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1.
Cinnamic acid 4-hydroxylase (CA4H) was purified from microsomes of manganese-induced Jerusalem artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus L.) tuber tissues. The three-step purification procedure involved solubilization and phase partitioning in Triton X-114, followed by chromatography on DEAE-Trisacryl and hydroxylapatite columns. Purification was monitored using carbon monoxide and type I substrate binding properties of the enzyme. The protein, purified to electrophoretic homogeneity, showed an Mr of about 57,000 on SDS-PAGE. Polyclonal antibodies raised against this protein selectively reacted with a 57-kDa polypeptide on Western blots of induced Jerusalem artichoke microsomes. The antibody selectively and strongly inhibited CA4H activity from several plant species.  相似文献   

2.
Affinity-purified antibodies were used to identify a protein of molecular mass 45 kDa (45 kDa protein) in rat brain cytosol as phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PtdIns4P) kinase. Antibodies were raised in rabbits by immunization with the purified 45 kDa protein. Anti-(45 kDa protein) immunoglobulins were isolated by affinity chromatography of the antiserum on a solid immunosorbent, which was prepared by coupling a soluble rat brain fraction, the DEAE-cellulose pool containing 10-15% 45 kDa protein, to CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B. The purified IgGs were specific for the 45 kDa protein as judged by immunoblot and by immunoprecipitation. The purified anti-(45 kDa protein) IgGs inhibited the enzyme activity of partially purified PtdIns4P kinase, whereas preimmune IgGs were ineffective. Immunoprecipitation of the 45 kDa protein from the partially purified enzyme preparation with the purified IgGs resulted in a concomitant decrease in the amount of 45 kDa protein and in PtdIns4P kinase activity. The amount of 45 kDa protein remaining in the supernatant and the activity of PtdIns4P kinase correlated with a coefficient of r = 0.87. The evidence presented lends further support for the notion that the catalytic activity of PtdIns4P kinase in rat brain cytosol resides in a 45 kDa protein.  相似文献   

3.
Ferrochelatase was purified from the livers of normal and protoporphyria cattle by chromatography on Blue Sepharose CL-6B in order to investigate the enzyme defect in this disorder. The increase in specific activity (up to 2900-fold) indicated that the normal and protoporphyria enzymes were purified to a similar degree. The mutant enzyme had catalytic activity which was 10 to 15% of normal ferrochelatase, although the Michaelis constants for protoporphyrin and iron were similar. The molecular mass of the normal and protoporphyria enzyme protein was 40 kDa as evaluated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). In the presence of 15 mM sodium cholate, gel filtration demonstrated a similar size. However, at a lower concentration of sodium cholate (4 mM) the molecular mass was about 240 kDa, suggesting that the purified enzymes aggregate under this condition. Polyvalent antibodies were raised in rabbits using as antigens purified normal native enzyme and normal 40-kDa protein which had been further purified by preparative SDS-PAGE. In Western blots these antibodies complexed with both the normal and mutant 40-kDa proteins. The amount of 40-kDa protein in normal and protoporphyria mitochondrial fractions was also similar as evaluated by Western blots. These studies indicate that the ferrochelatase defect in bovine protoporphyria probably results from a point gene mutation that causes a minor change in enzyme structure.  相似文献   

4.
Prolyl hydroxylase was purified from human foetal skin and from a mixture of human foetal tissues by the affinity chromatography procedure using poly(L-proline). The enzyme from both sources was pure, when examined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, as a native protein or in the presence of sodium dodecylsulphate, and enzyme activity recovery varied from 38% to 70% with seven enzyme preparations. The enzyme synthesized from 61.0 mumol to 82.7 mumol hydroxyproline mg protein-1 h-1 degrees C with a saturating concentration of (Pro-Pro-Gly)5 as substrate. The molecular weight of the enzyme was identical with that of the chick prolyl hydroxylase when studied by gel filtration, and the molecular weights of the subunits of the enzyme were about 61000 and 64000 as determined by sodium dodecylsulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition of the human enzyme was very similar to that of the chick prolyl hydroxylase. Antisera to human and chick prolyl hydroxylases were prepared in rabbits. A single precipitin line was seen between the antiserum to human prolyl hydroxylase and the human enzyme in double immunodiffusion, and no cross-reactivity was detected between the human chick enzymes by this technique. However, a distinct cross-reactivity was observed between the human and chick enzymes in inhibition experiments.  相似文献   

5.
Two novel rare mutations, MCAD approximately 842G-->C (R256T) and MCAD approximately 1166A-->G (K364R), have been investigated to assess how far the biochemical properties of the mutant proteins correlate with the clinical phenotype of medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency. When the gene for K364R was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, the synthesized mutant protein only exhibited activity when the gene for chaperonin GroELS was co-overexpressed. Levels of activity correlated with the amounts of native MCAD protein visible in western blots. The R256T mutant, by contrast, displayed no activity either with or without chaperonin, but in this case a strong MCAD protein band was seen in the western blots throughout. The proteins were also purified, and the enzyme function and thermostability investigated. The K364R protein showed only moderate kinetic impairment, whereas the R256T protein was again totally inactive. Neither mutant showed marked depletion of FAD. The pure K364R protein was considerably less thermostable than wild-type MCAD. Western blots indicated that, although the R256T mutant protein is less thermostable than normal MCAD, it is much more stable than K364R. Though clinically asymptomatic thus far, both mutations have a severe impact on the biochemical phenotype of the protein. K364R, like several previously described MCAD mutant proteins, appears to be defective in folding. R256T, by contrast, is a well-folded protein that is nevertheless devoid of catalytic activity. How the mutations specifically affect the catalytic activity and the folding is further discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Purification and characterization of trimming glucosidase I from pig liver   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Trimming glucosidase I has been purified about 400-fold from pig liver crude microsomes by fractional salt/detergent extraction, affinity chromatography and poly(ethylene glycol) precipitation. The purified enzyme has an apparent molecular mass of 85 kDa, and is an N-glycoprotein as shown by its binding to concanavalin A-Sepharose and its susceptibility to endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase (endo H). The native form of glucosidase I is unusually resistant to non-specific proteolysis. The enzyme can, however, be cleaved at high, that is equimolar, concentrations of trypsin into a defined and enzymatically active mixture of protein fragments with molecular mass of 69 kDa, 45 kDa and 29 kDa, indicating that it is composed of distinct protein domains. The two larger tryptic fragments can be converted by endo H to 66 kDa and 42 kDa polypeptides, suggesting that glucosidase I contains one N-linked high-mannose sugar chain. Purified pig liver glucosidase I hydrolyzes specifically the terminal alpha 1-2-linked glucose residue from natural Glc3-Man9-GlcNAc2, but is inactive towards Glc2-Man9-GlcNAc2 or nitrophenyl-/methyl-umbelliferyl-alpha-glucosides. The enzyme displays a pH optimum close to 6.4, does not require metal ions for activity and is strongly inhibited by 1-deoxynojirimycin (Ki approximately 2.1 microM), N,N-dimethyl-1-deoxynojirimycin (Ki approximately 0.5 microM) and N-(5-carboxypentyl)-1-deoxynojirimycin (Ki approximately 0.45 microM), thus closely resembling calf liver and yeast glucosidase I. Polyclonal antibodies raised against denatured pig liver glucosidase I, were found to recognize specifically the 85 kDa enzyme protein in Western blots of crude pig liver microsomes. This antibody also detected proteins of similar size in crude microsomal preparations from calf and human liver, calf kidney and intestine, indicating that the enzymes from these cells have in common one or more antigenic determinants. The antibody failed to cross-react with the enzyme from chicken liver, yeast and Volvox carteri under similar experimental conditions, pointing to a lack of sufficient similarity to convey cross-reactivity.  相似文献   

7.
Glutathione S-transferase activity from human platelets was purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography. The purified enzyme was found to be the acidic form and its molecular and catalytic properties were identical to acidic glutathione S-transferases purified from other human tissues. The purified platelet enzyme had no peroxidase activity and did not protect microsomes against peroxidation.  相似文献   

8.
Two peaks of glutamine synthetase (GS) activity were resolved by anion-exchange chromatography from the marine diatom Skeletonema costatum Grev. The second peak of activity accounted for greater than 93% of total enzyme activity, and this isoform was purified over 200-fold. Results from denaturing gel electrophoresis and gel-filtration chromatography suggest that six 70-kD subunits constitute the 400-kD native enzyme. The structure of the diatom GS, therefore, appears more similar to that of a type found in bacteria than to the type common among other eukaryotes. Apparent Michaelis constant values were 0.7 mM for NH4(+), 5.7 mM for glutamic acid, and 0.5 mM for ATP. Enzyme activity was inhibited by serine, alanine, glycine, phosphinothricin, and methionine sulfoximine. Polyclonal antiserum raised against the purified enzyme localized a single polypeptide on western blots of S. costatum cell lysates and recognized the denatured, native enzyme. Western analysis of the two peak fractions derived from anion-exchange chromatography demonstrated that the 70-kD protein was present only in the later eluting peak of enzyme activity. This form of GS does not appear to be unique to S. costatum, since the antiserum recognized a similar-sized protein in cell lysates of other chromophytic algae.  相似文献   

9.
A highly active and soluble glucose-6-phosphatase has been purified to near homogeneity from rat liver. Successful purification has been initiated by covalent labeling of the enzyme in native rat liver microsomes with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and NaBH4, followed by solubilization of the microsomes with Triton X-100, chromatography on phenyl-Sepharose, hydroxyapatite, DEAE-Sephacel and a second chromatography step on hydroxyapatite. The final enzyme preparation obtained was approximately 700-fold purified over the activity of starting microsomes. As judged by SDS/PAGE the purified glucose-6-phosphatase is composed of a single protein with a molecular mass of 35 kDa. The present work demonstrates that the purified glucose-6-phosphatase must be arranged in the native microsomal membrane so that it is accessible to pyridoxal 5'-phosphate from the cytoplasmic side.  相似文献   

10.
Methylthioadenosine sulfoxide (MTAS), an oxidized derivative of the cell toxic metabolite methylthioadenosine has been used in elucidating the relevance of an interrelationship between the catalytic behavior and the conformational state of hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase and in characterizing the transmembrane orientation of the integral unit in the microsomal membrane. The following results were obtained: (1) Glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis at 37 degrees C is progressively inhibited when native microsomes are treated with MTAS at 37 degrees C. In contrast, glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis of the same MTAS-treated microsomes assayed at 0 degrees C is not inhibited. (2) Subsequent modification of the MTAS-treated microsomes with Triton X-114 reveals that glucose-6-phosphatase assayed at 37 degrees C as well as at 0 degrees C is inhibited. (3) Although excess reagent is separated by centrifugation and the MTAS-treated microsomes diluted with buffer before being modified with Triton the temperature-dependent effect of MTAS on microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase is not reversed at all. (4) In native microsomes MTAS is shown to inhibit glucose-6-phosphatase noncompetitively. The subsequent Triton-modification of the MTAS-treated microsomes, however, generates an uncompetitive type of inhibition. (5) Preincubation of native microsomes with MTAS completely prevents the inhibitory effect of 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene 2,2'-disulfonate (DIDS) as well as 4,4'-diazidostilbene 2,2'-disulfonate (DASS) on glucose-6-phosphatase. (6) Low molecular weight thiols and tocopherol protect the microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase against MTAS-induced inhibition. (7) Glucose-6-phosphatase solubilized and partially purified from rat liver microsomes is also affected by MTAS in demonstrating the same temperature-dependent behavior as the enzyme of MTAS-treated and Triton-modified microsomes. From these results we conclude that MTAS modulates the enzyme catalytic properties of hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase by covalent modification of reactive groups of the integral protein accessible from the cytoplasmic surface of the microsomal membrane. The temperature-dependent kinetic behavior of MTAS-modulated glucose-6-phosphatase is interpreted by the existence of distinct catalytically active enzyme conformation forms. Detergent-induced modification of the adjacent hydrophobic microenvironment additionally generates alterations of the conformational state leading to changes of the kinetic characteristics of the integral enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Extracellular phytase from Aspergillus ficuum, a glycoprotein, was purified to homogeneity in 3 column chromatographic steps using ion exchange and chromatofocusing. Results of gel filtration chromatography and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated the approximate molecular weight of the native protein to be 85-100-KDa. On the basis of a molecular weight of 85-KDa, the molar extinction coefficient of the enzyme at 280 nm was estimated to be 1.2 X 10(4) M-1 cm-1. The isoelectric point of the enzyme, as deduced by chromatofocusing, was about 4.5. The purified enzyme is remarkably stable at 0 degree C. Thermal inactivation studies have shown that the enzyme retained 40% of its activity after being subjected to 68 degrees C for 10 minutes, and the enzyme exhibited a broad temperature optimum with maximum catalytic activity at 58 degrees C. The Km of the enzyme for phytate and p-nitrophenylphosphate is about 40 uM and 265 uM, respectively, with an estimated turnover number of the enzyme for phytate of 220 per sec. Enzymatic deglycosylation of phytase by Endoglycosidase H lowered the molecular weight of native enzyme from 85-100-KDa to about 76-KDa; the digested phytase still retained some carbohydrate as judged by positive periodic acid-Schiff reagent staining of the electrophoresed protein. Immunoblotting of the phytase with monoclonal antibody 7H10 raised against purified native enzyme recognized not only native but also partially deglycosylated protein.  相似文献   

12.
Polyclonal antibodies were prepared against NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase purified from Jerusalem artichoke. These antibodies inhibited efficiently the NADPH-cytochrome c reductase activity of the purified enzyme, as well as of Jerusalem artichoke microsomes. Likewise, microsomal NADPH-dependent cytochrome P-450 mono-oxygenases (cinnamate and laurate hydroxylases) were efficiently inhibited. The antibodies were only slightly inhibitory toward microsomal NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity, but lowered NADH-dependent cytochrome P-450 mono-oxygenase activities. The Jerusalem artichoke NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase is characterized by its high Mr (82,000) as compared with the enzyme from animals (76,000-78,000). Western blot analysis revealed cross-reactivity of the Jerusalem artichoke reductase antibodies with microsomes from plants belonging to different families (monocotyledons and dicotyledons). All of the proteins recognized by the antibodies had an Mr of approx. 82,000. No cross-reaction was observed with microsomes from rat liver or Locusta migratoria midgut. The cross-reactivity generally paralleled well the inhibition of reductase activity: the enzyme from most higher plants tested was inhibited by the antibodies; whereas Gingko biloba, Euglena gracilis, yeast, rat liver and insect midgut activities were insensitive to the antibodies. These results point to structural differences, particularly at the active site, between the reductases from higher plants and the enzymes from phylogenetically distant plants and from animals.  相似文献   

13.
We have purified carbonic anhydrase (CA) IV from human lung membranes to apparent homogeneity in a form which is catalytically active and stable to storage. It has an apparent molecular mass of 35 kDa, is insensitive to endoglycosidases, and seems to contain no N-linked or O-linked oligosaccharide chains. Reduction of disulfide linkages led to altered migration on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and loss of catalytic activity. CA IV resembles CA II in being a "high activity" isozyme, relatively resistant to inhibition by halide ions and sensitive to inhibition by sulfonamides. Application of this purification to human kidney membranes produced homogeneous enzyme with nearly identical properties. Amino acid compositions of both lung and kidney CA IV were similar, as were tryptic peptide patterns resolved on high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Amino-terminal sequences of native enzyme from lung and kidney were identical, as were amino-terminal sequences of the three major tryptic peptides resolved on reverse phase HPLC. Isoelectric focusing revealed microheterogeneity in enzyme from both sources. Antibody raised to human lung CA IV reacted equally strongly with CA IV from kidney, but very weakly or not at all with other CAs. Treatment of lung membranes and kidney membranes with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C released over half of the membrane-bound CA IV, suggesting that at least half of the CA IV in both organs is anchored to membranes by phosphatidylinositol-glycan linkages.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene 2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS) on microsomal glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis has been reinvestigated and characterized in order to elucidate the topological and functional properties of the interacting sites of the glucose-6-phosphatase. The studies were performed on microsomal membranes, partially purified and reconstituted glucose-6-phosphatase preparations and show the following. (a) DIDS inhibits activity of the glucose-6-phosphatase of native microsomes as well as the partially purified glucose-6-phosphatase. (b) Inhibition is reversed when the microsomes and the partially purified phosphohydrolase, incorporated into asolectin liposomes, are modified with Triton X-114. (c) Treatment of native microsomes with DIDS and the following purification of glucose-6-phosphatase from these labeled membranes leads to an enzyme preparation which is labeled and inhibited by DIDS. (d) Preincubation of native microsomes or partially purified glucose-6-phosphatase with a 3000-fold excess of glucose 6-phosphate cannot prevent the DIDS-induced inhibition. (e) Inhibition of glucose-6-phosphatase by DIDS is completely prevented when reactive sulfhydryl groups of the phosphohydrolase are blocked by p-mecuribenzoate. (f) Reactivation of enzyme activity is obtained when DIDS-labeled microsomes are incubated with 2-mercaptoethanol or dithiothreitol. Therefore, we conclude that inhibition of microsomal glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis by DIDS cannot result from binding of this agent to a putative glucose-6-phosphate-carrier protein. Our results rather suggest that inhibition is caused by chemical modification of sulfhydryl groups of the integral phosphohydrolase accessible to DIDS attack itself. An easy interpretation of these results can be obtained on the basis of a modified conformational model representing the glucose-6-phosphatase as an integral channel-protein located within the hydrophobic interior of the microsomal membrane [Schulze et al. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 16,571-16,578].  相似文献   

15.
Ram spermatozoa adenylate cyclase is insensitive to all usual regulatory processes. The purification of its active catalytic subunit was accomplished after proteolytic solubilization of a particulate fraction by alpha-chymotrypsin. The purification (26,000-fold from the particulate fraction or 125,000-fold from the whole-sperm proteins) was achieved by conventional procedures (DEAE-Trisacryl, Ultrogel AcA 34, DEAE-Sephacel, hydroxyapatite), in the absence of detergent, and with a yield of 5-10% and a final specific activity of 19 mumol cyclic AMP formed mg protein-1 min-1 at 30 degrees C in the presence of manganese as cosubstrate. The solubilized enzyme, stable at the beginning of the purification procedure, became unstable at the later stages. After the last step (chromatography on hydroxyapatite) half-lives of 27 min, 50 min and 160 min were obtained at 30 degrees C, 20 degrees C and 4 degrees C respectively. The enzyme was stabilized by addition of bovine serum albumin and Lubrol PX, 80% of the activity remaining after 24 h at 4 degrees C. The purified enzyme exhibited a Km value similar to that of the native enzyme (Km = 1.4 mM). Unlike the native enzyme, the purified enzyme has an absolute requirement for MnATP; no significant activity was recovered in the presence of MgATP. Adenosine inhibited the activity of both the native and purified forms of the enzyme to the same extent and in a non-competitive manner. This indicates that adenosine acts on the catalytic component itself and the inhibition site and the catalytic site are different. Data obtained with adenosine analogs indicate that adenosine interacts with the cyclase catalytic subunit with a 'P-site' specificity. The purified adenylate cyclase, which had an apparent molecular mass of 38 kDa on a high-performance liquid chromatography column [Stengel, D., Guenet, L. and Hanoune, J. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 10,818-10,826], gave a doublet of 36 kDa and 34 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. This represents the smallest protein entity associated with adenylate cyclase activity so far reported.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of the photoactivated reagent 4,4'-diazidostilbene 2,2'-disulfonic acid (DASS) on rat liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase has been investigated in order to analyze the accessibility and the chemical nature of functional sites of the integral enzyme protein. The following results were obtained. (i) When native rat liver microsomes are irradiated with the photoactive reagent, the activity of glucose-6-phosphatase is progressively inhibited. However, complete reactivation is obtained by modification of the DASS-labeled microsomes with Triton X-114. (ii) Inhibition of glucose-6-phosphatase is also reversed when the DASS-labeled microsomes are treated with p-mercuribenzoate or dithiothreitol. (iii) When native microsomes are labeled with DASS an intensely fluorescent adduct is formed whose emission and excitation maximum corresponds with those obtained when cysteine or 3-mercaptopropionic acid are irradiated in the presence of the photolabile reagent. (iv) The data from fluorescence measurements show that p-mercuribenzoate and dithiothreitol reduce fluorescence labeling of the microsomes whereas Triton modification of the DASS-labeled membranes does not affect the DASS-induced fluorescence. (v) Glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis of the partially purified glucose-6-phosphatase is also inhibited as observed with native microsomes. The DASS-induced inhibition is reversed and prevented by p-mercuribenzoate; however, the partially purified enzyme cannot be reactivated by Triton X-114. (vi) When glucose-6-phosphatase is partially purified from the DASS-labeled microsomes this enzyme preparation is fluorescence labeled and inhibited. From these results we conclude that DASS directly reacts with the integral phosphohydrolase mainly by chemical modification of essential sulfhydryl groups of the enzyme protein accessible from the cytoplasmic surface of the native microsomal membrane. The Triton-induced reactivation of the glucose-6-phosphatase of DASS-labeled microsomes is explained in terms of conformational changes of the integral protein elicited during modification of the surrounding membrane by detergent.  相似文献   

17.
Extracellular phytase from Aspergillus ficuum, a glycoprotein, was purified to homogeneity in 3 column chromatographic steps using ion exchange and chromatofocusing. Results of gel filtration chromatography and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated the approximate molecular weight of the native protein to be 85–100-KDa. On the basis of a molecular weight of 85–KDa, the molar extinction coefficient of the enzyme at 280 nm was estimated to be 1.2 × 104 M-l cm-1. The isoelectric point of the enzyme, as deduced by chromatofocusing, was about 4.5. The purified enzyme is remarkably stable at 0°C. Thermal inactivation studies have shown that the enzyme retained 40% of its activity after being subjected to 68°C for 10 minutes, and the enzyme exhibited a broad temperature optimum with maximum catalytic activity at 58°C. The Km of the enzyme for phytate and p-nitrophenylphosphate is about 40 uM and 265 uM, respectively, with an estimated turnover number of the enzyme for phytate of 220 per sec. Enzymatic deglycosylation of phytase by Endoglycosidase H lowered the molecular weight of native enzyme from 85–100-KDa to about 76–KDa; the digested phytase still retained some carbohydrate as judged by positive periodic acid-Schiff reagent staining of the electrophoresed protein. Immunoblotting of the phytase with monoclonal antibody 7H10 raised against purified native enzyme recognized not only native but also partially deglycosylated protein.  相似文献   

18.
Immunoglobulin G fractions (IgGs), isolated from rabbits immunized against hepatic cytochrome P-450 isozymes were used to investigate the immunochemical homology among trout P-450s and between trout and rat P-450s. The antigens used for immunization were five constitutive trout P-450s (LMC1 to LMC5), one beta-naphthoflavone (BNF)-inducible trout P-450 (LM4b), and one phenobarbital-induced rat P4500IIB1 (PB-B). In the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), strong cross-reactivity was observed between anti-LMC2 IgG and P-450 LMC1, and between anti-LMC3 IgG and P-450 LMC4. There was little or no cross-reactivity of anti-LMC5 IgG with other trout P-450s. Trout P-450 LM4b was not recognized by any of the antibodies against constitutive trout P-450s. Antibodies to P-450 LMC1 and P450 LMC2 cross-reacted strongly with rat P450IIB1 and with proteins of PB-induced rat liver microsomes. Rat P450IA1 (BNF-B) did not cross-react with anti-LMC1 or anti-LMC2 IgG. These cross-reactions were essentially confirmed by immunoblot (Western blot) analysis. Western blots of PB-induced rat liver microsomes probed with anti LMC1 revealed two major immunoreactive proteins in the P-450 region, one of which co-migrated with rat P450IIB1. P450IIB1 itself cross-reacted strongly with anti-LMC1 IgG. In control rats, a single protein band cross-reacted poorly with anti-LMC1 IgG. Antibodies to LMC1 and LMC2 did not cross-react with rat P450IA1 in Western blots. The antigenic epitopes in rat P450IIB1 recognized by anti-LMC1 IgG and anti-LMC2 IgG are probably not located at or near the active site of the enzyme since these antibodies did not inhibit benzphetamine N-demethylase activity of P450IIB1 or of PB-induced rat liver microsomes. In general, our results demonstrate: (1) the presence of a significant homology between LMC1 and LMC2, and between constitutive trout P-450 (LMC1) and PB-induced rat P-450 (P450IIB1); and (2) distant homology between constitutive trout P-450s and constitutive rat P-450s or BNF-induced rat P-450s.  相似文献   

19.
NADH:nitrate reductase was extracted from corn leaves (Zea mays L. W64A × W182E) and purified on blue Sepharose. After the nitrate reductase was further purified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, it was used to immunize mice and a rabbit. Western blots of crude leaf extracts were used to demonstrate monospecificity of the mouse ascitic fluids and the rabbit antiserum. The electrophoretic properties of purified corn and squash NADH:nitrate reductases in both native and denatured states were shown to be similar using western blotting with mouse ascitic fluid. The corn leaf enzyme has a 115,000 polypeptide subunit like that of squash. Western blots could detect 3 to 10 nanograms of nitrate reductase protein. But the detection of proteolytic degradation products using western blotting was inconsistent and remains to be established. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed for quantifying nitrate reductase protein in the crude extracts of corn leaves. Using a standard curve based on nitrate reductase activity, the ELISA for corn nitrate reductase could detect 0.5 to 10 nanograms of nitrate reductase protein and was adequately sensitive for quantitative analysis of nitrate reductase in crude extracts of leaves even when activity levels were very low. When the ELISA was used to compare the nitrate reductase protein content of corn roots and leaves, these tissues were estimated to contain 0.24 to 0.5 and 4 to 5 micrograms nitrate reductase protein/gram root and leaf, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
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