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1.
The acetyl-CoA:acetoacetate CoA-transferase of Escherichia coli has the subunit structure α2β2 The enzyme contains six sulfhydryl groups, one per α chain and two per β chain, and no disulfides. The rates and extent of sulfhydryl group reactivity with 5,5′-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) were compared in the free enzyme, the enzyme-CoA intermediate in the catalytic pathway, and a substrate analog-enzyme Michaelis complex. The analog used was acetylaminodesthio-CoA, a competitive inhibitor with respect to acetyl-CoA; the analog is not a substrate. The reactions were studied in the presence and absence of 10% glycerol. In the absence of glycerol, one sulfhydryl group reacted rapidly in the free enzyme and enzyme-CoA intermediate; relative to the free enzyme, the rate and number of subsequently reacting sulfhydryl groups were increased in the enzyme-CoA intermediate. In the presence of 10% glycerol, one sulfhydryl group reacted rapidly in the free enzyme, while two reacted rapidly in the enzyme-CoA compound; the rates and extents of subsequently reacting sulfhydryl groups were also enhanced in the enzyme-CoA compound. The data strongly suggested subunit interactions in the free enzyme and intermediate; glycerol abolished those interactions in the enzyme-CoA intermediate. In the absence of glycerol, sulfhydryl group reactivity in the Michaelis complex, enzyme-acetylaminodesthio-CoA, was similar to that in the free enzyme with one exception: One of the more slowly reacting sulfhydryl groups in the free enzyme reacted at a rate characteristic of the enzyme-CoA intermediate. The results obtained with N-ethylmaleimide were qualitatively similar. The fractional inactivation of the enzyme with N-ethylmaleimide as a function of sulfhydryl groups modified and the subunit location of those sulfhydryl groups indicated that the same sulfhydryl groups react in both enzyme species; however, those sulfhydryl groups reacted more rapidly in the enzyme-CoA compound. The data indicate both subunit interactions in the enzyme and characteristic conformational changes upon formation of an acyl-CoA-enzyme Michaelis complex and the enzyme-CoA intermediate.  相似文献   

2.
Diamine oxidase from Euphorbia characias latex contains two sulfhydryl groups per mole of dimeric enzyme. The sulfhydryl groups are unreactive in the native enzyme but can be readily titrated by 4,4′-dithiodipyridine after protein denaturation, or anaerobically in the presence of the amine substrate. In the presence of both substrates (diamine and oxygen) they react sluggishly. The sulfhydryl groups show different reactivity toward various reagents, but in every case their modification inhibits catalytic activity. The insensitivity of the native enzyme to specific reagents suggests that the sulfhydryl groups are positioned in the interior of the protein and shielded from the solvent. Their reactivity in the presence of the amine substrate could be attributed to a conformational change occurring upon substrate binding or after substrate oxidation.  相似文献   

3.
meso-α,?-Diaminopimelate D-dehydrogenase was inhibited by sulfhydryl reagents such as p-chloromercuribenzoate and HgCl2. Two sulfhydryl groups were titrated per molecule in the presence and absence of 6 M guanidine hydrochloride: the enzyme contained one sulfhydryl group per subunit. Modification of the sulfhydryl groups with p-chloromercuribenzoate, 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), 4,4'-dithiopyridine, N-ethylmaleimide, and iodoacetic acid was accompanied by a loss of enzyme activity. However, modification of sulfhydryl groups of the enzyme with cyanide did not affect the activity. Thus, the introduction of bulky or charged substituents to sulfhydryl groups decreased the catalytic activity of the enzyme, but modification of the groups with the small and uncharged group, a cyano group, did not. The sulfhydryl groups did not play an essential role in catalysis.  相似文献   

4.
Aspartase (L-aspartate ammonia-lyase, EC 4.3.1.1) of Escherichia coli W contains 38 half-cystine residues per tetrameric enzyme molecule. Two sulfhydryl groups were modified with N-ethylmaleimide or 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) per subunit, while 8.3 sulfhydryl groups were titrated with p-mercuribenzoic acid. In the presence of 4 M guanidine - HCl, 8.6 sulfhydryl groups reacted with DTNB per subunit. Aspartase was inactivated by various sulfhydryl reagents following pseudo-first-order kinetics. Upon modification of one sulfhydryl group per subunit with N-Ethylmaleimide, 85% of the original activity was lost; a complete inactivation was attained concomitant with the modification of two sulfhydryl groups. These results indicate that one or two sulfhydryl groups are essential for enzyme activity. L-Aspartate and DL-erythro-beta-hydroxyaspartate markedly protected the enzyme against N-ethylmaleimide-inactivation. Only the compounds having an amino group at the alpha-position exhibited protection, indicating that the amino group of the substrate contributes to the protection of sulfhydryl groups of the enzyme. Examination of enzymatic properties after N-ethylmaleimide modification revealed that 5-fold increase in the Km value for L-aspartate and a shift of the optimum pH for the activity towards acidic pH were brought about by the modification, while neither dissociation into subunits nor aggregation occurred. These results indicate that the influence of the sulfhydryl group modification is restricted to the active site or its vicinity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
This paper deals with the search for specific inhibitors or activators of the mitochondrial phospholipase A2. Convincing evidence for the existence of proteins in the mitochondrial or cytosolic fraction that function as specific regulators of this enzyme was not obtained. The enzymatic activity appeared to be inhibited at low substrate concentrations by lipocortin isolated from human monocytes. However, at higher substrate concentrations, the inhibition disappeared, suggesting either that lipocortin sequestered the phospholipid substrate or that the putative inactive complex of enzyme and lipocortin dissociated in the presence of excess phospholipids. The hydrolysis of the neutral phospholipid phosphatidylethanolamine was stimulated by the presence of cardiolipin and phosphatidylglycerol. It is unlikely that this is caused merely by the negative charge of these phospholipids, since other negatively charged phospholipids did not show this effect. Using a phospholipid extract from mitochondria as substrate, the enzymatic activity as a function of the Ca2+ concentration was determined. Only one enzyme activity plateau was observed. The calculated KCa2+ value of 0.05 mM suggests that the mitochondrial phospholipase A2 could be regulated strictly by the modulation of the free Ca2+ concentration in vivo. The two activity plateaus observed previously upon variation of the Ca2+ concentration using phosphatidylethanolamine as substrate could be explained by a Ca2+-induced transition of the phospholipid structure.  相似文献   

6.
Purified ferrochelatase (protoheme ferrolyase; EC 4.99.1.1) from the bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides was examined to determine the roles of cationic and sulfhydryl residues in substrate binding. Reaction of the enzyme sulfhydryl residues with N-ethylmaleimide or monobromobimane resulted in a rapid loss of enzyme activity. Ferrous iron, but not porphyrin substrate, had a protective effect against inactivation by these two reagents. Quantitation with 3H-labeled N-ethylmaleimide revealed that inactivation required one to two sulfhydryl groups to be modified. Modification of arginyl residues with either 2,3-butanedione or camphorquinone 10-sulfonate resulted in a loss of ferrochelatase activity. A kinetic analysis of the modified enzyme showed that the Km for ferrous iron was not altered but that the Km for the porphyrin substrate was increased. These data suggested that arginyl residues may be involved in porphyrin binding, possibly via charge pair interactions between the arginyl residue and the anionic porphyrin propionate side chain. Modification of lysyl residues had no effect on enzyme activity. We also examined the ability of bacterial ferrochelatase to use various 2,4-disubstituted porphyrins as substrates. We found that 2,4-bis-acetal- and 2,4-disulfonate deuteroporphyrins were effective substrates for the purified bacterial enzyme and that N-methylprotoporphyrin was an effective inhibitor of the enzyme. Our data for the ferrochelatase of R. sphaeroides are compared with previously published data for the eucaryotic enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
3-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase is a lipid-requiring enzyme with an absolute requirement of lecithin for function. The enzyme contains two sulfhydryl groups per monomer. Modification of the more reactive sulfhydryl group with N-ethylmaleimide resulted in inactivation of the enzyme and modification of coenzyme-binding characteristics [McIntyre, J. O., Fleer, E. A. M. and Fleischer, S. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 5135-5141]. The present study further investigates the function of the sulfhydryl groups by utilizing chemical derivatization techniques. The reactive sulfhydryl was derivatized first with 3,3'-dithiobis(6-nitrobenzoic acid) (Ellman's reagent) to form the S-(carboxynitrophenylthio) derivative which could then be replaced with cyanide to form the S-cyanylated enzyme. We find that derivatizing the essential sulfhydryl group leads to some loss of activity. The effect appears to be steric since a larger derivatizing group gives greater loss of activity. The normal enzyme is inhibited approximately 50% in excess substrate. Derivatization of the reactive sulfhydryl group results in loss of this substrate inhibition, the modified enzyme being at least three-fold more active at high substrate concentrations; the activity increases from 18% to 54% and from 1% to 4% of maximal activity for the S-cyanylated and S-(carboxynitrophenylthio) enzyme derivatives, respectively. Cyanylation results in complete loss of fluorescence energy transfer from tryptophan to NADH at low salt concentration but is normal in the presence of 100mM NaCl. However, the binding constant of the coenzyme is decreased only several-fold in the cyanylated enzyme as studied by fluorescence quenching. The cyanylated enzyme formed tight ternary complexes (spin-labeled NADH-monomethylmalonate) (spin-labeled NAD-sulfite) similar to that formed by the normal enzyme. The spin label is highly immobilized, but the hyperfine splitting values differ somewhat from the normal enzyme. We conclude that the reactive sulfhydryl is close to the active site of 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase but is not involved in the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
Bovine cardiac glycogen-free glycogen synthase I reacts with oxidized glutathione at low temperature to partially inactivate the enzyme. Evidence is presented that a mixed disulfide between glutathione and the enzyme is formed in this reaction. A short incubation of the GSSG-treated enzyme with dithiothreitol restores full enzyme activity. The reaction with GSSG is pH dependent and the product is quite stable at neutral pH. Oxidation of one sulfhydryl group in glycogen synthase is associated with a loss of 60-70% of the enzyme activity. Further modification of protein sulfhydryls has less effect on the enzyme activity. Other low molecular weight disulfides also inactivate glycogen synthase and treatment with [35S]cystine to produce a 40% loss of enzyme activity gave rise to a single major radioactive peptide after cyanogen bromide digestion. Thus the GSSG-mediated inactivation of glycogen synthase apparently occurs through a single reactive sulfhydryl group that forms a mixed disulfide with low molecular weight disulfide molecules. Uridine 5'-diphosphate glucose and glycogen prevent the inactivation of glycogen-free glycogen synthase with GSSG, and glucose 6-phosphate retards the rate of inactivation. Reduction and reactivation of the GSSG-oxidized glycogen synthase is not affected by glycogen and it occurs readily at neutral pH with dithiothreitol, mercaptoethanol, or cysteamine. Oxidation of the reactive sulfhydryl group with GSSG has no effect on the rate of glycogen synthase phosphorylation by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

9.
The inactivation of porcine heart thiolase I with the disulfide reagents 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) (DTNB) and 2,2- and 4,4-dithiopyridine in 0.2 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.5, follows second-order kinetics with rate constants of 2.2 X 10(2), 25 X 10(2), and 5.8 X 10(2) M-1 min-1, respectively. Stoichiometric concentrations of the thiol-oxidizing reagent diethyl azodicarboxylate inactivate thiolase in less than 1 min at pH 7.5. The presence of saturating concentrations of the substrate acetoacetyl coenzyme A or the formation of the acetyl enzyme (a normal catalytic intermediate) results in a significant protection against the inactivation of thiolase by DTNB, 2,2-dithiopyridine, and diethyl azodicarboxylate. All five sulfhydryl residues of native thiolase react with either of the dipyridyl disulfides, but only the equivalent of 3.2 residues react with DTNB even at high concentrations and prolonged incubation times. The reaction of thiolase with DTNB leads to the formation of 1.0-1.4 mol of intrachain disulfide and 0.65 mol of mixed disulfides. After inactivation of thiolase with an equimolar concentration of diethyl azodicarboxylate, 1.2 mol of intrachain disulfide per subunit is found. No cross-linking between the subunits occurs as a result of the reaction of thiolase with DTNB or diethyl azodicarboxylate. The DTNB-inactivated enzyme can be reactivated with excess dithiothreitol while the diethyl azodicarboxylate inactivated enzyme is totally resistant to reactivation by dithiothreitol. There appear to be at least two different ways of forming inactive, oxidized enzyme products depending on the oxidant used, suggesting the possibility of multiple sulfhydryl groups at or near the active site.  相似文献   

10.
Flavin-dependent sulfhydryl oxidases represent a newly discovered family of proteins with a range of cellular locations and putative roles. The avian and mammalian proteins can catalyze the direct oxidation of protein cysteine residues to disulfides with the reduction of dioxygen to hydrogen peroxide. Although thiols interfere with the peroxidase-mediated quantitation of hydrogen peroxide, a very sensitive, continuous fluorescence assay of the sulfhydryl oxidases can be devised with careful selection of thiol substrate concentration and fluorogen. Purified avian enzyme (or crude chicken egg white) was used for these experiments. Homovanillic acid was found to be a suitable fluorogen in the presence of 300 microM thiols from either dithiothreitol or reduced ribonuclease A. High concentrations of horseradish peroxidase minimized the effects of contaminating catalase in biological samples. Using fluorescence microcells, the assay could detect 15fmol of avian sulfhydryl oxidase and the rates were linearly dependent on enzyme concentration up to 6nM. Aspects of the interaction among thiols, homovanillic acid, and peroxidase are discussed which limit the sensitivity of the assay and require that care is exercised in the application of this new procedure. Finally, the assay is used to show that there is sulfhydryl oxidase activity in a number of secretory fluids including human tears.  相似文献   

11.
Lysosomal phospholipase A2 (LPLA2) is characterized by increased activity toward zwitterionic phospholipid liposomes containing negatively charged lipids under acidic conditions. The effect of anionic lipids on LPLA2 activity was investigated. Mouse LPLA2 activity was assayed as C2-ceramide transacylation. Sulfatide incorporated into liposomes enhanced LPLA2 activity under acidic conditions and was weakened by NaCl or increased pH. Amiodarone, a cationic amphiphilic drug, reduced LPLA2 activity. LPLA2 exhibited esterase activity when p-nitro-phenylbutyrate (pNPB) was used as a substrate. Unlike the phospholipase A2 activity, the esterase activity was detected over wide pH range and not inhibited by NaCl or amiodarone. Presteady-state kinetics using pNPB were consistent with the formation of an acyl-enzyme intermediate. C2-ceramide was an acceptor for the acyl group of the acyl-enzyme but was not available as the acyl group acceptor when dispersed in liposomes containing amiodarone. Cosedimentation of LPLA2 with liposomes was enhanced in the presence of sulfatide and was reduced by raising NaCl, amiodarone, or pH in the reaction mixture. LPLA2 adsorption to negatively charged lipid membrane surfaces through an electrostatic attraction, therefore, enhances LPLA2 enzyme activity toward insoluble substrates. Thus, anionic lipids present within lipid membranes enhance the rate of phospholipid hydrolysis by LPLA2 at lipid-water interfaces.—Abe, A., and J. A. Shayman. The role of negatively charged lipids in lysosomal phospholipase A2 function.  相似文献   

12.
We have probed a cysteine residue that confers resistance to tetrodotoxin (TTX) block in heart Na channels, with membrane-impermeant, cysteine-specific, methanethiosulfonate (MTS) analogs. Covalent addition of a positively charged group to the cysteinyl sulfhydryl reduced pore conductance by 87%. The effect was selectively prevented by treatment with TTX, but not saxitoxin (STX). Addition of a negatively charged group selectively inhibited STX block without affecting TTX block. These results agree with models that place an exposed cysteinyl sulfhydryl in the TTX site adjacent to the mouth of the pore, but do not support the contention that STX and TTX are interchangeable. The surprising differences between the two toxins are consistent with the hypothesis that the toxin-receptor complex can assume different conformations when STX or TTX bound.  相似文献   

13.
Three binding sites on highly purified lysosomal beta-glucosidase from human placenta were identified by studies of the effects of interactions of various enzyme modifiers. The negatively charged lipids, taurocholate and phosphatidylserine, were shown to be noncompetitive, nonessential activators of 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucoside hydrolysis. Similar results were observed using the natural substrate, glucosyl ceramide, and low concentrations of taurocholate (less than 1.8 mM) or phosphatidylserine (0.5 mM). However, higher concentrations resulted in a complex partial inhibition of glucosyl ceramide hydrolysis. Increasing concentrations of phosphatidylserine obviated the effects of taurocholate, suggesting that these compounds compete for a common binding site on the enzyme. Glucosyl sphingosine and its N-hexyl derivative were potent noncompetitive inhibitors of the enzyme activity using either substrate. Taurocholate (or phosphatidylserine) and glucosyl sphingosine were shown to be mutually exclusive, indicating competition for a common binding site. In contrast, octyl- and dodecyl-beta-glucosides were linear-mixed-type inhibitors of glucosyl ceramide or 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucoside hydrolysis, indicating at least two binding sites on the enzyme. Inhibition by these alkyl beta-glucosides was observed only in the presence of taurocholate or phosphatidylserine. The competitive component [Ki (slope)] for the two alkyl beta-glucosides decreased with increasing alkyl chain length, and was unaffected by increasing taurocholate or phosphatidylserine concentration. The noncompetitive component [Ki (intercept)] was nearly identical for both alkyl beta-glucosides and was decreased by increasing taurocholate or phosphatidylserine concentration. These results indicated that the negatively charged lipids and alkyl beta-glucosides were not mutually exclusive, but interacted with different binding sites on the enzyme. Gluconolactone was shown to protect the enzyme from inhibition by the catalytic site-directed covalent inhibitor, conduritol B indicating an interaction at a common binding site. In the presence of substrate, taurocholate facilitated the inhibition of gluconolactone or conduritol B epoxide. These studies indicated that lysosomal beta-glucosidase had at least three binding sites: (i) a catalytic site which cleaves the beta-glucosidic moiety, (ii) an aglycon site which binds the acyl or alkyl moieties of substrates and some inhibitors, and (iii) a hydrophobic site which interacts with negatively charged lipids and facilitates enzyme catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
Previous reports have demonstrated that aconitase has a single reactive sulfhydryl at or near the active site (Johnson, P. G., Waheed, A., Jones, L., Glaid, A. J., and Gawron, O. (1977) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 74, 384-389). On the basis of experiments with phenacyl bromide in which enzyme activity was abolished while substrate afforded protection, it was concluded that this group was an essential sulfhydryl. We have further examined the reactivity of this group and confirmed the result that, when reagents with bulky groups (e.g. N-ethylmaleimide or phenacyl bromide) modify the protein at the reactive sulfhydryl, activity is lost. However, when smaller groups, e.g. the SCH3 from methylmethanethiosulfonate or the CH2CONH2 from iodoacetamide, are introduced, there is only partial (50%) or no loss of activity. Experiments were performed to obtain evidence that these reagents are modifying the same residue. Methylmethanethio-sulfonate-treated enzyme showed an increase in the Km for citrate from 200 to 330 microM. EPR spectra were taken of the reduced N-ethylmaleimide- and iodoacetamide-modified enzyme in the presence of substrate. The former gave a spectrum typical of the substrate-free enzyme, while the spectrum of the latter was identical to enzyme with bound substrate. We, therefore, conclude that modification of this sulfhydryl affects activity by interfering with the binding of substrate to the active site and is not essential in the catalytic process.  相似文献   

15.
《Biophysical journal》2020,118(4):957-966
Diacylglycerol kinase ε (DGKε) is a membrane-bound enzyme that catalyzes the ATP-dependent phosphorylation of diacylglycerol to form phosphatidic acid (PA) in the phosphatidylinositol cycle. DGKε lacks a putative regulatory domain and has recently been reported to be regulated by highly curved membranes. To further study the effect of other membrane properties as a regulatory mechanism of DGKε, our work reports the effect of negatively charged phospholipids on DGKε activity and substrate acyl chain specificity. These studies were conducted using purified DGKε and detergent-free phospholipid aggregates, which present a more suitable model system to access the impact of membrane physical properties on membrane-active enzymes. The structural properties of the different model membranes were studied by means of differential scanning calorimetry and 31P-NMR. It is shown that the enzyme is inhibited by a variety of negatively charged phospholipids. However, PA, which is a negatively charged phospholipid and the product of DGKε catalyzed reaction, showed a varied regulatory effect on the enzyme from being an activator to an inhibitor. The type of feedback regulation of DGKε by PA depends on the particular PA molecular species as well as the physical properties of the membrane that the enzyme binds to. In the presence of highly packed PA-rich domains, the enzyme is activated. However, its acyl chain specificity is only observed in liposomes containing 1,2-dioleoyl PA in the presence of Ca2+. It is proposed that to endow the enzyme with its substrate acyl chain specificity, a highly dehydrated (hydrophobic) membrane interface is needed. The presence of an overlap of mechanisms to regulate DGKε ensures proper phosphatidylinositol cycle function regardless of the trigged stimulus and represents a sophisticated and specialized manner of membrane-enzyme regulation.  相似文献   

16.
A number of IgG monoclonal antibodies against L. mesenteroides glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) have been prepared. Four of the antibodies form 1:1 enzyme-antibody complexes which are stabilized in the presence of glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) and have greatly reduced enzyme activity. In the absence of G6P, the 1:1 complexes convert gradually to a more active multimeric form. Reduction of the IgG inter-heavy chain disulfides partially relieves inhibition and removes the G6P requirement for stability. F(ab')2 fragments of one of the antibodies behave similarly to the intact IgG. Reduction of the disulfides in the G6PDH-F(ab')2 complex leads to complete recovery of activity. The activity of complexes of G6PDH with reduced antibodies or Fab with digoxin bound to the antibody or Fab sulfhydryl groups can be modulated with antibodies to digoxin. The anti-G6PDH antibodies bridge two identical epitopes of this two subunit enzyme and simulate the function of regulatory subunits in which anti-digoxin acts as an activator. The system can be used to provide a sensitive homogeneous immunoassay for digoxin.  相似文献   

17.
Certain phospholipase A2 enzymes (E.C.3.1.1.4) selectively inhibit neurotransmitter release from cholinergic nerve terminals. Both specific acceptor proteins and the physical state of nerve terminal phospholipids have been implicated in studies of the mechanism of phospholipase neurotoxin action. Here we have examined the effects of charge on a micellar phospholipid substrate by comparing the enzyme activity and binding of two neurotoxic phospholipases (beta-bungarotoxin and crotoxin) with other non-neurotoxic phospholipases. This has been achieved by altering either the phospholipid or the ionic charge of the detergent in the mixed phospholipid micelle. The neurotoxic phospholipases were only active on negatively charged micelles, whereas the non-neurotoxic enzymes were equally active in hydrolyzing neutral micelles. This distinction was also reflected in binding studies; the non-neurotoxic phospholipases bound to both types of substrate, whereas beta-bungarotoxin and crotoxin selectively bound to negatively charged micellar structures. These experiments suggest that, in addition to the existence of any specific acceptor proteins, neurotoxin binding is also governed by the charge on the lipid phase of the nerve terminal membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Soluble succinate dehydrogenase prepared by butanol extraction reacts with N-ethylmaleimide according to first-order kinetics with respect to both remaining active enzyme and the inhibitor concentration. Binding of the sulfhydryl groups of the enzyme prevents its alkylation by N-ethylmaleimide and inhibition by oxaloacetate. A kinetic analysis of the inactivation of alkylating reagent in the presence of succinate or malonate suggests that N-ethylmaleimide acts as a site-directed inhibitor. The apparent first-order rate constant of alkylation increases between pH 5.8 and 7.8 indicating a pKa value for the enzyme sulfhydryl group equal to 7.0 at 22 degrees C in 50 mM Tris-sufate buffer. Certain anions (phosphate, citrate, maleate and acetate) decrease the reactivity of the enzyme towards the alkylating reagent. Succinate/phenazine methosulfate reductase activity measured in the presence of a saturating concentration of succinate shows the same pH-dependence as the alkylation rate by N-ethylmaleimide. The mechanism of the first step of succinate oxidation, including a nucleophilic attack of substrate by the active-site sulfhydryl group, is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
D J Smith  E T Maggio    G L Kenyon 《Biochemistry》1975,14(4):766-771
New reagents for the temporary blocking of active or accessible sulfhydryl groups of enzymes have been developed. These reagents, which are either alkyl alkanethiolsulfonates or alkoxycarbonylalkyl disulfides, rapidly and quantitatively place various RS- groups on the sulfhydryls to generate mixed disulfides. In all cases native enzymes can be regenerated with either dithiothreitol or beta-mercaptoethanol. In general the temporary blocking groups also afford total protection against normally inhibitory thiol blocking agents. When RS- groups were attached to rabbit muscle creatine kinase (EC 2.7.3.2), a trend toward lower residual activities with increasing bulk was observed. Treatment of the native creatine kinase with 14CH3HgC1 led to incorporation of greater than 1 equiv of CH3Hg- group per subunit. This CH3Hg- blocked enzyme was fully active, and the blocking group afforded no protection against iodoacetamide. These results suggest that CH3Hg- and the RS- groups are modifying two different sulhydryl groups on the enzyme. When papain (EC 3.4.4.10) was treated with excess methyl methanethiolsulfonate. complete and rapid inhibition was observed, and 1 equiv of CH3S- was incorporated/mol of active enzyme. Complete protection against normally inhibitory 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) was afforded by the temporary blocking group. When rabbit muscle glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.12) was titrated with methyl methanethiolsulfonate, two sulfhydryl groups per subunit were found to be modified, one much more rapidly than the other. If one extrapolates the initial slope of the titration curve, the inactivation of the enzyme would be complete after modification of a single cysteinyl residue per subunit.  相似文献   

20.
A thin-gel isoelectric focusing method has been developed for analysis of protein S-thiolation (formation of mixed disulfides with low molecular weight thiols). The method is rapid and it can be used with 3 to 5 micrograms of a pure protein, or 15 to 20 micrograms of tissue extract protein. It is possible to detect a modification of the protein sulfhydryl by either charged or uncharged thiols, and to determine the quantity of different S-thiolated protein species in a modified sample. The method was used to quantitate the amount of S-thiolation of phosphorylase b in a reaction with oxidized glutathione that produced four S-thiolated forms of the enzyme. The method was also used to detect S-thiolation of two proteins in a cardiac tissue extract treated with diamide. One of the protein bands was shown to be S-thiolated with both cysteine and glutathione, while the other band was S-thiolated only with glutathione.  相似文献   

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