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1.
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   

2.
D-beta-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase is a lipid-requiring enzyme, which is a tetramer both in the mitochondrial inner membrane and as the purified enzyme reconstituted with phospholipid. For the active enzyme-phospholipid complex in the absence of ligands, we previously found that reaction with N-ethylmaleimide (at 5 mol/mol of enzyme subunit) resulted in progressive loss of enzymic activity with an inactivation stoichiometry of 1 equiv of sulfhydryl derivatized per mole of enzyme and a maximum derivatization of 2 equiv [Latruffe, N., Brenner, S. C., & Fleischer, S. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 5285-5290]. We now find, in the presence of nucleotide or substrate, that the rate of inactivation is significantly reduced, which indicates that these ligands afford protection of the essential sulfhydryl. Further, in the presence of ligands, the inactivation stoichiometry is 0.5, consistent with half-of-the-site reactivity of the essential sulfhydryl. Thus, at a low ratio of N-ethylmaleimide to enzyme, nucleotide or substrate affords essentially complete protection of the nonessential sulfhydryl from derivatization. The binding characteristics of NADH to both the native and N-ethylmaleimide-derivatized enzyme have been compared by fluorescence spectroscopy. Quenching of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of the protein shows that the enzyme, derivatized with N-ethylmaleimide either in the absence or in the presence of NAD+, binds NADH but with a reduced Kd (approximately 50 microM as compared with approximately 20 microM for native enzyme). However, a critical change has occurred in that resonance energy transfer from protein to bound NADH, observed in the native enzyme, is abolished in the N-ethylmaleimide-derivatized enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Single tryptophan mutant proteins of a catalytically active domain III recombinant protein (PE24) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. The binding of the dinucleotide substrate, NAD+, to the PE24 active site was studied by exploiting intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence for the wild-type, single Trp, and tryptophan-deficient mutant proteins. Various approaches were used to study the substrate binding process, including dynamic quenching, CD spectroscopy, steady-state fluorescence emission analysis, NAD+-glycohydrolase activity, NAD+ binding analysis, protein denaturation experiments, fluorescence lifetime analysis, steady-state anisotropy measurement, stopped flow fluorescence spectroscopy, and quantum yield determination. It was found that the conservative replacement of tryptophan residues with phenylalanine had little or no effect on the folded stability and enzyme activity of the PE24 protein. Dynamic quenching experiments indicated that when bound to the active site of the enzyme, the NAD+ substrate protected Trp-558 from solvent to a large extent but had no effect on the degree of solvent exposure for tryptophans 417 and 466. Also, upon substrate binding, the anisotropy of the Trp-417(W466F/W558F) protein showed the largest increase, followed by Trp-466(W417F/W558F), and there was no effect on Trp-558(W417F/W466F). Furthermore, the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence exhibited the highest degree of substrate-induced quenching for the wild-type protein, followed in decreasing order by Trp-417(W466F/W558F), Trp-558(W417F/W466F), and Trp-466(W417F/W558F). These data provide evidence for a structural rearrangement in the enzyme domain near Trp-417 invoked by the binding of the NAD+ substrate.  相似文献   

5.
Previous studies showed that modification of an average of one of the three tryptophan residues of succinyl-CoA synthetase of Escherichia coli abolished enzyme activity, but did not prevent phosphorylation of the enzyme by ATP [Ybarra, J., Prasad, A. R. S., & Nishimura, J.S. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7174-7178]. In the present study, single mutations in which each of the three tryptophans (beta-Trp43, beta-Trp76, and beta-Trp248) has been changed to phenylalanine (designated W43F, W76F, and W248F) have been accomplished by the technique of site-directed mutagenesis and the mutant proteins isolated. In addition, a double mutant in which beta-Trp43 and beta-Trp248 were changed to phenylalanines (W43,248F) has also been isolated. Each of the mutant enzymes was practically as active as wild type. Since the emission spectrum of beta-Trp76 reflected a low fluorescence intensity for this residue, it was possible to obtain the emission spectrum of each tryptophan residue by using W43F, W248F, and W43,248F. From the positions of the emission maxima and the results of iodide quenching of fluorescence, it was deduced that beta-Trp248 is a surface residue, beta-Trp43 is buried, and beta-Trp76 is intermediate in location. Coenzyme A, but no other substrate, protected the fluorescence of beta-Trp76 and beta-Trp248, but not of beta-Trp43, against quenching by acrylamide. These results are consistent with an interaction between beta-Trp76 and beta-Trp248 and the binding site for CoA.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract To know if significant disulfide reduction was an important event during Streptomyces spore germination, the thiol-disulfide ratio was studied. Sulfhydryl and disulfide levels were determined by the quenching reactionof the fluorescence of fluorescein mercuric acetate. In the first 2 h of germination (darkening of spores), no significant changes in both levels were found. During spore swelling, the sulfhydryl content increased, whereas the disulfide content decreased. This increase in sulfhydryl groups was mainly occurring (93%) in the spore soluble fraction. Our data allowed us to discard the possibility of a major change in the thiol-disulfide ratio during initiation of Streptomyces spore germination.  相似文献   

7.
beta-Ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (acyl-CoA:acetyl-CoA C-acyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.16) is known to possess sulfhydryl groups of cysteines at the active site that are essential for its catalytic activity. Other groups at the active site that participate in the catalytic process were identified by using anhydride reagents which covalently modify the protein by specifically reacting with any amino groups potentially present at the active site. Since these reagents may also react with thiol groups, the enzyme's amino groups were modified after masking the cysteine thiols present by an alkylalkane thiosulfonate-type reagent, methyl methanethiol-sulfonate (MMTS), that selectively formed a disulfide bridge, thus generating an inactive thiolmethylated enzyme. When this procedure was followed, the enzyme could be undoubtedly modified at its amino by the anhydride reagent, leading to a doubly modified protein. The thiomethyl group could then be removed by reduction with dithiothreitol, yielding an enzyme modified solely on the amino residues. The amino group could be unblocked in turn by exposure to acidic pH. The different anhydrides inactivated thiolase, but only acetoacetyl coenzyme A (AcAcCoA) provided any protection against inactivation. When thiolmethylcitraconyl thiolase was reduced with dithiothreitol the enzyme remained inactive, but when the doubly modified enzyme was exposed to pH 5 then the reduction led to formation of an active enzyme. These results are interpreted as demonstrating a role for an amino group at the enzyme active site. A catalytic mechanism is proposed for the enzyme which involves the amino group.  相似文献   

8.
Cucurbitacin delta 23-reductase from Cucurbita maxima var. Green Hubbard fruit displays an apparent Mr of 32,000, a Stokes radius of 263 nm and a diffusion coefficient of 8.93 X 10(-7) cm2 X s-1. The enzyme appears to possess a homogeneous dimeric quaternary structure with a subunit Mr of 15,000. Two tryptophan and fourteen tyrosine residues per dimer were found. Emission spectral properties of the enzyme and fluorescence quenching by iodide indicate the tryptophan residues to be buried within the protein molecule. In the pH range 5-7, where no conformational changes were detected, protonation of a sterically related ionizable group with a pK of approx. 6.0 markedly influenced the fluorescence of the tryptophan residues. Protein fluorescence quenching was employed to determine the dissociation constants for binding of NADPH (Kd 17 microM), NADP+ (Kd 30 microM) and elaterinide (Kd 227 microM). Fluorescence energy transfer between the tryptophan residues and enzyme-bound NADPH was observed.  相似文献   

9.
The 73-kDa protease (73K protease) was purified from a clinical isolate of Serratia marcescens kums 3958. The purified protease appeared homogeneous by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence or absence of 2-mercaptoethanol. The protease is active in a broad pH range with maximum activity at pH 7.5-8.0. The protease appeared to be a thiol protease, since it was inhibited by sulfhydryl reactive compounds such as p-chloromercuribenzoic acid, fluorescein mercuric acetate (FMA), iodoacetamide, and N-ethylmaleimide, and the protease activity was enhanced by various reducing agents such as cysteine, glutathione, 2-mercaptoethanol, and dithiothreitol. The protease contained 2 mol of free sulfhydryl residues per mol of protease. When the protease was reacted with FMA, a maximum of 2 mol of FMA per mol of enzyme was found reacted, based on fluorescence quenching in which the enzyme inactivation was paralleled linearly with the loss of both SH groups. This indicates possible equal involvement of the two thiol groups for the enzyme activity. The inactivation of the protease by FMA was partially restored by a dialysis in the presence of cysteine or dithiothreitol. The protease was not inhibited by high molecular weight kininogen but was inhibited by alpha 2-macroglobulin. The protease bound stoichiometrically to alpha 2-macroglobulin with 1:1 molar ratio and 25% activity remained constant even after the addition of 4 molar excess of alpha 2-macroglobulin. The protease extensively degraded IgG, IgA, fibronectin, fibrinogen, and alpha 1-protease inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Addition of 1 eq of fluorescein mercuric acetate (FMA) to beef heart cytochrome oxidase was found to inhibit the steady-state electron transfer activity by 50%, but further additions up to 10 eq had no additional effect on activity. The partial inhibition caused by FMA is thus similar to that observed with other mercury compounds (Mann, A. J., and Auer, H. E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 454-458). The fluorescence of FMA was quenched by a factor of 10 upon binding to cytochrome oxidase, consistent with the involvement of a sulfhydryl group. However, addition of mercuric chloride to FMA-cytochrome oxidase resulted in an increase in fluorescence, suggesting that FMA was displaced from the high affinity binding site. Cytochrome c binding to FMA-cytochrome oxidase resulted in a 10% decrease in the fluorescence, possibly caused by Forster energy transfer from FMA to the cytochrome c heme. The binding site for FMA in cytochrome oxidase was investigated by carrying out sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis under progressively milder dissociation conditions. When FMA-cytochrome oxidase was dissociated with 3% sodium dodecyl sulfate and 6 M urea, FMA was predominantly bound to subunit II following electrophoresis. However, when the dissociation was carried out at 4 degrees C in the absence of urea with progressively smaller amounts of lithium dodecyl sulfate, the labeling of subunit II decreased and that of subunit I increased. These experiments demonstrate that mercury compounds bind to a high affinity site on cytochrome oxidase, possibly located in subunit I, but then migrate to subunit II under the normal sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis conditions. A definitive assignment of the high affinity binding site in the native enzyme cannot be made, however, because it is possible that mercury compounds can migrate from one sulfhydryl to another under even the mildest electrophoresis conditions.  相似文献   

11.
Oeljeklaus S  Fischer K  Gerhardt B 《Planta》2002,214(4):597-607
Following chromatography on hydroxyapatite, the elution profile of the thiolase activity of the glyoxysomal fraction from sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) cotyledons exhibited two peaks when the enzyme activity was assayed with acetoacetyl-CoA as substrate. Only one of these two activity peaks was detectable when a long-chain thiolase substrate was used in the activity assay. The proteins (thiolase I and thiolase II) underlying the two activity peaks detected with acetoacetyl-CoA were of glyoxysomal origin. They were purified using glyoxysomal matrices as starting material, and biochemically characterized. Thiolase I is an acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase (EC 2.3.1.9) exhibiting activity only towards acetoacetyl-CoA (Km = 11 microM). Its contribution to the total glyoxysomal thiolytic activity towards acetoacetyl-CoA amounted to about 15%. Thiolase II is a 3-oxoacyl-CoA thiolase (EC 2.3.1.16). The activity of the enzyme towards 3-oxoacyl-CoAs increased with increasing chain length of the substrate. Thiolase II exhibited a Km value of 27 microM with acetoacetyl-CoA as substrate. and Km values between 3 and 7 microM with substrates having a carbon chain length from 6 to 16 carbon atoms. The thiolase activity of the glyoxysomes towards acetoacetyl-CoA and 3-oxopalmitoyl-CoA exceeded the glyoxysomal butyryl-CoA and palmitoyl-CoA beta-oxidation rates, respectively, by about 10-fold at all substrate concentrations employed (1-15 microM).  相似文献   

12.
N Papadakis  G G Hammes 《Biochemistry》1977,16(9):1890-1896
One sulfhydryl group per polypeptide chain of the pyruvate dehydrogenase component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex from Escherichia coli was selectively labeled with N-[P-(2-benzoxazoyl)phenyl]-maleimide (NBM), 4-dimethylamino-4-magnitude of-maleimidostilbene (NSM), and N-(4-dimethylamino-3,5-dinitrophenyl)maleimide (DDPM) in 0.05 M potassium phosphate (pH 7). Modification of the sulfhydryl group did not alter the enzymatic activity or the binding of 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) or thiochrome diphosphate to the enzyme. The fluorescence of the NBM or NSM coupled to the sulfhydryl group on the enzyme was quenched by binding to the enzyme of the substrate pyruvate the coenzyme thiamine diphosphate, the coenzyme analogue thiochrome diphosphate, the regulatory ligands acetyl-CoA, GTP, and phosphoenolpyruvate, and the acetyl-CoA analogue, ANS. Fluorescence energy transfer measurements were carried out for the enzyme-bound donor-acceptor pairs NBM-ANS, NBM-thiochrome diphosphate ANS-DDPM, and thiochrome diphosphate-DDM. The results indicate that the modified sulfhydryl group is more than 40 A from the active site and approximately 49 A from the acetyl-CoA regulatory site. Thus, a conformational change must accompany the binding of ligands to the regulatory and catalytic sites. Anisotropy depolarization measurements with ANS bound on the isolated pyruvate dehydrogenase in 0.05 M potassium phosphate (pH 7.0) suggest that under these conditions the enzyme is dimeric.  相似文献   

13.
A fourfold increase in sulfhydryl content upon germination of Bacillus megaterium spores was observed by the standard fluorescein mercuric acetate assay as reported by others. However, assay of ruptured dormant spores or the use of N-ethylmaleimide and a denaturing agent on intact spores showed a constant sulfhydryl level in dormancy and in germination. The apparent increase in sulfhydryl groups observed on germination was shown to be due to inaccessibility of most sulfhydryl groups in the dormant spore to sulfhydryl reagents. The disulfide content of dormant spores showed no change on germination, nor was any evidence found for production of low-molecular-weight sulfhydryl or disulfide compounds during germination.  相似文献   

14.
A series of N-alkylmaleimides varying in chainlength from N-methyl- to N-octylmaleimide inclusive was shown to effectively inactivate sheep liver sorbitol dehydrogenase at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C. The apparent second-order rate constants for inactivation increased with increasing chainlength of the N-alkylmaleimide used. Positive chainlength effects were also indicated by the Kd values for the N-ethyl and N-heptyl derivatives obtained from studies of the saturation kinetics observed for inactivation of the enzyme at high concentrations of these maleimides. The complete inactivation of sorbitol dehydrogenase was demonstrated to occur through the selective covalent modification of one cysteine residue per subunit of enzyme. The stoichiometry of enzyme inactivation was supported on the one hand by fluorescence titration with fluorescein mercuric acetate of the native and the inactivated enzyme, and, on the other hand, by the simultaneous inactivation of the enzyme with selective modification of one sulfhydryl per subunit by N-[p-(2-benzoxazolyl)phenyl]maleimide. Protection of the enzyme from N-alkylmaleimide inactivation was observed with the binding of NADH, whereas both NAD and sorbitol were ineffective as protecting ligands. Diazotized 3-aminopyridine adenine dinucleotide, in contrast to previous studies of this reagent with yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and rabbit muscle glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, did not function as a site-labeling reagent for sorbitol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

15.
Soluble formate dehydrogenase from Methanobacterium formicicum was purified 71-fold with a yield of 35%. Purification was performed anaerobically in the presence of 10 mM sodium azide which stabilized the enzyme. The purified enzyme reduced, with formate, 50 mumol of methyl viologen per min per mg of protein and 8.2 mumol of coenzyme F420 per min per mg of protein. The apparent Km for 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin, a hydrolytic derivative of coenzyme F420, was 10-fold greater (63 microM) than for coenzyme F420 (6 microM). The purified enzyme also reduced flavin mononucleotide (Km = 13 microM) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (Km = 25 microM) with formate, but did not reduce NAD+ or NADP+. The reduction of NADP+ with formate required formate dehydrogenase, coenzyme F420, and coenzyme F420:NADP+ oxidoreductase. The formate dehydrogenase had an optimal pH of 7.9 when assayed with the physiological electron acceptor coenzyme F420. The optimal reaction rate occurred at 55 degrees C. The molecular weight was 288,000 as determined by gel filtration. The purified formate dehydrogenase was strongly inhibited by cyanide (Ki = 6 microM), azide (Ki = 39 microM), alpha,alpha-dipyridyl, and 1,10-phenanthroline. Denaturation of the purified formate dehydrogenase with sodium dodecyl sulfate under aerobic conditions revealed a fluorescent compound. Maximal excitation occurred at 385 nm, with minor peaks at 277 and 302 nm. Maximal fluorescence emission occurred at 455 nm.  相似文献   

16.
Betaine-homocysteine S-methyltransferase (BHMT) is a zinc-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of a methyl group from glycine betaine (Bet) to homocysteine (Hcy) to form dimethylglycine (DMG) and methionine (Met). Previous studies in other laboratories have indicated that catalysis proceeds through the formation of a ternary complex, with a transition state mimicked by the inhibitor S-(delta-carboxybutyl)-l-homocysteine (CBHcy). Using changes in intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence to determine the affinity of human BHMT for substrates, products, or CBHcy, we now demonstrate that the enzyme-substrate complex reaches its transition state through an ordered bi-bi mechanism in which Hcy is the first substrate to bind and Met is the last product released. Hcy, Met, and CBHcy bind to the enzyme to form binary complexes with K(d) values of 7.9, 6.9, and 0.28 microM, respectively. Binary complexes with Bet and DMG cannot be detected with fluorescence as a probe, but Bet and DMG bind tightly to BHMT-Hcy to form ternary complexes with K(d) values of 1.1 and 0.73 microM, respectively. Mutation of each of the seven tryptophan residues in human BHMT provides evidence that the enzyme undergoes two distinct conformational changes that are reflected in the fluorescence of the enzyme. The first is induced when Hcy binds, and the second, when Bet binds. As predicted by the crystal structure of BHMT, the amino acids Trp44 and Tyr160 are involved in binding Bet, and Glu159 in binding Hcy. Replacing these residues by site-directed mutagenesis significantly reduces the catalytic efficiency (V(max)/K(m)) of the enzyme. Replacing Tyr77 with Phe abolishes enzyme activity.  相似文献   

17.
Conformational changes induced by binding of ligands to cytosolic NADP(+)-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase from lactating bovine mammary gland were assessed using circular dichroism and fluorescence techniques. The secondary structure of isocitrate dehydrogenase, as monitored by CD spectra in the far-UV region, is unaltered by enzyme-ligand interactions; in contrast, dramatic changes occur in the near-UV region (270-290 nm) assigned to tyrosine and/or solvent-exposed tryptophan residues. Both the coenzyme analog, 2'-phosphoadenosine 5'-diphosphoribose, and NADPH have an effect on the CD spectrum which is opposite to that produced by metal complexes of either isocitrate or citrate. A CD band at 292 nm assigned to approximately 2 tryptophan residues in a hydrophobic environment is unchanged by binding of substrate or coenzyme. Approximately 30% of the intrinsic fluorescence of isocitrate dehydrogenase, corresponding to approximately 2 tryptophan residues, is not quenched by acrylamide in the absence of 6.3 M guanidine hydrochloride and remains unquenched in the enzyme-substrate complex. The constancy in the proportion of buried and exposed tryptophan residues implicates tyrosine in the observed near-UV CD spectral changes. Since binding of ligands does not influence quaternary structure (Seery, V.L., and Farrell, H. M., Jr. (1989) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 274, 453-462), activation of isocitrate dehydrogenase may be related to a substrate-induced conformational transition.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
An early development-specific soluble 55 kDa Ca(2+)-dependent protein kinase has been purified to homogeneity from sandalwood somatic embryos and biochemically characterized. The purified enzyme, swCDPK, resolved into a single band on 10% polyacrylamide gels, both under denaturing and non-denaturing conditions. swCDPK activity was strictly dependent on Ca(2+), K(0.5) (apparent binding constant) for Ca(2+)-activation of substrate phosphorylation activity being 0.7 microM and for autophosphorylation activity approximately 50 nM. Ca(2+)-dependence for activation, CaM-independence, inhibition by CaM-antagonist (IC(50) for W7=6 microM, for W5=46 microM) and cross-reaction with polyclonal antibodies directed against the CaM-like domain of soybean CDPK, confirmed the presence of an endogenous CaM-like domain in the purified enzyme. Kinetic studies revealed a K(m) value of 1.3 mg/ml for histone III-S and a V(max) value of 0.1 nmol min(-1) mg(-1). The enzyme exhibited high specificity for ATP with a K(m) value of 10 nM. Titration with calcium resulted in the enhancement of intrinsic emission fluorescence of swCDPK and a shift in the lambda(max) emission from tryptophan residues. A reduction in the efficiency of non-radiative energy transfer from tyrosine to tryptophan residues was also observed. These are taken as evidence for the occurrence of Ca(2+)-induced conformational change in swCDPK. The emission spectral properties of swCDPK in conjunction with Ca(2+) levels required for autophosphorylation and substrate phosphorylation help understand mode of Ca(2+) activation of this enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
CO dehydrogenase from Clostridium thermoaceticum is a nickel-containing enzyme that catalyzes both the reversible conversion of CO2 to CO (for incorporation into the carbonyl group of acetate) and the synthesis of acetyl-CoA from methyl corrinoid, CO, and CoASH. The latter activity is conveniently assayed by monitoring the exchange of [1-14C]acetyl-CoA (carbonyl group) with 12CO. Kinetic parameters for the highly oxygen sensitive exchange activity have been determined: Km (acetyl-CoA) = 600 microM; Vmax = 440 min-1. In addition, coenzyme A analogues have been tested as inhibitors of the exchange to probe the active site of the enzyme; each has no effect on the CO2 in equilibrium CO activity of CO dehydrogenase. Coenzyme A, the substrate for acetate biosynthesis, is a potent competitive inhibitor, KI = 7 microM. Comparison of this value with that for desulfo-CoA (KI = 6000 microM) suggests that a key mode of binding is through the sulfur atom, possibly to a metal site on the enzyme. The relatively high affinity of the enzyme for CoASH relative to acetyl-CoA is consistent with its proposed operation in the acetogenic direction. The differential sensitivity to oxygen and storage of the two activities of CO dehydrogenase as well as the contrasting effect of coenzyme A inhibitors suggests that acetate assemblage occurs at a site distinct from that for CO dehydrogenation.  相似文献   

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