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1.
6,7-Dideoxy-D-gluco-heptonic-7-phosphonic acid, the isosteric phosphonate analogue of gluconate 6-phosphate, was prepared by incubation of the corresponding analogue of glucose 6-phosphate with glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and NADP+ in the presence of an enzyme NADPH-NADP+ recycling system. The analogue of gluconate 6-phosphate is a substrate for yeast gluconate 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, showing Michaelis-Menten kinetics at pH 7.5 and 8.0. At both pH values the Km values are approx. 3-fold higher and the Vmax. values approx. 7-fold lower than those of the natural substrate.  相似文献   

2.
Summary A new glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) variant associated with chronic nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia was discovered in Japan. The patient showed hemolytic crises after upper respiratory infections. The enzyme activity was about 3.8% of the normal. The partially purified enzyme revealed slow anodal electrophoretic mobility, high Km NADP, marked thermal-instability, and increased affinity for a substrate analogue (deamino-NADP). A particular characteristic of this enzyme was a biphasic pH curve with a greatly increased activity at low pH values. From these results, this variant was clearly different from hitherto observed G6PD variants, and was designated G6PD Asahikawa.  相似文献   

3.
1. Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase was isolated and partially purified from a thermophilic fungus, Penicillium duponti, and a mesophilic fungus, Penicillium notatum. 2. The molecular weight of the P. duponti enzyme was found to be 120000+/-10000 by gelfiltration and sucrose-density-gradient-centrifugation techniques. No NADP(+)- or glucose 6-phosphate-induced change in molecular weight could be demonstrated. 3. Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase from the thermophilic fungus was more heat-stable than that from the mesophile. Glucose 6-phosphate, but not NADP(+), protected the enzyme from both the thermophile and the mesophile from thermal inactivation. 4. The K(m) values determined for glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase from the thermophile P. duponti were 4.3x10(-5)m-NADP(+) and 1.6x10(-4)m-glucose 6-phosphate; for the enzyme from the mesophile P. notatum the values were 6.2x10(-5)m-NADP(+) and 2.5x10(-4)m-glucose 6-phosphate. 5. Inhibition by NADPH was competitive with respect to both NADP(+) and glucose 6-phosphate for both the P. duponti and P. notatum enzymes. The inhibition pattern indicated a rapid-equilibrium random mechanism, which may or may not involve a dead-end enzyme-NADP(+)-6-phosphogluconolactone complex; however, a compulsory-order mechanism that is consistent with all the results is proposed. 6. The activation energies for the P. duponti and P. notatum glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenases were 40.2 and 41.4kJ.mol(-1) (9.6 and 9.9kcal.mol(-1)) respectively. 7. Palmitoyl-CoA inhibited P. duponti glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and gave an inhibition constant of 5x10(-6)m. 8. Penicillium glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase had a high degree of substrate and coenzyme specificity.  相似文献   

4.
The ability of glucose 6-phosphate and carbamyl phosphate to serve as substrates for glucose-6-phosphatase (D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase; EC 3.1.3.9) of intact and disrupted microsomes from rat liver was compared at pH 7.0. Results support carbamyl phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate as effective substrates with both. Km values for carbamyl phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate were greater with intact than with disrupted microsomes, but Vmax values were higher with the latter. The substrate translocase-catalytic unit concept of glucose-6-phosphatase function is thus confirmed. The Km values for 3-O-methyl-D-glucose and D-glucose were larger when determined with intact than with disrupted microsomes. This observation is consistent with the involvement of a translocase specific for hexose substrate as a rate-influencing determinant in phosphotransferase activity of glucose-6-phosphatase.  相似文献   

5.
1. The deoxyfluoro-d-glucopyranose 6-phosphates are substrates for both yeast and rat liver glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase. 2. The V(max.) values (relative to d-glucose 6-phosphate) were determined for a series of d-glucose 6-phosphate derivatives substituted at C-2. The V(max.) values decreased with increasing electronegativity of the C-2 substituent. This is consistent with a mechanism involving hydride-ion transfer. 3. 2-Deoxy-d-arabino-hexose 6-phosphate (2-deoxy-d-glucose 6-phosphate) showed substrate inhibition with the yeast enzyme but not with the rat liver enzyme. 4. 2-Amino-2-deoxy-d-glucose 6-phosphate (d-glucosamine 6-phosphate) was a substrate for the yeast enzyme but a competitive inhibitor for the rat liver enzyme. 5. Lineweaver-Burk plots for the d-glucose 6-phosphate derivatives with yeast glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase were biphasic.  相似文献   

6.
1. Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity (EC 1.1.1.49) of two morphological forms of Trypanosoma cruzi, epimastigotes and metacyclics, are reported. 2. The kinetic behaviour and some of the kinetic parameters of the enzyme in both forms were studied. The enzymes showed a simple Michaelis-Menten kinetic. 3. The activity in epimastigote forms was alway higher than the metacyclic ones. At subsaturating concentrations of substrate was almost 10-fold higher, whereas at saturating concentrations was about 2-fold higher. 4. In epimastigote forms the specific activity and Km values, at pH 7.5 and 37 degrees C, was found to be 142 mUnits x mg-1 of protein and 0.23 mM, respectively. 5. In the same conditions, the specific activity and Km values in metacyclic forms was 75 mUnits x mg-1 of protein and 1.06 mM, respectively. 6. A possible role in the carbohydrate metabolism of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase in both forms of Trypanosoma cruzi is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Inorganic vanadate (Vi) activates catalysis by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase of the oxidation of glucose by NADP+. As the concentration of Glu-6-P dehydrogenase is increased, the rate of the vanadate-activated glucose oxidation becomes less sensitive to increases in enzyme concentration. The rate of glucose oxidation in the absence of Vi increases linearly with Glu-6-P dehydrogenase concentration. These results are interpreted in terms of nonenzymic formation of glucose 6-vanadate. At high enzyme concentration, vanadate ester formation becomes partially rate-limiting, and extrapolation to infinite Glu-6-P dehydrogenase concentration allows determination of the second order rate constant for formation of the ester. In separate experiments designed to test the proposed mechanism, it was found that Vi, at concentrations at which it strongly activates catalysis by Glu-6-P dehydrogenase of glucose oxidation, has no effect on the rates of oxidation of glucose 6-phosphate or 6-deoxyglucose catalyzed by Glu-6-P dehydrogenase. Sulfate, which is known to activate glucose oxidation and to inhibit glucose 6-phosphate oxidation, strongly activates 6-deoxyglucose oxidation. These experiments show that the 6-hydroxyl group of glucose is essential for the observed activation by Vi and are also consistent with the formation of glucose 6-vanadate. Also, the rate of the sulfate-activated glucose oxidation increases linearly with Glu-6-P dehydrogenase concentration. These results are consistent with the proposed mechanism for sulfate activation which involves sulfate binding to the enzyme (Anderson, W. B., Horne, R. N., and Nordlie, R. C. (1968) Biochemistry 7, 3997-4004). The second order rate constant calculated for formation of glucose 6-vanadate at pH 7.0 is 2.4 M-1 s-1. The corresponding values for glucose 6-phosphate and glucose 6-arsenate formation are approximately 9 X 10(-11) M-1 s-1 and 6.3 X 10(-6) M-1 s-1 (Lagunas, R. (1980) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 205, 67-75).  相似文献   

8.
Sigmoid kinetics of human erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Several disagreements and inconsistencies have appeared regarding whether human erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase exhibits sigmoid or classical kinetics with respect to NADP+ binding. The latest report is that the purified enzyme exhibits classical kinetics while the intracellular enzyme exhibits sigmoid kinetics (H. N. Kirkman, and G. F. Gaetani (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 4033-4038). The various investigations were carried out at fixed pH, ionic strength, and temperature. The steady-state kinetics of crude and purified erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase are reported here at various temperatures, ionic strengths, and pH values and as a function of glucose 6-phosphate concentration. Sigmoid kinetics were observed for both purified and crude enzyme samples at high pH, temperature, ionic strength, and concentration of glucose 6-phosphate with Hill coefficients varying between 1.40 and 1.90. In contrast, at low pH, temperature, and ionic strength, the crude enzyme samples exhibit sigmoid kinetics while the purified samples exhibit classical kinetics despite the high concentration of glucose 6-phosphate. High concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate and factors favoring the enzyme in the dimeric form are necessary conditions for the observation of sigmoid kinetics in human erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. These factors are high pH, ionic strength, and temperature. The observed sigmoid kinetics in this enzyme is explained as arising from tetramer-dimer transitions.  相似文献   

9.
Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) was purified from Aspergillus aculeatus, a filamentous fungus previously isolated from infected tongue of a patient. The enzyme, apparently homogeneous, had a specific activity of 220 units mg(-1), a molecular weight of 105,000 +/- 5,000 Dal by gel filtration and subunit size of 52,000 +/- 1,100 Dal by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The substrate specificity was extremely strict, with glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) being oxidized by nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP) only. At assay pH of 7.5, the enzyme had K(m) values of 6 microM and 75 microM for NADP and G6P respectively. The k(cat) was 83 s(-1). Steady-state kinetics at pH 7.5 produced converging linear Lineweaver-Burk plots as expected for ternary-complex mechanism. The patterns of product and dead-end inhibition suggested that the enzyme can bind NADP and G6P separately to form a binary complex, indicating a random-order mechanism. The enzyme was irreversibly inactivated by heat in a linear fashion, with G6P providing a degree of protection. Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), adenosinetriphosphate (ATP), and fructose 6-phosphate (F6P), in decreasing order, are effective inhibitors. Zinc and Cobalt ions were effective inhibitors although cobalt ion was more potent; the two divalent metals were competitive inhibitors with respect to G6P, with Ki values of 6.6 microM and 4.7 microM respectively. It is proposed that inhibition by divalent metal ions, at low NADPH /NADP ratio, is another means of controlling pentosephosphate pathway.  相似文献   

10.
Mammary glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Molecular weight studies   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase was isolated from lactating rat mammary glands by a procedure extended and modified from one previously described. The sedimentation coefficient, S20,W, was 10.3 in 0.01 m potassium phosphate, pH 6.9, containing 0.1 m NaCl at three protein concentrations between 0.51 and 1.45 mg/ml. The partial specific volume, v?, was 0.735 ml/g as determined by equilibrium sedimentation centrifugation in H2O and D2O containing buffers at pH(D) 6.5 containing 0.01 m potassium phosphate and 0.1 m NaCl. In the same buffer, but with 2.0 m NaCl, the apparent partial specific volume, φ′, was 0.756 ml/g. Equilibrium sedimentation of the enzyme at an initial concentration of 0.8 mg/ml was performed in 0.01 m potassium phosphate, pH 6.5, containing 1.0 mm EDTA, 7.0 mm mercaptoethanol, and various concentrations of NaCl between 0 and 2.0 m and with or without 0.1 mm NADP+. Weight-average and Z-average molecular weights were calculated and, from these values, the molecular weights of the monomer and dimer were derived. Under these conditions, the enzyme existed principally as a dimer, of molecular weight approximately 235,000, at low salt concentration, and as a monomer, of molecular weight approximately 120,000 in 1.0 m and 2.0 m NaCl. The subunit molecular weight was found to be 64,000 by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. Equilibrium sedimentation in 6 m guanidine hydrochloride gave a subunit molecular weight of 62,000 (assuming v? was unaltered) or 58,000 or 54,000 (assuming v? is decreased by 0.01 or 0.02, respectively, in 6 m guanidine). We conclude that rat mammary glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase has a molecular weight similar to that of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenases isolated from various other mammalian sources with the notable exception of human erythrocyte glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase which, like the microbial glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenases thus far examined, has a significantly lower molecular weight.  相似文献   

11.
Two isoenzymes of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) have been separated from the plant fraction of soybean (Glycine max L. Merr. cv Williams) nodules by a procedure involving (NH4)2SO4 gradient fractionation, gel chromatography, chromatofocusing, and affinity chromatography. The isoenzymes, which have been termed glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenases I and II, were specific for NADP+ and glucose 6-phosphate and had optimum activity at pH 8.5 and pH 8.1, respectively. Both isoenzymes were labile in the absence of NADP+. The apparent molecular weight of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenases I and II at pH 8.3 was estimated by gel chromatography to be approximately 110,000 in the absence of NADP+ and double this size in the presence of NADP+. The apparent molecular weight did not increase when glucose 6-phosphate was added with NADP+ at pH 8.3. Both isoenzymes had very similar kinetic properties, displaying positive cooperativity in their interaction with NADP+ and negative cooperativity with glucose 6-phosphate. The isoenzymes had half-maximal activity at approximately 10 micromolar NADP+ and 70 to 100 micromolar glucose 6-phosphate. NADPH was a potent inhibitor of both of the soybean nodule glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

12.
Human glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase contains about 18 sulfhydryl groups per active dimer (MW = 110,000, and it does not contain S–S bridges. Chloromercuribenzoate stoichinmetrically and reversibly inactivates the enzyme. Oxidation of the enzyme by hydrogen peroxide induces a reduction of enzyme activity, an alteration of the substrate specificity, and an increased anodal electrophoretic mobility. The oxidized enzyme can use 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate, deamino NADP, and NAD far more effectively than the native enzyme. Oxidation of the enzyme by air at pH 8.0 does not induce a significant loss of enzyme activity or an alteration of the substrate specificity, although about 70% of the sulfhydryl groups of the enzyme are oxidized by the treatment.  相似文献   

13.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase has been purified 1000-fold from pig liver. This enzyme exists as an active dimer of molecular weight 133,000 and an inactive monomer of molecular weight 67,500. The pH of maximum activity is 8.5 and the ionic strength maximum is 0.1 to 0.5 M. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is highly specific for NADP+ and glucose 6-phosphate. Apparent Km values of 3.6 muM and 5.4 muM were obtained for glucose 6-phosphate and NADP+. This enzyme is located almost entirely within the soluble portion of the cellular cytoplasm.  相似文献   

14.
S-(+)-3,4-Dihydroxybutylphosphonic acid, an isosteric analogue of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate, was synthesized stereospecifically and shown to be an effective substrate for rabbit muscle glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (sn-glycerol 3-phosphate-NAD(+) oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.8). Non-isosteric phosphonate analogues of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate showed neither substrate nor inhibitory activity with the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
The role of Asp-177 in the His-Asp catalytic dyad of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides has been investigated by a structural and functional characterization of the D177N mutant enzyme. Its three-dimensional structure has been determined by X-ray cryocrystallography in the presence of NAD(+) and in the presence of glucose 6-phosphate plus NADPH. The structure of a glucose 6-phosphate complex of a mutant (Q365C) with normal enzyme activity has also been determined and substrate binding compared. To understand the effect of Asp-177 on the ionization properties of the catalytic base His-240, the pH dependence of kinetic parameters has been determined for the D177N mutant and compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. The structures give details of glucose 6-phosphate binding and show that replacement of the Asp-177 of the catalytic dyad with asparagine does not affect the overall structure of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Additionally, the evidence suggests that the productive tautomer of His-240 in the D177N mutant enzyme is stabilized by a hydrogen bond with Asn-177; hence, the mutation does not affect tautomer stabilization. We conclude, therefore, that the absence of a negatively charged aspartate at 177 accounts for the decrease in catalytic activity at pH 7.8. Structural analysis suggests that the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters of D177N glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase results from an ionized water molecule replacing the missing negative charge of the mutated Asp-177 at high pH. Glucose 6-phosphate binding orders and orients His-178 in the D177N-glucose 6-phosphate-NADPH ternary complex and appears to be necessary to form this water-binding site.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Two new glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) variants associated with chronic nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia were discovered. G6PD Kobe was found in a 16-year-old male associated with hemolytic crisis after upper respiratory infection. The enzyme activity of the variant was about 22% of that of the normal enzyme. The main enzymatic characteristics were slower than normal anodal electrophoretic mobility, high Km G6P, increased thermal-instability, an acidic pH optimum, and an extremely increased affinity for the substrate analogue, galactose 6-phosphate (Gal-6P).G6PD Sapporo was found in a 3-year-old male associated with drug-induced hemolysis. The enzyme activity was extremely low, being 3.6% of normal. In addition, this variant showed high Ki NADPH and thermal-instability.G6PD Kobe utilized the artificial substrate Gal-6P effectively as compared with the common natural substrate, glucose 6-phosphate. In G6PD Sapporo, NADPH could not exert the effect of product inhibition. The structural changes of these variants are expected to occur at the portions inducing conformational changes of the substrate binding site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Glucose is metabolized in Escherichia coli chiefly via the phosphoglucose isomerase reaction; mutants lacking that enzyme grow slowly on glucose by using the hexose monophosphate shunt. When such a strain is further mutated so as to yield strains unable to grow at all on glucose or on glucose-6-phosphate, the secondary strains are found to lack also activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. The double mutants can be transduced back to glucose positivity; one class of transductants has normal phosphoglucose isomerase activity but no glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. An analogous scheme has been used to select mutants lacking gluconate-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Here the primary mutant lacks gluconate-6-phosphate dehydrase (an enzyme of the Enter-Doudoroff pathway) and grows slowly on gluconate; gluconate-negative mutants are selected from it. These mutants, lacking the nicotinamide dinucleotide phosphate-linked glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase or gluconate-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, grow on glucose at rates similar to the wild type. Thus, these enzymes are not essential for glucose metabolism in E. coli.  相似文献   

18.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from sporangiophores of Phycomyces blakesleeanus NRRL 1555 (-) was partially purified. The enzyme showed a molecular weight of 85 700 as determined by gel-filtration. NADP+ protected the enzyme from inactivation. Magnesium ions did not affect the enzyme activity. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was specific for NADP+ as coenzyme. The reaction rates were hyperbolic functions of substrate and coenzyme concentrations. The Km values for NADP+ and glucose 6-phosphate were 39.8 and 154.4 microM, respectively. The kinetic patterns, with respect to coenzyme and substrate, indicated a sequential mechanism. NADPH was a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADP+ (Ki = 45.5 microM) and a non-competitive inhibitor with respect to glucose 6-phosphate. ATP inhibited the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. The inhibition was of the linear-mixed type with respect to NADP+, the dissociation constant of the enzyme-ATP complex being 2.6 mM, and the enzyme-NADP+-ATP dissociation constant 12.8 mM.  相似文献   

19.
The specificity and kinetic parameters of the reactions catalyzed by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides has been examined under a range of conditions in order to elucidate details about the mechanism of action of this enzyme. The rate of oxidation of glucose 6-phosphate is inhibited by the addition of various organic solvents. However, the low, inherent glucose dehydrogenase activity of this enzyme was stimulated under these conditions, and was further activated by divalent anions that were observed to be inhibitors of the glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenation. From an examination of the pH variation of the enzyme kinetic parameters two groups on the enzyme that appear to be involved in the binding of the phosphate group of the sugar substrate have been detected. An enzyme catalytic group, probably a carboxylic acid, has been identified that accepts the proton from the hydroxyl group at carbon-1 of the sugar substrate during its oxidation to a lactone. The ionization of a group on the enzyme with a pK of 8.7 resulted in an increase in the maximum velocity of the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity of the enzyme as a consequence of a pH-dependent product release step that is no longer rate limiting at high pH. Stabilization of gluconic acid-delta-lactone against nonenzymatic hydrolysis by organic solvents has allowed the kinetic parameters of the reverse reaction to be reliably measured for the first time in a narrow pH range.  相似文献   

20.
A study of the reverse reaction of rat brain hexokinase (ATP:D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1) has been performed using a photometric method based on a mutarotase-glucose oxidase-peroxidase-chromogen system to trap and visualize glucose, plus a glycerol kinase-glycerol system to trap ATP. Glucose 6-phosphate or 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate were used as phosphoryl donors at different concentrations of ADP. Variation of glucose 6-phosphate concentrations resulted in a biphasic curve from which apparent Km and Ki values of ca. 0.2 mM were calculated. In contrast, variation of 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate concentrations resulted in Michaelian kinetics with an apparent Km of 2 mM. The Km value for MgADP was 16 mM irrespective of the nature and concentration of the hexose 6-phosphate substrate. These results are fully consistent with an allosteric site for glucose 6-phosphate as an explanation for the inhibition of animal hexokinases by glucose 6-P and further indicate that the maximal rate is the parameter affected. From these observations and previous knowledge, the possible occurrence in animal hexokinases of a regulatory site for ATP to account for the competition between glucose 6-phosphate and ATP in the forward reaction is postulated.  相似文献   

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