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1.
The effect of addition of product on the amplitude of the “burst” reaction of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase was studied using a stopped-flow spectrophotofluorimeter. The amplitude of the “burst” formation of enzyme-bound NADH fluorescence was completely diminished by the addition of excess acetaldehyde or benzaldehyde in the reaction with NAD+ and ethanol or NAD+ and benzylalcohol, respectively. The results indicate that a significant concentration of the ternary enzyme-coenzyme-substrate complex was formed during the steady-state in the presence of product, and this ternary complex did not exhibit NADH fluorescence. The dissociation constants for the ternary complex were determined from the amplitudes of the “burst” reactions. The “active site” titration of the enzyme with NAD+ in the presence of ethanol and iso-butyramide is also described.  相似文献   

2.
Due to the controversy over the half-of-the-sites reactivity of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase during benzyl alcohol oxidation, we have re-investigated the transient kinetics, stoichiometry and rate parameters over a wide range of substrate concentrations (0.05 mm to 40 mm) at pH 7.0 and 8.5 and using newly determined extinction coefficients. Data were elaborated by computer analysis in order to separate the initial rapid step (burst) from the whole time-course of the reaction. It has been found that: (1) the dependence of the burst amplitude upon benzyl alcohol concentration is distinctly biphasic. In the range from 0.05 mm up to approximately 1 mm the burst amplitude is rather insensitive to changes in alcohol concentration and corresponds to 50% of the active sites of the enzyme; for alcohol concentrations greater than 1 mm this amplitude increases and reaches a value of approximately 90% when benzyl alcohol is 40 mm. (2) The steady-state initial rate is also biphasic with respect to alcohol concentration, indicative of substrate inhibition, which begins in the concentration range at which deviation from the half-burst also appears. In other words, burst amplitudes larger than 50% are concomitant with inhibition of the rate of enzyme turnover. (3) In the presence of isobutyramide the burst is larger than 50% for the whole range of concentration of the substrate and extrapolates at infinite substrate concentration to approximately 90% of the enzyme sites. (4) With deuteroethanol as substrate, the burst is larger than 50%, with or without isobutyramide, and extrapolates to approximately 95% of the enzyme sites at infinite substrate concentration. These data explain the discrepancy of results in the literature concerning the transient kinetics of alcohol oxidation. Mechanistic implications of the results (particularly the deviation from the halfof-the-sites behaviour of benzyl alcohol under inhibition conditions) are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The transient-state kinetics of enzymic reduction of acetaldehyde and benzaldehyde by NADH, catalyzed by horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase, have been examined under single-turnover conditions, obtained by carrying out reactions either with limiting amounts of enzyme in the presence of 20 mM pyrazole or with limiting amounts of substrate. Analysis of the variation with substrate, coenzyme, and enzyme concentrations of amplitudes and time constants for the exponential transients observed at 328 nm and 300 nm shows that the kinetics of enzymic aldehyde reduction are qualitatively and quantitatively consistent with the relationships derived in the preceding paper for an ordered ternary-complex mechanism involving identical and independent catalytic sites. It is concluded that there is no evidence whatsoever for the kinetic significance of a half-of-the-sites reactivity or any other kind of subunit interaction in the liver alcohol dehydrogenase system. The biphasic transients observed at 328 nm for the reduction of aromatic aldehydes such as benzaldehyde are a normal kinetic characteristic of the ordered ternary-complex mechanism, being attributable to accumulation of the ternary enzyme-NAD-product complex when product dissociation from this complex is slow in comparison to its formation by ternary-complex interconversion.  相似文献   

4.
The hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate catalysed by cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) from sheep liver was studied by steady-state and transient kinetic techniques. NAD+ and NADH stimulated the steady-state rate of ester hydrolysis at concentrations expected on the basis of their Michaelis constants from the dehydrogenase reaction. At higher concentrations of the coenzymes, both NAD+ and NADH inhibited the reaction competitively with respect to 4-nitrophenyl acetate, with inhibition constants of 104 and 197 micron respectively. Propionaldehyde and chloral hydrate are competitive inhibitors of the esterase reaction. A burst in the production of 4-nitrophenoxide ion was observed, with a rate constant of 12 +/- 2s-1 and a burst amplitude that was 30% of that expected on the basis of the known NADH-binding site concentration. The rate-limiting step for the esterase reaction occurs after the formation of 4-nitrophenoxide ion. Arguments are presented for the existence of distinct ester- and aldehyde-binding sites.  相似文献   

5.
Liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH; E.C. 1.1.1.1) provides an excellent system for probing the role of binding interactions with NAD+ and alcohols as well as with NADH and the corresponding aldehydes. The enzyme catalyzes the transfer of hydride ion from an alcohol substrate to the NAD+ cofactor, yielding the corresponding aldehyde and the reduced cofactor, NADH. The enzyme is also an excellent catalyst for the reverse reaction. X-ray crystallography has shown that the NAD+ binds in an extended conformation with a distance of 15 Å between the buried reacting carbon of the nicotinamide ring and the adenine ring near the surface of the horse liver enzyme. A major criticism of X-ray crystallographic studies of enzymes is that they do not provide dynamic information. Such data provide time-averaged and space-averaged models. Significantly, entries in the protein data bank contain both coordinates as well as temperature factors. However, enzyme function involves both dynamics and motion. The motions can be as large as a domain closure such as observed with liver alcohol dehydrogenase or as small as the vibrations of certain atoms in the active site where reactions take place. Ternary complexes produced during the reaction of the enzyme binary entity, E-NAD+, with retinol (vitamin A alcohol) lead to retinal (vitamin A aldehyde) release and the enzyme binary entity E-NADH. Retinal is further metabolized via the E-NAD+-retinal ternary complex to retinoic acid (vitamin A acid). To unravel the mechanistic aspects of these transformations, the kinetics and energetics of interconversion between various ternary complexes are characterized. Proton transfers along hydrogen bond bridges and NADH hydride transfers along hydrophobic entities are considered in some detail. Secondary kinetic isotope effects with retinol are not particularly large with the wild-type form of alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver. We analyze alcohol dehydrogenase catalysis through a re-examination of the reaction coordinates. The ground states of the binary and ternary complexes are shown to be related to the corresponding transition states through topology and free energy acting along the reaction path.  相似文献   

6.
Corrected fluorescence properties of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and its coenzyme complexes have been investigated as a function of temperature. Dissociation constants have been obtained for binary and ternary complexes of NAD and NADH by following the enhancement of NADH fluorescence or the quenching of the protein fluorescence. It is found that the presence of pyrazole increases the affinity of NAD to the enzyme approximately 100-fold. The formation of the ternary enzyme - NAD - pyrazole complex is accompanied by a large change in the ultraviolet absorption properties, with a new band in the 290-nm region. Significant optical changes also accompany the formation of the ternary enzyme-NADH-acetamide complex. The possible origin for the quenching of the protein fluorescence upon coenzyme binding is discussed, and it is suggested that a coenzyme-induced conformational change can cause it. Thermodynamic parameters associated with NAD and NADH binding have been evaluated on the basis of the change of the dissociation constants with temperature. Optical and thermodynamic properties of binary and ternary complexes of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase are compared with the analogous properties of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

7.
W F Bosron  S J Yin  F E Dwulet  T K Li 《Biochemistry》1986,25(8):1876-1881
The beta 1 beta 1 and beta 2 beta 2 human liver alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzymes differ by only one residue at the coenzyme-binding site; Arg-47 in beta 1 is replaced by His in the beta 2 subunit. Since Arg-47 is thought to facilitate the carboxymethylation of Cys-46 in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase by binding halo acids in a Michaelis-Menten complex prior to inactivation, the specificity and kinetics of modification of the two human liver beta beta isoenzymes with iodoacetate were compared. Both of the beta beta isoenzymes were inactivated by treatment with iodo[14C]acetate, and one Cys per subunit was carboxymethylated. Cys-174, which is a ligand to the active-site zinc atom in horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase, was selectively carboxymethylated in each of the human beta beta isoenzymes; less than 15% of the iodo[14C]acetate incorporated into the enzyme appeared in Cys-46. Therefore, the three-dimensional structure of the basic amino acids in the anion-binding site of the human beta beta isoenzymes appears to be different from that of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase. The kinetics of alkylation are consistent with the formation of a Michaelis-Menten complex before inactivation of the isoenzymes. The average Ki values for iodoacetate were 10 and 16 mM for beta 1 beta 1 and beta 2 beta 2, respectively, and maximal rate constants for inactivation were 0.22 and 0.17 min-1, respectively. From these data, it can be concluded that there is a relatively minor effect of the substitution of His for Arg at position 47 on the kinetics of inactivation.  相似文献   

8.
The non-Michaelis-Menten kinetics, burst and steady-state periods, expressed by citrate synthase in the presence of citryl-CoA, were investigated by labelling experiments with trace amounts of [14C]acetyl-CoA. The results indicate that citrate becomes labelled in the reaction of liberated acetyl-CoA with the binary synthase.oxaloacetate complex that is transiently generated in the lyase reaction of citryl-CoA. Mediated by the hydrolase function of synthase, the counteracting citryl-CoA lyase and ligase reactions operate towards a transient flow equilibrium. This precedes the thermodynamic equilibrium and is established during the burst period; it is maintained under steady-state conditions and corresponds to the formation of transiently nonproductive synthase. The rates of both synthase partial reactions, therefore, are likewise affected. Oxaloacetate in the presence of acetyl-CoA competitively inhibits the hydrolysis of citryl-CoA and vice versa. In the synthase dependence of the burst periods and during the time dependence of the steady-state periods, nonproportionally more of physiological substrates participate in citrate formation. The nonproportional increase is a consequence of the continuously changing conditions to establish or to maintain the flow equilibrium, respectively, during the reaction progress. Third rate periods after the steady state result if the equilibrium conditions cannot be satisfied. High concentrations of oxaloacetate inhibit the expression of non-Michaelis-Menten kinetics by formation of nonproductive synthase.oxaloacetate complex. The supply of acetyl-CoA is then sufficient and the formation of the flow equilibrium prevented. The implication of the results with structural work is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The NAD+ analogue, 3-aldoxime pyridine adenine dinucleotide, is prepared by transglycosidation. Contrary to the published data, this analogue shows no activity as coenzyme with alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver or from yeast. This is demonstrated by three methods: no increase of absorption at 331 nm by the enzymic oxidation of ethanol; no increase at 290 nm with cinnamic alcohol; and no exchange reaction. The inhibition by this analogue of the oxidation of ethanol by NAD+ is competitive at pH 7.6 and 9.5 with yeast alcohol dehydrogenase; with liver alcohol dehydrogenase, it is of the mixed type at pH 7.6 and non-competitive at pH 9.5. The lack of activity of the analogue and inhibition of the competitive or mixed type may be explained by the fact that the binary complex does not bind the substrate or that in the ternary complex the hydride shift does not occur. The non-competitive inhibition at pH 9.5 with the horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase may be explained by the existence of binding sites specific for this analogue.  相似文献   

10.
The transient kinetics of aldehyde reduction by NADH catalyzed by liver alcohol dehydrogenase consist of two kinetic processes. This biphasic rate behavior is consistent with a model in which one of the two identical subunits in the enzyme is inactive during the reaction at the adjacent protomer. Alternatively, enzyme heterogeneity could result in such biphasic behavior. We have prepared liver alcohol dehydrogenase containing a single major isozyme; and the transient kinetics of this purified enzyme are biphasic.Addition of two [14C]carboxymethyl groups per dimer to the two “reactive” sulfhydryl groups (Cys46) yields enzyme which is catalytically inactive toward alcohol oxidation. Alkylated enzyme, as initially isolated by gel filtration chromatography at pH 7·5, forms an NAD+-pyrazole complex. However, the ability to bind NAD+-pyrazole is rapidly lost in pH 8·75 buffer; therefore, our alkylated preparations, as isolated by chromatography at pH 8·75, are inactive toward NAD+-pyrazole complex formation. We have prepared partially inactivated enzyme by allowing iodoacetic acid to react with liver alcohol dehydrogenase until 50% of the NAD+-pyrazole binding capacity remains; under these reaction conditions one [14C]carboxymethyl group is added per dimer. This partially alkylated enzyme preparation is isolated by gel filtration and has been aged sufficiently to lose NAD+-pyrazole binding ability at alkylated subunits. When solutions of native liver alcohol dehydrogenase and partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase containing the same number of unmodified active sites are allowed to react with substrate under single turnover conditions, partially alkylated enzyme is only half as reactive as native enzyme. This indicates that some molecular species in partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase that react with pyrazole and NAD+ during the active site titration do not react with substrate. These data are consistent with a model in which a subunit adjacent to an alkylated protomer in the dimeric enzyme is inactive toward substrate. In addition, NAD+-pyrazole binding at the protomers adjacent to alkylated subunits is slowly lost so that 75% of the enzyme-NAD+-pyrazole binding capacity is lost in 50% alkylated enzyme. These data supply strong evidence for subunit interactions in liver alcohol dehydrogenase.Binding experiments performed on partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase indicate that coenzyme binding is normal at a subunit adjacent to an alkylated protomer even though active ternary complexes cannot be formed. One hypothesis consistent with these results is the unavailability of zinc for substrate binding at the active site in subunits adjacent to alkylated protomers in monoalkylated dimer.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of the enzymatic step of the peroxidatic reaction between NAD and hydrogen peroxide, catalysed by horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (alcohol:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.1), has been investigated at pH 7 at high enzyme concentration. Under such conditions no burst phase has been observed, thus indicating that the rate-limiting step in the process, which converts NAD into Compound I, either precedes or coincides with the chemical step responsible for the observed spectroscopic change. Kinetic analysis of the data, performed according to a simplified reaction scheme suggests that the rate-limiting step is coincident with the spectroscopic (i.e., chemical) step itself. Furthermore, the absence of a proton burst phase indicates the proton release step does not precede the chemical step, in contrast with the case of ethanol oxidation. A kinetic effect of different premixing conditions on the reaction rate has been observed and attributed to the presence of NADH formed in the 'blank reaction' between NAD and residual ethanol tightly bound to alcohol dehydrogenase. A molecular mechanism for the enzymatic peroxidation step is finally proposed, exploiting the knowledge of the much better known reaction of ethanol oxidation. Inhibition of this reaction by NADH has been investigated with respect to H2O2 (noncompetitive, Ki about 10 microM) and to NAD (competitive, Ki about 0.7 microM). The effect of temperature on the steady-state reaction state (about 65 kJ/mol activation energy) has also been studied.  相似文献   

12.
An activity was identified in a phosphate buffer extract of calf liver acetone powder which utilized 2-mercaptoethanol and NAD+ as substrates and formed NADH as one product. The activity responsible for catalyzing this reaction is associated with calf liver alcohol dehydrogenase based on copurification, similarity in pH optima, and similarity in response to chelating agents and other inactivating agents. Crystalline horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase also catalyzes the formation of NADH from NAD+ using 2-mercaptoethanol as the substrate. Although the Km for mercaptoethanol is much lower than that for ethanol, 30 μm as compared to 0.625 mm, the maximum velocity with mercaptoethanol as the substrate is only 7% of that when ethanol is the substrate. Because of this difference in maximum velocity, 2-mercaptoethanol is an apparent competitive inhibitor with respect to ethanol with crystalline horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase, consistent with ethanol and 2-mercaptoethanol binding at the same site. The apparent Ki for 2-mercaptoethanol is 14 μm. 2-Butanethiol is a competitive inhibitor with respect to both 2-mercaptoethanol and ethanol with horse and beef liver alcohol dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

13.
Liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH; E.C. 1.1.1.1) provides an excellent system for probing the role of binding interactions with NAD(+) and alcohols as well as with NADH and the corresponding aldehydes. The enzyme catalyzes the transfer of hydride ion from an alcohol substrate to the NAD(+) cofactor, yielding the corresponding aldehyde and the reduced cofactor, NADH. The enzyme is also an excellent catalyst for the reverse reaction. X-ray crystallography has shown that the NAD(+) binds in an extended conformation with a distance of 15 A between the buried reacting carbon of the nicotinamide ring and the adenine ring near the surface of the horse liver enzyme. A major criticism of X-ray crystallographic studies of enzymes is that they do not provide dynamic information. Such data provide time-averaged and space-averaged models. Significantly, entries in the protein data bank contain both coordinates as well as temperature factors. However, enzyme function involves both dynamics and motion. The motions can be as large as a domain closure such as observed with liver alcohol dehydrogenase or as small as the vibrations of certain atoms in the active site where reactions take place. Ternary complexes produced during the reaction of the enzyme binary entity, E-NAD(+), with retinol (vitamin A alcohol) lead to retinal (vitamin A aldehyde) release and the enzyme binary entity E-NADH. Retinal is further metabolized via the E-NAD(+)-retinal ternary complex to retinoic acid (vitamin A acid). To unravel the mechanistic aspects of these transformations, the kinetics and energetics of interconversion between various ternary complexes are characterized. Proton transfers along hydrogen bond bridges and NADH hydride transfers along hydrophobic entities are considered in some detail. Secondary kinetic isotope effects with retinol are not particularly large with the wild-type form of alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver. We analyze alcohol dehydrogenase catalysis through a re-examination of the reaction coordinates. The ground states of the binary and ternary complexes are shown to be related to the corresponding transition states through topology and free energy acting along the reaction path.  相似文献   

14.
1. Produced inhibition by ethanol of the acetaldehyde-NADH reaction, catalysed by the alcohol dehydrogenases from yeast and horse liver, was studied at 25 degrees C and pH 6-9. 2. The results with yeast alcohol dehydrogenase are generally consistent with the preferred-pathway mechanism proposed previously [Dickenson & Dickinson (1975) Biochem. J. 147, 303-311]. The observed hyperbolic inhibition by ethanol of the maximum rate of acetaldehyde reduction confirms the existence of the alternative pathway involving an enzyme-ethanol complex. 3. The maximum rate of acetaldehyde reduction with horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase is also subject to hyperbolic inhibition by ethanol. 4. The measured inhibition constants for ethanol provide some of the information required in the determination of the dissociation constant for ethanol from the active ternary complex. 5. Product inhibition by acetaldehyde of the ethanol-NAD+ reaction with yeast alcohol dehydrogenase was examined briefly. The results are consistent with the proposed mechanism. However, the nature of the inhibition of the maximum rate cannot be determined within the accessible range of experimental conditions. 6. Inhibition of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase by trifluoroethanol was studied at 25 degrees C and pH 6-10. The inhibition was competitive with respect to ethanol in the ethanol-NAD+ reaction. Estimates were made of the dissociation constant for trifluoroethanol from the enzyme-NAD+-trifluoroethanol complex in the range pH6-10.  相似文献   

15.
Steady-state measurements of enzyme-catalysed reactions are capable of providing more information about the rate constants of the individual steps than is commonly obtained. We have applied a combination of the jackknife and non-linear regression techniques to measurements of the rate of oxidation of ethanol by NAD+, catalysed by alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver. This has permitted values and confidence intervals to be assigned to the eight rate constants that characterize the binding of ethanol and NAD+ in random order to the enzyme, and to the net rate constant kcat. for the breakdown of the ternary complex.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction of the mono- and triglutamate forms of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate and 5-formyltetrahydrofolate with serine hydroxymethyltransferase were determined by several methods. These methods included: determining dissociation constants by observing the absorbance at 502 nm of a ternary complex of the enzyme, glycine, and the folate compounds; determining inhibition constants from steady-state reactions; and determining the rate of formation and breakdown of the enzyme inhibitor complex by rapid reaction kinetics. Studies of the dissociation and inhibitor constants showed that both 5-methyltetrahydrofolate and 5-formyltetrahydrofolate have essentially the same affinity for the enzyme-glycine binary complex. However, rapid reaction and steady-state kinetic studies showed that the triglutamate form of 5-formyltetrahydrofolate both binds and is released much more slowly from the enzyme-glycine binary complex, compared with the triglutamate form of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate. The results also showed that only one rotamer of 5-formyltetrahydrofolate binds at the active site of serine hydroxymethyltransferase. The results are discussed in terms of the possible role of 5-formyltetrahydrofolate polyglutamates in regulation of one-carbon metabolism.  相似文献   

17.
Kinetic studies of the liver alcohol dehydrogenase catalyzed dehydrogenation of aldehydes were carried out over a wide range of octanal concentrations. The effect of specific inhibitors of liver alcohol dehydrogenase on aldehyde dehydrogenase activity was examined. The results were consistent with a steady-state random mechanism with the formation of the ternary E · NADH octanal complex at low temperatures. This ternary complex becomes inconspicuous at high temperatures. The aldehyde dehydrogenase activity was found to associate with all ethanol-active isozymes. The dual dehydrogenase reactions are catalyzed by the same molecule, presumably in the region of the same domain. However, the two activities respond differently to structural changes.  相似文献   

18.
The EE and SS isozymes of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase have been immobilized separately to weakly CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B. The resulting immobilized dimeric preparations lost practically all of their activity after treatment with 6 M urea. However, enzyme activity was regenerated by allowing the urea-treated Sepharose-bound alcohol dehydrogenase to interact specifically with either soluble subunits of dissociated horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase or soluble dimeric enzyme. The regeneration of steroid activity in the immobilized preparations after treatment of the bound S subunits with soluble E subunits seems to show that true reassociation of the enzyme had taken place on the solid phase, since only isozymes with an S-polypeptide chain are active when using 5 beta-dihydrotestosterone as substrate. The results presented in this paper indicate that immobilized single subunits of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase are inactive and that dimer formation is a prerequisite for the enzymic activity.  相似文献   

19.
E V Evdokimov 《Biofizika》1986,31(2):200-203
Macroscopic fluctuations of liver alcohol dehydrogenase enzymic activity in complex reaction consisting in ethanol oxidation and butyraldehyde reduction were studied. It was found that maximal fluctuation amplitude was observed when the rates of both reactions were equal. Such dependence indicates connection between macroscopic fluctuations in alcohol dehydrogenase reaction and oscillations of relative affinity of the enzyme to oxidized and reduced coenzyme forms.  相似文献   

20.
The kinetics of enzymatic oxidation of ethanol in the presence of alcohol dehydrogenase within a wide range of ethanol and NAD concentrations (pH 6.0--11.5) were studied. It was shown that high concentrations of ethanol (greater than 0.7--5 mM, depending on pH) and NAD (greater than 0.4--0.8 mM) activate alcohol dehydrogenase from horse liver within the pH range of 6.0--7.9. A mechanism of activation based on negative cooperativity of ADH subunits for binding of ethanol and NAD was proposed. The catalytic and Michaelis constants for alcohol dehydrogenase were calculated from ethanol and NAD at all pH values studied. The changes resulting from the subunit cooperativity were revealed. The nature of ionogenic groups of alcohol dehydrogenase, which affect the formation of complexes between the enzyme and NAD and ethanol, and the rate constants for catalytic oxidation of ethanol was assumed. The biological significance of the enzyme capacity for activation by high concentrations of ethanol within the physiological range of pH in the blood under excessive use of alcohol is discussed.  相似文献   

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