehydrogenase inactivates the enzyme, but does not significantly affect the thiamin-PP binding sites. It appears that phosphorylation produces a conformational change in pyruvate dehydrogenase that displaces a catalytic group (or groups) at the active center.  相似文献   

12.
The derivative of vitamin B1, thiamin pyrophosphate, is a cofactor of enzymes performing catalysis in pathways of energy production. In alpha2beta2-heterotetrameric human pyruvate dehydrogenase, this cofactor is used to cleave the Calpha-C(=O) bond of pyruvate followed by reductive acetyl transfer to lipoyl-dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase. The dynamic nonequivalence of two, otherwise chemically equivalent, catalytic sites has not yet been understood. To understand the mechanism of action of this enzyme, we determined the crystal structure of the holo-form of human pyruvate dehydrogenase at 1.95-A resolution. We propose a model for the flip-flop action of this enzyme through a concerted approximately 2-A shuttle-like motion of its heterodimers. Similarity of thiamin pyrophosphate binding in human pyruvate dehydrogenase with functionally related enzymes suggests that this newly defined shuttle-like motion of domains is common to the family of thiamin pyrophosphate-dependent enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
Human pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1), a heterotetramer (alpha2beta2), is the first component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC). E1 catalyzes the thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP)-dependent decarboxylation of pyruvate and the reductive acetylation of the dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase component. Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to recreate three point mutations in the alpha subunit identified in E1-deficient patients, M181V, R349H, and P188L (P188A mutant E1 was used because of the very low level of expression of P188L), to investigate the functional roles of these three amino acid residues. P188A mutant E1 was much less thermostable than the wild-type E1. The kcats of M181V and P188A mutant E1s determined in the PDC reaction were 38 and 24% of that of the wild-type enzyme, respectively. The apparent Km for TPP for M181V increased significantly (approx 250-fold when determined in the PDC assay), while the apparent Km for pyruvate increased by only about 3-fold. In contrast, P188A had similar Kms for the coenzyme and the substrate as the wild-type. Km values for R349H were not determined due to the extremely low activity of this mutant (1.2% of the wild-type E1-specific activity measured in the PDC assay). Wild-type E1 displayed a lag phase in the progress curve of the PDC reaction measured in the presence of low TPP concentrations (below 1 microM) only. All mutants had a lag phase that was not eliminated even at very high TPP concentrations, suggesting modifications in the conformation of the active site. Kinetic analysis indicated thiamin 2-thiothiazolone pyrophosphate (ThTTPP) to be an intermediate analog for wild-type human E1. M181V required a higher concentration of ThTTPP for inactivation than the wild-type and P188A E1s. The results of circular dichroism spectropolarimetry in the far UV region indicated that there were no major changes in the secondary structure of M181V, P188A, and R349H E1s. These mutant enzymes exhibited negative dichroic spectra at about 330 nm only in the presence of high TPP concentrations. This study suggests that arginine-349 is critical for E1's activity, methionine-181 is involved in the binding of TPP, and proline-188 is necessary for structural integrity of E1.  相似文献   

14.
The crystal structure of the recombinant thiamin diphosphate-dependent E1 component from the Escherichia coli pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex (PDHc) has been determined at a resolution of 1.85 A. The E. coli PDHc E1 component E1p is a homodimeric enzyme and crystallizes with an intact dimer in an asymmetric unit. Each E1p subunit consists of three domains: N-terminal, middle, and C-terminal, with all having alpha/beta folds. The functional dimer contains two catalytic centers located at the interface between subunits. The ThDP cofactors are bound in the "V" conformation in clefts between the two subunits (binding involves the N-terminal and middle domains), and there is a common ThDP binding fold. The cofactors are completely buried, as only the C2 atoms are accessible from solution through the active site clefts. Significant structural differences are observed between individual domains of E1p relative to heterotetrameric multienzyme complex E1 components operating on branched chain substrates. These differences may be responsible for reported alternative E1p binding modes to E2 components within the respective complexes. This paper represents the first structural example of a functional pyruvate dehydrogenase E1p component from any species. It also provides the first representative example for the entire family of homodimeric (alpha2) E1 multienzyme complex components, and should serve as a model for this class of enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
The regulatory effects of alpha-ketoisovalerate on purified bovine heart pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and endogenous pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase were investigated. Incubation of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex with 0.125 to 10 mM alpha-ketoisovalerate caused an initial lag in enzymatic activity, followed by a more linear but inhibited rate of NADH production. Incubation with 0.0125 or 0.05 mM alpha-ketoisovalerate caused pyruvate dehydrogenase inhibition, but did not cause the initial lag in pyruvate dehydrogenase activity. Gel electrophoresis and fluorography demonstrated the incorporation of acyl groups from alpha-keto[2-14C]isovalerate into the dihydrolipoyl transacetylase component of the enzyme complex. Acylation was prevented by pyruvate and by arsenite plus NADH. Endogenous pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity was stimulated specifically by K+, in contrast to previous reports, and kinase stimulation by K+ correlated with pyruvate dehydrogenase inactivation. Maximum kinase activity in the presence of K+ was inhibited 62% by 0.1 mM thiamin pyrophosphate, but was inhibited only 27% in the presence of 0.1 mM thiamin pyrophosphate and 0.1 mM alpha-ketoisovalerate. Pyruvate did not affect kinase inhibition by thiamin pyrophosphate at either 0.05 or 2 mM. The present study demonstrates that alpha-ketoisovalerate acylates heart pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and suggests that acylation prevents thiamin pyrophosphate-mediated kinase inhibition.  相似文献   

16.
Genetic defects in pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) cause lactic acidosis, neurological deficits, and often early death. Most mutations of PDC are localized in the alpha subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1) component. We have kinetically characterized a patient's missense mutation alphaH44R in E1alpha by creating and purifying three recombinant human E1s (alphaH44R, alphaH44Q, and alphaH44A). Substitutions at histidine-15 resulted in decreased V(max) values (6% alphaH44R; 30% alphaH44Q; 90% alphaH44A) while increasing K(m) values for thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) compared to wild-type (alphaH44R, 3-fold; alphaH44Q, 7-fold; alphaH44A, 10-fold). This suggests that the volume of the residue at site 15 is important for TPP binding and substitution by a residue with a longer side chain disrupts the active site more than the TPP binding site. The rates of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of alphaH44R E1 by E1-kinase and phospho-E1 phosphatase, respectively, were similar to that of the wild-type E1 protein. These results provide a biochemical basis for altered E1 function in the alphaH44R E1 patient.  相似文献   

17.
Inactivation of formate dehydrogenase by formaldehyde, pyridoxal and pyridoxal phosphate was studied. The effects of concentrations of the modifying agents, substrates, products and inhibitors on the extent of the enzyme inactivation were examined. A complete formate dehydrogenase inactivation by pyridoxal, pyridoxal, phosphate and formaldehyde is achieved by the blocking of 2, 5 and 13 lysine residues per enzyme subunit, respectively. The coenzymes do not protect formate dehydrogenase against inactivation. In the case of modification by pyridoxal and pyridoxal phosphate a complete maintenance of the enzyme activity and specific protection of one lysine residue per enzyme subunit is observed during formation of a binary formate-enzyme complex, or a ternary enzyme--NAD--azide complex. One lysine residue is supposed to be located at the formate-binding site of the formate dehydrogenase active center.  相似文献   

18.
T B Patel  M S Olson 《Biochemistry》1982,21(18):4259-4265
The regulation of the branched chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex by covalent modification was investigated in rat liver mitochondria. Depletion of intramitochondrial calcium and magnesium caused an inactivation of the branched chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex. Following inactivation of the branched chain complex, addition of calcium or magnesium ions separately to incubations of mitochondria only partially reactivated the enzyme complex. However, simultaneous addition of calcium and magnesium activated the branched chain enzyme complex rapidly and nearly completely. Mitochondrial incubations were performed in the presence of [32P]phosphate under conditions known to activate or to inactivate the branched chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex. Evidence demonstrating that [32P]-phosphate was incorporated into two major protein bands separated in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels of the mitochondrial incubations is presented. Migration of the labeled mitochondrial protein bands in the gel system corresponded exactly to the migration of the alpha subunit of the purified heart-derived pyruvate dehydrogenase (decarboxylase, E1) and the alpha subunit of the purified kidney-derived branched chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase (decarboxylase, E1). Furthermore, when the measured activity of the branched chain complex was minimized, the amount of [32P]phosphate incorporated into the alpha chain of the branched chain enzyme was maximal. Conversely, incubation conditions which activated maximally the enzyme complex minimized the [32P]phosphate incorporation into the alpha subunit of the branched chain dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

19.
A 4175-bp EcoRI fragment of DNA that encodes the alpha and beta chains of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (lipoamide) component (E1) of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus has been cloned in Escherichia coli. Its nucleotide sequence was determined. Open reading frames (pdhA, pdhB) corresponding to the E1 alpha subunit (368 amino acids, Mr 41,312, without the initiating methionine residue) and E1 beta subunit (324 amino acids, Mr 35,306, without the initiating methionine residue) were identified and confirmed with the aid of amino acid sequences determined directly from the purified polypeptide chains. The E1 beta gene begins just 3 bp downstream from the E1 alpha stop codon. It is followed, after a longer gap of 73 bp, by the start of another but incomplete open reading frame that, on the basis of its known amino acid sequence, encodes the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase (E2) component of the complex. All three genes are preceded by potential ribosome-binding sites and the gene cluster is located immediately downstream from a region of DNA showing numerous possible promoter sequences. The E1 alpha and E1 beta subunits of the B. stearothermophilus pyruvate dehydrogenase complex exhibit substantial sequence similarity with the E1 alpha and E1 beta subunits of pyruvate and branched-chain 2-oxo-acid dehydrogenase complexes from mammalian mitochondria and Pseudomonas putida. In particular, the E1 alpha chain contains the highly conserved sequence motif that has been found in all enzymes utilizing thiamin diphosphate as cofactor.  相似文献   

20.
Pyruvate is formed on incubation of l-cysteine with acetone powder preparations of Acacia georginae but in the presence of cyanide, β-cyanoalanine is produced and pyruvate production is highly depressed. The pH optimum for pyruvate production is 8·5. In the presence of fluoride (1·5 mM), the pH profile is unchanged and in the presence of cyanide (1·5 mM), minimal pyruvate production occurs at pH 8·5. Although addition of pyridoxal phosphate had no influence on pyruvate or β-Cyanoalanine production, these processes were prevented by sodium borohydride, an inhibitor of pyridoxal enzymes. Neither l-serine nor O-acetyl-l-serine serve as alternative substrates for pyruvate production. β-Fluoroalanine was not detected on incubating fluoride with an enzyme preparation from A. georginae acetone powders.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号