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1.
Acetyl-CoA synthetase, utilized in a coupled reaction system, has been shown to be applicable to the spectrophotometric determination of propionic and methylmalonic acids in biological fluids. The isolation of acetyl-CoA synthetase from yeast is simpler than the purification from mammalian sources. This study also presents some properties of the yeast enzyme and compares it to the more extensively studied enzyme isolated from ammmalian tissue. Isolation and purification yielded a preparation with a specific activity of 44 units/mg at 25 degrees. The purified acetyl-CoA synthetase was apparently homogeneous by sodium dodecyl sulfate-poly-acrylamide gel electrophoresis with an estimated subunit molecular weight of 78,000. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of ATP revealed a single protein band which contained all of the enzyme activity. Analytical ultra-centrifuge studies indicated the presence of a single protein with a molecular wright of 151,000 and sedimentation velocity analysis revealed a single peak with a sedimentation coefficient of 8.65 So20,w. Similar to the enzyme from mammalian sources, yeast acetyl-CoA synthetase has a high degree of substrate specificity and is active only on acetate and propionate. In addition, the reaction mechanism, as demonstrated by initial velocity patterns obtained from substrate pairs, appeared to be identical to the enzyme from bovine heart. However, the apparent Michaelis constants for the substrates were significantly different from the mammalian enzyme. The yeast-derived enzyme also differed from the mammalian in terms of molecular weight, amino acid composition, pH optimum, effect of monovalent cations, and stability characteristics. Thus, yeast acetyl-CoA synthetase is more easily purified than the mammalian enzyme and provides an excellent preparation for the assay of propionic and methylmalonic acids.  相似文献   

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Purification and properties of the catalase of bakers' yeast   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
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DNA polymerases from bakers' yeast.   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
Two DNA polymerases are present in extracts of commercial bakers' yeast and wild type Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown aerobically to late log phase. Yeast DNA polymerase I and yeast DNA polymerase II can be separated by DEAE-cellulose, hydroxylapatite, and denatured DNA-cellulose chromatography from the postmitochondrial supernatants of yeast lysates. The yeast polymerases are both of high molecular weight (greater than 100,000) but are clearly separate species by the lack of immunological cross-reactivity. Analysis of associated enzyme activities and other reaction properties of yeast DNA polymerases provides additional evidence for distinguishing the two species. Enzyme I has no associated nuclease activity but does carry out pyrophosphate exchange and pyrophosphorolysis reactions, and has an associated 3'-exonuclease activity. Enzyme I does not degrade deoxynucleoside triphosphates and cannot utilize a mismatched template. Enzyme II does carry out a template-dependent deoxynucleoside triphosphate degradation reaction and can excise mismatched 3'-nucleotides from suitable template systems. Earlier studies have shown that both Enzyme I and Enzyme II are inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide. The yeast enzymes are not identical to any known eukaryotic or prokaryotic DNA polymerases. In general, Enzyme I appears to be most similar to eukaryotic DNA polymerase alpha and Ezyme II exhibits properties of prokaryotic DNA polymerases II and III.  相似文献   

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Pyridoxine dehydrogenase (1.1.1.65) (pyridoxal reductase), purified to homogeneity from baker's yeast, is a monomer of Mr approximately 33,000. It catalyzes the reversible oxidation of pyridoxine by NADP to yield pyridoxal and NADPH; equilibrium lies far in the direction of pyridoxine formation (Keq approximately 1.4 X 10(11) l/mol at 25 degrees C). Reduction of pyridoxal occurs most rapidly at pH 6.0-7.0; oxidation of pyridoxine is optimal at pH 8.6. NAD and NADH do not replace NADP and NADPH as substrates; pyridoxine, pyridoxal and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate are the only naturally occurring cosubstrates found. Several other aromatic aldehydes also are reduced, but substrate specificity and other properties of the enzyme distinguish it clearly from other alcohol dehydrogenases or aldehyde reductases. Between pH 6.3 and 7.1 (the intracellular pH of yeast), V/Km with pyridoxal and NADPH as substrates is greater than 600 times that observed with pyridoxine and NADPH as substrates is greater than 600 times that observed with pyridoxine and NADP as substrates. These and other considerations strongly indicate that the dehydrogenase functions in vivo to reduce pyridoxal to pyridoxine, which is the preferred substrate for pyridoxal (pyridoxine) kinase in yeast.  相似文献   

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This paper describes the purification and properties of an enzyme present in yeast which splits N-acetylphenylalanyl-tRNA to N-acetylphenylalanine and tRNA. The enzyme has been 35000 as estimated by filtration on Sephadex G-150, is maximally active in the presence of a divalent cation (Mg2+ , Mn2+ or Ca2+) and has a pH optimum at around neutrality. The enzyme is highly specific in hydrolyzing N-acetylphenylalanyl-tRNA (Km = 0.4 micron). Phenylalanyl-tRNA is hydrolyzed with a similar apparent affinity but with an efficiency of 40% of that found for N-acetylphenylalanyl-tRNA. Other free or N-substituted aminoacyl-tRNAs are not substrates of this hydrolase. Neither of the two reaction products are effective inhibitors of this enzyme. Based on its substrate specificity, the trivial name of N-acetylphenylalanyl-tRNA hydrolase is proposed for this enzyme.  相似文献   

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Cytochrome c1 has been purified from mitochondria of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The procedure involves solubilization withcholate, ammonium sulfate fractionation, disruption of the dytochrome b-c1 complex with mercaptoethanol and detergents, and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. The final product is psectrally pure, contains up to 62 nmol of covalently bound heme per mg of protein and does not react with oxygen or carbon monoxide. Sodium dodecyl sulfate disaggregates the purified cytochrome into a single 31,000 dalton subunit carrying the covalently attached heme group. Many cytochrome c1 preparations contain in addition an 18,500 dalton polypeptide which is devoid of covalently bound heme. Since this polypeptide can be removed from the heme-carrying polypeptide by relatively mild procedures, it is probably not an essential subunit of cytochrome c1. Cytochrome c1 is extremely sensitive to proteolysis. If it si purified in the absence of protease inhibitors, a family of heme polypeptides with molecular weights of 29,000, 27,000, and 25,000 daltons is obtained. In the presence of the protease inhibitor phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride the purification yields predominantly a 31,000 dalton heme protein with only little contamination by a 29,000 dalton degradation product. In order to show that only the 31,000 dalton heme-polypeptide is the native species, yeast cells were labeled with the heme-precursor delta-amino[3H]levulinic acid, converted to protoplasts and directly lysed with dodecyl sulfate in the presence of protease inhibitors. Subsequent electrophoresis of the lysate in the presence of dodecyl sulfate reveals the covalently bound heme of cytochrome c1 as a single symmetrical peak at 31,000 daltons.  相似文献   

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D J Uhlinger  C Y Yang  L J Reed 《Biochemistry》1986,25(19):5673-5677
The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was purified to homogeneity from bakers' yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). No pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity was detected at any stage of the purification. However, the purified pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was phosphorylated and inactivated with purified pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase from bovine kidney. The protein-bound radioactivity was localized in the pyruvate dehydrogenase alpha subunit. The phosphorylated, inactive pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was dephosphorylated and reactivated with purified pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase from bovine heart. Tryptic digestion of the 32P-labeled complex yielded a single phosphopeptide, which was purified to homogeneity. The sequence of the phosphopeptide was established to be Tyr-Gly-Gly-His-Ser(P)-Met-Ser-Asp-Pro-Gly-Thr-Thr-Tyr-Arg. This sequence is very similar to the sequence of a tryptic phosphotetradecapeptide derived from the alpha subunit of bovine kidney and heart pyruvate dehydrogenase: Tyr-His-Gly-His-Ser(P)-Met-Ser-Asp-Pro-Gly-Val-Ser-Tyr-Arg.  相似文献   

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1. Mitochondria from Candida utilis CBS 1516 and Sacchromyces cerevisiae JB 65 possess an ATPase-inhibitor activity. The inhibitor activity depends on the growth conditions of the yeast cells. It is markedly decreased when the cells are grown in the presence of a high concentration of glucose, which suggests that glucose represses the synthesis of the ATPase inhibitor or of a protein required for the insertion of the inhibitor into the inner mitochondrial membrane. 2. The ATPase inhibitor has been isolated from D. utilis mitochondria and purified to homogeneity. The minimal molecular weight calculated from amino acid composition is close to 7500. Dtermination of the molecular weight by sokium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gives a value close to 6000. 3. The ATPas inhibitor of C. utilis mitochondria differs from the beef heart ATPase inhibitor by a number of properties. It has a lower molecular weight (6000-7500 vs 10500), a different amino acid composition, and a more acidic isoelectric point 5, 6 vs 7, 6). In spite of these differences, the C. utilis inhibitor cross-reacts with the ATPase of beef heart submitochondrial inhibitor-depleted particles. 4. The interaction of the C. utilis inhibitor with the ATPase of inhibitor-depleted particles requires the addition of Mg-2+-ATP or ATP in the incubation medium. 5. 14-C labelling of the C.utilis inhibitor has been achieved by growing C. utilis in a medium supplemented with [14-C]leucine. It has been found by titration experiments that the C. utilis 14-C-labelled inhibitor binds to the homologous submitochondrial inhibitor-depleted particles with a KD of about 10- minus 7 M. The number of binding sites is of the order of 0.1 nmol/mg protein.  相似文献   

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