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1.
Treatment of rabbit hemopexin with bromoacetic acid (BrAc) or with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) modified histidine residues and produced a concomitant decrease in the protein's ability to form a low-spin hemichrome complex with deuteroheme (ferrideuteroporphyrin IX). Deuteroheme bound to hemopexin before treatment decreased the extent of inactivation by either reagent. After exposure of deuteroheme-hemopexin to 0.16 m BrAc at pH 6.9 for 120 h, 10–11 of the 16 histidine residues of hemopexin were carboxymethylated, but 90–95% of the deuteroheme-hemopexin complex remained intact. Under the same conditions, 12 histidine residues of apo-hemopexin were carboxymethylated, and 95% of the protein's ability to form its normal hemichrome complex with heme (ferriprotoporphyrin IX) was abolished. The alkylated apo-protein, however, did retain a potential to interact with deuteroheme. The apparent dissociation constants for the complexes of metal-free deuteroporphyrin and deuteroheme with BrAc-treated apo-hemopexin were both about 10?6m and nearly equal to that of the native deuteroporphyrin-hemopexin complex, as assessed by quenching of tryptophan fluorescence.Approximately 10 histidyl residues of the deuteroheme-hemopexin complex, but only about 4 residues of the apo-protein, were modified by DEP before heme-binding was appreciably affected. The effects of DEP on hemopexin were reversed by hydroxylamine at neutral pH, indicating that ethoxyformylation of histidine residues caused the observed inactivation of hemopexin. This and the results of BrAc treatment suggest that hemopexin contains several easily accessible histidine residues which are not critical for its interaction with heme.The conformation-sensitive positive ellipticity at 231 nm of hemopexin was affected by carboxymethylation and ethoxyformylation. Treatment with BrAc had only a small effect on the intrinsic ellipticity of apo-hemopexin, but eliminated the increase in ellipticity produced by interaction of unmodified hemopexin with heme. Treatment with DEP, on the other hand, decreased both intrinsic and extrinsic ellipticity.These results provide further evidence that the heme-hemopexin complex involves histidyl-heme iron coordination. In addition, they show that formation of the histidyl-heme complex not only greatly enhances the strength of the heme-hemopexin interaction but also is important for triggering conformational changes in the protein.  相似文献   

2.
Spectrophotometric and fluorimetric techniques were employed to charcterize the environment of the heme chromophore of rabbit hemopexin and to monitor changes in the environment of aromatic amino acid residues induced by the interaction of hemopexin with porphyrins and metalloporphyrins. Difference spectra showed maxima at 292 and 285 nm when hemopexin binds heme or deuteroheme but not deuteroporphyrin. These maxima are attributed to alterations in the local environment of tryptophan and tyrosine residues. Spectro-photometric titrations of the tyrosine residues of hemopexin, heme-hemopexin and hemopexin in 8 M urea showed apparent pK values at 11.4, 11.7, and 10.9 respectively. Perturbation difference spectra produced by 20% v/v ethylene glycol are consistent with the exposure of 6-8 of the 14 tyrosine residues and 6-8 of the 15 tryptophan residues of rabbit hemopexin to this perturbant. Only small differences were found between the perturbation spectra of apo- and heme-hemopexin near 290 nm, suggesting that slight or compensating changes in the exposure to solvent of tryptophan chromophores occur. In the Soret spectral region, the exposure of heme in the heme-hemopexin complex to ethylene glycol was 0.7, relative to the fully exposed heme peptide of cytochrome c. The fluorescence quantum yields of rabbit apo- and heme-hemopexin were estimated to be 0.06 and 0.03, respectively, compared to a yield of 0.13 for L-tryptophan. Iodide quenched 50% of the fluorescence of the deuteroheme-hemopexin complex. Cesium was not an effective quencher. Modification of approximately, 4 tryptophan residues with N-bromosuccinimide also decreased the relative fluorescence of apo-hemopexin by 50% and concomitantly reduced the heme-binding ability of the protein by 70%. The existence of sterically unhindered tryptophan residues in either apo- heme-hemopexin is unlikely since no charge transfer compelxes between these proteins and N-methylnicotinamide were detected.  相似文献   

3.
Ethoxyformic acid anhydride, amino-1H-tetrazole, and photooxidation in the presence of rose bengal, which are reagents known to react with histidine residues of proteins, were shown to inactivate monoamine oxidase. Ethoxyformic acid anhydride reacted with about 6 histidine residues per 100 000 g of protein under the experimental conditions adopted and completely inactivated the enzyme. However, NH2OH reactivated the ethaxyformic acid derivative t only. Since NH2OH specifically deacylates N-ethoxyformylimidazole, it was shown that at least some of the histidine residues are essential for activity. In addition, photooxidation experiments in the presence of 0.01% rose bengal confirmed that only histidine residues of bovine hepatic monoamine oxidase are destroyed under the designated experimental conditions. About 9 histidine residues per 100 000 g of protein were destroyed during the photooxidation experiments. In the presence of substrate, kynuramine or benzylamine, only 7 histidine residues were destroyed, which indicates that 2 histidine residues per 100 000 g of protein are essential for activity.  相似文献   

4.
The site of hemolytic activity of a toxin isolated from Aspergillus fumigatus designated Asp-hemolysin was determined by photooxidation techniques. The hemolytic activity of this toxin was strongly inhibited by photooxidation with methylene blue, rose bengal, riboflavin, or eosin G as a sensitizer, whereas crystal violet, hematoxylin, naphthol yellow S, bromothymol blue, methyl orange, and cresol red had no effect. pH dependence of the inactivation with methylene blue was observed in the narrow range of pH values from 7.0 to 8.0, like that of the inactivation with rose bengal or riboflavin. The histidine, cysteine, methionine, tryptophan, and tyrosine content of methylene blue-photooxidized Asp-hemolysin was significantly decreased, while other amino acids were not affected. The hemolytic activity of the toxin was lost more slowly than the histidine residue, being maintained at about 50% even at the time when the histidine residue was completely lost after 30 min. Photooxidation of Asp-hemolysin in the presence of rose bengal also caused a decrease in histidine, methionine, and threonine content. These findings suggest that residues of cysteine, methionine, threonine, tryptophan, and/or tyrosine but not histidine may play an important role through stereostructure in the manifestation of the hemolytic activity of Asp-hemolysin.  相似文献   

5.
Preferred heme binding sites of histidine-rich glycoprotein   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
M K Burch  W T Morgan 《Biochemistry》1985,24(21):5919-5924
The heme binding sites of rabbit histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRG), 94 kDa, were studied with rose bengal (RB), a fluorescein derivative that associates with histidine residues. Difference absorbance spectra indicate that HRG binds RB at two thermodynamically preferred sites (Kd approximately 2 microM) that are spectroscopically equivalent. Up to 18-22 equiv of RB can also be bound by a set of lower affinity sites. Mesoheme is capable of displacing RB from the two preferred sites (Kd = 0.6 microM) and provides evidence that the two sites are not identical. Two peptides isolated from plasmin-digested HRG, one 35-kDa peptide rich in histidine (approximately 30 mol %) and one 15-kDa peptide relatively poor in histidine (approximately 4 mol %), also bind RB and mesoheme. The two preferred RB binding sites of HRG are located on the 15-kDa histidine-poor peptide and the lower affinity "class" of sites on the 35-kDa histidine-rich peptide. Mesoheme or RB quenches the tryptophan fluorescence of HRG and the histidine-poor peptide with an apparent binding stoichiometry near 2. Fluorescence quenching also indicates that 1-2 equiv of Cu(II) binds to the 15-kDa peptide, and absorbance spectroscopy provides evidence that Cu(II) is capable of displacing heme from the peptide. The fluorescence lifetimes of RB, determined by phase-modulation fluorometry, indicate that the two preferred sites in the histidine-poor domain are more apolar than the more numerous sites located in the histidine-rich region of the protein.  相似文献   

6.
Irradiation with visible light of human serum albumin in aqueous solution at pH 8, in the presence of catalytic amounts of rose bengal or methylene blue, resulted in random oxidation of the histidine residues in the protein under consumption of one mole O2, and release of somewhat less than one proton, per histidine residue degraded. An increase of light absorption at 250 nm was proportional to the amount of oxygen consumed. Bilirubin bound to the oxidized protein showed an increased light absorption at its maximum, 460 nm, and a decreased binding affinity, indicating a conformational change of the protein on oxidation of histidine residues. This change also resulted in a slight perturbation of tyrosine light absorption, corresponding to a shift of the chromophore to more polar surroundings. Further, a sensitized oligomerization of albumin was observed, independent of oxidation of the histidine residues, and not consuming oxygen. Irradiation of a complex of human serum albumin with one molecule of bound bilirubin, in the absence of a sensitizing dye, resulted in a fast, non-oxygen consuming process whereby the light absorption maximum of the pigment was shifted 4 nm towards longer wavelength and part of the bilirubin was converted to a more polar pigment, bound less firmly to the protein. This was followed by a relatively slow oxidation of the pigment under uptake of one mole O2. Parallel photooxidation of the protein carrier could not be detected. It is considered possible that the fast, anaerobic process is operative in phototherapy of hyperbilirubinemia in the newborn. Serum albumin is probably not oxidized during this treatment.  相似文献   

7.
To further identify structural features of the hemopexin molecule important for its heme transport function, a fragment of the heme-binding domain (residues 1–213, Mr 35 kD, domain I) of rabbit hemopexin was obtained after digestion with subtilisin. Both apo- and heme-domain I were cleaved by subtilisin, and the subtilisin-digested form of domain I (called SD-DI) was shown by microsequencing to have been cleaved at Asp 22 forming a 30 kD subfragment lacking the conserved histidine residue at position 7 and the N-linked oligosaccharide at Asn 9. The 5 kD peptide cleaved from domain I is not disulfide linked to domain I and can be removed by membrane ultrafiltration. SD-DI retains the ability of domain I to bind heme, to associate with the other functional domain of hemopexin (domain II), and to interact with the hemopexin receptor on mouse Hepa cells. Moreover, although the heme complex of SD-DI is less themostable than native heme-domain I, like heme-domain I, heme-SD-DI is stabilized to a large extent when associated with domain II. These results show that the conserved His 7 residue is not involved in heme binding by hemopexin and that residues 1–22 of hemopexin and the N-linked oligosaccharide at Asn 9 are not essential for either receptor binding or interdomain interactions. Nevertheless, these N-terminal residues of hemopexin do contribute significantly to the overall stability of the hemopexin molecule and the interdomain interactions necessary for receptor recognition.  相似文献   

8.
The fluorescein dye, rose bengal, inhibits Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I reversibly in the dark and irreversibly in the light. The reversible inhibition, which occurs in the micromolar concentration range, is competitive with respect to the poly(dA-T) template/ primer and noncompetitive with respect to the complementary deoxynucleoside triphosphates. The Hill coefficient for the inhibition by rose bengal is 3.0. Equilibrium dialysis experiments using 131I-labeled rose bengal have demonstrated direct binding of the inhibitor to the enzyme. No dye binds to poly(dA-T) at concentrations where the inhibition is observed. There are 22 ± 3 rose bengal binding sites per polymerase which can be subdivided into a class of high affinity sites and one of low affinity sites. The high affinity sites (3 μm) bind rose bengal with a Hill coefficient of 1.7 and are responsible for the observed inhibition. The low affinity sites (7μm) are more numerous (about 16) and bind rose bengal in a noncooperative manner. The displacement of rose bengal from the enzyme by poly(dA-T) at equilibrium confirms the competition between poly(dA-T) and rose bengal inferred from the kinetic data for the polymerization reaction. The inhibition of the 3′,5′ exonuclease activity and the template-directed dATP ? P-P exchange reaction by rose bengal is fully consistent with the interaction of rose bengal at the polynucleotide binding site. The enzyme induces an extrinsic Cotton effect in the visible absorption of rose bengal. The abolition of this Cotton effect by poly(dA-T) further supports the proposed site of binding of the dye.  相似文献   

9.
1. The three isozymes of glycerate-2,3-P2 dependent phosphoglycerate mutase present in tissues of mammals and reptiles were inactivated by both treatment with diethylpyrocarbonate and photooxidation with rose bengal. 2. Inactivation of type M isozyme purified from rabbit muscle was complete when two histidine residues per enzyme subunit were carboethoxylated. Hydroxylamine removed the carboethoxy groups, with partial recovery of the enzymatic activity. The cofactor protected the enzyme against inactivation. 3. The inactivation of rabbit muscle phosphoglycerate mutase by photooxidation with methylene blue and rose bengal was sharply pH dependent. The pH profile of enzyme inactivation followed the titration curve of histidine, suggesting that this amino acid was critical for enzyme activity. Glycerate-2,3-P2 did not protect phosphoglycerate mutase against photoinactivation.  相似文献   

10.
Hemopexin alters conformation upon binding heme as shown by circular dichroism (CD), but hemopexin binds the heme analog, iron-meso-tetra-(4-sulfonatophenyl)-porphine (FeTPPS), without undergoing concomitant changes in its CD spectrum. Moreover, FeTPPS, unlike heme, does not increase the compactness of the heme-binding domain (I) of hemopexin shown by an increased sedimentation rate in sucrose gradients. On the other hand, like heme, FeTPPS forms a bishistidyl coordination complex with hemopexin and upon binding protects hemopexin from cleavage by plasmin. Competitive inhibition and saturation studies demonstrate that FeTPPS-hemopexin binds to the hemopexin receptor on mouse hepatoma cells but with a lower affinity (Kd 125 nM) more characteristic of apo-hemopexin than heme-hemopexin (Kd 65 nM). This provides evidence that conformational changes produced in hemopexin upon binding heme, but not upon binding FeTPPS, are important for increasing the affinity of hemopexin for its receptor. The amount of cell-associated radiolabel from 55FeTPPS-hemopexin increases linearly for up to 90 min but at a rate only about a third of that of the mesoheme-complex. As expected from the recycling of hemopexin, more iron-tetrapyrrole than protein is associated with the Hepa cells, but the ratio of 55Fe-ligand to 125I-hemopexin is only 2:1 for FeTPPS-hemopexin compared to 4:1 for mesoheme complexes. [55Fe]Mesoheme was associated at 5 min with lower density fractions containing plasma membranes and at 30 min with fractions containing higher density intracellular compartments. In contrast, 55FeTPPS was found associated with plasma membrane fractions at both times and was not transported into the cell. Although FeTPPS-hemopexin binds to the receptor, subsequent events of heme transport are impaired. The results indicate that upon binding heme at least three types of conformational changes occur in hemopexin which have important roles in receptor recognition and that the nature of the ligand influences subsequent heme transport.  相似文献   

11.
The modification of histidine residues of ovine pituitary lutropin by rose bengal sensitized photooxidation has been investigated. The destruction of an average of one histidine out of six lead to 90% loss of biological activity as examined by the invitro steroidogenic response in the rat Leydig cell essay. Further modification of an average 2 – 3 histidine residues reduced the biological activity to less than 1% of the native lutropin. The modified lutropin was incapable of inhibiting the native lutropin induced steroidogenesis. Gel filtration experiments and polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis patterns indicated that no dissociation of the molecule into subunits occurred. This is the first report on the essentiality of the histidine residue for the activity of lutropin.  相似文献   

12.
Sn-protoporphyrin IX (SnPP), an inhibitor of heme oxygenase and a potential therapeutic agent for neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, is bound tightly by hemopexin. The apparent dissociation constant (Kd) at pH 7.4 is 0.25 +/- 0.15 microM, but estimation of the Kd for the SnPP-hemopexin complex is hampered by the fact that at physiological pH SnPP exists as monomers and dimers, both of which are bound by hemopexin. SnPP is readily displaced from hemopexin by heme (Kd less than 1 pM). The hemopexin-SnPP interaction, like that of heme-hemopexin, is dependent on the histidine residues of hemopexin. However, as expected from the differences in the coordination chemistries of tin and iron, the stability of the histidyl-metalloporphyrin complex is lower for SnPP-hemopexin than for mesoheme-hemopexin. Nevertheless, when SnPP binds to hemopexin, certain of the ligand-induced changes in the conformation of hemopexin which increase the affinity of the protein for its receptor are produced. Binding of SnPP produces the conformational change in hemopexin which protects the hinge region of hemopexin from proteolysis, but SnPP does not produce the characteristic increase in the ellipticity of hemopexin at 231 nm that heme does. Competition experiments confirmed that human serum albumin (apparent Kd = 4 +/- 2 microM) has a significantly lower affinity for SnPP than does hemopexin. Appreciable amounts of SnPP (up to 35% in adults and 20% in neonates) would be bound by hemopexin in the circulation, and the remainder of SnPP would be associated with albumin due to the latter's high concentration in serum. Essentially no non-protein-bound SnPP is present. Importantly, SnPP-hemopexin binds to the hemopexin receptor on mouse hepatoma cells with an affinity comparable to that of heme-hemopexin and treatment of the hepatoma cells with SnPP-hemopexin causes a rapid increase in the steady state level of heme oxygenase messenger RNA. These results show that hemopexin participates in the transport of SnPP to heme oxygenase and in its regulation by SnPP.  相似文献   

13.
The photooxidizing xanthene dye rose bengal (10 nM to 1 microM) stimulates rapid Ca2+ release from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. Following fusion of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) vesicles to an artificial bilayer, reconstituted Ca2+ channel activity is stimulated by nanomolar concentrations of rose bengal in the presence of a broad-spectrum light source. Rose bengal does not appear to affect K+ channels present in the SR. Following reconstitution of the sulfhydryl-activated 106-kDa Ca2+ channel protein into a bilayer, rose bengal activates the isolated protein in a light-dependent manner. Ryanodine at a concentration of 10 nM is shown to lock the 106-kDa channel protein in a subconductance state which can be reversed by subsequent addition of 500 nM rose bengal. This apparent displacement of bound ryanodine by nanomolar concentrations of rose bengal is also directly observed upon measurement of [3H]ryanodine binding to JSR vesicles. These observations indicate that photooxidation of rose bengal causes a stimulation of the Ca2+ release protein from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum by interacting with the ryanodine binding site. Furthermore, similar effects of rose bengal on isolated SR vesicles, on single channel measurements following fusion of SR vesicles, and following incorporation of the isolated 106-kDa protein strongly implicates the 106-kDa sulfhydryl-activated Ca2+ channel protein in the Ca2+ release process.  相似文献   

14.
S R Fahnestock 《Biochemistry》1975,14(24):5321-5327
The functional role of the Bacillus stearothermophilus 50S ribosomal protein B-L3 (probably homologous to the Escherichia coli protein L2) was examined by chemical modification. The complex [B-L3-23S RNA] was photooxidized in the presence of rose bengal and the modified protein incorporated by reconstitution into 50S ribosomal subunits containing all other unmodified components. Particles containing photooxidized B-L3 are defective in several functional assays, including (1) poly(U)-directed poly(Phe) synthesis, (2) peptidyltransferase activity, (3) ability to associate with a [30S-poly(U)-Phe-tRNA] complex, and (4) binding of elongation factor G and GTP. The rates of loss of the partial functional activities during photooxidation of B-L3 indicate that at least two independent inactivating events are occurring, a faster one, involving oxidation of one or more histidine residues, affecting peptidyltransferase and subunit association activities and a slower one affecting EF-G binding. Therefore the protein B-L3 has one or more histidine residues which are essential for peptidyltransferase and subunit association, and another residue which is essential for EF-G-GTP binding. B-L3 may be the ribosomal peptidyltransferase protein, or a part of the active site, and may contribute functional groups to the other active sites as well.  相似文献   

15.
A modification of water oxidation complex in spinach chloroplasts by rose bengal (RB), a known histidine modifying agent, has been studied using thermoluminescence (TL) technique. The changes in the TL profiles at low concentrations of the dye are explained on the basis of alterations in the protein dynamics while those at higher concentrations of the dye are related to the oxidation of histidine residues.  相似文献   

16.
Diphosphopyridine nucleotide-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase from bovine heart was inactivated at neutral pH by bromoacetate and diethyl pyrocarbonate and by photooxidation in the presence of methylene blue or rose bengal. Inactivation by diethyl pyrocarbonate was reversed by hydroxylamine. Loss of activity by photooxidation at pH 7.07 was accompanied by progressive destruction of histidine with time; loss of 83% of the enzyme activity was accompanied by modification of 1.1 histidyl residues per enzyme subunit. The pH-rate profiles of inactivation by photooxidation and by diethyl pyrocarbonate modification showed an inflection point around pH 6.6, in accord with the pKa for a histidyl residue of a protein. Partial protection against inactivation by photooxidation or diethyl pyrocarbonate was obtained with substrate (manganous isocitrate or magnesium isocitrate) or ADP; the combination of substrate and ADP was more effective than the components singly. As demonstrated by differential enzyme activity assays between pH 6.4 and pH 7.5 with and without 0.67 mm ADP, modification of the reactive histidyl residue of the enzyme caused a preferential loss of the positive modulation of activity by ADP. The latter was particularly apparent when substrate partially protected the enzyme against inactivation by rose bengal-induced photooxidation.  相似文献   

17.
The ubiquitous use of heme in animals poses severe biological and chemical challenges. Free heme is toxic to cells and is a potential source of iron for pathogens. For protection, especially in conditions of trauma, inflammation and hemolysis, and to maintain iron homeostasis, a high-affinity binding protein, hemopexin, is required. Hemopexin binds heme with the highest affinity of any known protein, but releases it into cells via specific receptors. The crystal structure of the heme-hemopexin complex reveals a novel heme binding site, formed between two similar four-bladed beta-propeller domains and bounded by the interdomain linker. The ligand is bound to two histidine residues in a pocket dominated by aromatic and basic groups. Further stabilization is achieved by the association of the two beta-propeller domains, which form an extensive polar interface that includes a cushion of ordered water molecules. We propose mechanisms by which these structural features provide the dual function of heme binding and release.  相似文献   

18.
Using human erythroleukemia K562 cells, existence of receptors for hemopexin has been investigated. Hemopexin was bound to the cells in saturable, time- and temperature-dependent manner. The cells exhibited approximately 8,400 binding sites/cell for hemopexin and apohemopexin. The dissociation constants (Kd) for hemopexin and apohemopexin were 4.79 nM and 10.8 nM, respectively. Specific binding of labeled hemopexin was inhibited with increasing concentrations of unlabeled hemopexin and apohemopexin, but unaffected by transferrin and serum albumin. Heme bound to hemopexin was incorporated into the cells at 37 degrees C, but not at 4 degrees C. These results indicate that heme in hemopexin was taken up by K562 cells via the receptors for hemopexin.  相似文献   

19.
The photooxidation of yeast enolase using rose bengal (Westhead, 1965) has been reexamined. Four histidines per subunit are oxidized during complete inactivation but only one is critical for maintaining enzymatic activity. The bulk of the protection against photoinactivation is afforded by high concentrations of magnesium (midpoint concentration = 2.5 mm) but only in the presence of substrate, placing the critical histidine at or near the binding site of either catalytic or inhibitory magnesium. The tryptic peptide containing this histidine has been isolated by triethylaminoethyl cellulose chromatography, preparative-paper electrophoresis, and chromatography on phosphorylated cellulose. Amino acid analysis, aminoterminal determination, and electrophoretic migration give the structure: -His-(Asn, Leu)-Lys-. The peptide may be tentatively assigned as residues 180–183 in the enolase amino acid sequence (C. C. Q. Chin, F. Wold, and J. M. Brewer, Fed. Proc., 1978, 37, 1618). Binding of the chromophoric competitive inhibitor, 3-aminoenolpyruvate-2-phosphate, by photoinactivated enolase showed no changes in the dissociation constants or stoichiometry. However, the extinction coefficient at 295 nm of bound 3-aminoenolpyruvate-2-phosphate was reduced from 22,000 to 10,700 m?1 cm?1, indicating an alteration in the environment associated with the bound inhibitor. The critical histidine does not appear to be necessary for substrate-inhibitor binding but is required for enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

20.
Dihydrodiol dehydrogenase from pig liver was inactivated by diethylpyrocarbonate (DEP) and by rose bengal-sensitized photooxidation. The DEP inactivation was reversed by hydroxylamine and the absorption spectrum of the inactivated enzyme indicated that both histidine and tyrosine residues were carbethoxylated. The rates of inactivation by DEP and by photooxidation were dependent on pH, showing the involvement of a group with a pKa of 6.4. The kinetics of inactivation and spectrophotometric quantification of the modified residues suggested that complete inactivation was caused by modification of one histidine residue per active site. The inactivation by the two modifications was partially prevented by either NADP(H) or the combination of NADP+ and substrate, and completely prevented in the presence of both NADP+ and a competitive inhibitor which binds to the enzyme-NADP+ binary complex. The DEP-modified enzyme caused the same blue shift and enhancement of NADPH fluorescence as did the native enzyme, suggesting that the modified histidine is not in the coenzyme-binding site of the enzyme. The results suggest the presence of essential histidine residues in the catalytic region of the active site of pig liver dihydrodiol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

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