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1.
The inducible 3-keto-5 alpha-steroid-delta 4-dehydrogenase of Nocardia corallina was purified to homogeneity using affinity chromatography on 19-nortestosterone-17-acetoxyaminoethyl Sepharose 4B. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, gel filtration and spectral analysis of flavin suggest that the purified dehydrogenase is a monomeric protein of Mr 60,000 containing one flavin. It has a typical absorption spectrum of flavoprotein with maxima at 457, 375, and 277 nm. The values shifted to 470 and 395 nm on binding of 19-nortestosterone. The enzyme catalyzed the dehydrogenation of 3-keto-5 alpha-steroid at the 4- and 5-position, e.g. the conversion of 5 alpha-androst-1-ene-3,17-dione to 1,4-androstadiene-3,17-dione with the reduction of phenazine methosulfate. The substrate 3-ketosteroid has essentially the 5 alpha-configuration. The enzyme did not reduce potassium ferricyanide but did reduce cytochrome c at a moderate rate, and exhibited only a weak steroid oxidase activity. Stereochemical study demonstrated that the enzyme abstracts the 4 beta, 5 alpha-hydrogens of the substrate as a hydrogen ion through a protein-based reaction and as a hydride ion by transfer to FAD, respectively. The enzyme oxidizes a wide variety of 3-keto-5 alpha-steroids but not 3 beta-hydroxysteroid. The dehydrogenase also catalyzed steroid transhydrogenation between 3-keto-5 alpha-steroid and 3-keto-1,4-diene-steroid. The properties of this enzyme are compared with those of 3-keto-steroid-delta 1-dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

2.
A novel enzyme, pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ)-dependent polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) dehydrogenase, was found in and partially purified from the membrane fraction of a PVA-degrading symbiont, Pseudomonas sp. strain VM15C. The enzyme required PQQ for PVA dehydrogenation with phenazine methosulfate, phenazine ethosulfate, and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol as electron acceptors and did not show PVA oxidase activity leading to H2O2 formation. The enzyme was active toward low-molecular-weight secondary alcohols rather than primary alcohols. A membrane-bound PVA oxidase was also present in cells of VM15C. Although the purified oxidase showed a substrate specificity similar to that of PQQ-dependent PVA dehydrogenase and about threefold-higher PVA-dehydrogenating activity with phenazine methosulfate or phenazine ethosulfate than PVA oxidase activity with H2O2 formation, it was shown that the enzyme does not contain PQQ as the coenzyme, and PQQ did not affect its activity. Incubation of the membrane fraction of cells with PVA caused a reduction in the cytochrome(s) of the fraction.  相似文献   

3.
A novel enzyme, pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ)-dependent polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) dehydrogenase, was found in and partially purified from the membrane fraction of a PVA-degrading symbiont, Pseudomonas sp. strain VM15C. The enzyme required PQQ for PVA dehydrogenation with phenazine methosulfate, phenazine ethosulfate, and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol as electron acceptors and did not show PVA oxidase activity leading to H2O2 formation. The enzyme was active toward low-molecular-weight secondary alcohols rather than primary alcohols. A membrane-bound PVA oxidase was also present in cells of VM15C. Although the purified oxidase showed a substrate specificity similar to that of PQQ-dependent PVA dehydrogenase and about threefold-higher PVA-dehydrogenating activity with phenazine methosulfate or phenazine ethosulfate than PVA oxidase activity with H2O2 formation, it was shown that the enzyme does not contain PQQ as the coenzyme, and PQQ did not affect its activity. Incubation of the membrane fraction of cells with PVA caused a reduction in the cytochrome(s) of the fraction.  相似文献   

4.
An NAD+-linked 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase was purified to homogeneity from a fungus, Cylindrocarpon radicicola ATCC 11011 by ion exchange, gel filtration, and hydrophobic chromatographies. The purified preparation of the dehydrogenase showed an apparent molecular weight of 58,600 by gel filtration and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. SDS-gel electrophoresis gave Mr = 26,000 for the identical subunits of the protein. The amino-terminal residue of the enzyme protein was determined to be glycine. The enzyme catalyzed the oxidation of 17 beta-hydroxysteroids to the ketosteroids with the reduction of NAD+, which was a specific hydrogen acceptor, and also catalyzed the reduction of 17-ketosteroids with the consumption of NADH. The optimum pH of the dehydrogenase reaction was 10 and that of the reductase reaction was 7.0. The enzyme had a high specific activity for the oxidation of testosterone (Vmax = 85 mumol/min/mg; Km for the steroid = 9.5 microM; Km for NAD+ = 198 microM at pH 10.0) and for the reduction of androstenedione (Vmax = 1.8 mumol/min/mg; Km for the steroid = 24 microM; Km for NADH = 6.8 microM at pH 7.0). In the purified enzyme preparation, no activity of 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, delta 5-3-ketosteroid-4,5-isomerase, or steroid ring A-delta-dehydrogenase was detected. Among several steroids tested, only 17 beta-hydroxysteroids such as testosterone, estradiol-17 beta, and 11 beta-hydroxytestosterone, were oxidized, indicating that the enzyme has a high specificity for the substrate steroid. The stereospecificity of hydrogen transfer by the enzyme in dehydrogenation was examined with [17 alpha-3H]testosterone.  相似文献   

5.
Extracellular 3beta-hydroxysteroid oxidase (SO) has been isolated from cell-free cultivation broth at the growth of Mycobacterium vaccae VKM Ac-1815D on glycerol-mineral medium in the presence of sitosterol. The enzyme is responsible for the transformation of 3beta-hydroxy-5-ene- to 3-keto-4-ene-moiety of steroids including dehydrogenation of 3beta-hydroxy function followed by delta5-->delta4 isomerization. 6-Hydroxy-4-sitosten-3-one and 6-hydroxy-4-androsten-3,17-dione were revealed among the metabolites at the incubation of the enzyme preparations with sitosterol and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), respectively. The enzyme was strongly NADH or NADPH dependent. SO has been purified over 300-fold using cultivation broth concentration on hollow fibers followed by fractionation by ammonium sulphate, column chromatography on DEAE-Toyopearl, hydroxyapatite Bio-Gel HTP and double gel-filtration on Bio-Gel A 0.5 M. SDS-electrophoresis gave a molecular mass estimate of 62 +/- 4 kDa. The purified SO obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, double reciprocal plots kinetics revealed Km value towards DHEA 5 x 10(-4) M. Along with SO activity, 17-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17-OH SDH) and 3-ketosteroid-1(2)-dehydrogenase (1(2)-SDH) activities were detected in cell-free cultivation broth. The extracellular steroid transforming activities of C-17-ketosteroid producing mycobacteria were hitherto unreported.  相似文献   

6.
Procedures for the purification of an aldehyde dehydrogenase from extracts of the obligate methylotroph, Methylomonas methylovora are described. The purified enzyme is homogeneous as judged from polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In the presence of an artificial electron acceptor (phenazine methosulfate), the purified enzyme catalyzes the oxidation of straight chain aldehydes (C1-C10 tested), aromatic aldehydes (benzaldehyde, salicylaldehyde), glyoxylate, and glyceraldehyde. Biological electron acceptors such as NAD+, NADP+, FAD, FMN, pyridoxal phosphate, and cytochrome c cannot act as electron carriers. The activity of the enzyme is inhibited by sulfhydryl agents [p-chloromercuribenzoate, N-ethylmaleimide and 5,5-dithiobis (2-nitrobenzoic acid)], cuprous chloride, and ferrour nitrate. The molecular weight of the enzyme as estimated by gel filtration is approximately 45000 and the subunit size determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis is approximately 23000. The purified enzyme is light brown and has an absorption peak at 410 nm. Reduction of enzyme with sodium dithionite or aldehyde substrate resulted in the appearance of peaks at 523 nm and 552 nm. These results suggest that the enzyme is a hemoprotein. There was no evidence that flavins were present as prosthetic group. The amino acid composition of the enzyme is also presented.Non-Standard Abbreviations PMS phenazine methosulfate - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - DEAE diethylaminoethyl  相似文献   

7.
Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase, a multifunctional enzyme responsible for dehydrogenation and decarboxylation of glutaryl-CoA to crotonyl-CoA, has been purified 1,680-fold from porcine liver mitochondria. The purified porcine enzyme has a subunit molecular weight of 47,800 and a native molecular weight of 190,500. Porcine glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase catalyzed the conversion of [1,5-14C]glutaryl-CoA to [14C] crotonyl-CoA and 14CO2 in a 1:1:1 ratio. The porcine enzyme has Km values for electron transfer flavoprotein and glutaryl-CoA of 1.1 and 3.3 microM, respectively, and turnover numbers of 860 mol of electron transfer flavoprotein/min/mol of glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase and 327 mol of glutaryl-CoA/min/mol of glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase. Human glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase has been purified 1,278-fold from human liver mitochondria. The purified human enzyme has a subunit molecular weight of 58,800 and a native molecular weight of 256,000. Human glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase showed a reaction of only partial identity when compared to porcine glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase by Ouchterlony double immunodiffusion analysis using antiserum raised against and monospecific for porcine glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

8.
Whole cells of Pseudomonas testosteroni, induced to synthesize steroid-transforming enzymes beforehand, have been immobilized by entrapment in polyacrylamide gel. The immobilized cells have been used to catalyze the continuous delta1-dehydrogenation of Reichstein's substance S under various conditions in the presence of phenazine methosulfate (PMS), an electron acceptor for the cell-free delta1-dehydrogenase. The presence of PMS substantially increases the rate of reaction when fed with the steroid substrate to a continuous stirred tank reactor containing the immobilized cells. The operational half-life of the delta1-dehydrogenase activity of the cells, about 103 hr under the best operating conditions, is essentially unaffected by the presence of PMS. Though the acceleration of the reaction may be due to PMS-mediated passage of electrons from some component in the electron transport chain to molecular oxygen, the lack of a similar effect with methylene blue is consistent with the conclusion that PMS functions directly as the electron acceptor for the delta1-dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

9.
Ligand specificity of the type I steroid receptor is apparently conferred by the activity of 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. To determine the kinetic properties of this enzyme, rat liver cDNA was expressed in cultured cells using recombinant vaccinia virus. Although this enzyme catalyzes only dehydrogenation when purified from rat liver, the recombinant enzyme obtained from cell lysates catalyzed both 11 beta-dehydrogenation of corticosterone to 11-dehydrocorticosterone and the reverse 11-oxoreduction reaction. At pH 8.5, the first order rate constant Kcat/Km for dehydrogenase activity exceeded that for reductase (63 vs. 38 min-1 x 10(-4], whereas the rate constants for the two reactions were nearly equal (48 vs. 47 min-1 x 10(-4] at pH 7.0. These results are consistent with the previously determined pH optima for these activities in liver microsomes. Removal (with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase) of NADP+ produced by the reductase reaction significantly increased reductase activity. Glycyrrhetinic acid, a known inhibitor of the dehydrogenase reaction, also inhibited the reductase reaction at slightly higher concentrations (50% inhibitory concentration, less than 5 nM for dehydrogenase, 10-20 nM for reductase). Partial inhibition of glycosylation with A1-tunicamycin decreased dehydrogenase activity 50% without affecting reductase activity. The data demonstrate that a single polypeptide catalyzes both dehydrogenation and reduction, although the presence of additional enzyme forms catalyzing one or the other activity has not been ruled out.  相似文献   

10.
A sarcosine dehydrogenase was purified to homogeneity from cell free extract of Pseudomonas putida aerobically grown in a medium containing creatinine or betaine as the carbon and nitrogen sources. The enzyme catalyzed dehydrogenation of N-methyl derivatives of some amino acids but was inert toward dimethylglycine, betaine and choline. Phenazine methosulfate, 2, 6-dichlorophenol indophenol, methylene blue, meldora blue, nile blue and potassium ferricyanide served as electron carriers. The maximal activity was observed at pH 8.0–9.0. The Km and Kmax values for sarcosine were 29 mm and 1.2 μmol/min/mg, respectively. The molecular weight was estimated to be about 170,000, presumably composed of four sub-units. Spectrophotometric and fluorometric analyses indicated that the enzyme was a flavoprotein.  相似文献   

11.
Succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) was solubilized from membranes of Mycobacterium phlei by Triton X-100 with a recovery of about 90%. The solubilized SDH was purified about 90-fold by Sephacryl S-300, DEAE-cellulose, hydroxylapatite, and isoelectric focusing in the presence of Triton X-100 with a 20% recovery. SDH was homogeneous, as determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in nondenaturing gels containing Triton X-100. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the enzyme revealed two subunits with molecular weights of 62,000 and 26,000. SDH is a flavoprotein containing 1 mol of flavin adenine dinucleotide, 7 to 8 mol of nonheme iron, and 7 to 8 mol of acid-labile sulfide per mol of protein. Using phenazine methosulfate and 2,6-dichloroindophenol as electron acceptors, the enzyme had an apparent Km of 0.12 mM succinate. SDH exhibited a sigmoidal relationship of rate to succinate concentration, indicating cooperativity. The enzyme was competitively inhibited by fumarate with a Ki of 0.15 mM. In the absence of Triton X-100, the enzyme aggregated, retained 50% of the activity, and could be resolubilized with Triton X-100 with full restoration of activity. Cardiolipin had no effect on the enzyme activity in the absence of Triton X-100, but it stimulated the activity by about 30% in the presence of 0.1% Triton X-100 in the assay mixture. Menaquinone-9(2H), isolated from M. phlei, had no effect on the enzyme activity either in the presence or absence of Triton X-100.  相似文献   

12.
Seven multiforms of indanol dehydrogenase were isolated in a highly purified state from male rabbit liver cytosol. The enzymes were monomeric proteins with similar molecular weights of 30,000-37,000 but with distinct electrophoretic mobilities. All the enzymes oxidized alicyclic alcohols including benzene dihydrodiol and hydroxysteroids at different optimal pH, but showed clear differences in cofactor specificity, steroid specificity, and reversibility of the reaction. Two NADP+-dependent enzymes exhibited both 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity for 5 alpha-androstanes and 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity for 5 beta-androstan-3 alpha-ol-17-one. Three of the other enzymes with dual cofactor specificity catalyzed predominantly 5 beta-androstane-3 alpha,17 beta-diol dehydrogenation. The reverse reaction rates of these five enzymes were low, whereas the other two enzymes, which had 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity for 5 alpha-androstanes or 3(17)beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity for 5 alpha-androstanes, highly reduced 3-ketosteroids and nonsteroidal aromatic carbonyl compounds with NADPH as a cofactor. All the enzymes exhibited Km values lower for the hydroxysteroids than for the alicyclic alcohols. The results of kinetic analyses with a mixture of 1-indanol and hydroxysteroids, pH and heat stability, and inhibitor sensitivity suggested strongly that, in the seven enzymes, both alicyclic alcohol dehydrogenase and hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activities reside on a single enzyme protein. On the basis of these data, we suggest that indanol dehydrogenase exists in multiple forms in rabbit liver cytosol and may function in in vivo androgen metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
Alcohol dehydrogenase from Methylobacterium organophilum.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The alcohol dehydrogenase from Methylobacterium organophilum, a facultative methane-oxidizing bacterium, has been purified to homogeneity as indicated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. It has several properties in common with the alcohol dehydrogenases from other methylotrophic bacteria. The active enzyme is a dimeric protein, both subunits having molecular weights of about 62,000. The enzyme exhibits broad substrate specificity for primary alcohols and catalyzes the two-step oxidation of methanol to formate. The apparent Michaelis constants of the enzyme are 2.9 x 10(-5) M for methanol and 8.2 x 10(-5) M for formaldehyde. Activity of the purified enzyme is dependent on phenazine methosulfate. Certain characteristics of this enzyme distinguish it from the other alcohol dehydrogenases of other methylotrophic bacteria. Ammonia is not required for, but stimulates the activity of newly purified enzyme. An absolute dependence on ammonia develops after storage of the purified enzyme. Activity is not inhibited by phosphate. The fluorescence spectrum of the enzyme indicates that it and the cofactor associated with it may be chemically different from the alcohol dehydrogenases from other methylotrophic bacteria. The alcohol dehydrogenases of Hyphomicrobium WC-65, Pseudomonas methanica, Methylosinus trichosporium, and several facultative methylotrophs are serologically related to the enzyme purified in this study. The enzymes of Rhodopseudomonas acidophila and of organisms of the Methylococcus group did not cross-react with the antiserum prepared against the alcohol dehydrogenase of M. organophilum.  相似文献   

14.
Choline dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.99.1) catalyzes the four-electron oxidation of choline to glycine-betaine via a betaine-aldehyde intermediate. Such a reaction is of considerable interest for biotechnological applications in that transgenic plants engineered with bacterial glycine-betaine-synthesizing enzymes have been shown to have enhanced tolerance towards various environmental stresses, such as hypersalinity, freezing, and high temperatures. To date, choline dehydrogenase has been poorly characterized in its biochemical and kinetic properties, mainly because its purification has been hampered by instability of the enzyme in vitro. In the present report, we cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli the betA gene from the moderate halophile Halomonas elongata which codes for a hypothetical choline dehydrogenase. The recombinant enzyme was purified to more than 70% homogeneity as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by treatment with 30 to 50% saturation of ammonium sulfate followed by column chromatography using DEAE-Sepharose. The purified enzyme showed similar substrate specificities with either choline or betaine-aldehyde as the substrate, as indicated by the apparent V/K values (where V is the maximal velocity and K is the Michaelis constant) of 0.9 and 0.6 micro mol of O(2) min(-1) mg(-1) mM(-1) at pH 7 and 25 degrees C, respectively. With 1 mM phenazine methosulfate as the primary electron acceptor, the apparent V(max) values for choline and betaine-aldehyde were 10.9 and 5.7 micro mol of O(2) min(-1) mg(-1), respectively. These V(max) values decreased four- to sevenfold when molecular oxygen was used as the electron acceptor. Altogether, the kinetic data are consistent with the conclusion that H. elongata betA codes for a choline dehydrogenase that can also act as an oxidase when electron acceptors other than molecular oxygen are not available.  相似文献   

15.
In addition to the two species of ferredoxin-type iron-sulfur centers (Centers S-1 and S-2), a third iron-sulfur center (Center S-3), which is paramagnetic in the oxidezed state analogous to the bacterial high potential iron-sulfur protein, has bwen detected in the reconstitutively active soluble succinate dehydrogenase preparation. Midpoint potential (at pH 7.4) of Center S-3 determined in a particulate succinate-cytochrome c reductase is +60 +/- 15 mV. In soluble form, Center S-3 becomes extremely labile towards oxygen or ferricyanide plus phenazine methosulfate similar to reconstitutive activity of the dehydrogenase. Thus, even freshly prepared reconstitutively active enzyme preparations show EPR spectra of Center S-3 which correspond approximately to 0.5 eq per flavin; in particulate preparations this component was found in a 1:1 ratio to flavin. All reconstitutively inactive dehydrogenase preparations that Center S-3 is an innate constituent of succinate dehydrogenase and plays an important role in mediating electrons from the flavoprotein subunit to most probably ubiquinone and then to the cytochrome chain.  相似文献   

16.
A modification of the assays for isocitrate and malate dehydrogenase, using phenazine methosulphate and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, permits measurements on cell-free extracts. Phenazine methosulfate at concentrations higher than 30 nmoles/3 ml prevents the accumulation of NADPH or NADH and thus reduces errors due to endogenous oxidation of these compounds. The use of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol rather than a tetrazolium salt as the terminal electron acceptor allows continuous spectrophotometric measurement of enzyme activities.Assay for NADP-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase can be performed in aerobic or anaerobic conditions. Assays for malate dehydrogenase should be run under anaerobic conditions because of the interference by oxygen on the phenazine methosulfate mediated reduction of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol by NADH. Under anaerobic conditions, where NADH oxidase is inoperative, the phenazine methosulfate/dichlorophenolindophenol assay is more sensitive than the assay using direct measurement of NADH at 340 nm.  相似文献   

17.
A membrane-bound glucoside 3-dehydrogenase [EC 1.1.99.13], which oxidizes validoxylamine A to the 3-keto derivative, was solubilized from the membrane fraction of Flavobacterium saccharophilum by Triton X-100 and purified about 280-fold with an overall yield of 30% from the membrane fraction by column chromatography on DEAE- and CM-Sepharose CL-6B and gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300. The purified enzyme exhibited a single protein band on disc gel electrophoresis, and FAD was shown to be the prosthetic group. The enzyme had a molecular weight of 270,000 as determined by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300 and consisted of 4 identical subunits each with a molecular weight of 66,000. The enzyme reacted with various artificial electron acceptors such as 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP), phenazine methosulfate, and ferricyanide. The optimum pH for DCIP reductase activity was 6.0. The enzyme was inhibited by Hg2+ and p-chloromercuribenzoate. D-Glucose and methyl-alpha- and beta-D-glucoside showed the highest susceptibility to the enzyme, and were converted to the corresponding 3-keto sugars.  相似文献   

18.
Pseudomonas fluorescens E118 was isolated from soil as an effective eugenol-degrading organism by a screening using eugenol as enrichment substrate. The first enzyme involved in the degradation of eugenol in this organism, eugenol dehydrogenase, was purified after induction by eugenol, and the purity of the enzyme was shown by SDS-PAGE and gel-permeation HLPC. The enzyme is a heterodimer that consists of a 10-kDa cytochrome c and a 58-kDa subunit. The larger subunit presumably contains flavin, suggesting a flavocytochrome c structure and an electron transfer via flavin and cytochrome c during dehydrogenation. The activity of the purified enzyme depended on the addition of a final electron acceptor such as phenazine methosulfate, 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol, cytochrome c, or potassium ferricyanide. The enzyme catalyzed the dehydrogenation of three different 4-hydroxybenzylic structures including the conversion of eugenol to coniferyl alcohol, 4-alkylphenols to 1-(4-hydroxyphenyl)alcohols, and 4-hydroxybenzylalcohols to the corresponding aldehydes. The catalytic and structural similarity between this enzyme and a Penicillium vanillyl-alcohol oxidase and 4-alkylphenol methylhydroxylases from several Pseudomonas species is discussed. Received: 17 June 1998 / Accepted: 12 October 1998  相似文献   

19.
2-Methyl-branched chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase was purified to homogeneity from rat liver mitochondria. The native molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated to be 170,000 by gel filtration. On sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis both with and without 2-mercaptoethanol, the enzyme showed a single protein band with Mr = 41,500, suggesting that this enzyme is composed of four subunits of equal size. Its isoelectric point was 5.50 +/- 0.2, and A1%280 nm was 12.5. This enzyme contained protein-bound FAD. The purified enzyme dehydrogenated S-2-methylbutyryl-CoA and isobutyryl-CoA with equal activity. The activities with each of these compounds were co-purified throughout the entire purification procedure. This enzyme also dehydrogenated R-2-methylbutyryl-CoA, but the specific activity was considerably lower (22%) than that for the S-enantiomer. The enzyme did not dehydrogenate other acyl-CoAs, including isovaleryl-CoA, propionyl-CoA, butyryl-CoA, octanoyl-CoA, and palmitoyl-CoA, at any significant rate. Apparent Km and Vmax values for S-2-methylbutyryl-CoA were 20 microM and 2.2 mumol min-1 mg-1, respectively, while those for isobutyryl-CoA were 89 microM and 2.0 mumol min-1 mg-1 using phenazine methosulfate as an artificial electron acceptor. The enzyme was also active with electron transfer flavoprotein. Tiglyl-CoA and methacrylyl-CoA were identified as the reaction products from S-2-methylbutyryl-CoA and isobutyryl-CoA, respectively. 2-Ethylacrylyl-CoA was produced from R-2-methylbutyryl-CoA. Tiglyl-CoA competitively inhibited the activity with both S-2-methylbutyryl-CoA and isobutyryl-CoA with a similar Ki. The enzyme activity was also severely inhibited by several organic sulfhydryl reagents such as N-ethylmaleimide, p-hydroxymercuribenzoate, and methyl mercury iodide. The pattern and degree of inhibition were essentially identical for both substrates. The purified 2-methyl-branched chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase was immunologically distinct from isovaleryl-CoA-, short chain acyl-CoA-, medium chain acyl-CoA-, or long chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

20.
2-Hydroxyisonicotinate dehydrogenase from Mycobacterium sp. INA1 was purified 26-fold to apparent homogeneity. The enzyme is involved in isonicotinate degradation by Mycobacterium sp. INA1 and catalyzes the conversion of 2-hydroxyisonicotinate to 2,6-dihydroxypyridine-4-carboxylate. The purified protein exhibited a native molecular mass of 300 kDa and subunits of 97, 31 and 17 kDa, respectively, indicating an α2β2γ2 structure. The absorption spectrum of the homogeneous enzyme was characteristic for an iron/sulfur flavoprotein. 3.8 mol of iron, 3.7 mol of acid labile sulfur, 0.94 mol of FAD and 0.75 mol of molybdenum were determined per mol of protomer. The molybdenum cofactor was identified as molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide. 2-Hydroxyisonicotinate dehydrogenase was inactivated in the presence of cyanide. According to these basic properties the protein seems to belong to the class of molybdo-iron/sulfur flavoproteins of the xanthine oxidase family.  相似文献   

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