首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Inactive NADP-malate dehydrogenase (disulfide form) from chloroplasts of Zea mays is activated by reduced thioredoxin while the active enzyme (dithiol form) is inactivated by incubation with oxidized thioredoxin. This reductive activation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase is inhibited by over 95% in the presence of NADP and the Kd for this interaction of NADP with the inactive enzyme is about 3 microM. Other substrates of the enzyme (malate, oxaloacetate, or NADPH) do not effect the rate of enzyme activation but NADPH can reverse the inhibitory effect of NADP. It appears that NADPH (Kd = 250 microM) and NADP (Kd = 3 microM) compete for the same site, presumably the coenzyme-binding site at the active centre. Apparently the enzyme . NADP binary complex cannot be reduced by thioredoxin whereas the enzyme . NADPH complex is reduced at the same rate as is the free enzyme. Similarly the oxidative inactivation of reduced NADP-malate dehydrogenase is inhibited by up to 85% by NADP and NADPH completely reverses this inhibition. The Kd values of the active-reduced enzyme for NADP and NADPH were both estimated to be 30 microM. From these data a model was constructed which predicts how changing NADPH/NADP levels in the chloroplast might change the steady-state level of NADP-malate dehydrogenase activity. The model indicates that at any fixed ratio of reduced to oxidized thioredoxin high proportions of active NADP-malate dehydrogenase and, hence, high rates of oxaloacetate reduction, can only occur with very high NADPH/NADP ratios.  相似文献   

2.
NADP-malate dehydrogenase activity, the ratio of NADPH to NADP, and thioredoxin redox state in Zea mays chloroplasts were determined after various treatments. Following transfer from dark to light, NADP-malate dehydrogenase was activated more than 20-fold within 10 min while the proportion of pyridine nucleotide as NADPH increased from about 25 to 90%, and the proportion of thioredoxin in the reduced form increased from 20 to more than 90%, in less than 1 min. After transfer back to the dark, NADPH levels dropped very rapidly to the initial values recorded before illumination, while enzyme activity and reduced thioredoxin levels decreased more slowly. Addition of oxaloacetate or 3-phosphoglycerate to illuminated chloroplasts results in a decrease of about 70% in the activity of NADP-malate dehydrogenase, a 30% decrease in the level of NADPH, and a 25% decrease in the reduced thioredoxin content. Adding dihydroxyacetone phosphate and pyruvate had no effect. These results are considered in relation to the hypothesis that NADP-malate dehydrogenase activity in chloroplasts may be determined by factors regulating the ratio of NADPH to NADP as well as those influencing the redox state of thioredoxin.  相似文献   

3.
The chloroplastic enzyme NADP-malate dehydrogenase is activated by a reversible thiol/disulfide interchange with reduced thioredoxin. Its target disulfide bridge is considered to be located at the amino terminus. To further substantiate the regulatory role of this disulfide, site-directed mutagenesis has been used to replace each or both of the amino-terminal cysteines of the sorghum leaf NADP-malate dehydrogenase, expressed in Escherichia coli, by serines. A truncation mutant lacking the amino terminus has also been produced. Surprisingly, the mutant proteins still required activation by reduced thioredoxin. However, their activation was almost instantaneous, whereas the native enzyme reached full activity after a 10-20 min preincubation. The 8 1/2 for reduced thioredoxin was decreased 2-fold in the mutants, but their Km values for NADPH and oxaloacetate did not change significantly. The inhibition of activation by NADP and inhibition of activity by thiol-derivatizing agents were also retained. These results are interpreted as an indication that two thioredoxin-dependent reduction steps are involved in NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase light activation, hence that two disulfides per monomer participate in the process. The overall activation rate would depend on a conformational change following the reduction of the amino-terminal disulfide bridge. The amino terminus also plays a role in the dimerization of the protein.  相似文献   

4.
Carboxy-terminal amino acids of NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.82) from pea chloroplasts were removed by treatment with carboxypeptidase Y. This results in the activation of the inactive oxidized enzyme, while activation by light in vivo is thought to occur via reduction of an intrasubunit disulfide bridge. After proteolytic activation the oxidized enzyme had a specific activity of 100 U/mg protein, which is 50% of the maximal activity of the control enzyme in the reduced state. When the truncated enzyme was reduced with dithiothreitol (DTT), the specific activity was further increased to 1200 U/mg. While the native enzyme is composed of four identical subunits of 38,900 Da, the truncated malate dehydrogenase forms dimers composed of two subunits of 38,000 Da. No further change of molecular mass or activity was noticed subsequent to prolonged incubation of native NADP-malate dehydrogenase with carboxypeptidase Y for several days. When the enzyme is denatured by 2 M guanidine-HCl, the proteolytic activation proceeds more rapidly, but only transiently. The truncated enzyme is less accessible to activation by reduced thioredoxin, but the stimulation of activity by DTT alone is more rapid than that of the native enzyme. These results indicate that only a small carboxy-terminal peptide of native NADP-malate dehydrogenase from pea chloroplasts is accessible to proteolytic degradation and that this peptide is involved in the regulation of activity, tetramer formation, and thioredoxin binding. While the pH optimum for catalytic activity of the intact reduced enzyme is at pH 8.0-8.5, it is shifted to more acidic values upon proteolysis of NADP-malate dehydrogenase. At pH values below 8 the reduced truncated enzyme exhibits substrate inhibition by oxaloacetate.  相似文献   

5.
Chloroplast thioredoxin m from the green alga Chlamydomomas reinhardtii is very efficiently reduced in vitro and in vivo in the presence of photoreduced ferredoxin and a ferredoxin dependent ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase. Once reduced, thioredoxin m has the capability to quickly activate the NADP malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.82) a regulatory enzyme involved in an energy-dependent assimilation of carbon dioxide in C4 plants. This activation is the result of the reduction of two disulfide bridges by thioredoxin m, that are located at the N- and C-terminii of the NADP malate dehydrogenase. The molecular structure of thioredoxin m was solved using NMR and compared to other known thioredoxins. Thioredoxin m belongs to the prokaryotic type of thioredoxin, which is divergent from the eukaryotic-type thioredoxins also represented in plants by the h (cytosolic) and f (chloroplastic) types of thioredoxins. The dynamics of the molecule have been assessed using (15)N relaxation data and are found to correlate well with regions of disorder found in the calculated NMR ensemble. The results obtained provide a novel basis to interpret the thioredoxin dependence of the activation of chloroplast NADP-malate dehydrogenase. The specific catalytic mechanism that takes place in the active site of thioredoxins is also discussed on the basis of the recent new understanding and especially in the light of the dual general acid-base catalysis exerted on the two cysteines of the redox active site. It is proposed that the two cysteines of the redox active site may insulate each other from solvent attack by specific packing of invariable hydrophobic amino acids.  相似文献   

6.
NADP-malate dehydrogenase was purified from leaves of Zea mays in the absence of thiol-reducing agents by (NH4)2SO4, polyethylene glycol, and pH fractionation followed by dye-ligand affinity chromatography and gel filtration. The purified enzyme is completely inactive (no activity detected between pH 6 and 9) but can be reactivated by thiol-reducing agents including dithiothreitol and thioredoxin. The active enzyme shows distinctly alkaline pH optima when assayed in either direction; Km values at pH 8.5 are oxaloacetate, 18 μm; malate, 24 mm; NADPH, 50 μm; and NADP, 45 μm. The reduction of oxaloacetate is inhibited by NADP (competitive with respect to NADPH, Ki = 50 μm). The molecular weight of the native inactive or active enzyme is 150,000 with subunits of Mr 38,000. Active enzyme is much more sensitive (>50-fold) to heat denaturation than is the inactive enzyme and is irreversibly inactivated by N-ethylmaleimide whereas the inactive enzyme is insensitive to this reagent. The active and inactive forms of NADP-malate dehydrogenase are assumed to correspond to dithiol and disulfide forms of the enzyme, respectively. The relative coenzyme-binding affinities of inactive NADP-malate dehydrogenase differ by a factor of 102 from the binding affinities for active NADP-malate dehydrogenase and 104 for non-thiol-regulated NAD-specific malate dehydrogenase. It is proposed that the 100-fold change in differential binding of NADP and NADPH upon conversion of NADP-malate dehydrogenase to the disulfide form may sufficiently alter the equilibrium of the central enzyme-substrate complexes, and hence the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme, to explain the associated loss of activity.  相似文献   

7.
NADP is a key electron carrier for a broad spectrum of redox reactions, including photosynthesis. Hence, chloroplastic NADP status, as represented by redox status (ratio of NADPH to NADP+) and pool size (sum of NADPH and NADP+), is critical for homeostasis in photosynthetic cells. However, the mechanisms and molecules that regulate NADP status in chloroplasts remain largely unknown. We have now characterized an Arabidopsis mutant with imbalanced NADP status (inap1), which exhibits a high NADPH/NADP+ ratio and large NADP pool size. inap1 is a point mutation in At2g04700, which encodes the catalytic subunit of ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase. Upon illumination, inap1 demonstrated earlier increases in NADP pool size than the wild type did. The mutated enzyme was also found in vitro to inefficiently reduce m‐type thioredoxin, which activates Calvin cycle enzymes, and NADP‐dependent malate dehydrogenase to export reducing power to the cytosol. Accordingly, Calvin cycle metabolites and amino acids diminished in inap1 plants. In addition, inap1 plants barely activate NADP‐malate dehydrogenase, and have an altered redox balance between the chloroplast and cytosol, resulting in inefficient nitrate reduction. Finally, mutants deficient in m‐type thioredoxin exhibited similar light‐dependent NADP dynamics as inap1. Collectively, the data suggest that defects in ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase and m‐type thioredoxin decrease the consumption of NADPH, leading to a high NADPH/NADP+ ratio and large NADP pool size. The data also suggest that the fate of NADPH is an important influence on NADP pool size.  相似文献   

8.
Light, besides initiating primary photochemical processes, alters the redox state of soluble components in chloroplast. The present review attempts to cover the mechanism of reductive photoactivation of enzymes of photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle using key enzymes as examples. The reduced soluble components — ferredoxin, thioredoxin and NADPH, in turn, cause the reduction of disulphides to dithiols of chloroplastic enzymes. NADP-malate dehydrogenase is subject to activation by light through changes in NADPH/NADP. The key enzyme of C4 photosynthesis-PEP carboxylase, though cytosolic, has been shown to be activated by disulphide/sulphhydryl interconversion by reductants generated in light through chloroplast electron transport flow. PyruvateP i dikinase activity is controlled by the adenylate energy charge. It remains unclear how light controls the activation of cytosolic enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
The quantum efficiencies of photosystems I and II (PSI and PSII), [NADP]/[NADPH] ratios, and the activities of chloroplastic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase were measured in intact pea (Pisum sativum L.) leaves in air following the transition from darkness to 750 microeinsteins per square meter per second irradiance. PSII efficiency declined from a low value to a minimum within the first 10 to 15 seconds of irradiance, after which it increased progressively to the steady-state value. The resistance of electron flow between the photosystems was high at this time, but it was not the principal factor limiting electron flow. Oxidation of P700 was restricted by acceptor side processes for approximately the first 60 seconds of illumination. Once the acceptor side limitation was relieved, the oxidation state of P700 was used to estimate the quantum efficiency of electron transport by PSI. This was observed to increase progressively with time. The quantum efficiencies of both photosystems increased in parallel, consistent with a predominant role for noncyclic electron transport. Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase activity increased in an approximately sigmoidal fashion with time of irradiance, paralleling the changes in the quantum efficiencies of the photosystems. In contrast, the activation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase did not show a lag period but increased with time, reaching a maximum value at about 50 seconds of illumination, after which it declined. The NADP pool was not extensively reduced during the first 10 seconds of illumination, but became so subsequently. It remained in the reduced state until about 60 seconds of illumination and then became relatively oxidized. The empirical relationship between NADP-malate dehydrogenase activity and the reduction state of the NADP pool supports the suggestion that NADP-malate dehydrogenase activity is a useful estimate of the reduction state of the stroma.  相似文献   

10.
Illumination of intact chloroplasts and treatment of chloroplast stroma with dithiothreitol (DTT) both inactivate glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH; EC 1.1.1.49) to less than 10% apparent activity when assayed under standard conditions. Illumination of intact protoplasts and incubation of leaf extract with DTT inactivate about 25-35% of the total G6PDH activity. In the leaf extract, however, further loss of activity is observed if NADP is absent. Light- and DTT-inactivated chloroplast G6PDH can be reactivated by oxidation with sodium tetrathionate or the thiol oxidant diamide. Chloroplast G6PDH is as sensitive toward reductive enzyme modulation in a stromal extract as are other light/dark modulated enzymes, e.g., NADP-malate dehydrogenase. Also, glutathione, provided it is kept reduced, is sufficient to cause inactivation. Light- and DTT-induced inactivation are shown to be due to a Km shift with respect to glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) from 1 to 35 and 43 mM, respectively, and with respect to NADP from 10 to 50 microM without any significant change of the Vmax. NADPH competitively (NADP) inhibits the enzyme (Ki = 8 microM). Reactivation by oxidation can be explained by an enhanced affinity of the oxidized enzyme toward G6P and NADP. The pH optimum of the reduced enzyme is more in the alkaline region (pH 9-9.5) as compared to that of the oxidized form (pH 8.0). The presence of 30 mM phosphate causes a shift of 0.5 to 1.0 pH unit into the alkaline region for both forms.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanism of activation of thioredoxin-linked NADP-malate dehydrogenase was investigated by using 14C-iodoacetate and 14C-dansylated thioredoxin m, and Sepharose affinity columns (thioredoxin m, NADP-malate dehydrogenase) as probes to monitor enzyme sulfhydryl status and enzyme-thioredoxin interaction. The data indicate that NADP-malate dehydrogenase, purified to homogeneity from corn leaves, is activated by a net transfer of reducing equivalents from thioredoxin m, reduced by dithiothreitol, to enzyme disulfide groups, thereby yielding oxidized thioredoxin m and reduced enzyme. The appearance of new sulfhydryl groups that accompanies the activation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase appears to involve a structural change that is independent of the formation of a stable complex between the enzyme and reduced thioredoxin m. The data are consistent with the conclusion that oxygen promotes deactivation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase through oxidation of SH groups on reduced thioredoxin and on the reduced (activated) enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Usuda H 《Plant physiology》1988,88(4):1461-1468
Recently, a nonaqueous fractionation method of obtaining highly purified mesophyll chloroplasts from maize leaves was established. This method is now used to determine adenine nucleotide levels, the redox states of the NADP system, Pi levels and dihydroxyacetone phosphate/3-phosphoglycerate ratios in mesophyll chloroplasts of Zea mays L. leaves under different light intensities. The sum of the ATP, ADP, and AMP levels was estimated to be 1.4 millimolar and the ATP/ADP ratio was 1 in the dark and 2.5 to 4 in the light. The adenine nucleotides were equilibrated by adenylate kinase. The total concentration of NADP(H) in the chloroplasts was 0.3 millimolar in the dark and 0.48 millimolar in the light. The ratio of NADPH/NADP was 0.1 to 0.18 in the dark and 0.23 to 0.48 in the light. The Pi level was estimated to be 20 millimolar in the dark and 10 to 17 millimolar in the light. The 3-phosphoglycerate reducing system was under thermodynamic equilibrium in the light. The calculated assimilatory forces were 8 per molar and 40 to 170 per molar in the dark and the light, respectively. There was no relationship between the degree of activation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase, and adenylate energy charge, or ATP/ADP ratio or ADP level under various light intensities. Only a weak relationship was found between the degree of activation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase and the NADPH/NADP ratio or NADP(H) level with increasing light intensity. A possible regulatory mechanism which is responsible for the regulation of activation of pyruvate,Pi dikinase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The chloroplastic NADP-malate dehydrogenase is activated by reduction of its N- and C-terminal disulfides by reduced thioredoxin. The activation is inhibited by NADP(+), the oxidized form of the cofactor. Previous studies suggested that the C-terminal disulfide was involved in this process. Recent structural data pointed toward a possible direct interaction between the C terminus of the oxidized enzyme and the cofactor. In the present study, the relationship between the cofactor specificity for catalysis and for inhibition of activation has been investigated by changing the cofactor specificity of the enzyme by substitution of selected residues of the cofactor-binding site. An NAD-specific thiol-regulated MDH was engineered. Its activation was inhibited by NAD(+) but no longer by NADP(+). These results demonstrate that the oxidized cofactor is bound at the same site as the reduced cofactor and support the idea of a direct interaction between the negatively charged C-terminal end of the enzyme and the positively charged nicotinamide ring of the cofactor, in agreement with the structural data. The structural requirements for cofactor specificity are modeled and discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Redox Transfer across the Inner Chloroplast Envelope Membrane   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
In leaves of spinach plants (Spinacia oleracea L.) grown in ambient CO2 the subcellular contents of adenylates, pyridine nucleotides, 3-phosphoglycerate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, malate, glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, and aspartate were assayed in the light and in the dark by nonaqueous fractionation technique. From the concentrations of NADP and NADPH determined in the chloroplast fraction of illuminated leaves the stromal NADPH to NADP ratio is calculated to be 0.5. For the cytosol a NADH to NAD ratio of 10−3 is calculated from the assay of the concentrations of NAD, malate, glutamate, aspartate, and 2-oxoglutarate on the assumption that the reactions catalyzed by the cytosolic glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase and malate dehydrogenase are not far away from equilibrium. For the transfer of redox equivalents from the chloroplastic NADPH to the cytosolic NAD two metabolite shuttles are operating across the inner envelope membrane: the triosephosphate-3-phosphoglycerate shuttle and the malate-oxaloacetate shuttle. Although both shuttles would have the capacity to level the redox state of the stromal and cytosolic compartment, this apparently does not occur. To gain an insight into the regulatory processes we calculated the free energy of the enzymic reactions and of the translocation steps involved. From the results it is concluded that the triosephosphate-3-phosphoglycerate shuttle is mainly controlled by the chloroplastic reaction of 3-phosphoglycerate reduction and of the cytosolic reaction of triosephosphate oxidation. The malate-oxaloacetate shuttle is found to be regulated by the chloroplastic NADP-malate dehydrogenase and also by the translocating step across the envelope membrane.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.82) is a light-activated chloroplast enzyme that functions in the C4 pathway of photosynthesis. The light regulation is believed to be mediated in vivo by thioredoxin-catalyzed reduction and re-oxidation of cystine residues. The rates of reversible activation and inactivation of the enzyme are strongly influenced by the coenzyme substrates that seem to ultimately determine the steady-state extent of activation in vivo. RESULTS: The X-ray structure of the inactive, oxidized enzyme was determined at 2.8 A resolution. The core structure is homologous to AND-dependent malate dehydrogenases. Two surface-exposed and thioredoxin-accessible disulfide bonds are present, one in the N-terminal extension and the other in the C-terminal extension. The C-terminal peptide of the inactive, oxidized enzyme is constrained by its disulfide bond to fold into the active site over NADP+, hydrogen bonding to the catalytic His225 as well as obstructing access of the C4 acid substrate. Two loops flanking the active site, termed the Arg2 and Trp loops, that contain the C4 acid substrate binding residues are prevented from closing by the C-terminal extension. CONCLUSIONS: The structure explains the role of the C-terminal extension in inhibiting activity. The negative C terminus will interact more strongly with the positively charged nicotinamide of NADP+ than NADPH, explaining why the coenzyme-binding affinities of the enzyme differ so markedly from those of all other homologous alpha-hydroxy acid dehydrogenases. NADP+ may also slow dissociation of the C terminus upon reduction, providing a mechanism for the inhibition of activation by NADP+ but not NADPH.  相似文献   

16.
Malic enzyme (S)-malate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (oxaloacetate-decarboxylating, EC 1.1.1.40) purified from the thermoacidophilic archaebacterium Sulfolobus solfataricus, strain MT-4, catalyzed the metal-dependent decarboxylation of oxaloacetate at optimum pH 7.6 at a rate comparable to the decarboxylation of L-malate. The oxaloacetate decarboxylase activity was stimulated about 50% by NADP but only in the presence of MgCl2, and was strongly inhibited by L-malate and NADPH which abolished the NADP activation. In the presence of MnCl2 and in the absence of NADP, the Michaelis constant and Vm for oxaloacetate were 1.7 mM and 2.3 mumol.min-1.mg-1, respectively. When MgCl2 replaced MnCl2, the kinetic parameters for oxaloacetate remained substantially unvaried, whereas the Km and Vm values for L-malate have been found to vary depending on the metal ion. The enzyme carried out the reverse reaction (malate synthesis) at about 70% of the forward reaction, at pH 7.2 and in the presence of relatively high concentrations of bicarbonate and pyruvate. Sulfhydryl residues (three cysteine residues per subunit) have been shown to be essential for the enzymatic activity of the Sulfolobus solfataricus malic enzyme. 5,5'-Dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and N-ethylmaleimide caused the inactivation of the oxidative decarboxylase activity, but at different rates. The inactivation of the overall activity by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate was partially prevented by NADP singly or in combination with both L-malate and MnCl2, and strongly enhanced by the carboxylic acid substrates; NADP + malate + MnCl2 afforded total protection. The inactivation of the oxaloacetate decarboxylase activity by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate treatment was found to occur at a slower rate than that of the oxidative decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

17.
1. Superovulated rat ovary was found to contain high activities of NADP-malate dehydrogenase and NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase. The activity of each enzyme was approximately four times that of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and equalled or exceeded the activities reported to be present in other mammalian tissues. Fractionation of a whole tissue homogenate of superovulated rat ovary indicated that both enzymes were exclusively cytoplasmic. The tissue was also found to contain pyruvate carboxylase (exclusively mitochondrial), NAD-malate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase (both mitochondrial and cytoplasmic) and ATP-citrate lyase (exclusively cytoplasmic). 2. The kinetic properties of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, NADP-malate dehydrogenase and NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase were determined and compared with the whole-tissue concentrations of their substrates and NADPH; NADPH is a competitive inhibitor of all three enzymes. The concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate, malate and isocitrate in incubated tissue slices were raised at least tenfold by the addition of glucose to the incubation medium, from the values below to values above the respective K(m) values of the dehydrogenases. Glucose doubled the tissue concentration of NADPH. 3. Steroidogenesis from acetate is stimulated by glucose in slices of superovulated rat ovary incubated in vitro. It was found that this stimulatory effect of glucose can be mimicked by malate, isocitrate, lactate and pyruvate. 4. It is concluded that NADP-malate dehydrogenase or NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase or both may play an important role in the formation of NADPH in the superovulated rat ovary. It is suggested that the stimulatory effect of glucose on steroidogenesis from acetate results from an increased rate of NADPH formation through one or both dehydrogenases, brought about by the increases in the concentrations of malate, isocitrate or both. Possible pathways involving the two enzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
For maximal rates of CO2 assimilation in isolated intact spinach chloroplasts the generation of the adequate NADPH/ATP ratio is achieved either by cyclic electron flow around photosystem I or by linear electron transport to oxaloacetate, nitrite or oxygen (Mehler-reaction). The interrelationships between these poising mechanisms turn out to be strictly hierarchical. In the presence of antimycin A, an inhibitor of ferredoxin-dependent cyclic electron transport, the reduction of both, oxaloacetate and nitrite, but not that of oxygen restores CO2 fixation. When oxaloacetate and nitrite are added at low concentrations simultaneously during steady-state CO2 fixation, the reduction of nitrite is clearly preferred over the reduction of oxaloacetate, but CO2 fixation is not influenced. Nitrite reduction is not decreased upon addition of oxaloacetate, but vice versa. This is due to the regulation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase activation by electron pressure via the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system on the one hand, and by the NADPH/(NADP+NADPH) ratio (anabolic reduction charge, ARC) on the other hand. Thus the closing of the malate valve prevents drainage of reducing equivalents from the chloroplast (1) when a low ARC indicates a high demand for NADPH in the stroma and (2) when nitrite reduction reduces the electron pressure at ferredoxin. The malate valve is opened when cyclic electron transport is inhibited by antimycin A. Under these conditions the rate of malate formation is higher than in the absence of the inhibitor even in the presence of oxaloacetate, thus indicating that the regulation of the malate valve functions at various redox states of the acceptor side of Photosystem I.Abbreviations ARC anabolic reduction charge (NADPH/(NADP+NADPH)) - Chl chlorophyll - DTT dithiothreitol; Fd-ferredoxin - NADP-MDH NADP-malate dehydrogenase - OAA oxaloacetate - PS photosystem - qN non-photochemical quenching - qP photochemical quenching - E quantum efficiency of PS II Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Hans Walter Heldt on the occasion of his 60th birthday.  相似文献   

19.
Respiration in cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes is interwoven with photosynthetic processes. We have constructed a range of mutants that are impaired in several combinations of respiratory and photosynthetic electron transport complexes and have examined the relative effects on the redox state of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool by using a quinone electrode. Succinate dehydrogenase has a major effect on the PQ redox poise, as mutants lacking this enzyme showed a much more oxidized PQ pool. Mutants lacking type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases also had more oxidized PQ pools. However, in the mutant lacking type I NADPH dehydrogenase, succinate was essentially absent and effective respiratory electron donation to the PQ pool could be established after addition of 1 mM succinate. Therefore, lack of the type I NADPH dehydrogenase had an indirect effect on the PQ pool redox state. The electron donation capacity of succinate dehydrogenase was found to be an order of magnitude larger than that of type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases. The reason for the oxidized PQ pool upon inactivation of type II NADH dehydrogenase may be related to the facts that the NAD pool in the cell is much smaller than that of NADP and that the NAD pool is fully reduced in the mutant without type II NADH dehydrogenase, thus causing regulatory inhibition. The results indicate that succinate dehydrogenase is the main respiratory electron transfer pathway into the PQ pool and that type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases regulate the reduction level of NADP and NAD, which, in turn, affects respiratory electron flow through succinate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

20.
The activity of pure calf-liver and Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductases decreased drastically in the presence of NADPH or NADH, while NADP+, NAD+ and oxidized E. coli thioredoxin activated both enzymes significantly, particularly the bacterial one. The loss of activity under reducing conditions was time-dependent, thus suggesting an inactivation process: in the presence of 0.24 mM NADPH the half-lives for the E. coli and calf-liver enzymes were 13.5 and 2 min, respectively. Oxidized E. coli thioredoxin fully protected both enzymes from inactivation, and also promoted their complete reactivation after only 30 min incubation at 30° C. Lower but significant protection and reactivation was also observed with NADP+ and NAD+. EDTA protected thioredoxin reductase from NADPH inactivation to a great degree, thus indicating the participation of metals in the process; EGTA did not protect the enzyme from redox inactivation. Thioredoxin reductase was extensively inactivated by NADPH under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, thus excluding the participation of O2 or oxygen active species in redox inactivation. The loss of thioredoxin reductase activity promoted by NADPH was much faster and complete in the presence of NAD+ glycohydrolase, thus suggesting that inactivation was related to full reduction of the redox-active disulfide. Those results indicate that thioredoxin reductase activity can be modulated in bacteria and mammals by the redox status of NADP(H) and thioredoxin pools, in a similar way to glutathione reductase. This would considerably expand the regulatory potential of the thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system with the enzyme being self-regulated by its own substrate, a regulatory protein.Abbreviations DTNB 5,5-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) - EGTA Ethylenglycoltetraacetic Acid - TNB 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoate - Trx Thioredoxin - Trx(SH)2 Reduced Thioredoxin - Trx-S2 Oxidized Thioredoxin  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号