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1.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase activities in extracts of livers from rats pretreated with glucagon are higher than in controls. This time-dependent activation is seen when the hydroxylase is assayed in the presence of tetrahydrobiopterin, but not in the presence of 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6,7-dimethyltetrahydropterin. A maximum 4-fold stimulation of hydroxylase activity was correlated with a conversion of the multiple forms of the enzyme to a single form. This form is characterized by an increased extent of phosphorylation compared to the unactivated enzyme. Incorporation of radioactive inorganic phosphate into phenylalanine hydroxylase following administration of glucagon was determined after specific immunoprecipitation of the enzyme from partially purified preparations. Sodium dodecyl sulfate disc gel electrophoresis showed that stimulation of enzyme activity is accompanied by incorporation of 32Pi into the protein to the extent of 0.7 mol/mol of hydroxylase subunit. These results demonstrate the phosphorylation of hepatic phenylalanine hydroxylase in vivo and strongly support the idea that the activity of this enzyme can be hormonally regulated through a phosphorylation mechanism.  相似文献   

2.
Activation of rat liver phenylalanine hydroxylase by limited proteolysis catalyzed by chymotrypsin was investigated with the use of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and high pressure gel filtration. Both activation and proteolysis were decreased by the addition of the natural cofactor, (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin. From chymotryptic digests of the hydroxylase carried out in the presence and absence of (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin, several different enzyme species were isolated by high pressure gel filtration. One species (subunit Mr = 47,000) with unchanged hydroxylase activity was isolated from the chymotryptic digest in the presence of (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin; it was derived from the native enzyme (Mr = 52,000) by cleavage of the COOH-terminal Mr = 5,000 portion of the native enzyme. In the absence of (6R)-tetrahydrobiopterin, another species (subunit Mr = 36,000) was isolated. In addition to modification at the COOH-terminal end of the molecule, this species also had lost a Mr = 11,000 fragment from the NH2-terminal end of the hydroxylase. The Mr = 11,000 fragment was shown to include the phosphorylation site of the enzyme. This Mr = 36,000 species was 30-fold more active than the native phenylalanine hydroxylase when assayed in the presence of tetrahydrobiopterin. These results suggest that the regulatory domain that inhibits hydroxylase activity in the basal state may be located at the NH2 terminus of the phenylalanine hydroxylase subunit.  相似文献   

3.
The pH optimum of rat liver phenylalanine hydroxylase is dependent on the structure of the cofactor employed and on the state of activation of the enzyme. The tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent activity of native phenylalanine hydroxylase has a pH optimum of about 8.5. In contrast, the 6,7-dimethyltetrahydropterin-dependent activity is highest at pH 7.0. Activation of phenylalanine hydroxylase either by preincubation with phenylalanine or by limited proteolysis results in a shift of the pH optimum of the tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent activity to pH 7.0. Activation of the enzyme has no effect on the optimal pH of the 6,7-dimethyltetrahydropterin-dependent activity. The different pH optimum of the tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent activity of native phenylalanine hydroxylase is due to a change in the properties of the enzyme when the pH is increased from pH 7 to 9.5. Phenylalanine hydroxylase at alkaline pH appears to be in an altered conformation that is very similar to that of the enzyme which has been activated by preincubation with phenylalanine as determined by changes in the intrinsic protein fluorescence spectrum of the enzyme. Furthermore, phenylalanine hydroxylase which has been preincubated at an alkaline pH in the absence of phenylalanine and subsequently assayed at pH 7.0 in the presence of phenylalanine shows an increase in tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent activity similar to that exhibited by the enzyme which has been activated by preincubation with phenylalanine at neutral pH. Activation of the enzyme also occurs when m-tyrosine or tryptophan replace phenylalanine in the assay mixture. The predominant cause of the increase in activity of the enzyme immediately following preincubation at alkaline pH appears to be the increase in the rate of activation by the amino acid substrate. However, in the absence of substrate activation, phenylalanine hydroxylase preincubated at alkaline pH displays an approximately 2-fold greater intrinsic activity than the native enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
1. Phenylalanine hydroxylase activity has been analyzed in Drosophila melanogaster using as cofactors the natural tetrahydropteridine 5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin (H4Bip) and the synthetic one 5,6-dimethyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin (H4Dmp). 2. The apparent Vmax and KM for substrate and cofactor showed that the enzyme has two times more affinity for the substrate when H4Bip is the cofactor in the reaction. Similarly to what was found with purified rat liver phenylalanine hydroxylase, H4Bip was the most effective cofactor, leading to 4-5 times more activity than that obtained with H4Dmp. 3. With the natural cofactor H4Bip, no activation of the enzyme with Phe was necessary (in contrast to mammalian phenylalanine hydroxylase), and this tetrahydropteridine inhibits phenylalanine hydroxylase activity when the enzyme is exposed to it before phenylalanine addition. With the synthetic H4Dmp, both types of preincubations led to an increase of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity. 4. The enzyme is highly unstable compared to mammalian phenylalanine hydroxylase, even at -20 degrees C. 5. Thorax and abdomen extracts caused significant inhibition of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity from third instar larvae or newborn adult head extracts, when assayed with the synthetic cofactor H4Dmp. This inhibition did not happen with H4Bip. The presence of the pteridine 7-xanthopterin in adult bodies was not the cause of this inhibition.  相似文献   

5.
The hydroxylation of phenylalanine to tyrosine by the liver enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase is regulated by the level of phenylalanine. Whether there is a distinct allosteric binding site for phenylalanine outside of the active site has been unclear. The enzyme contains an N-terminal regulatory domain that extends through Thr117. The regulatory domain of rat phenylalanine hydroxylase was expressed in Escherichia coli. The purified protein behaves as a dimer on a gel filtration column. In the presence of phenylalanine, the protein elutes earlier from the column, consistent with a conformational change in the presence of the amino acid. No change in elution is seen in the presence of the non-activating amino acid proline. 1H–15N HSQC NMR spectra were obtained of the 15N-labeled protein alone and in the presence of phenylalanine or proline. A subset of the peaks in the spectrum exhibits chemical shift perturbation in the presence of phenylalanine, consistent with binding of phenylalanine at a specific site. No change in the NMR spectrum is seen in the presence of proline. These results establish that the regulatory domain of phenylalanine hydroxylase can bind phenylalanine, consistent with the presence of an allosteric site for the amino acid.  相似文献   

6.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase, the enzyme that catalyzes the irreversible hydroxylation of phenylalanine to tyrosine, was purified from rat kidney with the use of phenyl-Sepharose, DEAE-Sephacel, and gel permeation high pressure liquid chromatography. Our most highly purified fractions had a specific activity in the presence of 6-methyltetrahydropterin, of 1.5 mumol of tyrosine formed/min/mg of protein, which is higher than has been reported hitherto. For the rat kidney enzyme, the ratio of specific activity in the presence of 6-methyltetrahydropterin to the specific activity in the presence of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is 5. By contrast, this ratio for the unactivated rat liver hydroxylase is 80. These results indicate that the kidney enzyme is in a highly activated state. The rat kidney hydroxylase could not be further activated by any of the methods that stimulate the BH4-dependent activity of the rat liver enzyme. In addition, the kidney enzyme binds to phenyl-Sepharose without prior activation with phenylalanine. The phenylalanine saturation pattern with BH4 as a cofactor is hyperbolic with substrate inhibition at greater than 0.5 mM phenylalanine, a pattern that is characteristic of the activated liver hydroxylase. The molecular weight of the rat kidney enzyme as determined by gel permeation chromatography is 110,000, suggesting that the enzyme might be an activated dimer. We conclude, therefore, that phenylalanine hydroxylases from rat kidney and liver are in different states of activation and may be regulated in different ways.  相似文献   

7.
The state of phosphorylation of phenylalanine hydroxylase was determined in isolated intact rat hepatocytes. 32P-labeled phenylalanine hydroxylase was immunoisolated from cells loaded with 32Pi or from cell extracts 'back-phosphorylated' with [gamma-32P]ATP by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The rate of phenylalanine hydroxylase phosphorylation in cells with elevated cAMP was similar to that observed for the isolated enzyme phosphorylated by homogeneous cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The phosphorylation rate in cAMP-stimulated cells was increased up to four times (reaching 0.018 s-1) by the presence of phenylalanine, the phosphate content (mol/mol hydroxylase) increasing to 0.5 from the basal level (0.17) in 50 s. The half maximal effect of phenylalanine was obtained at a physiologically relevant concentration (110 microM). The synthetic phenylalanine hydroxylase cofactor dimethyltetrahydropterin also enhanced the cAMP-stimulated phosphorylation of phenylalanine hydroxylase, presumably by displacing the endogenous cofactor, tetrahydrobiopterin. Phenylalanine was a negative modulator of the phosphorylation of phenylalanine hydroxylase induced by incubating cells with vasopressin or with the phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid. The same site on the phenylalanine hydroxylase was phosphorylated in response to these two agents as in response to elevated cAMP. The available evidence suggested that not only vasopressin, but also okadaic acid, acted by stimulating the multifunctional Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II or a kinase with closely resembling properties.  相似文献   

8.
Human phenylalanine hydroxylase was expressed and purified from Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with maltose-binding protein. After removal of the fusion partner, the effects of increasing urea concentrations on enzyme activity, aggregation, unfolding, and refolding were examined. At pH 7.50, purified human phenylalanine hydroxylase is transiently activated in the presence of 0-4 M urea but slowly inactivated at higher denaturant concentrations. Intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy showed that the enzyme is denatured through at least two distinct transitions. The presence of phenylalanine (L-Phe) shifts the transition midpoint of the first transition from 1.4 to 2.7 M urea, whereas the second transition is unaffected by this substrate. Apparently the free energy of denaturation was almost identical for the free enzyme and for the enzyme-substrate complex, but significant differences in dDeltaG(D)/d[urea] (m(D) values) were observed for the first denaturation transition. In the absence of substrate, a high rate of non-covalent aggregation was observed for the enzyme in the presence of 1-4 M urea. All three tryptophan residues in the enzyme (Trp-120, Trp-187, and Trp-326) were mutated to phenylalanine, either as single mutations or in combination, in order to identify the residues involved in the spectroscopic transitions. A gradual dissociation of the native tetrameric enzyme to increasingly denatured dimeric and monomeric forms was demonstrated by size exclusion chromatography in the presence of denaturants.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Serotonin synthesis by two distinct enzymes in Drosophila melanogaster   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Annotation of the sequenced Drosophila genome suggested the presence of an additional enzyme with extensive homology to mammalian tryptophan hydroxylase, which we have termed DTRH. In this work, we show that enzymatic analyses of the putative DTRH enzyme expressed in Escherichia coli confirm that it acts as a tryptophan hydroxylase but can also hydroxylate phenylalanine, in vitro. Building upon the knowledge gained from the work in mice and zebrafish, it is possible to hypothesize that DTRH may be primarily neuronal in function and expression, and DTPH, which has been previously shown to have phenylalanine hydroxylation as its primary role, may be the peripheral tryptophan hydroxylase in Drosophila. The experiments presented in this report also show that DTRH is similar to DTPH in that it exhibits differential hydroxylase activity based on substrate. When DTRH uses tryptophan as a substrate, substrate inhibition, catecholamine inhibition, and decreased tryptophan hydroxylase activity in the presence of serotonin synthesis inhibitors are observed. When DTRH uses phenylalanine as a substrate, end product inhibition, increased phenylalanine hydroxylase activity after phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and a decrease in phenylalanine hydroxylase activity in the presence of the serotonin synthesis inhibitor, alpha-methyl-(DL)-tryptophan are observed. These experiments suggest that the presence of distinct tryptophan hydroxylase enzymes may be evolutionarily conserved and serve as an ancient mechanism to appropriately regulate the production of serotonin in its target tissues.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanism by which p-chlorophenylalanine specifically reduces phenylalanine hydroxylase activity in rat liver in vivo and in Reuber H4 hepatoma cells in culture has been investigated. Chromatography on hydroxylapatite of liver extract from rats injected with p-chlorophenylalanine showed that the compound differentially affected the three normal phenylalanine hydroxylase isoenzymes (I, II, and III); isoenzymes II and III were completely absent after the treatment, but isoenzyme I was only reduced in quantity compared with normal adult rats. Normal Reuber H4 cells only possess isoenzyme I; treatment with p-chlorophenylalanine yielded a reduced level of enzyme activity which appeared to be noraml isoenzyme I by both chromatographic and kinetic criteria. There is evidence, based on immunochemical techniques, that cultures grown in the presence of p-chlorophenylalanine have significantly reduced levels of phenylalanine hydroxylase antigen, and that p-chlorophenylalanine inactivates phenylalanine hydroxylase at or near the time of enzyme synthesis. The bulk of enzyme synthesized prior to the addition of the compound appears unaffected by it. There is no indication that protein synthesis itself is affected by p-chlorophenylalanine. In addition, p-chlorophenylacetate was found to inactivate phenylalanine hydroxylase in an apparently identical manner with p-chlorophenylalanine, which almost certainly eliminates from consideration any mechanism of inactivation specifically requiring an amino acid. Finally, effects of cycloheximide and chlorophenylalanine were compared. Taken together, the data lead to two possible models for the inactivation of the enzyme. The model most consistent with all data requires (predicts) the existence of a proenzyme form of phenylalanine hydroxylase which can be specifically inactivated by p-chlorophenylalanine.  相似文献   

12.
We report here the identification of a cultured human hepatoma cell line which possesses an active phenylalanine hydroxylase system. Phenylalanine hydroxylation was established by growth of cells in a tyrosine-free medium and by the ability of a cell-free extract to convert [14C]phenylalanine to [14C]tyrosine in an enzyme assay system. This enzyme activity was abolished by the presence in the assay system of p-chlorophenylalanine but no significant effect on the activity was observed with 3-iodotyrosine and 6-fluorotryptophan. Use of antisera against pure monkey or human liver phenylalanine hydroxylase has detected a cross-reacting material in this cell line which is antigenically identical to the human liver enzyme. Phenylalanine hydroxylase purified from this cell line by affinity chromatography revealed a multimeric molecular weight (estimated 275,000) and subunit molecular weights (estimated 50,000 and 49,000) which are similar to those of phenylalanine hydroxylase purified from a normal human liver. This cell line should be a useful tool for the study of the human phenylalanine hydroxylase system.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetic and immunologic properties of phenylalanine hydroxylase of adult rat liver were compared to the properties of the similar enzyme present in cultured H4-II-E-C3 hepatoma cells. The enzymes from the two sources could not be distinguished by the Km values for either phenylalanine or 6,7-dimethyltetrahydropterin. Analysis by double immunodiffusion showed that phenylalanine hydroxylase from the two sources had identical immunologic determinants, but immunotitrations revealed a small but significant difference between the enzyme of the normal adult rat liver and the enzyme of cultured hepatoma cells. The results of double immunodiffusion and immunotitration experiments indicated also that the increased levels of phenylalanine hydroxylase seen in the hepatoma cells grown in the presence of hydrocortisone resulted from the accumulation of enzyme protein, but it could not be decided whether this accumulation resulted from an increased rate of synthesis or decreased rate of degradation.  相似文献   

14.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase converts phenylalanine to tyrosine utilizing molecular oxygen and tetrahydropterin as a cofactor, and belongs to the aromatic amino acid hydroxylases family. The catalytic domains of these enzymes are structurally similar. According to recent crystallographic studies, residue Tyr179 in Chromobacterium violaceum phenylalanine hydroxylase is located in the active site and its hydroxyl oxygen is 5.1 Å from the iron, where it has been suggested to play a role in positioning the pterin cofactor. To determine the catalytic role of this residue, the point mutants Y179F and Y179A of phenylalanine hydroxylase were prepared and characterized. Both mutants displayed comparable stability and metal binding to the native enzyme, as determined by their melting temperatures in the presence and absence of iron. The catalytic activity (kcat) of the Y179F and Y179A proteins was lower than wild-type phenylalanine hydroxylase by an order of magnitude, suggesting that the hydroxyl group of Tyr179 plays a role in the rate-determining step in catalysis. The KM values for different tetrahydropterin cofactors and phenylalanine were decreased by a factor of 3–4 in the Y179F mutant. However, the KM values for different pterin cofactors were slightly higher in the Y179A mutant than those measured for the wild-type enzyme, and, more significantly, the KM value for phenylalanine was increased by 10-fold in the Y179A mutant. By the criterion of kcat/KPhe, the Y179F and Y179A mutants display 10% and 1%, respectively, of the activity of wild-type phenylalanine hydroxylase. These results are consistent with Tyr179 having a pronounced role in binding phenylalanine but a secondary effect in the formation of the hydroxylating species. In conjunction with recent crystallographic analyses of a ternary complex of phenylalanine hydroxylase, the reported findings establish that Tyr179 is essential in maintaining the catalytic integrity and phenylalanine binding of the enzyme via indirect interactions with the substrate, phenylalanine. A model that accounts for the role of Tyr179 in binding phenylalanine is proposed.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at Abbreviations AAAHs aromatic amino acid hydroxylases - BH2 7,8-dihydro-l-biopterin - BH4 (6R)-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-l-biopterin - CD circular dichroism - cPAH Chromobacterium violaceum phenylalanine hydroxylase - DMPH4 6,7-dimethyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin - DTT dithiothreitol - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - ES-MS electrospray ionization mass spectrometry - hPAH human phenylalanine hydroxylase - ICP-AE inductively coupled plasma atomic emission - 6-MPH4 6-methyl-5,6,7,8-tetrahydropterin - PAH phenylalanine hydroxylase - PH4 tetrahydropterin - PKU phenylketonuria - RDS rate-determining step - TH tyrosine hydroxylase - THA 3-(2-thienyl)-l-alanine - TPH tryptophan hydroxylase - wt wild-type  相似文献   

15.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase was prepared from human foetal liver and purified 800-fold; it appeared to be essentially pure. The phenylalanine hydroxylase activity of the liver was confined to a single protein of mol.wt. approx. 108000, but omission of a preliminary filtration step resulted in partial conversion into a second enzymically active protein of mol.wt. approx. 250000. Human adult and full-term infant liver also contained a single phenylalanine hydroxylase with molecular weights and kinetic parameters the same as those of the foetal enzyme; foetal, newborn and adult phenylalanine hydroxylase are probably identical. The K(m) values for phenylalanine and cofactor were respectively one-quarter and twice those found for rat liver phenylalanine hydroxylase. As with the rat enzyme, human phenylalanine hydroxylase acted also on p-fluorophenylalanine, which was inhibitory at high concentrations, and p-chlorophenylalanine acted as an inhibitor competing with phenylalanine. Iron-chelating and copper-chelating agents inhibited human phenylalanine hydroxylase. Thiol-binding reagents inhibited the enzyme but, as with the rat enzyme, phenylalanine both stabilized the human enzyme and offered some protection against these inhibitors. It is hoped that isolation of the normal enzyme will further the study of phenylketonuria.  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated the p-chlorophenylalanine-dependent loss of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity in cultured hepatoma cells. The similarity of the effect of p-chlorophenylalanine on phenylalanine hydroxylase in the hepatoma cells and that reported from studies in vivo indicates that the loss of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity is due to a direct interaction of the amino acid analogue with the liver. We can find no evidence that the loss of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity is due to: a direct inactivation of the hydroxylase by p-chlorophenylalanine or an inhibitor produced by p-chlorophenylalanine treatment; an effect similar to that of p-fluorophenylalanine; or leakage of enzyme from the cells during p-chlorophenylalanine treatment. The data presented indicate: (a) the p-chlorophenylalanine effect is rather specific for phenylalanine hydroxylase; (b) following p-chlorophenylalanine removal, new protein synthesis is necessary for restoration of the hydroxylase activity; (c) the rate of loss of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity after the addition of p-chlorophenylalanine is much faster than the rate of restoration of the hydroxylase activity after removal of p-chlorophenylalanine; (d) even in the presence of p-chlorophenylalanine, hydrocortisone greatly stimulates the hydroxylase activity; (e) the cell density-dependent increase of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity is blocked by p-chlorophenylalanine. A discussion of the possible mechanisms of p-chlorophenylalanine-dependent loss of phenylalanine hydroxylase is presented. To measure very low leanine-dependent loss of phenylalanine hydroxylase is presented. To measure very low levels of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity, a new procedure, based on isotope dilution, was developed for isolating the tyrosine formed during the enzymatic reaction.  相似文献   

17.
A full-length human phenylalanine hydroxylase cDNA has been recombined with a prokaryotic expression vector and introduced into Escherichia coli. Transformed bacteria express phenylalanine hydroxylase immunoreactive protein and pterin-dependent conversion of phenylalanine to tyrosine. Recombinant human phenylalanine hydroxylase produced in E. coli has been partially purified, and biochemical studies have been performed comparing the activity and kinetics of the recombinant enzyme with native phenylalanine hydroxylase from human liver. The optimal reaction conditions, kinetic constants, and sensitivity to inhibition by aromatic amino acids are the same for recombinant phenylalanine hydroxylase and native phenylalanine hydroxylase. These data indicate that the recombinant human phenylalanine hydroxylase is an authentic and complete phenylalanine hydroxylase enzyme and that the characteristic aspects of phenylalanine hydroxylase enzymatic activity are determined by a single gene product and can be constituted in the absence of any specific accessory functions of the eukaryotic cell. The availability of recombinant human phenylalanine hydroxylase produced in E. coli will expedite physical and chemical characterization of human phenylalanine hydroxylase which has been hindered in the past by inavailability of the native enzyme for study.  相似文献   

18.
The cell density dependent regulation of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity in Reuber hepatoma (H4) cells growing in monolayer culture has been examined in detail. We found that 48 h or more after subculture phenylalanine hydroxylase activity in the cells is an exponential function of cell density (cells/cm2). No discontinuity in the relationship is seen with the formation of a confluent monolayer.A rapid loss or a rapid gain in enzyme activity in the cells is observed after diluting or concentrating the cell cultures. The two processes appear qualitatively different. The loss in activity is a first order process which starts at the time of subculture with the rate of loss dependent on the density of subculture. The gain in activity begins 6–8 h after subculture to a higher density; it can be blocked by cycloheximide and has a maximum rate of increase that is about 10% of the maximum rate of loss of activity.Using immunochemical procedures, we found the same amount of phenylalanine hydroxylase associated antigen in Reuber cells from low density as from high density cultures, over a range of phenylalanine hydroxylase specific activities from 0.2 to 4.2. After concentrating cells to a higher density, no increase in enzyme antigen was observed, despite a several-fold increase in enzyme activity and a requirement for protein synthesis during the process. These observations imply the presence of an active and inactive phenylalanine hydroxylase with the relative amounts of each determined by the cell density. The effects of db-cAMP are discussed. Evidence is presented here that the hydrocortisone stimulation of phenylalanine hydroxylase activity works through a different mechanism than the cell density dependent process.  相似文献   

19.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase purified from rat liver shows positive co-operativity in response to variations in phenylalanine concentration when assayed with the naturally occurring cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin. In addition, preincubation of phenylalanine hydroxylase with phenylalanine results in a substantial activation of the tetrahydrobiopterin-dependent activity of the enzyme. The monoclonal antibody PH-1 binds to phenylalanine hydroxylase only after the enzyme has been preincubated with phenylalanine and is therefore assumed to recognize a conformational epitope associated with substrate-level activation of the hydroxylase. Under these conditions, PH-1 inhibits the activity of phenylalanine hydroxylase; however, at maximal binding of PH-1 the enzyme is still 2-3 fold activated relative to the native enzyme. The inhibition by PH-1 is non-competitive with respect to tetrahydropterin cofactor. This suggests that PH-1 does not bind to an epitope at the active site of the hydroxylase. Upon maximal binding of PH-1, the positive co-operativity normally expressed by phenylalanine hydroxylase with respect to variations in phenylalanine concentration is abolished. The monoclonal antibody may therefore interact with phenylalanine hydroxylase at or near the regulatory or activator-binding site for phenylalanine on the enzyme molecule.  相似文献   

20.
Pterin-dependent phenylalanine hydroxylase from Chromobacterium violaceum contains a stoichiometric amount of copper (Cu2+, 1 mol/mol of enzyme). Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of the enzyme indicates that it is a type II copper-containing protein. The oxidized enzyme must be reduced by a single electron to be catalytically active. Dithiothreitol was found to be an effective reducing agent for the enzyme. Electron paramagnetic resonance data and kinetic results indicate the formation of an enzyme-thiol complex during the aerobic reduction of the enzyme by dithiothreitol. 6,7-Dimethyltetrahydropterin also reductively activates the enzyme, but only in the presence of the substrate, and is kinetically less effective than dithiothreitol. The metal center is not reoxidized as a result of normal turnover. However, the data indicate an alternative pathway exists that results in slow reoxidation of the enzyme. The 4a-hydrate of 6-methyltetrahydropterin (4a-carbinolamine) is observed during turnover of the enzyme. This intermediate is also observed during the reaction catalyzed by the iron-containing mammalian enzyme, suggesting that the mechanism of oxygen activation is similar for both enzymes.  相似文献   

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