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1.
G Veres  E Monostori  I Rasko 《FEBS letters》1985,184(2):299-303
Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase enzyme (EC 2.4.2.8) from chicken brain has been purified 10 000-fold to homogeneity. The molecular mass of the native enzyme is 85 kDa, with four subunits, each of 26 kDa, and exerts its maximum activity at pH 10.0. The Km values for hypoxanthine and guanine are 5.2 and 1.8 microM, respectively. The half-life of the enzyme is 30 min at 85 degrees C. Monoclonal antibodies were raised against the native purified enzyme and were used for purification of enzyme to homogeneity. The monoclonal antibody did not bind to the active centre of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
The purpose of this experimental investigation was to provide a purified plasma membrane fraction containing a highly hormone-responsive adenylate cyclase system. Bovine adrenal cortex was homogenised and a washed pellet (450 000 X g - min) was fractionated by zonal centrifugation in a sucrose and dextran gradient. Adenylate cyclase activity was purified up to 60-fold to a specific activity of 55, 340 and 210 pmol of adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) produced/minute per mg of protein at 38 degrees C for the basal, adrenocorticotrophin and fluoride-activated states, respectively. The time course of the adenylate cyclase activity is linear. The concentration necessary for half-maximal stimulation by adrenocorticotrophin-(1-24)-tetracosipeptide is 0.5 muM. The high hormone-responsiveness of the membrane preparation allows one to demonstrate activation of adenylate cyclase by very weakly agonistic adrenocorticotrophin fragments. The F- activated state can be detergent-dispersed by Lubrol and shows a Km (ATP) different from that of either the basal or adrenocorticotrophin-stimulated state. Other marked enzymes such as 5'-nucleotidase, glucose-6-phosphatase and cytochrome oxidase were followed during purification. The plasma membrane fraction shows rather homogeneous, relatively large vesicles (mean diameter 0.5 mum). It contains high-affinity binding sites for angiotensin II (about 2 pmol per mg protein) with an apparent association constant of 2 X 10(7) (1/mol) at 12 degrees C. The yield, 20 mg of membrane protein per preparation, may make it a tool in either affinity-labelling studies with the peptide hormones mentioned or the starting point for solubilisation and purification of adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

3.
Adenosine inhibits ram sperm adenylate cyclase activity which is membrane-bound and comprises only the catalytic subunit. The inhibition parameters of adenylate cyclase by adenosine were not modified when the enzyme was purified 3 to 5,000 fold. Optimal inhibition by adenosine was found to require a high concentration of manganese, and exhibited a noncompetitive pattern up to a concentration of 1 mM adenosine. Adenosine was the most potent inhibitor among various analogs tested with the following rank order of potencies: adenosine greater than 2'O-methyladenosine greater than 2'deoxyadenosine much greater than 2 chloroadenosine. Studies with agonists and antagonists of the "R"-type adenosine receptor led us to conclude that adenosine inhibits ram sperm adenylate cyclase via a "P"-site carried by the catalytic subunit itself.  相似文献   

4.
Bordetella pertussis, the etiologic agent of whooping cough, produces a calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase which elevates intracellular cAMP in a variety of eucaryotic cells. Exogenous calmodulin added to the partially purified adenylate cyclase has been shown to inhibit invasion of animal cells by this enzyme (Shattuck, R. L., and Storm, D. R. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 6323-6328). In this study, several properties of the calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase are shown to be influenced by Ca2+ in the absence of calmodulin. The presence or absence of Ca2+ during QAE-Sephadex ion exchange chromatography produced two distinct chromatographic patterns of adenylate cyclase activity. Two different forms of the enzyme (Pk1 and Pk2EGTA) were isolated by this procedure. Pk1 adenylate cyclase readily elevated intracellular cAMP levels in mouse neuroblastoma cells (N1E-115) while Pk2EGTA adenylate cyclase had no effect on cAMP levels in these cells. Gel exclusion chromatography of Pk1 adenylate cyclase gave apparent Stokes radii (RS) of 43.5 A (+/- 1.3) in the presence of 2 mM CaCl2 and 33.8 A (+/- 0.94) in the presence of 2 mM EGTA [( ethylenebis (oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid). These Stokes radii are consistent with molecular weights of 104,000 (+/- 6,400) and 61,000 (+/- 3,600), respectively. Pk2EGTA adenylate cyclase had an apparent RS of 33.0 (+/- 1.2) (Mr = 60,600 (+/- 2,800] in the presence of Ca2+ or excess EGTA. At 60 degrees C, Pk1 adenylate cyclase exhibited a Ca2+-dependent heat stability with a half-life for loss of enzyme activity of 10.3 min in 5 mM CaCl2 and a half-life of 2.8 min in the presence of 0.1 microM CaCl2. The stability of Pk2EGTA adenylate cyclase was not affected by changes in free Ca2+. The adenylate cyclase preparations described above were submitted to sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and enzyme activity was recovered from gel slices by extraction with detergent containing buffers. The catalytic subunit isolated from SDS-polyacrylamide gels was activated 7-fold in the presence of Ca2+ with maximum activity observed at 1 microM free Ca2+. With both preparations, the apparent molecular weight of the catalytic subunit on SDS gels was 51,000 in the presence of 2 mM CaCl2 and 45,000 in the presence of 2 mM EGTA. The catalytic subunit of the enzyme was purified to apparent homogeneity by preparative SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and resubmitted to SDS gel electrophoresis in the presence or absence of free Ca2+. The purified catalytic subunit also exhibited a Ca2+-dependent shift in its mobility on SDS gels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Human erythrocyte membranes were incubated in the presence of sodium fluoride. After centrifugation at 30,000 g for 30 min the supernatant was able to stimulate the catalytic subunit of adenylate cyclase. The stimulatory factor was purified from the supernatant of fluoride-treated membranes by three subsequent chromatographic steps including DEAE-Sephacel ion-exchange chromatography in the absence of detergent, gel-filtration on Ultrogel AcA 44 in the presence of 1% sodium cholate and phenyl-Sepharose CL/4B hydrophobic chromatography. The final preparation showed approximately 120-fold purification in stimulatory activity over the initial extract and contained two polypeptides (Mr 42 kDa and 36 kDa). The stimulator activity of the preparation was inhibited by 60% by beta gamma-subunits of the GTP-binding protein of bovine brain membranes, G0. The data obtained suggest that the regulatory GTP-binding stimulatory protein of adenylate cyclase, GS, dissociates from human erythrocyte membranes as a result of fluoride-ion treatment.  相似文献   

6.
A deoxycytidine deaminase that was extremely thermostable in the presence of dithiothreitol was found in a mesophilic bacterium isolated from soil. The bacterium was classified as a Nocardioides sp. The enzyme was purified to a homogeneous protein by treatment at 100 degrees C, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and chromatography on DEAE-Toyopearl, hydroxyapatite, and then Sephacryl S-100. Twenty micrograms of the pure enzyme was obtained from 811 mg of the starting crude protein. After treatment at 50 degrees C for 15 min in the absence of dithiothreitol, enzyme activity was 44% of the starting activity; after treatment at 100 degrees C for 2 h in the presence of 50 mm dithiothreitol, activity was 56% of the starting activity. Dithiothreitol greatly stabilized the enzyme. Activity was maximum at 99 degrees C. The Km values for deoxycytidine, cytidine, and methyl-deoxycytidine were 55.2, 140, and 130 microM, respectively. The molecular mass was estimated to be 52 kDa by gel permeation chromatography. The enzyme molecule was dissociated into two subunits each of 18 kDa subunit when reduced with mercaptoethanol.  相似文献   

7.
Bordetella pertussis, the bacterium responsible for whooping cough, releases a soluble, calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase into its culture medium. B. pertussis mutants deficient in this enzyme are avirulent, indicating that the adenylate cyclase contributes to the pathogenesis of the disease. It has been proposed that B. pertussis adenylate cyclase may enter animal cells and increase intracellular adenosine cyclic 3',5'-phosphate (cAMP) levels. We have purified the enzyme extensively from culture medium using anion-exchange chromatography in the presence and absence of calmodulin and gel filtration chromatography. The enzyme was purified 1600-fold to a specific activity of 608 mumol of cAMP min-1 mg-1 and was free of islet activating protein. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 43 400 in the absence of calmodulin and 54 200 in the presence of calmodulin. The Km of the bacterial enzyme for adenosine 5'-triphosphate was 2.0 mM, whereas the Km of the calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase from bovine brain was 0.07 mM. Although the enzyme was not purified to homogeneity, its turnover number of 27 000 min-1 is the highest documented for any adenylate cyclase preparation.  相似文献   

8.
A calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase has been purified to apparent homogeneity from bovine cerebral cortex using calmodulin-Sepharose followed by forskolin-Sepharose and wheat germ agglutinin-Sepharose. The final product appeared as one major polypeptide of approximately 135,000 daltons on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. This polypeptide was a major component of the protein purified through calmodulin-Sepharose. The catalytic subunit was stimulated 3-4-fold by calmodulin (CaM) with a turnover number greater than 1000 min-1 and was directly inhibited by adenosine. The catalytic subunit of the enzyme interacted directly with 125I-CaM on a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel overlay system, and this interaction was Ca2+ concentration dependent. In addition, the catalytic subunit was shown to directly bind 125I-labeled wheat germ agglutinin using a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel overlay technique, and N-acetylglucosamine inhibited binding of the lectin to the catalytic subunit. Calmodulin did not inhibit binding of wheat germ agglutinin to the catalytic subunit, and the binding of calmodulin was unaffected by wheat germ agglutinin. These data illustrate that the catalytic subunit of the calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase is a glycoprotein which interacts directly with calmodulin and that adenosine can inhibit the enzyme without intervening receptors or G coupling proteins. It is concluded that the catalytic subunit of adenylate cyclase is a transmembrane protein with a domain accessible from the outer surface of the cell.  相似文献   

9.
Adenylate cyclase in particulate extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae utilized either MnATP or MgATP as substrate. A mutation in the CYR1 gene, which codes for the catalytic unit of yeast adenylate cyclase (Matsumoto, K., Uno, I., and Ishikawa, T. (1983) Cell 32, 417-423), eliminated utilization of both MgATP and MnATP, indicating that a single enzyme was responsible for both activities. GTP and guanylyl-5'-imidodiphosphate stimulated yeast adenylate cyclase, while a GDP analog, guanosine-5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate), competitively inhibited this stimulation. Thermal inactivation studies distinguished putative guanine-nucleotide regulatory protein (N) from the catalytic unit (C) of yeast adenylate cyclase. Yeast N, which conferred guanine nucleotide regulation and the ability to utilize MgATP on yeast C, was quickly inactivated by incubation of particulate extracts at 30 degrees C. In contrast, yeast C, which apparently utilized MnATP as substrate in the absence of a functional N protein, resisted inactivation at 30 degrees C. These observations suggested that physically distinct protein components mediated the catalytic activity of yeast adenylate cyclase and its regulation by guanine nucleotides. These findings indicate a striking homology between the adenylate cyclase systems of S. cerevisiae and those of vertebrate cells.  相似文献   

10.
After 30 years of effort, the mammalian adenylate cyclase catalytic subunit has now been purified. It is a glycoprotein of 155 kDa, representing less than 0.01% of synaptosomal membrane protein. As measured in the presence of forskolin, its specific activity is 10-20 mumol of cAMP X mg-1 X min-1. The enzyme obtained is completely devoid of Gs alpha subunits, and is calmodulin-dependent. The purification procedures involve an affinity chromatography step, either with calmodulin, or with forskolin, or both. If gel filtration precedes the affinity chromatography, two different fractions with high specific enzyme activity are obtained. One contains the 155 kDa protein as the sole component. The other contains, as its major component, a 105 kDa protein. The relationship between the 2 proteins remains to be defined.  相似文献   

11.
Previous studies using calmodulin-Sepharose affinity chromatography have suggested that bovine brain may contain a mixture of calmodulin-sensitive and -insensitive adenylate cyclase activities (Wescott, K. R., La Porte, D. C., and Storm, D. R. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 82, 3086-3090). In this study, mice were immunized with a purified preparation of the calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase from bovine brain, and a polyclonal antiserum was obtained which was specific to the calmodulin-sensitive form of the enzyme. The antiserum was not inhibitory and precipitated enzyme activity from a homogeneous preparation of the calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase catalytic subunit. Furthermore, the antiserum did not interact with calmodulin-insensitive adenylate cyclase which was resolved from the calmodulin-sensitive form of the enzyme by calmodulin-Sepharose affinity chromatography. Since the only polypeptide specifically precipitated by the antiserum had an Mr of 135,000, which was identical to the Mr of the catalytic subunit of the enzyme, it is concluded that the antiserum interacted directly and specifically with the catalytic subunit of the calmodulin-sensitive isozyme of adenylate cyclase. Detergent-solubilized membranes from several rat tissues were examined for the presence of calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase using anti-calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase antiserum. Approximately 40-60% of the total adenylate cyclase activity of rat brain and kidney were immunoprecipitated by the antiserum, whereas liver and testes contained no detectable calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase. Approximately 15% of the total adenylate cyclase activity in rat heart and lung was the calmodulin-sensitive form. These data indicate that the calmodulin-sensitive and insensitive adenylate cyclases from bovine brain are immunologically distinct and support the proposal that there may be two or more distinct adenylate cyclase isozymes in brain.  相似文献   

12.
Three forms of adenylate cyclase have been detected in Y. pestis: membrane-bound, cytoplasmic and extracellular. Extracellular adenylate cyclase has been purified so as to achieve a homogeneous state, and some of its physicochemical parameters have been investigated. In the process of purification the initial preparation of this enzyme has been subjected to heating at 100 degrees C for 15 minutes, fractionation with ammonium sulfate, and gel filtration on Sephadex G-100. The homogeneity of adenylate cyclase has been confirmed by electrophoresis in 7.5% polyacrylamide gel and precipitation by the plague agglutinating serum. The enzyme has been found to have a molecular weight of 30,000 daltons and to show the optimum activity at pH 7.0-7.2 and at a temperature between 37 and 40 degrees C. Monospecific rabbit serum to the homogeneous preparation of adenylate cyclase has been obtained.  相似文献   

13.
Calmodulin (CaM)-sensitive adenylate cyclase has recently been purified extensively from bovine brain. In this study, the sensitivity of the CaM-sensitive adenylate cyclase to adenosine and adenosine analogs was examined. The highly purified enzyme preparation retained sensitivity to inhibition by adenosine and adenosine analogs with ribose ring modifications, but not to those with purine ring modifications. Adenosine inhibition of this enzyme was not dependent on GTP and was noncompetitive with respect to ATP. Enzyme that had been dissociated from functional guanine nucleotide binding protein interactions by gel filtration in the presence of the zwitterionic detergent 3-[3-(cholamidopropyl)-dimethylammonio]-propanesulfonate and Mn2+ retained sensitivity to adenosine inhibition. The Ki for adenosine inhibition of the CaM-sensitive adenylate cyclase was approximately 2.6 X 10(-4) M. 5'-Guanylylimidodiphosphate and CaM did not affect the Ki of 3'-deoxyadenosine for the enzyme, but the presence of Ca2+ in the millimolar range raised the Ki by a factor of 5. These results show that the CaM-sensitive form of adenylate cyclase from bovine brain is subject to adenosine inhibition, and strongly suggest that this inhibition is due to interaction of ligands with a purine-specific ("P") site located on the catalytic subunit of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Cell-free extracts of Thiobacillus acidophilus catalysed the quantitative conversion of trithionate (S3O6(2-) to thiosulphate and sulphate. A continuous assay for quantification of experimental results was based on the difference in absorbance between trithionate and thiosulphate at 220 nm. Trithionate hydrolase was purified to near homogeneity from cell-free extracts of T. acidophilus. The molecular masses of the native enzyme and the subunit were 99 kDa (gel filtration) and 34 kDa (SDS/PAGE). The purified enzyme has a pH optimum of 3.5-4.5 and a temperature optimum of 70 degrees C. Enzyme activity was stimulated by sulphate. The stimulation of the enzyme activity by sulphate was half maximal at a concentration of 0.23 M. The Km for trithionate is 70 microM at 30 degrees C and 270 microM at 70 degrees C. Enzyme activity was lost after 36 days at 0 degrees C, 27 days at 70 degrees C; but after 97 days at 30 degrees C, 40% of the initial activity was still present: The enzyme activity was inhibited by mercury chloride, N-ethylmaleimide, thiosulphate and tetrathionate. Tetrathionate S4O6(2-) was not hydrolysed by trithionate hydrolase.  相似文献   

15.
An l-amino amidase from Mycobacterium neoaurum ATCC 25795 responsible for the enantioselective resolution of dl-alpha-methyl valine amide was purified and characterized. The purification procedure included ammonium sulfate fractionation, gel filtration, and anion-exchange chromatography, which resulted in a homogeneous preparation of the enzyme with a native molecular mass of 136 kDa and a subunit molecular mass of 40 kDa. The purified enzyme displayed the highest activity at 50 degrees C and at pH 8.0 and 9.5. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by the metal-chelating agent 1,10-phenanthroline, the disulfide-reducing agent dithiothreitol, and the cysteine proteinase inhibitor iodoacetamide. The purified amino amidase showed a unique l-enantioselective activity towards a broad range of both alpha-H- and alpha-alkyl-substituted amino acid amides, with the highest activity towards the cyclic amino acid amide dl-proline amide. No activity was measured with dl-mandelic acid amide nor with the dipeptide l-phenylalanine-l-leucine. The highest catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m) ratio) was measured with dl-alpha-allyl alanine amide, dl-alpha-methyl phenylalanine amide, and dl-alpha-methyl leucine amide.  相似文献   

16.
Cytoplasmic pyrophosphatase has been isolated from the thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Thermoplasma acidophilum. The enzyme was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity by combining ion-exchange and affinity-chromatographic separations. This soluble pyrophosphatase probably consists of six identical subunits, since SDS/PAGE gave an estimate of about 22 kDa for a single subunit and size-exclusion chromatography under non-denaturing conditions indicates a molecular mass of 110 +/- 5 kDa. The two most prominent catalytic features of this enzyme are the absolute requirement for divalent cations for catalytic action, Mg2+ conferring the highest activity, and the pronounced specificity for PPi. The catalytic behavior apparently follows simple Michaelis-Menten kinetics with a Km of about 7 microM for PPi and a specific activity of about 1200 U/mg at 56 degrees C. Surprisingly, maximum activity could be observed at 85 degrees C which is more than 20 degrees C above the temperature for optimal growth. Several cytoplasmic extracts of eubacteria and archaebacteria have been probed with a polyclonal antiserum raised against the purified archaebacterial protein. The only noticeable cross-reactivity could be detected with an extract from the methanogen Methanosarcina barkeri although this probably does not reflect the inferred phylogenetic relationship between methanogens and Thermoplasma acidophilum.  相似文献   

17.
A Bacillus sp. CCMI 966, characterised as Bacillus subtilis, has a duplication time of about 24 min. It produces at least two extracellular xylanases, Xyl I and Xyl II. The extracellular xylanase activity seems to be strongly correlated with the biomass growth profile. The Xyl II isoenzyme was purified by ammonium sulphate precipitation and anionic exchange chromatography, with a purification factor of 8.3. The molecular weight of the isoenzyme was estimated by SDS-PAGE revealing that Xyl II is a multimeric enzyme with a catalytic subunit of about 20 kDa. Under non-denaturing conditions, a molecular weight of about 340 kDa was obtained by native PAGE gel and of 20 kDa by gel filtration chromatography. The enzyme showed an optimum pH and temperature of 6.0 at 60 degrees C. Xyl II was stable at 40 degrees C for 180 min at pH 6.0. The specificity of Xyl II for different substrates was evaluated. Xyl II presents a higher affinity towards OSX, with a K(m) of 1.56 g l(-1) and showed the ability to hydrolyse laminarin, with a K(m) of 1.02 g l(-1). Xylotetraose is the main product of xylan degradation. The Xyl II ability for binding to cellulose and/or xylan was also studied.  相似文献   

18.
Purification and characterization of polygalacturonase from banana fruit   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Polygalacturonase isoenzyme 3 (PG-3) was purified to homogeneity with a specific activity of 0.7 mu katal mg-1 protein from banana fruit pulp. The purified enzyme was a glycoprotein with ca. 8% carbohydrate. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was found to be 90 +/- 10 kDa with a subunit molecular weight of 29 +/- 2 kDa. The enzyme exhibited optimum activity at pH 4.3 and temperature 40 degrees C with activation energy 35.4 kJ mol-1. A unique property of the enzyme was the requirement of -SH groups for the enzyme activity. The enzyme was inhibited by p-CMB and activated by 2-ME and DTT. The inhibition of p-CMB could be reversed by DTT. The enzyme contained eight free -SH groups. The Km of the enzyme was 0.15% for polygalacturonic acid.  相似文献   

19.
Tannase from Penicillium variable IARI 2031 was purified by a two-step purification strategy comprising of ultra-filtration using 100 kDa molecular weight cutoff and gel-filtration using Sephadex G-200. A purification fold of 135 with 91% yield of tannase was obtained. The enzyme has temperature and pH optima of 50 degrees C and 5 degrees C, respectively. However, the functional temperature range is from 25 to 80 degrees C and functional pH range is from 3.0 to 8.0. This tannase could successfully be immobilized on Amberlite IR where it retains about 85% of the initial catalytic activity even after ninth cycle of its use. Based on the Michaelis-Menten constant (Km) of tannase, tannic acid is the best substrate with Km of 32 mM and Vmax of 1.11 micromol ml(-1)min(-1). Tannase is inhibited by phenyl methyl sulphonyl fluoride (PMSF) and N-ethylmaleimide retaining only 28.1% and 19% residual activity indicating that this enzyme belongs to the class of serine hydrolases. Tannase in both crude and crude lyophilized forms is stable for one year retaining more than 60% residual activity.  相似文献   

20.
Betaine-homocysteine methyl transferase (BHMT) from Aphanothece halophytica was purified to homogeneity by hydroxyapatite, DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B and Sephadex G-200 column chromatography. A 24-fold purification and 11% overall yield were achieved with a specific activity of 595 nmol h−1 mg−1. The subunit molecular weight was determined to be 45 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), and the native enzyme was found to have a molecular weight of 350 kDa, suggesting an octameric structure of the enzyme. The enzyme shows optimum activity at 37°C, pH 7.5. The apparent Km values for glycinebetaine and L-homocysteine were 4.3 mM and 1.3 mM, respectively. The enzyme was 70% inactivated by 5 mM dimethylglycine whereas the same concentration of sarcosine slightly inactivated the enzyme. Two analogs of glycinebetaine were also tested for enzyme inactivation and it was found that 5 mM choline inactivated 60% of the enzyme activity and 2.5 mM betaine aldehyde completely abolished the enzyme activity. NaCl at 200 mM or higher also completely inactivated the enzyme. Received: 6 December 2000 / Accepted: 10 January 2001  相似文献   

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