首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
5-Oxoprolinase catalyzes the ATP-dependent decyclization of 5-oxo-L-proline to L-glutamate. Previous studies provided evidence for the intermediate formation of a phosphorylated form of 5-oxoproline (Seddon, A. P., and Meister, A. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 11538-11541) and of a tetrahedral intermediate (Li, L., Seddon, A. P., and Meister, A. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 11020-11025). A new approach to the study of the reaction mechanism using the 18O isotope effect on the 13C NMR signals for 5-oxoproline and glutamate is reported here. The 13C chemical shifts induced by 18O substitution for the carbonyl group of 5-oxoproline and the gamma-carboxyl group of glutamate are about 0.03 ppm with respect to the corresponding 16O-compounds. Using 5-[18O]oxo[5-13C]proline (97 and 79.5 atom % excess, 13C and 18O, respectively), the disappearance of the 18O-labeled and unlabeled 5-oxoproline and formation of the corresponding glutamate species were followed in the reactions catalyzed by purified preparations of 5-oxoprolinase isolated from Pseudomonas putida and from rat kidney. This procedure permits simultaneous determinations of the rates of 18O exchange and of the overall decyclization reaction. The ratios of 18O exchange rates to the overall reaction rates for the bacterial and kidney enzyme catalyzed-reactions were 0.28 and 0.14, respectively. The findings support the view that the coupling of ATP hydrolysis to 5-oxoproline decyclization involves formation of a phosphorylated tetrahedal intermediate. Although the exchange phenomena are consistent with the mechanistic interpretations, they seem not to be required for catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
5-Oxo-L-prolinase catalyzes a reaction in which the endergonic cleavage of 5-oxo-L-proline to form L-glutamate is coupled to the exergonic cleavage of ATP to ADP and Pi. In the present research, the enzyme present in a strain of Pseudomonas putida isolated from soil by enrichment culture was found to be composed of two protein components. Neither component alone could catalyze the 5-oxoprolinase reaction, but the reaction was effectively catalyzed when they were mixed. One component (A) exhibited 5-oxo-L-proline-dependent ATPase activity indicating that Component A can interact with both ATP and 5-oxo-L-proline. The other component (coupling protein; B) does not exhibit ATPase activity nor is there evidence that it binds 5-oxo-L-proline. The findings are consistent with (but do not prove) the hypothesis that the Component A catalyzes an initial step in the reaction which involves 5-oxoproline and ATP, such as phosphorylation of 5-oxoproline. The coupling protein (B) may function as a catalyst that converts a phosphorylated form of 5-oxoproline to glutamate, or it might alter the conformation of Component A so as to facilitate the reaction.  相似文献   

3.
5-Oxo-L-prolinase from Pseudomonas putida is composed of two reversibly dissociable proteins: Component A catalyzes 5-oxoproline-dependent cleavage of ATP, but does not catalyze the decyclization of 5-oxoproline; Component B is required for the coupling of ATP cleavage to ring-opening of 5-oxoproline to form glutamate (Seddon, A. P., Li, L., and Meister, A. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 8091-8094). We describe here the purifications of Components A and B to apparent homogeneity and the interactions between these two proteins. The cellular content of Component B activity is significantly greater than that of Component A. By gel filtration, Component A is a hexamer; but in the presence of substrates, it is a dimer. Component B can exist as an aggregate, an octamer, or a tetramer, depending upon the conditions used. Gel filtration of a mixture of Components A and B in the presence of substrates gives a unique protein species that exhibits 5-oxoprolinase activity. The Mr of this Component A-Component B complex indicates that it probably has an A2-B2 structure. The molar ratio of Component A to Component B in the complex was determined to be 1:1 by the continuous variation method (Job). Titrations of each component by the other suggest that phosphorylated 5-oxoproline-bound Component A is the entity that interacts with Component B. These studies indicate that the binding of phosphorylated 5-oxoproline-bound Component A to Component B to form a complex proceeds by a cooperative type mechanism. This is supported by the observed shifts of the intersection points of the Job curves (see Appendix).  相似文献   

4.
gamma-Glutamate kinase, the enzyme that catalyzes the first step in the pathway from glutamate to proline, has been postulated to convert glutamate to a gamma-activated form (possibly gamma-glutamyl phosphate), which is reduced by a NADPH-linked reductase to yield glutamate gamma-semialdehyde (in equilibrium with delta 1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate). In the present work we found that the kinase, in the absence or presence of the reductase (and in the absence of NADPH), catalyzes stoichiometric formation of 5-oxo-L-proline and Pi from L-glutamate and ATP, but catalyzes hydroxamate formation at only about 10% of the rate of ATP-cleavage. A new substrate of the kinase was found; thus, cis-cycloglutamate (cis-1-amino-1,3-dicarboxycyclohexane), a glutamate analog which cannot cyclize to form an analog of 5-oxoproline, interacts effectively with the kinase. The trans form of cycloglutamate does not interact with the kinase; only the cis form can assume a diequatorial conformation equivalent to the extended conformation of glutamate. cis-Cycloglutamyl phosphate formation was shown and evidence was obtained for formation of an enzyme-ADP-cycloglutamyl phosphate complex. Although cis-cycloglutamyl phosphate is not a reducible substrate of the NADPH-dependent reductase, the findings indicate that it interacts with the reductase. These studies, which elucidate several aspects of the mechanism of the utilization of glutamate for formation of delta 1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate, support the hypothesis that the kinase and reductase function as an enzyme complex. A model is suggested in which gamma-glutamyl phosphate formed on the kinase interacts with the reductase to form a gamma-glutamyl-reductase complex, which is reduced by NADPH to yield glutamate gamma-semialdehyde.  相似文献   

5.
Rat kidney 5-oxo-L-prolinase catalyzes the endergonic hydrolysis of 5-oxo-L-proline (L-pyroglutamate, L-2-pyrrolidone-5-carboxylate) to form L-glutamate; the reaction is driven by and dependent on the stoichiometric concomitant hydrolysis of ATP to ADP and inorganic phosphate. The present studies are concerned with the mechanism by which the free energy of ATP hydrolysis is conserved and made available for 5-oxoproline hydrolysis. Studies with 18O-labeled substrates showed that (a) all three oxygen atoms of 5-oxoproline are recovered in the product glutamate, and (b) the two water molecules consumed in the reaction contribute one oxygen atom to inorganic phosphate and one oxygen atom to the gamma-carboxyl group of glutamate. It was shown that the enzyme also catalyzes the intrinsically exergonic hydrolysis of alpha-hydroxyglutarate lactone, a reaction that is ATP-dependent. Intermediates in the 5-oxoprolinase reaction were not detected by exchange experiments with radioactive ADP and phosphate, nor were they trapped by adding hydroxylamine. In the presence of very high glutamate concentrations, a slow reversal of the 5-oxoprolinase reaction was demonstrated by measuring ATP formation. The findings are consistent with a mechanism in which 5-oxo-L-proline is phosphorylated by ATP on the amide carbonyl oxygen and the resulting intermediate is subsequently hydrolyzed to yield gamma-glutamyl phosphate; the latter is hydrolyzed to glutamate and inorganic phosphate.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns), phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PtdIns4P) and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P2] of turkey erythrocytes were labelled by using either [32P]Pi or [3H]inositol. Although there was little basal release of inositol phosphates from membranes purified from labelled cells, in the presence of guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]) the rate of accumulation of inositol bis-, tris- and tetrakis-phosphate (InsP2, InsP3 and InsP4) was increased 20-50-fold. The enhanced rate of accumulation of 3H-labelled inositol phosphates was linear for up to 20 min; owing to decreases in 32P specific radioactivity of phosphoinositides during incubation of membranes with unlabelled ATP, the accumulation of 32P-labelled inositol phosphates was linear for only 5 min. In the absence of ATP and a nucleotide-regenerating system, no InsP4 was formed, and the overall inositol phosphate response to GTP[S] was decreased. Analyses of phosphoinositides during incubation with ATP indicated that interconversions of PtdIns to PtdIns4P and PtdIns4P to PtdIns(4,5)P2 occurred to maintain PtdIns(4,5)P2 concentrations; GTP[S]-induced inositol phosphate formation was accompanied by a corresponding decrease in 32P- and 3H-labelled PtdIns, PtdIns4P and PtdIns(4,5)P2. In the absence of ATP, only GTP[S]-induced decreases in PtdIns(4,5)P2 occurred. Since inositol monophosphate was not formed under any condition, PtdIns is not a substrate for the phospholipase C. The production of InsP2 was decreased markedly, but not blocked, under conditions where Ins(1,4,5)P3 5-phosphomonoesterase activity in the preparation was inhibited. Thus the predominant substrate of the GTP[S]-activated phospholipase C of turkey erythrocyte membranes is PtdIns(4,5)P2. Ins(1,4,5)P3 was the major product of this reaction; only a small amount of Ins(1:2-cyclic, 4,5)P3 was released. The effects of ATP on inositol phosphate formation apparently involve the contributions of two phenomena. First, the P2-receptor agonist 2-methylthioadenosine triphosphate (2MeSATP) greatly increased inositol phosphate formation and decreased [3H]PtdIns4P and [3H]PtdIns(4,5)P2 in the presence of a low (0.1 microM) concentration of GTP[S]. ATP over the concentration range 0-100 microM produced effects in the presence of 0.1 microM-GTP[S] essentially identical with those observed with 2MeSATP, suggesting that the effects of low concentrations of ATP are also explained by a stimulation of P2-receptors. Higher concentrations of ATP also increase inositol phosphate formation, apparently by supporting the synthesis of substrate phospholipids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
A soluble fraction, obtained by extracting E. coli cytoplasmic membrane vesicles with water, transfers radioactivity from [γ-32P]ATP to a protein present in this soluble fraction. The formation of the [32P]phosphoprotein appears to be reversible. Thus the protein can transfer its 32P to ADP to form [32P]ATP, and the phosphate on the protein can exchange with the phosphate of ATP. Preliminary evidence indicates that the phosphate moiety is linked to a histidine residue of the protein. The Mn2+ and ATP dependencies of [32P]phosphoprotein formation are almost identical to the diglyceride kinase reaction previously reported in intact membrane vesicles. Although indirect evidence supports the involvement of the phosphoprotein in the diglyceride kinase reaction, the soluble fraction catalyzes only a slow formation of [32P]phosphatidie acid from [γ-32P]ATP and α,β-diglyceride.  相似文献   

8.
The product of the selD gene from Escherichia coli catalyses the formation of an activated selenium compound which is required for the synthesis of Sec-tRNA (Sec, selenocysteine) from Ser-tRNA and for the formation of the unusual nucleoside 5-methylaminomethyl-2-selenouridine in several tRNA species. selD was overexpressed in a T7 promoter/polymerase system and purified to apparent homogeneity. Purified SELD protein is a monomer of 37 kDa in its native state and catalyses a selenium-dependent ATP-cleavage reaction delivering AMP and releasing the beta-phosphate as orthophosphate. The gamma-phosphate group of ATP was not liberated in a form able to form a complex with molybdate. It was precluded that any putative covalent or non-covalent ligand of SELD not removed during purification participated in the reaction. In a double-labelling experiment employing [75Se]selenite plus dithiothreitol and [gamma-32P]ATP the 75Se and 32P radioactivities co-chromatographed on a poly(ethyleneimine)-cellulose column. No radioactivity originating from ATP eluted in this position when [alpha-32P]ATP or [beta-32P]ATP or [14C]ATP were offered as substrates. The results support the speculation that the product of SELD is a phosphoselenoate with the phosphate moiety derived phosphoselenoate from the gamma-phosphate group of ATP. The alpha,beta cleavage of ATP is also supported by the finding that neither adenosine 5'-[alpha,beta-methylene]triphosphate nor adenosine 5'-[beta,gamma-methylene]triphosphate served as substrates in the reaction.  相似文献   

9.
The enzyme, RNA cyclase, has been purified from cell-free extracts of HeLa cells approximately 6000-fold. The enzyme catalyzes the conversion of 3'-phosphate ends of RNA chains to the 2',3'-cyclic phosphate derivative in the presence of ATP or adenosine 5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate (ATP gamma S) and Mg2+. The formation of 1 mol of 2',3'-cyclic phosphate ends is associated with the disappearance of 1 mol of 3'-phosphate termini and the hydrolysis of 1 mol of ATP gamma S to AMP and thiopyrophosphate. No other nucleotides could substitute for ATP or ATP gamma S in the reaction. The reaction catalyzed by RNA cyclase was not reversible and exchange reactions between [32P]pyrophosphate and ATP were not detected. However, an enzyme-AMP intermediate could be identified that was hydrolyzed by the addition of inorganic pyrophosphate or 3'-phosphate terminated RNA chains but not by 3'-OH terminated chains or inorganic phosphate. 3'-[32P](Up)10Gp* could be converted to a form that yielded, (Formula: see text) after degradation with nuclease P1, by the addition of wheat germ RNA ligase, 5'-hydroxylpolynucleotide kinase, RNA cyclase, and ATP. This indicates that the RNA cyclase had catalyzed the formation of the 2',3'-cyclic phosphate derivative, the kinase had phosphorylated the 5'-hydroxyl end of the RNA, and the wheat germ RNA ligase had catalyzed the formation of a 3',5'-phosphodiester linkage concomitant with the conversion of the 2',3'-cyclic end to a 2'-phosphate terminated residue.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphonoacetaldehyde (Pald) is formed in a variety of biosynthetic pathways leading to natural phosphonates and is an intermediate in the degradation pathway of the natural product 2-aminoethylphosphonate. To facilitate the investigation of the enzymes catalyzing these pathways, a method for the synthesis of radiolabeled Pald was developed. The enzyme pyruvate phosphate dikinase was used to prepare phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) from pyruvate, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and orthophosphate. Then PEP was converted to phosphonopyruvate (Ppyr) with PEP mutase and then to Pald with Ppyr decarboxylase. By using [beta-32P]ATP or [2-14C]pyruvate as precursor, [32P]Pald or [1-14C]Pald was obtained, respectively. The utilization of the synthetic, radiolabeled Pald as a probe of enzyme mechanism was demonstrated with the enzyme phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase (trivial name phosphonatase). The single turnover time course for the formation and consumption of radiolabeled covalent enzyme species evidenced a kinetically competent covalent intermediate.  相似文献   

11.
A method has been developed for the enzymatic preparation of alpha-(32)P-labeled ribo- and deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates, cyclic [(32)P]AMP, and cyclic [(32)P]GMP of high specific radioactivity and in high yield from (32)Pi. The method also enables the preparation of [gamma-(32)P]ATP, [gamma-(32)P]GTP, [gamma-(32)P]ITP, and [gamma-(32)P]-dATP of very high specific activity and in high yield. The preparation of the various [alpha-(32)P]nucleoside triphosphates relies on the phosphorylation of the respective 3'-nucleoside monophosphates with [gamma-(32)P]ATP by polynucleotide kinase and a subsequent nuclease reaction to form [5'-(32)P]nucleoside monophosphates. The [5'-(32)P]nucleoside monophosphates are then converted enzymatically to the respective triphosphates. All of the reactions leading to the formation of [alpha-(32)P]nucleoside triphosphates are carried out in the same reaction vessel, without intermediate purification steps, by the use of sequential reactions with the respective enzymes. Cyclic [(32)P]AMP and cyclic [(32)P]GMP are also prepared enzymatically from [alpha-(32)P]ATP or [alpha-(32)P]GTP by partially purified preparations of adenylate or guanylate cyclases. With the exception of the cyclases, all enzymes used are commerically available. The specific activity of (32)P-labeled ATP made by this method ranged from 200 to 1000 Ci/mmol for [alpha-(32)P]ATP and from 5800 to 6500 Ci/mmol for [gamma-(32)P]ATP. Minor modifications of the method should permit higher specific activities, especially for the [alpha-(32)P]nucleoside triphosphates. Methods for the use of the [alpha-(32)P]nucleoside phosphates are described for the study of adenylate and guanylate cyclases, cyclic AMP- and cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase, cyclic nucleotide binding proteins, and as precursors for the synthesis of other (32)P-labeled compounds of biological interest. Moreover, the [alpha-(32)P]nucleoside triphosphates prepared by this method should be very useful in studies on nucleic acid structure and metabolism and the [gamma-(32)P]nucleoside triphosphates should be useful in the study of phosphate transfer systems.  相似文献   

12.
A simplified method is described for the enzymatic synthesis and purification of [alpha-32P]ribo- and deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates. The products are obtained at greater than 97% radiochemical purity with yields of 50--70% (relative to 32Pi) by a two-step elution from DEAE-Sephadex. All reactions are done in one vessel as there is no need for intermediate product purifications. This method is therefore suitable for the synthesis of these radioactive compounds on a relatively large scale. The sequential steps of the method involve first the synthesis of [gamma-32P]ATP and the subsequent phosphorylation of nucleoside 3' monophosphate with T4 polynucleotide kinase to yield nucleoside 3', [5'-32P]diphosphate. Hexokinase is used after the T4 reaction to remove any remaining [gamma-32P]ATP. Nucleoside 3',[5'-32P]diphosphate is treated with nuclease P-1 to produce the nucleoside [5'-32P]monophosphate which is phosphorylated to the [alpha-32P]nucleoside triphosphate with pyruvate kinase and nucleoside monophosphate kinase. Adenosine triphosphate used as the phosphate donor for [alpha-32P]deoxynucleoside triphosphate syntheses is readily removed in a second purification step involving affinity chromatography on boronate-polyacrylamide. [alpha-32P]Ribonucleoside triphosphates can be similarly purified when deoxyadenosine triphosphate is used as the phosphate donor.  相似文献   

13.
R J Coll  A J Murphy 《Biochemistry》1991,30(6):1456-1461
The CaATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum was reacted with [gamma-32P]ATP to form the covalent phosphoenzyme intermediate. Noncompetitive inhibition by reactive red-120 and chelation of calcium allowed us to monitor single-turnover kinetics of the phosphoenzyme reacting with water or added ADP at 0 degrees C. When ADP was added and the amount of product, [gamma-32P]ATP, formed was measured, we found that added cold ATP did not interfere with the phosphoenzyme reacting with ADP. We conclude that ATP cannot bind where ADP binds, the phosphorylated active site. This implies that when ATP at high concentrations causes an acceleration of phosphoenzyme hydrolysis, it must do so by binding to an allosteric site. Considering the monoexponential nature of product formation we observed, simple one-nucleotide-site models cannot account for the above result.  相似文献   

14.
Dibutyryl-cAMP-differentiated U937 cells incorporate alkyllyso-sn-glycero-3-[32P]phosphocholine (alkyllyso-[32P]GPC) into cellular alkylacyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (alkylacyl-GPC). Upon stimulation with fMet-Leu-Phe (fMLP), recombinant C5a, or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), these cells produce alkylacyl-sn-glycero-3-[32P]phosphate (alkylacyl-[32P]GP). In the presence of ethanol (0.5%), alkylacyl-sn-glycero-3-[32P]phosphoethanol (alkylacyl-[32P]GPet) is also formed with a concomitant reduction in alkylacyl-[32P]GP accumulation. Because cellular ATP is not labeled with 32P, alkylacyl-[32P]GP and alkylacyl-[32P]GPet must be formed by phospholipase D (PLD)-catalyzed hydrolysis and transphosphatidylation, respectively. Activation by receptor agonists, but not by PMA, requires extracellular Ca2+ and is augmented by cytochalasin B pretreatment. Upon stimulation, dibutryl cAMP-differentiated U937 cells labeled with alkylacyl-[32P]GPC produce [32P]PO4 but not [32P]phosphocholine. Furthermore, when these cells were labeled in alkylacyl-GPC by incubation with [3H]alkyllyso-GPC and then stimulated, [3H]alkylacyl-glycerol ([3H]alkylacyl-Gro) is produced with a time-course similar to that of [32P]PO4 formation and coincident with the decline in alkylacyl-GP accumulation. These results demonstrate that alkylacyl-GP formed by PLD is dephosphorylated by phosphatidate phosphohydrolase to produce PO4 and alkylacyl-Gro. Upon stimulation with fMLP or C5a, U937 cells labeled in diacyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (diacyl-GPC) by incubation with [3H]acyllyso-GPC generate [3H]diacyl-GP, [3H]diacyl-GPEt, and [3H]diacyl-Gro with kinetics similar to those for the generation of the [3H]alkyl products. Thus, in differentiated U937 cells stimulated with receptor agonists, both alkylacyl-GPC and diacyl-GPC are sequentially metabolized by PLD and phosphatidate phosphohydrolase.  相似文献   

15.
Pyridoxal [32P] phosphate was prepared using [gamma-32P] ATP, pyridoxal, and pyridoxine kinase purified from Escherichia coli B. The pyridoxal [32P] phosphate obtained had a specific activity of at least 1 Ci/mmol. This reagent was used to label intact influenza virus, red blood cells, and both normal and transformed chick embryo fibroblasts. The cell or virus to be labeled was incubated with pyridoxal [32P] phosphate. The Schiff base formed between pyridoxal [32P] phosphate and protein amino groups was reduced with NaBH4. The distribution of pyridoxal [32P] phosphate in cell membrane or virus envelope proteins was visualized by autoradiography of the proteins separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The labeling of the proteins of both influenza and chick cells appeared to be limited exclusively to those on the external surface of the virus or plasma membrane. With intact red blood cells the major portion of the probe was bound by external proteins, but a small amount of label was found associated with the internal proteins spectrin and hemoglobin.  相似文献   

16.
Glutamate decarboxylase from a mouse brain P2 fraction undergoes a twofold activation in the presence of 0.5 mM ATP. No such stimulation by ATP occurs if the enzyme is assayed in the presence of excess pyridoxal phosphate as cofactor. The ATP-induced stimulation is almost completely eliminated if the enzyme is dialysed before its assay. [lambda-32P]ATP present during the enzyme measurement is converted to [32P]pyridoxal phosphate. These results demonstrate that the activation produced by ATP is the result of the generation of cofactor during the course of the assay. This phenomenon may be a reflection of a control mechanism of glutamate decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

17.
1. Conditions for binding of [gamma-32P]ATP to bovine brain Na+,K+-stimulated ATPase were investigated by the indirect technique of measuring the initial rate of 32P-labelling of the active site of the enzyme. 2. At 100 muM [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of 3 mM MgCl2, approximately the same very high rate of formation of [32P]phosphoenzyme was obtained irrespective of whether [gamma-32P]ATP was added to the enzyme simultaneously with, or 70 ms in advance of the addition of NaCl. A comparatively slow rate of phosphorylation was obtained at 5 muM[gamma-32P]ATP without preincubation. However, on preincubation of the enzyme with 5 muM[gamma-32P]ATP a rate of formation of [32P]phosphoenzyme almost as rapid as at 100 muM[gamma-32P]ATP was observed. 3. A transient [32P]phosphoenzyme was discovered. It appeared in the presence of K+, under conditions which allowed extensive binding of [gamma-32P]-ATP. The amount of [gamma-32P]ATP that could be bound to the enzyme seemed to equal the amount of [32P] phosphorylatable sites. 4. The formation of the transient [32P] phosphoenzyme was inhibited by ADP. The transient [32P] phosphoenzyme was concluded mainly to represent the K+-insensitive and ADP-sensitive E1-32P. 5. When KCl was present in the enzyme solution before the addition of NaCl only a comparatively slow rate of phosphorylation was observed. On preincubation of the enzyme with [gamma-32]ATP an increase in the rate of formation of [32P] phosphoenzyme was obtained, but there was no transient [32P]-phosphoenzyme. The transient [32P]phosphoenzyme was, however, detected when the enzyme solution contained NaCl in addition to KCl and the phosphorylation was started by the addition of [gamma-32P]ATP.  相似文献   

18.
Energetics of the calcium-transporting ATPase   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
A thermodynamic cycle for catalysis of calcium transport by the sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase is described, based on equilibrium constants for the microscopic steps of the reaction shown in Equation 1 under a single set of experimental (formula; see text) conditions (pH 7.0, 25 degrees C, 100 mM KCl, 5 mM MgSO4): KCa = 5.9 X 10(-12) M2, K alpha ATP = 15 microM, Kint = 0.47, K alpha ADP = 0.73 mM, K'int = 1.7, K"Ca = 2.2 X 10(-6) M2, and Kp = 37 mM. The value of K"Ca was calculated by difference, from the free energy of hydrolysis of ATP. The spontaneous formation of an acylphosphate from Pi and E is made possible by the expression of 12.5 kcal mol-1 of noncovalent binding energy in E-P. Only 1.9 kcal mol-1 of binding energy is expressed in E X Pi. There is a mutual destabilization of bound phosphate and calcium in E-P X Ca2, with delta GD = 7.6 kcal mol-1, that permits transfer of phosphate to ADP and transfer of calcium to a concentrated calcium pool inside the vesicle. It is suggested that the ordered kinetic mechanism for the dissociation of E-P X Ca2, with phosphate transfer to ADP before calcium dissociation outside and phosphate transfer to water after calcium dissociation inside, preserves the Gibbs energies of these ligands and makes a major contribution to the coupling in the transport process. A lag (approximately 5 ms) before the appearance of E-P after mixing E and Pi at pH 6 is diminished by ATP and by increased [Pi]. This suggests that ATP accelerates the binding of Pi. The weak inhibition by ATP of E-P formation at equilibrium also suggests that ATP and phosphate can bind simultaneously to the enzyme at pH 6. Rate constants are greater than or equal to 115 s-1 for all the steps in the reaction sequence to form E-32P X Ca2 from E-P, Ca2+ and [32P]ATP at pH 7. E-P X Ca2 decomposes with kappa = 17 s-1, which shows that it is a kinetically competent intermediate. The value of kappa decreases to 4 s-1 if the intermediate is formed in the presence of 2 mM Ca2+. This decrease and inhibition of turnover by greater than 0.1 mM Ca2+ may result from slow decomposition of E-P X Ca3.  相似文献   

19.
A phosphoprotein phosphatase (phosphoprotein phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.16) has been partially purified from rat liver homogenates by (NH4)2SO4 and ethanol precipitations followed by DEAE-cellulose and Sepharose 6B chromatography. The phosphoprotein phosphatase is capable of cleaving [32P]phosphate from radiolabelled phosphopyruvate kinase (type L) (EC 2.7.1.40), phosphohistones, and phosphoprotamine. However, it did not detectably dephosphorylate ATP, ADP, DL-phosphorylserine or beta-glycerophosphate. Dephosphorylation of [32P]phosphopyruvate kinase was stimulated by divalent cations and inhibited by ATP, ADP, Fru-1,6-P2, and orthophosphate. Divalene cations could reverse inhibition induced by ADP or ATP. At least one function of the phosphoprotein phosphatase may be to remove phosphate groups from the phosphorylated form of pyruvate kinase in the liver.  相似文献   

20.
A radiometric method has been devised for the determination of small quantities of NADH formed in preceding dehydrogenase reactions. In a coupled enzymatic reaction, phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) catalyzes the transfer of [32P]orthophosphate from [gamma-32P]ATP to 3-phosphoglycerate; the intermediate, 1,3-[1-32P]diphosphoglycerate, is dephosphorylated by glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAP-DH). [32P]Orthophosphate is released proportionally to NADH and can be measured after adsorption of [gamma-32P]ATP to activated charcoal. With this method, 0.2 pmol of NADH are detectable in the presence of a 10(4)-fold excess of NAD over NADH.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号