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1.
Covalent modification of two of the four cysteine-149 residues of yeast glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, at pH 8.5, decreases the reactivity of the remaining two cysteine-149 residues and essentially inactivates the protein. The structure of the modifying reagent has only a secondary influence on this half-of-the-sites effect. Reactivity studies, together with the existing X-ray and sequence studies, suggest that the four active sites are initially functionally identical both in activity and in cysteine reactivity. The half-of-the-sites effect therefore arises in part or in whole from ligand-induced negatively co-operative conformational changes. A detailed kinetic study with iodoacetamide gives relative values of two rapidly reacting groups, a third more slowly reacting, and a fourth very slowly reacting group. These data, added to the existing data on cytidine triphosphate synthetase and alkaline phosphatase, suggest that the half-of-the-sites phenomena in many enzymes may be explained by ligand-induced negative co-operativity triggered by binding or covalent bond formation or both.  相似文献   

2.
The treatment of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase from Candida utilis with dansyl chloride causes the modification of one amino acid residue per enzyme subunit and the inactivation of the enzyme. Either a cysteine or a tyrosine residue can be modified, depending on the pH of the reaction mixture. The dansyl residue can be transferred from one residue to the other suggesting that the two amino acid residues are close in the tridimensional structure of the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Pyrene maleimide is shown to be a 'half of the sites' reagent for glutamate dehydrogenase and for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The modified residues are identified as cysteine-115 for glutamate dehydrogenase and cysteine-149 for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The two enzymes react differently with pyrene maleimide. Whereas the hydrophobic environment of cysteine-115 directs the modification of glutamate dehydrogenase, the high reactivity of cysteine-149 determines the specific modification of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Glutamate dehydrogenase activity is unaltered by the modification: glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in inhibited.  相似文献   

4.
Inactivation of yeast phosphoglyceromutase (tetramer) with 1,2-cyclohexanedione correlates with the modification of six arginyl residues per mole of the enzyme. Protection experiments using 3-phosphoglycerate suggest that four arginyl residues (one residue per subunit) are involved in the binding of the substrate to the enzyme. The modified enzyme reversibly regained its activity upon incubation with hydroxylamine. The reactivity of lysyl residues which have been shown to be involved in the active site is markedly reduced in the enzyme inactivated with 1,2-cyclohexanedione, indicating that the lysyl and arginyl residues are in close proximity in the active site.  相似文献   

5.
Two variants of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase which are specified by genes on plasmids found in Gram-negative bacteria were subjected to amidination with methyl acetimidate to determine the relative reactivity of surface lysine residues and to search for unreactive or "buried" amino groups which might contribute to stabilization of the native tetramers. Representative examples of the type-I and type-III variants of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase were found to have one lysine residue each in the native state which appears to be inaccessible to methyl acetimidate. The uniquely unreactive residue of the type-I protein is lysine-136, whereas the lysine that is "buried" in the type-III enzyme is provisonally assigned to residue 38 of the prototype sequence. It is suggested that the lysine residue in each case participates in the formation of an ion pair at the intersubunit interface and that the two amino groups in question occupy functionally equivalent positions in the quaternary structures of their respective enzyme variants. Lysine-136 of type-I enzyme is also uniquely unavailable for modification by citraconic anhydride, a reagent used to disrupt the quaternary structure of the native enzyme. Contrary to expectation, exhaustive citraconylation fails to dissociate the tetramer, but does destroy catalytic activity. Removal of citraconyl groups from modified chloramphenicol acetyltransferase is accompanied by a full region of catalytic activity. Analysis of the rate of hydrolysis of citraconyl groups from the modified tetramer by amidination of unblocked amino groups with methyl [14C]acetamidate reveals difference in lability for several of the ten modified lysine residues. Although the unique stability of the quaternary structure of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase may be due to strong hydrophobic interactions, it is argued that lysine-136 may contribute to stability via the formation of an ion pair at the subunit interface.  相似文献   

6.
Rabbit muscle phosphoglucose isomerase was modified with phenylglyoxal or 2,3-butanedione, the reaction with either reagent resulting in loss of enzymatic activity in a biphasic mode. At slightly alkaline pH butanedione was found to be approximately six times as effective as phenylglyoxal. The inactivation process could not be significantly reversed by removal of the modifier. Competitive inhibitors of the enzyme protected partially against loss of enzyme activity by either modification. The only kind of amino acid residue affected was arginine. However, more than one arginine residue per enzyme subunit was found to be susceptible to modification by the dicarbonyl reagents. From protection experiments it was concluded (i) that both modifiers react specifically with an arginine in the phosphoglucose isomerase active site and nonspecifically with one or more arginine residues elsewhere in the enzyme molecule, (ii) that modification at either loci causes loss of catalytic activity, and (iii) that butanedione has a higher preference for active site arginine than for arginine residues outside of the catalytic center whereas the opposite is true for phenylglyoxal.  相似文献   

7.
Rat muscle glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was reacted with two reagents aimed at the highly reactive cysteine-149 residue in the active site of the enzyme. The enzyme was rapidly inactivated by iodine monochloride. Complete inactivation occured when approx. 6 mol ICl were added per mol enzyme, indicating that reactions which compete with the reagent's interaction with cysteine-149 take place. Iodine was also found to inactivate the enzyme rapidly and effectively, and, when not in excess, this reagent interacted specifically with cysteine-149. The fraction of original enzymatic activity which could be restored by 2-mercaptoethanol in enzyme samples inhibited by 4.2 mol I2/mol enzyme, decreased with time to a limiting value of 0.6 reached after approx. 15 min. The enzyme thus treated showed a remarkable similarity to enzyme samples purified from old rats, both in its activity and in NAD+ binding patterns under various conditions. It is concluded that the structural modifications induced in the modified enzyme resemble the age-related modifications in native ‘old’ enzyme. These results demonstrate that the origin of the age-related effects in glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase is in subtle, post-synthetic structural changes. The inactivation reactions described above require a non-reducing environment for the enzyme. Whether such conditions do exist in cells of old animals is the subject of future studies.  相似文献   

8.
Succinyl-CoA synthetase of Escherichia coli is an alpha 2 beta 2 protein containing active sites at the interfaces between alpha- and beta-subunits. The alpha-subunit contains a histidine residue that is phosphorylated during the reaction. The beta-subunit binds coenzyme A and probably succinate [see Nishimura, J. S. (1986) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 58, 141-172]. Chemical modification studies have been conducted in order to more clearly define functions of each subunit. Tryptophan residues of the enzyme were modified by treatment with N-bromosuccinimide at pH 7. There was a linear relationship between loss of enzyme activity and tryptophan modified. At one tryptophan residue modified per beta-subunit, 100% of the enzyme activity was lost. In this enzyme sample, one methionine residue in each alpha- and beta-subunit was oxidized to methionine sulfoxide, although loss of enzyme activity could not be related in a linear manner to the formation of this residue. Subunits were prepared from enzyme that was inactivated 50% by N-bromosuccinimide with 0.5 tryptophan modified per beta-subunit but with insignificant modification of methionine residues in either subunit. Small decreases in the tyrosine and histidine content were observed in the alpha-subunit but not in the beta-subunit. In this case, modified beta-subunit when mixed with unmodified alpha-subunit gave a population of molecules that was 50% as active as the refolded, unmodified control but was only slightly changed with respect to phosphorylation capacity and unchanged with respect to rate of phosphorylation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The modification and concomitant inactivation of the catalytic subunit of bovine heart cAMP-dependent protein kinase with affinity analogs of peptide substrates potentially capable of undergoing disulfide interchange with enzyme-bound sulfhydryl groups have been used to probe the active site associated with peptide binding. The regeneration of catalytic activity on treatment of the modified enzymes with dithiothreitol and the observation that prior reaction with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) blocks the modification of the kinase by these reagents are consistent with the proposal that only thiol residues are reacting. The affinity analog Leu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Cys(3-nitro-2-pyridinesulfenyl)-Leu-Gly, 1, and the closely related peptide AcLeu-Arg-Arg-Ala-Cys(3-nitro-2-pyridinesulfenyl)-Leu-Gly-OEt, 3, react with a single sulfhydryl as shown by the stoichiometry of the release of the 3-nitro-2-pyridinesulfenyl group and the amount of label incorporated in the enzyme when the radioactively labeled peptide analog of 3 (peptide 4) is employed as the modifying agent. The kinetics of the reaction of 1 with 4.3 microM catalytic subunit was monophasic (employing substrate in excess conditions), yielding an apparent value of KI of approximately 40 microM and a k2 value of approximately 0.25 s-1. The low value of the observed KI, together with the observation that protein kinase substrates inhibit the modification reactions, suggest strongly that the cysteine residue undergoing reaction is in the vicinity of the active site. By trypsin-catalyzed degradation and identification of the peptide segment modified by covalent attachment of the peptide portion of the radioactive analog 4, the single cysteine modified was identified as cysteine-198.  相似文献   

10.
R N Puri  D Bhatnagar  R Roskoski 《Biochemistry》1985,24(23):6499-6508
The catalytic subunit of adenosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate dependent protein kinase from bovine skeletal muscle was rapidly inactivated by o-phthalaldehyde at 25 degrees C (pH 7.3). The reaction followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, and the second-order rate constant was 1.1 X 10(2) M-1 s-1. Absorbance and fluorescence spectroscopic data were consistent with the formation of an isoindole derivative (1 mol/mol of enzyme). The reaction between the catalytic subunit and o-phthalaldehyde was not reversed by the addition of reagents containing free primary amino and sulfhydryl functions following inactivation. The reaction, however, could be arrested at any stage during its progress by the addition of an excess of cysteine or less efficiently by homocysteine or glutathione. The catalytic subunit was protected from inactivation by the presence of the substrates magnesium adenosine triphosphate and an acceptor serine peptide substrate. The decrease in fluorescence emission intensity of incubation mixtures containing iodoacetamide- or 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine-modified catalytic subunit and o-phthalaldehyde paralleled the loss of phosphotransferase activity. Catalytic subunit denatured with urea failed to react with o-phthalaldehyde. Inactivation of the catalytic subunit by o-phthalaldehyde is probably due to the concomitant modification of lysine-72 and cysteine-199. The proximal distance between the epsilon-amino function of the lysine and the sulfhydryl group of the cysteine residues involved in isoindole formation in the native enzyme is estimated to be approximately 3 A. The molar transition energy of the catalytic subunit-o-phthalaldehyde adduct was 121 kJ/mol and compares favorably with a value of 127 kJ/mol for the 1-[(beta-hydroxyethyl)thio]-2-(beta-hydroxyethyl)isoindole in hexane, indicating that the active site lysine and cysteine residues involved in formation of the isoindole derivative of the catalytic subunit are located in a hydrophobic environment. o-Phthalaldehyde probably acts as an active site specific reagent for the catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

11.
Alkaline phosphatase from Megalobatrachus japonicus was inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEP). The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics with a second-order rate constant of 176 M(-1) x min(-1) at pH 6.2 and 25 degrees C. The loss of enzyme activity was accompanied with an increase in absorbance at 242 nm and the inactivated enzyme was re-activated by hydroxylamine, indicating the modification of histidine residues. This conclusion was also confirmed by the pH profiles of inactivation, which showed the involvement of a residue with pK(a) of 6.6. The presence of glycerol 3-phosphate, AMP and phosphate protected the enzyme against inactivation. The results revealed that the histidine residues modified by DEP were located at the active site. Spectrophotometric quantification of modified residues showed that modification of two histidine residues per active site led to complete inactivation, but kinetic stoichiometry indicated that one molecule of modifier reacted with one active site during inactivation, probably suggesting that two essential histidine residues per active site are necessary for complete activity whereas modification of a single histidine residue per active site is enough to result in inactivation.  相似文献   

12.
Uridine phosphorylase from Escherichia coli is inactivated by diethyl pyrocarbonate at pH 7.1 and 10 degrees C with a second-order rate constant of 840 M-1.min-1. The rate of inactivation increases with pH, suggesting participation of an amino acid residue with pK 6.6. Hydroxylamine added to the inactivated enzyme restores the activity. Three histidine residues per enzyme subunit are modified by diethyl pyrocarbonate. Kinetic and statistical analyses of the residual enzymic activity, as well as the number of modified histidine residues, indicate that, among the three modifiable residues, only one is essential for enzyme activity. The reactivity of this histidine residue exceeded 10-fold the reactivity of the other two residues. Uridine, though at high concentration, protects the enzyme against inactivation and the very reactive histidine residue against modification. Thus it may be concluded that uridine phosphorylase contains only one histidine residue in each of its six subunits that is essential for enzyme activity.  相似文献   

13.
Diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivates Pseudomonas ochraceae 4-hydroxy-4-methyl-2-oxoglutarate aldolase [4-hydroxy-4-methyl-2-oxoglutarate pyruvate-lyase: EC 4.1.3.17] by a simple bimolecular reaction. The inactivation is not reversed by hydroxylamine. The pH curve of inactivation indicates the involvement of a residue with a pK of 8.8. Several lines of evidence show that the inactivation is due to the modification of epsilon-amino groups of lysyl residues. Although histidyl residue is also modified, this is not directly correlated to the inactivation. No cysteinyl, tyrosyl, or tryptophyl residue or alpha-amino group is significantly modified. The modification of three lysyl residues per enzyme subunit results in the complete loss of aldolase activity toward various 4-hydroxy-2-oxo acid substrates, whereas oxaloacetate beta-decarboxylase activity associated with the enzyme is not inhibited by this modification. Statistical analysis suggests that only one of the three lysyl residues is essential for activity. l-4-Carboxy-4-hydroxy-2-oxoadipate, a physiological substrate for the enzyme, strongly protects the enzyme against inactivation. Pi as an activator of the enzyme shows no specific protection. The molecular weight of the enzyme, Km for substrate or Mg2+, and activation constant for Pi are virtually unaltered after modification. These results suggest that the modification occurs at or near the active site and that the essential lysyl residue is involved in interaction with the hydroxyl group but not with the oxal group of the substrate.  相似文献   

14.
The active site of glutathione S-transferase isoenzyme 4-4, purified from rat liver, was studied by chemical modification. Tetrachloro-1,4-benzoquinone, a compound previously shown to inactivate glutathione S-transferases very efficiently by covalent binding in or close to the active site, completely prevented the alkylation of the enzyme by iodoacetamide, indicating that the reaction had taken place with cysteine residues. Both from radioactive labeling and spectral quantification experiments, evidence was obtained for the covalent binding of three benzoquinone molecules per subunit, i.e. equivalent to the number of cysteine residues present. This threefold binding was achieved with a fourfold molar excess of the benzoquinone, illustrating the high reactivity of this compound. Comparison of the number of amino acid residues modified by tetrachloro-1,4-benzoquinone with the decrease of catalytic activity revealed an almost complete inhibition after modification of one cysteine residue. Chemical modification studies with diethylpyrocarbonate indicated that all four histidine residues of the subunit are ethoxyformylated in an at least partially sequential manner. Modification of the second histidine residue resulted in complete loss of catalytic activity. Preincubation of the transferase with the glutathione conjugate of tetrachloro-1,4-benzoquinone resulted in 78% protection against this modification. However, glutathione itself hardly protected against the reaction with diethylpyrocarbonate. The intrinsic fluorescence properties of the enzyme were affected by covalent binding of tetrachloro-1,4-benzoquinone. The concentration dependency of the fluorescence quenching is strongly correlated with the inactivation of the enzyme, indicating that covalent binding of the benzoquinone occurs in the vicinity of at least one tryptophan residue. Finally, the binding of bilirubin, as measured by means of circular dichroism, was inhibited by preincubation of the enzyme with tetrachloro-1,4-benzoquinone in a manner which strongly correlated with the loss of enzymatic activity, the protection against inactivation by diethylpyrocarbonate, and the fluorescence quenching. All processes showed a 70-80% decrease after incubation of the enzyme with an equimolar amount of the benzoquinone. Thus, evidence is presented for the presence of a cysteine, a histidine and a tryptophan residue in, or in the vicinity of, the active site of the glutathione S-transferase 4 subunit.  相似文献   

15.
Diethyl pyrocarbonate inhibits pig kidney holo-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine decarboxylase with a second-order rate constant of 1170 M-1 min-1 at pH 6.8 and 25 degrees C, showing a concomitant increase in absorbance at 242 nm due to formation of carbethoxyhistidyl derivatives. Activity can be restored by hydroxylamine, and the pH curve of inactivation indicates the involvement of a residue with a pKa of 6.03. Complete inactivation of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine decarboxylase requires the modification of 6 histidine residues/mol of enzyme. Statistical analysis of the residual enzyme activity and of the extent of modification shows that, among 6 modifiable residues, only one is critical for activity. Protection exerted by substrate analogues, which bind to the active site of the enzyme, suggests that the modification occurs at or near the active site. The modified inactivated 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine decarboxylase still retains most of its ability to bind substrates. Thus, it may be suggested that the inactivation of enzyme by diethyl pyrocarbonate is not due to nonspecific steric or conformational changes which prevent substrate binding. However, the modified enzyme fails to produce at high pH either an enzyme-substrate complex or an enzyme-product complex absorbing at 390 nm. Considerations on this peculiar feature of the modified enzyme consistent with a catalytic role for the modified histidyl residue are discussed. The overall conclusion of this study may be that the modification of only one histidyl residue of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine decarboxylase inactivates the enzyme and that this residue plays an essential role in the mechanism of action of the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glyceraldehyde-3-phoshate:nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide oxidoreductase (phosphorylating), EC 1.2.1.12) forms a complex with 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD which survives precipitation with 7% perchloric acid. The molar ratio bound 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD to the enzyme is 2.5 to 2.9. Lactate, malate, and alcohol dehydrogenases do not form acid-precipitable complexes with 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD. 3-Pyridinealdehyde-deamino-NAD or glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate also forms an acid-stable complex with glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase; however, NAD, 3-acetylpyridine-NAD, or thionicotinamide-NAD does not produce an acid-stable complex. Incubation of the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase with glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, acetyl phosphate, iodoacetic acid, or iodosobenzoate inhibits the formation of the acid-stable complex with 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD. Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate or 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD also prevents carboxymethylation of the active site cysteine-149 by[14-C]iodoacetic acid. These studies indicate that the aldehyde group of 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD forms a thiohemiacetal linkage with cysteine-149 which is the substrate binding site for the dehydrogenase reaction. These findings may account for the fact that 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD strongly inhibits the dehydrogenase and esterase activities of 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD forms a thiohemiacetal linkage with cysteine-149 which is the substrate binding site for the dehydrogenase reaction. These findings may account for the fact that 3-pyridinealdehyde-NAD strongly inhibits the dehydrogenase and esterase activities of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase which require reduced cysteine-149. However, the analogue does not inhibit the acetyl phosphates activity of the enzyme for which the active site sulfhydryl residues must be oxidized.  相似文献   

17.
Malic enzyme of duck liver is alkylated by bromopyruvate with half-of-the-sites stoichiometry, and with accompanying loss of oxidative decarboxylase and enhancement of pyruvate reductase activities as was previously shown for the pigeon enzyme (Hsu, R.Y. (1982) Mol. Cell. Biochem. 43, 3-26). In the present work, the alkylated enzyme is shown to bind NADPH, but not L-malate in the presence of MnCl2, indicating impairment of the enzyme site for the substrate and/or divalent metal. The enzyme was differentially labeled by 3-bromo-1-[14C]-pyruvate and digested with TPCK-treated trypsin. Two peptides bearing the susceptible residue were purified by high-performance liquid chromatography and sequenced. Peptide II has the sequence of FMPIVYTPTVGLAXQQYGLAFR, corresponding to residues 86-107 (temporary numbering) of the duck enzyme; cysteine-99(x) is not detected, indicating that it is the target of modification by bromopyruvate. Peptide I is a truncated form of peptide II lacking five amino acid residues at the C-terminal. Cysteine-99 is conserved in malic enzymes from duck, rat, mouse, maize, human, Flaveria trinervia and Bacillus stearothermophilus.  相似文献   

18.
Chemical modification of purified d-glucosaminate dehydratase (GADH) apoenzyme by N-ethyl-maleimide (NEM) and by 7-chloro-4-aminobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBDC1) resulted in the time- and concentration-dependent inactivation of the enzyme in each case. The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics and a double-logarithmic plot of the observed pseudo-first-order rate constant against reagent concentration proved evidence for an approximately first-order reaction, suggesting that the modification of a single cysteine residue per mole of enzyme resulted in inactivation. Amino acid analysis of the NEM-inactivated enzyme showed that three moles of cysteine residues among six moles per mole of subunit were modified under these conditions, therefore one of the three cysteine residues modified by NEM may be essential for activity. Pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP) and D-glucosaminate (GlcNA) protected the enzyme against inactivation by NEM and NBDCI. The apoenzyme was inactivated by EDTA and activity of enzyme was restored by incubation with Mn2+ in the presence of PLP. Incubation of the EDTA-treated enzyme with NEM inhibited the restoration of activity. These results suggest that one of the cysteine residues of GADH may be chelated to a Mn2+ at or near the active site of GADH, contributing to formation of the active enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
K Tanizawa  E W Miles 《Biochemistry》1983,22(15):3594-3603
Inactivation of the beta 2 subunit and of the alpha 2 beta 2 complex of tryptophan synthase of Escherichia coli by the arginine-specific dicarbonyl reagent phenylglyoxal results from modification of one arginyl residue per beta monomer. The substrate L-serine protects the holo beta 2 subunit and the holo alpha 2 beta 2 complex from both inactivation and arginine modification but has no effect on the inactivation or modification of the apo forms of the enzyme. This result and the finding that phenylglyoxal competes with L-serine in reactions catalyzed by both the holo beta 2 subunit and the holo alpha 2 beta 2 complex indicate that L-serine and phenylglyoxal both bind to the same essential arginyl residue in the holo beta 2 subunit. The apo beta 2 subunit is protected from phenylglyoxal inactivation much more effectively by phosphopyridoxyl-L-serine than by either pyridoxal phosphate or pyridoxine phosphate, both of which lack the L-serine moiety. The phenylglyoxal-modified apo beta 2 subunit binds pyridoxal phosphate and the alpha subunit but cannot bind L-serine or L-tryptophan. We conclude that the alpha-carboxyl group of L-serine and not the phosphate of pyridoxal phosphate binds to the essential arginyl residue in the beta 2 subunit. The specific arginyl residue in the beta 2 subunit which is protected by L-serine from modification by phenyl[2-14C]glyoxal has been identified as arginine-148 by isolating a labeled cyanogen bromide fragment (residues 135-149) and by digesting this fragment with pepsin to yield the labeled dipeptide arginine-methionine (residues 148-149). The primary sequence near arginine-148 contains three other basic residues (lysine-137, arginine-141, and arginine-150) which may facilitate anion binding and increase the reactivity of arginine-148. The conservation of the arginine residues 141, 148, and 150 in the sequences of tryptophan synthase from E. coli, Salmonella typhimurium, and yeast supports a functional role for these three residues in anion binding. The location and role of the active-site arginyl residues in the beta 2 subunit and in two other enzymes which contain pyridoxal phosphate, aspartate aminotransferase and glycogen phosphorylase, are compared.  相似文献   

20.
Sheep liver 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase is shown to be inactivated by diethylpyrocarbonate in a biphasic manner at pH 6.0, 25 degrees C. After allowing for the hydrolysis of the reagent, rate constants of 56 M-1 s-1 and 11.0 M-1 s-1 were estimated for the two processes. The complete reactivation of partially inactivated enzyme by neutral hydroxylamine, the elimination of the possibility that modification of cysteine or tyrosine residues are responsible for inactivation, and the magnitudes of the rate constants for inactivation relative to the experimentally determined value for the reaction of diethylpyrocarbonate with N alpha-acetylhistidine (2.2 M-1 s-1), all suggested that enzyme inactivation occurs solely by modification of histidine residues. Comparison of the experimental plot of residual fractional activity versus the number of modified histidine residues per subunit with simulated plots for three hypothetical models, each predicting biphasic kinetics, indicated that inactivation results from the modification of at most one essential histidine residue per subunit, although it appears that other (non-essential) histidines react independently. This histidine is thought to be His-242 and is present in the active site. Evidence in support of its role in catalysis is briefly discussed. Both 6-phosphogluconate and organic phosphate protect against inactivation, and a kinetic analysis of the protection indicated a dissociation constant of 2.1 X 10(-6) M for the enzyme--6-phosphogluconate complex. NADP+ also protected, but this might be due, at least in part, to a reduction in the effective concentration of diethylpyrocarbonate.  相似文献   

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