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1.
We previously described an arginase-deficient, polyamine-dependent Chinese hamster ovary cell line which grows in serum-free medium. From this strain we isolated a new mutant strain that has no detectable catalytic ornithine decarboxylase activity. The mutant cells contain, however, immunoreactive ornithine decarboxylase-like protein roughly in the same quantity as the parent strain. The mutant and the parent cell line strains also contain similar amounts of ornithine decarboxylase-mRNA hybridizable to a specific cDNA. If polyamines are omitted from the medium, proliferation of the mutant cells is considerably retarded and ceases in 6 to 10 days. Addition of ornithine or alpha-difluoromethylornithine, a specific inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase, has no effect on these cells. Putrescine and spermidine decreased in the mutant cells to undetectable levels during polyamine starvation, whereas spermine was reduced to 1/5th of that found in the control cultures. Polyamines appear to be indispensable for the mutant strain, but this was obvious only after the amount of polyamines, found as impurities in bovine serum albumin used in the medium, was reduced by dialysis to 10(-12) M. Because sera contain polyamines, the ability of the mutant strain to grow in serum-free medium is a great advantage in elucidation of the mechanisms of polyamine function.  相似文献   

2.
Phorbol ester tumor promoters and growth factors rapidly stimulate ornithine decarboxylase activity in the transformed hamster fibroblast line HE68BP. We report here a close correspondence between the time courses and magnitudes of induction of ornithine decarboxylase activity and immunoreactive ornithine decarboxylase protein following treatment of HE68BP cells with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) and/or refeeding with fresh medium. Cycloheximide addition to induced cells caused a rapid fall in the levels of both ornithine decarboxylase activity and ornithine decarboxylase protein. Northern blot analysis of RNA isolated from HE68BP cells indicated that treatment with TPA and fresh medium increased the amount of two species of mRNA of lengths 2.4 and 2.1 kilobase. This increased accumulation of ornithine decarboxylase mRNA corresponded temporally to that observed at the protein level, with a 15-fold maximal induction 7 h after treatment followed by a rapid decline in hybridizable RNA. These data indicate that stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity by TPA or refeeding involves changes in levels of ornithine decarboxylase mRNA as well as changes in the rate of synthesis of ornithine decarboxylase protein.  相似文献   

3.
A radioimmunoassay for ornithine decarboxylase was used to study the regulation of this enzyme in rat liver. The antiserum used reacts with ornithine decarboxylase from mouse, human or rat cells. Rat liver ornithine decarboxylase enzyme activity and enzyme protein (as determined by radioimmunoassay) were measured in thioacetamide-treated rats at various times after administration of 1,3-diaminopropane. Enzyme activity declined rapidly after 1,3-diaminopropane treatment as did the amount of enzyme protein, although the disappearance of enzyme activity slightly preceded the loss of immunoreactive protein. The loss of enzyme protein after cycloheximide treatment also occurred rapidly, but was significantly slower than that seen with 1,3-diaminopropane. When 1,3-diaminopropane and cycloheximide were injected simultaneously, the rate of disappearance of enzyme activity and enzyme protein was the same as that seen with cycloheximide alone. These results show that the rapid loss in enzyme activity after 1,3-diaminopropane treatment is primarily due to a loss in enzyme protein and that protein synthesis is needed in order for 1,3-diaminopropane to exert its full effect. A macromolecular inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase that has been termed antizyme is induced in response to 1,3-diaminopropane, but our results indicate that the loss of enzyme activity is not due to the accumulation of inactive ornithine decarboxylase-antizyme complexes. It is possible that the antizyme enhances the degradation of the enzyme protein. Control experiments demonstrated that the antiserum used would have detected any inactive antizyme-ornithine decarboxylase complexes present in liver since addition of antizyme to ornithine decarboxylase in vitro did not affect the amount of ornithine decarboxylase detected in our radioimmunoassay. Anti-(ornithine decarboxylase) antibodies may be useful in the purification of antizyme since the antizyme-ornithine decarboxylase complex can be immunoprecipitated, and antizyme released from the precipitate with 0.3 M-NaCl.  相似文献   

4.
Antiserum against ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) was prepared in rabbits using purified ornithine decarboxylase from rat liver as the antigen. Immunoglobulins from the immune sera were covalently coupled to agarose by cyanogen bromide activation. With the aid of this immunoadsorbent against the enzyme it has been shown that following partial hepatectomy and growth hormone administration, the ornithine decarboxylase activity is elevated concomitantly with the increase in the immunoreactive enzyme protein. In addition, the rapid decay in ornithine decarboxylase activity in regenerating rat liver after cycloheximide injection is accompanied by a decrease in the immunoreactive protein. These results suggest that the activity of ornithine decarboxylase in rat liver is regulated through rapid changes in de novo synthesis and degradation of the enzyme protein.  相似文献   

5.
A human neuroblastoma cell line (Paju) grew in 10 mM difluoromethyl-ornithine, which at this concentration normally stops the growth of all mammalian cells. Ornithine decarboxylase from Paju was resistant to inhibition in vitro by difluoromethylornithine, and required 10 microM of the compound for 50% inhibition, whereas ornithine decarboxylase from SH-SY5Y cells (another human neuroblastoma) and from rat liver needed only 0.5 microM difluoromethylornithine. Paju ornithine decarboxylase also exhibited a long half-life (over eight hours) in vivo. The half-life of immunoreactive protein was significantly longer than that of the activity. The long half-life of ornithine decarboxylase in Paju cells leads to its accumulation to a specific activity of 2000 nmol/mg of protein per 30 min during rapid growth (the corresponding activity in SH-SY5Y cells was about 2.5). When partially purified ornithine decarboxylase from Paju cells was incubated with rat liver microsomes it was inactivated with a half-life of 75 min. This inactivation was accompanied by a fall in the amount of immunoreactive protein. In the same inactivating system partially purified SH-SY5Y ornithine decarboxylase had a half-life of 38 min and its half-life in vivo was 50 min. The corresponding values for rat liver ornithine decarboxylase were 45 min and 40 min, respectively. Rat liver microsomes also inactivated rat liver adenosylmethionine decarboxylase. These results suggest that Paju ornithine decarboxylase has an altered molecular conformation, rendering it resistant to (i) difluoromethylornithine and (ii) proteolytic degradation both in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Ornithine decarboxylase activity increases at least 4–5-fold before DNA synthesis both in synchronous cycling cells and in quiescent cells stimulated to proliferate. The purpose of our experiments was to test whether the transient peaks of ornithine decarboxylase activity in both growth situations were biochemically regulated in a similar manner. We found that the regulation of this particular enzyme activity is distinct in two ways. Firstly, the addition of 2mm-hydroxyurea will block the induction of ornithine decarboxylase in continuously dividing Chinese-hamster ovary cells, while having no effect on ornithine decarboxylase induction in stimulated quiescent cells. Hydroxyurea added after the induction occurs has no effect on the enzyme activity. The apparent half-life of the enzyme is not altered in cells treated with hydroxyurea. Hydroxyurea does not affect the enzyme directly, since incubation of cell homogenates with this drug results in no loss of measurable ornithine decarboxylase activity and hydroxyurea does not markedly alter general RNA- or protein-synthesis rates. The inactivation of ornithine decarboxylase activity by hydroxyurea does not resemble the loss of activity observed with a 90min treatment with spermidine. Thiourea, a less potent inhibitor of ribonucleoside diphosphate reductase, will also inhibit ornithine decarboxylase activity, but to a lesser extent. Secondly, the expression of ornithine decarboxylase in quiescent cells stimulated to proliferate is biphasic as these cells traverse G1 and enter S phase, whereas only one peak of activity is apparent in synchronous cycling G1-phase cells. The time interval between the first peak of ornithine decarboxylase activity and the onset of DNA synthesis is approx. 5h longer in non-dividing cells stimulated to proliferate than in continuously dividing cells. The results suggest that the regulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity is different in the two growth systems in that the induction of ornithine decarboxylase in continuously dividing cells occurs closer in time to DNA synthesis and is dependent on deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates.  相似文献   

7.
1. The activities of l-ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) and S-adenosyl-l-methionine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.50) were dramatically enhanced in both the ventral prostate and the seminal vesicle of castrated rats in response to androgenic stimulation. The time course of the stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase together with the quantitatively different response of adenosylmethionine decarboxylase to testosterone treatment in the prostate gland and seminal vesicle indicated that the enhancement in polyamine synthesis in the ventral prostate may reflect both cellular proliferation and the restoration of the secretory functions of the organ. In the seminal vesicle, however, the stimulation of the polyamine-biosynthetic pathway more closely resembled the pattern found in other rat tissues, such as regenerating liver, undergoing compensatory growth. 2. Ornithine decarboxylase activity in the ventral prostate and especially in the seminal vesicle of sexually mature rat was diminished in vivo by various short-chain diamines such as 1,2-diaminoethane, 1,3-diaminopropane and putrescine (1,4-diaminobutane). These diamines had no direct effect on the enzyme activity in vitro. 3. In contrast with the marginal decrease in ornithine decarboxylase activity produced by diaminoethane in the ventral prostate of non-castrated animals, repeated injections of the latter amine completely prevented the intense stimulation of the enzyme activity in the ventral prostate and seminal vesicle of castrated rats at 24h after the commencement of testosterone treatment. 4. The decrease in ornithine decarboxylase activity observed after injections of diamines (putrescine) in the ventral prostate was apparently associated with a similar decrease in the amount of immunoreactive protein as revealed by immunotitration of the enzyme with antiserum to rat ornithine decarboxylase.  相似文献   

8.
Stepwise increments of the concentration of 2-difluoromethylornithine, a mechanism-based irreversible inhibitor of mammalian ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17), resulted in a selection of cultured Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells capable of growing in the presence of up to 50 mM difluoromethylornithine. Dialyzed extracts of drug-resistant tumor cells exhibited a very high ornithine decarboxylase activity and contained large excess of immunoreactive ornithine decarboxylase protein. Hybridization analyses with cloned complementary DNA revealed that the difluoromethylornithine-resistant tumor cells also expressed mRNA of the enzyme at greatly enhanced rate. The overproduction of ornithine decarboxylase by the tumor cells grown under the pressure of difluoromethylornithine was at least partly attributable to a 10 to 20-fold increase in the total gene dosage of ornithine decarboxylase involving an amplification of several genes of the gene family. The gene amplification developed appeared to be stable, as the gene dosage only slowly (during a period of several months) returned towards the normal level upon the removal of difluoromethylornithine. The overproduction of ornithine decarboxylase was accompanied by an enhanced resistance of the enzyme towards difluoromethylornithine in vitro.  相似文献   

9.
Chinese hamster ovary cells, selected in mitosis and plated into medium containing hydroxyurea, can progress through G1 and enter S phase although bulk DNA synthesis is prevented. As the cells progress through G1 in the presence of hydroxyurea, ornithine decarboxylase activity remains low while general protein synthesis appears unaffected. After hydroxyurea is removed, ornithine decarboxylase activity increases, but only after approximately 20% of the DNA has been replicated. These results suggest that ornithine decarboxylase induction is not essential for cellular progression into S phase but is required for the completion of DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
We have recently isolated, without using any inhibitors, a mutant of Chinese hamster ovary cell line which greatly overproduces ornithine decarboxylase in serum-free culture. Addition of polyamines (putrescine, spermidine, or spermine, 10 microM) or ornithine (1 mM), the precursor of polyamines, to the culture medium of these cells caused a rapid and extensive decay of ornithine decarboxylase activity. At the same time the activity of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase showed a less pronounced decrease. Notably, the polyamine concentrations used were optimal for growth of the cells and caused no perturbation of general protein synthesis. Spermidine and spermine appeared to be the principal regulatory amines for both enzymes, but also putrescine, if accumulated at high levels in the cells, was capable of suppressing ornithine decarboxylase activity. The amount of ornithine decarboxylase protein (as measured by radioimmunoassay) declined somewhat more slowly than the enzyme activity, but no more than 10% of the loss of activity could be ascribed to post-translational modifications or inhibitor interaction. Some evidence for inactivation through ornithine decarboxylase-antizyme complex formation was obtained. Gel electrophoretic determinations of the [35S]methionine-labeled ornithine decarboxylase revealed a rapid reduction in the synthesis and acceleration in the degradation of the enzyme after polyamine additions. No decrease in the amounts of the two ornithine decarboxylase-mRNA species, hybridizable to a specific cDNA, was detected, suggesting that polyamines depressed ornithine decarboxylase synthesis by selectively inhibiting translation of the message.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Intratesticular injection with arginine vasopressin caused stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity in the testes of immature rats. The increase in ornithine decarboxylase activity in response to arginine vasopressin was dose and time dependent. Maximal stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity occurred at 2 h after injection with 0.1 micrograms of arginine vasopressin. It was observed that stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity occurred in seminiferous tubules and in Leydig cells of the testis in response to arginine vasopressin.  相似文献   

13.
The immunohistochemical distribution of renal ornithine decarboxylase was studied in male mice both with and without testosterone treatment. Testosterone (1 mg per mouse) induced a marked increase in ornithine decarboxylase activity of the mouse kidney, whereas no significant immunohistochemical difference was observed either in immunoreactivity or its localization. In intact male as well as androgen-treated mice dense ornithine decarboxylase-immunoreactive cells were observed mainly in the cortex, especially many ornithine decarboxylase-immunoreactive cells were observed in the inner portion, while a much weaker immunoreactivity was observed in the medulla. The largest number of ornithine decarboxylase-immunoreactive cells seemed to be localized in the pars recta of the proximal tubule. The immunoreactivity was not detected in all the tubular cells but scattered among them. The renal corpuscles were not immunoreactive. In each ornithine decarboxylase-immunoreactive cell, the cytoplasm showed much denser immunoreactivity than the nucleus.  相似文献   

14.
Ornithine decarboxylase activity in insulin-deficient states   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The activity of ornithine decarboxylase, the rate-controlling enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis, was determined in tissues of normal control rats and rats made diabetic with streptozotocin. In untreated diabetic rats fed ad libitum, ornithine decarboxylase activity was markedly diminished in liver, skeletal muscle, heart and thymus. Ornithine decarboxylase was not diminished in a comparable group of diabetic rats maintained on insulin. Starvation for 48h decreased ornithine decarboxylase activity to very low values in tissues of both normal and diabetic rats. In the normal group, refeeding caused a biphasic increase in liver ornithine decarboxylase; there was a 20-fold increase in activity at 3h followed by a decrease in activity, and a second peak between 9 and 24h. Increases in ornithine decarboxylase in skeletal muscle, heart and thymus were not evident until after 24–48h of refeeding, and only a single increase occurred. The increase in liver ornithine decarboxylase in diabetic rats was greater than in normal rats after 3h of refeeding, but there was no second peak. In peripheral tissues, the increase in ornithine decarboxylase with refeeding was diminished. Skeletal-muscle ornithine decarboxylase is induced more rapidly when meal-fed rats are refed after a period without food. Refeeding these rats after a 48h period without food caused a 5-fold increase in ornithine decarboxylase in skeletal muscle at 3h in control rats but failed to increase activity in diabetic rats. When insulin was administered alone or together with food to the diabetic rats, muscle ornithine decarboxylase increased to activities even higher than in the refed controls. In conclusion, these findings indicate that the regulation of ornithine decarboxylase in many tissues is grossly impaired in diabetes and starvation. They also suggest that polyamine formation in vivo is an integral component of the growth-promoting effect of insulin or some factor dependent on insulin.  相似文献   

15.
Any one of five amino acis (alanine, asparagine, glutamine, glycine, and serine) is an essential requirement for the induction of ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) in cultured chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells maintained with a salts/glucose, medium. Each of these amino acids induced a striking activation of ornithine decarboxylase in the presence of dibutyryl cyclic AMP and luteinizing hormone. The effect of the other amino acids was considerably less or negligible. The active amino acids at optimal concentrations (10 mM) induced only a 10-20 fold enhancement of enzyme activity alone, while in the presence of dibutyryl cyclic AMP, ornithine decarboxylase activity was increased 40-50 fold within 7-8 h. Of the hormones and drugs tested, luteinizing hormone resulted in the highest (300-500 fold) induction of ornithine decarboxylase with optimal concentrations of dibutyryl cyclic AMP and asparagnine. Omission of dibutyryl cyclic AMP reduced this maximal activation to one half while optimal levels of luteinizing hormone alone caused no enhancement of ornithine decarboxylase activity. The induction of ornithine decarboxylase elicited by dibutyryl cyclic AMP, amino acid and luteinizing hormone was diminished about 50% with inhibitors of RNA and protein synthesis. The specific amino acid requirements for ornithine decarboxylase induction in chinese hamster ovary cells was similar to the requirements for induction in two other transformed cell lines. Understanding the mechanism of enzyme induction requires an identification of the essential components of the regulatory system. The essential requirement for enzyme induction is one of five amino acids. The induction of ornithine decarboxylase by dibutyryl cyclic AMP and luteinizing hormone was additive in the presence of an active amino acid.  相似文献   

16.
The administration of cadmium (1.25 mg as Cd2+/kg, ip.) to male rats resulted in a significant increase of hepatic and renal ornithine decarboxylase activity. The maximum increase of ornithine decarboxylase activity to about 10-fold of the controls was seen at 4 hr after the administration of cadmium, and the increased enzyme activity was returned to control levels by 12 hr. Cadmium produced somewhat dose-dependently the increase of ornithine decarboxylase activity. The increase of ornithine decarboxylase seen on the administration of cadmium was cancelled by pretreatment of rats with cycloheximide. The treatment of female rats with cadmium also caused the increase of hepatic ornithine decarboxylase activity, but not renal enzyme activity.  相似文献   

17.
Luteinizing hormone is known to stimulate the enzyme ornithine decarboxylase in the ovary. Highly purified human follicle stimulating hormone that is devoid of significant biologically active luteinizing hormone can also induce ornithine decarboxylase activity in intact immature rats with a time course of induction similar to that reported for luteinizing hormone. A maximum of 8–10-fold stimulation above controls was observed 4 h following intravenous administration of human follicle stimulating hormone. This stimulation followed a strict dose response relationship. Ovine luteinizing hormone and human chorionic gonadotropin always induced more ovarian ornithine decarboxylase activity than that achieved by maximally effective doses of follicle stimulating hormone. This could not be attributed solely to the ability of specific cell population to respond to the respective gonadotropins. Although granulosa cells contained little receptor for luteinizing hormone/human chorionic gonadotropin and the residual tissue contained little receptor for follicle stimulating hormone, each tissue responded to these gonadotropins in a manner suggestive of the mediation by one or more diffusable factors. A relationship between gonadotropin induced 3’5’-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cyclic adenosine monophosphate) concentration and ornithine decarboxylase activity suggests that the mediation of gonadotropin stimulated ovarian ornithine decarboxylase is not solely through cyclic adenosine monophosphate, indicating the presence of other factors in the induction of gonadotropin increased ornithine decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

18.
A human neuroblastoma cell line with an altered ornithine decarboxylase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
A human neuroblastoma cell line (Paju) was resistant to 10 mM difluoromethylornithine, a concentration at which the growth of all mammalian cells normally stops. Ornithine decarboxylase from Paju was very resistant to inhibition by difluoromethylornithine in vitro (Ki = 10 microM compared to 0.5 microM for mouse kidney ornithine decarboxylase). After purification, apparently homogeneous Paju ornithine decarboxylase was inactivated with [3H]difluoromethylornithine and analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Under denaturing conditions it was found to have an altered molecular structure, i.e. two nonidentical subunits of Mr = 55,000 and 60,000. Another unusual feature of Paju ornithine decarboxylase was its long half-life in vivo (T 1/2 = 8 h compared with 36 min in human HL-60 promyelocytic leukemia cells). The disappearance of immunoreactive protein was only slightly slower than the loss of catalytic activity. The long half-life of Paju ornithine decarboxylase was not shared by adenosylmethionine decarboxylase. Despite the altered structure of Paju ornithine decarboxylase, it was recognized by a specific antisera raised in rabbit against mouse kidney ornithine decarboxylase. The Paju karyotype did not contain double minute chromosomes or any large homogeneously staining region such as that seen in a mouse lymphoma cell mutant that is resistant to difluoromethylornithine and overproduces ornithine decarboxylase (McConlogue, L., and Coffino, P. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 12083-12086).  相似文献   

19.
1. Starvation caused a marked decrease in the activity of ornithine decarboxylase in mammary gland, together with a lesser decrease in the activity of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase and a marked fall in milk production. Liver ornithine decarboxylase and S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase activities were unaffected. 2. Refeeding for 2.5 h was without effect on ornithine decarboxylase in mammary gland, but it returned the S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase activity in mammary gland to control values and elevated both ornithine decarboxylase and S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase in liver. 3. Refeeding for 5 h returned the activity of ornithine decarboxylase in mammary gland to fed-state values and resulted in further increases in S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase in mammary gland and liver and in ornithine decarboxylase in liver. 4. Prolactin deficiency in fed rats resulted in decreased milk production and decreased activity of ornithine decarboxylase in mammary gland. The increase in ornithine decarboxylase activity normally seen after refeeding starved rats for 5 h was completely blocked by prolactin deficiency. 5. In fed rats, injection of streptozotocin 2.5 h before death caused a decrease in the activities of ornithine decarboxylase and S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase in mammary gland, which could be reversed by simultaneous injection of insulin. Insulin deficiency also prevented the increase in S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase in liver and mammary gland normally observed after refeeding starved rats for 2.5 h.  相似文献   

20.
Repeated injections of 1,3-diaminopropane, a potent inhibitor of mammalian ornithine decarboxylase, induced protein-synthesis-dependent formation of macromolecular inhibitors or ;antienzymes' [Heller, Fong & Canellakis (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.73, 1858-1862] to ornithine decarboxylase in normal rat liver. Addition of the macromolecular inhibitors, produced in response to repeated injections of diaminopropane, to active ornithine decarboxylase in vitro resulted in a profound loss of the enzyme activity, which, however, could be partly recovered after passage of the enzyme-inhibitor mixture through a Sephadex G-75 columin in the presence of 0.4m-NaCl. This treatment also resulted in the appearance of free inhibitor. In contrast with the separation of the enzyme and inhibitory activity after combination in vitro, it was not possible to re-activate, by using identical conditions of molecular sieving, any inhibited ornithine decarboxylase from cytosol fractions obtained from animals injected with diaminopropane. However, the idea that injection of various diamines, also in vivo, induces acute formation of macromolecular inhibitors, which reversibly combine with the enzyme, was supported by the finding that the ornithine decarboxylase activity remaining after diaminopropane injection appeared to be more stable to increased ionic strength than the enzyme activity obtained from somatotropin-treated rats. Incubation of the inhibitory cytosol fractions with antiserum to ornithine decarboxylase did not completely abolish the inhibitory action of either the cytosolic inhibitor or the antibody. A single injection of diaminopropane produced an extremely rapid decay of liver ornithine decarboxylase activity (half-life about 12min), which was comparable with, or swifter than, that induced by cycloheximide. However, although after cycloheximide treatment the amount of immunotitrable ornithine decarboxylase decreased only slightly more slowly than the enzyme activity, diaminopropane injection did not decrease the amount of the immunoreactive protein, but, on the contrary, invariably caused a marked increase in the apparent amount of antigen, after some lag period. The diamine-induced increase in the amount of the immunoreactive enzyme protein could be totally prevented by a simultaneous injection of cycloheximide. These results are in accord with the hypothesis that various diamines may result in rapid formation of macromolecular inhibitors to ornithine decarboxylase in vivo, which, after combination with the enzyme, abolish the catalytic activity but at the same time prevent the intracellular degradation of the enzyme protein.  相似文献   

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