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1.
Stopped-flow experiments in which sheep liver cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) was rapidly mixed with NAD(+) and aldehyde showed a burst of NADH formation, followed by a slower steady-state turnover. The kinetic data obtained when the relative concentrations and orders of mixing of NAD(+) and propionaldehyde with the enzyme were varied were fitted to the following mechanism: [Formula: see text] where the release of NADH is slow. By monitoring the quenching of protein fluorescence on the binding of NAD(+), estimates of 2x10(5) litre.mol(-1).s(-1) and 2s(-1) were obtained for k(+1) and k(-1) respectively. Although k(+3) could be determined from the dependence of the burst rate constant on the concentration of propionaldehyde to be 11s(-1), k(+2) and k(-2) could not be determined uniquely, but could be related by the equation: (k(-2)+k(+3))/k(+2) =50x10(-6)mol.litre(-1). No significant isotope effect was observed when [1-(2)H]propionaldehyde was used as substrate. The burst rate constant was pH-dependent, with the greatest rate constants occurring at high pH. Similar data were obtained by using acetaldehyde, where for this substrate (k(-2)+k(+3))/k(+2)=2.3x10 (-3)mol.litre(-1) and k(+3) is 23s(-1). When [1,2,2,2-(2)H]acetaldehyde was used, no isotope effect was observed on k(+3), but there was a significant effect on k(+2) and k(-2). A burst of NADH production has also been observed with furfuraldehyde, trans-4-(NN-dimethylamino)cinnamaldehyde, formaldehyde, benzaldehyde, 4-(imidazol-2-ylazo)benzaldehyde, p-methoxybenzaldehyde and p-methylbenzaldehyde as substrates, but not with p-nitrobenzaldehyde.  相似文献   

2.
Pre-steady state, stopped flow analysis of Escherichia coli D-3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase was performed by following the fluorescence of protein tryptophan and the fluorescence resonance energy transfer from protein tryptophan to bound NADH. The results indicate that binding of substrates is ordered, with coenzyme, NADH, binding first. Furthermore, the analysis indicated that there are two sets of sites on the tetrameric enzyme that can be differentiated by their kinetic behavior. NADH binding was consistent with an initial binding event followed by a slow conformational change for each site. The slow conformational change is responsible for the apparent tight binding of NADH to the apoenzyme but is too slow to participate in the catalytic cycle when the enzyme is rapidly turning over. Subsequent binding of the substrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, was characterized by a rapid equilibrium binding event followed by a conformational change for each site. Catalysis in the direction of NAD(+) reduction showed a distinct burst of activity followed by a slow rate of turnover, indicating that the rate-limiting step is after hydride transfer. Catalysis in the direction of NADH oxidation did not display burst kinetics, indicating that the rate-limiting step is at or before the hydride transfer step. The burst data indicated that the rate of NAD(+) reduction (3.8 s(-1)) is similar to the k(cat) of the enzyme (2-3 s(-1)) in that direction. However, analysis of the reaction with deuterated NADH failed to show an effect on the velocity of the reaction with a V(H)/V(D)=1.07+/-0.06. None of the other rates determined by stopped flow analysis could account for the k(cat) of the enzyme in either direction (forward k(cat)=0.01 s(-1), reverse k(cat)=2-3 s(-1)), suggesting that the rate-limiting step in both directions is a conformational change in the enzyme that is not detected optically.  相似文献   

3.
T4 DNA ligase catalyzes phosphodiester bond formation between juxtaposed 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxyl termini in duplex DNA in three steps: 1) enzyme-adenylylate formation by reaction with ATP; 2) adenylyl transfer to a 5'-phosphorylated polynucleotide to generate adenylylated DNA; and 3) phosphodiester bond formation with release of AMP. This investigation used synthetic, nicked DNA substrates possessing either a 5'-phosphate or a 5'-adenylyl phosphate. Steady state experiments with a nicked substrate containing juxtaposed dC and 5'-phosphorylated dT deoxynucleotides (substrate 1) yielded kcat and kcat/Km values of 0.4±0.1 s(-1) and 150±50 μm(-1) s(-1), respectively. Under identical reaction conditions, turnover of an adenylylated version of this substrate (substrate 1A) yielded kcat and kcat/Km values of 0.64±0.08 s(-1) and 240±40 μm(-1) s(-1). Single turnover experiments utilizing substrate 1 gave fits for the forward rates of Step 2 (k2) and Step 3 (k3) of 5.3 and 38 s(-1), respectively, with the slowest step ~10-fold faster than the rate of turnover seen under steady state conditions. Single turnover experiments with substrate 1A produced a Step 3 forward rate constant of 4.3 s(-1), also faster than the turnover rate of 1A. Enzyme self-adenylylation was confirmed to also occur on a fast time scale (~6 s(-1)), indicating that the rate-limiting step for T4 DNA ligase nick sealing is not a chemical step but rather is most likely product release. Pre-steady state reactions displayed a clear burst phase, consistent with this conclusion.  相似文献   

4.
Lyle KS  Haas JA  Fox BG 《Biochemistry》2003,42(19):5857-5866
Stearoyl-ACP Delta9 desaturase (Delta9D) catalyzes the NADPH- and O(2)-dependent insertion of a cis double bond between the C9 and C10 positions of stearoyl-ACP (18:0-ACP) to produce oleoyl-ACP (18:1-ACP). This work revealed the ability of reduced [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin (Fd) to act as a catalytically competent electron donor during the rapid conversion of 18:0-ACP into 18:1-ACP. Experiments on the order of addition for substrate and reduced Fd showed high conversion of 18:0-ACP to 18:1-ACP (approximately 95% per Delta9D active site in a single turnover) when 18:0-ACP was added prior to reduced Fd. Reactions of the prereduced enzyme-substrate complex with O(2) and the oxidized enzyme-substrate complex with reduced Fd were studied by rapid-mix and chemical quench methods. For reaction of the prereduced enzyme-substrate complex, an exponential burst phase (k(burst) = 95 s(-1)) of product formation accounted for approximately 90% of the turnover expected for one subunit in the dimeric protein. This rapid phase was followed by a slower phase (k(linear) = 4.0 s(-1)) of product formation corresponding to the turnover expected from the second subunit. For reaction of the oxidized enzyme-substrate complex with excess reduced Fd, a slower, linear rate (k(obsd) = 3.4 s(-1)) of product formation was observed over approximately 1.5 turnovers per Delta9D active site potentially corresponding to a third phase of reaction. An analysis of the deuterium isotope effect on the two rapid-mix reaction sequences revealed only a modest effect on k(burst) ((D)k(burst) approximately 1.5) and k(linear) (D)k(linear) approximately 1.4), indicating C-H bond cleavage does not contribute significantly to the rate-limiting steps of pre-steady-state catalysis. These results were used to assemble and evaluate a minimal kinetic model for Delta9D catalysis.  相似文献   

5.
Barbara Hosein  Graham Palmer 《BBA》1983,723(3):383-390
Reduced spinach ferredoxin reacts with molecular oxygen in an autocatalytic reaction characterized by a hyperbolic dependence on oxygen concentration. The kinetics of the reaction indicate formation of a reduced ferredoxin-oxygen intermediate complex and production of superoxide anion which may also react with reduced ferredoxin. Hydrogen peroxide, which is formed from superoxide, in turn reoxidizes reduced ferredoxin at a rate nearly 10-times faster than that of the comparable reaction with oxygen. The kinetics of reaction of hydrogen peroxide with reduced ferredoxin are biphasic. The substrate dependence of the first phase of the reaction is consistent with a simple one-step equilibrium reaction. The second phase of the reaction could be eliminated by addition of the radical trapper, sodium formate.  相似文献   

6.
A ferredoxin-NAD+ oxidoreductase (EC 1.18.1.3) has been isolated from extracts of the obligate methanotroph Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b. This enzyme was shown to couple electron flow from formate dehydrogenase (NAD+ requiring) to ferredoxin. Ferredoxin-NAD+ reductase was purified to homogeneity by conventional chromatography techniques and was shown to be a flavoprotein with a molecular weight of 36,000 +/- 1,000. This ferredoxin reductase was specific for NADH (Km, 125 microM) and coupled electron flow to the native ferredoxin and to ferredoxins from spinach, Clostridium pasteurianum, and Rhodospirillum rubrum (ferredoxin II). M. trichosporium ferredoxin saturated the ferredoxin-NAD+ reductase at a concentration 2 orders of magnitude lower (3 nM) than did spinach ferredoxin (0.4 microM). Ferredoxin-NAD+ reductase also had transhydrogenase activity which transferred electrons and protons from NADH to thionicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (Km, 9 microM) and from NADPH to 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide (Km, 16 microM). Reconstitution of a soluble electron transport pathway that coupled formate oxidation to ferredoxin reduction required formate dehydrogenase, NAD+, and ferredoxin-NAD+ reductase.  相似文献   

7.
5-Ethylphenazine-poly(ethylene glycol)-NAD+ conjugate (EP+-PEG-NAD+) was prepared by linking 1-(3-carboxypropyloxy)-5-ethylphenazine (I) to poly(ethylene glycol)-bound NAD+ (PEG-NAD+) and its kinetic properties were studied. As a reference compound, poly(ethylene glycol)-bound 5-ethylphenazine derivative (III) was also prepared and the effects of poly(ethylene glycol) on the reaction rate of the 5-ethylphenazine moiety with NADH was investigated. The second-order rate constant, k1, of the reaction of III with NADH is 2.78 mM-1 s-1 and is about 1.7 times that of 1-(3-ethoxycarbonylpropyloxy)-5-ethylphenazine (II) with NADH. A similar effect of the attached poly(ethylene glycol) was observed for the reaction of PEG-NADH with I or II. The second-order rate constants, k2 and k3, of the reactions of the reduced form of III with oxygen and with 3-(4',5'-dimethylthiazole-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium ion, respectively, were k2 = 1.22 mM-1 s-1 and k3 = 32 mM-1 s-1; the k2 value is not changed but the k3 value is decreased by the attachment of the polymer. EP+-PEG-NAD+ works as a unique catalyst having an intramolecular reaction step within its turnover cycle in a coupled multi-step reaction system containing malate dehydrogenase, malate, EP+-PEG-NAD+, a tetrazolium salt and oxygen. The first-order rate constant, k4, of the intramolecular reaction was 1.1 s-1. The effects of the covalent linking of the 5-ethylphenazine and the NAD+ moieties were estimated by comparing the value of k4 with that of k1 for the reaction of III with NADH; the effective concentration of the NADH moiety for the 5-ethylphenazine moiety on the same EP+-PEG-NADH molecule (or vice versa) was calculated to be 0.40 mM from the ratio of k4/k1. The values of the rate constants in the coupled multi-step reaction system enable us to understand the dynamic features of the system and the characteristics of EP+-PEG-NAD+ as a catalyst are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Choline oxidase catalyzes the four-electron oxidation of choline to glycine-betaine, with betaine-aldehyde as intermediate and molecular oxygen as primary electron acceptor. The enzyme is capable of accepting betaine-aldehyde as a substrate, allowing the investigation of the reaction mechanism for both the conversion of choline to the aldehyde intermediate and of betaine-aldehyde to glycine-betaine. The steady state kinetic mechanism has been determined at pH 7 with choline and betaine-aldehyde as substrate to be sequential, consistent with oxygen reacting with the reduced enzyme before release of betaine-aldehyde or glycine-betaine, respectively. A K(m) value < or =20 microM has been estimated for betaine-aldehyde based on the kinetic pattern with a y-intercept seen in a plot of 1/rate versus 1/[oxygen]. The kinetic data suggest that betaine-aldehyde predominantly remains bound at the active site during turnover of the enzyme with choline. In agreement with such a conclusion, less than 10% betaine-aldehyde has been found in the reaction mixture under enzymatic turnover with saturating concentrations of choline. The k(cat) values were 6.4+/-0.3 and 15.3+/-2.5 s(-1) for choline and betaine-aldehyde, respectively, suggesting that a kinetic step in the oxidation of choline to the aldehyde intermediate must be partially rate-limiting for catalysis. Cleavage of the CH bond of choline as being partially rate-limiting for catalysis is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Nidetzky B  Klimacek M  Mayr P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(34):10371-10381
Microbial xylose reductase, a representative aldo-keto reductase of primary sugar metabolism, catalyzes the NAD(P)H-dependent reduction of D-xylose with a turnover number approximately 100 times that of human aldose reductase for the same reaction. To determine the mechanistic basis for that physiologically relevant difference and pinpoint features that are unique to the microbial enzyme among other aldo/keto reductases, we carried out stopped-flow studies with wild-type xylose reductase from the yeast Candida tenuis. Analysis of transient kinetic data for binding of NAD(+) and NADH, and reduction of D-xylose and oxidation of xylitol at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C provided estimates of rate constants for the following mechanism: E + NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH right arrow over left arrow E.NADH + D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NADH.D-xylose right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+).xylitol right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E.NAD(+) right arrow over left arrow E + NAD(+). The net rate constant of dissociation of NAD(+) is approximately 90% rate limiting for k(cat) of D-xylose reduction. It is controlled by the conformational change which precedes nucleotide release and whose rate constant of 40 s(-)(1) is 200 times that of completely rate-limiting E.NADP(+) --> E.NADP(+) step in aldehyde reduction catalyzed by human aldose reductase [Grimshaw, C. E., et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 14356-14365]. Hydride transfer from NADH occurs with a rate constant of approximately 170 s(-1). In reverse reaction, the E.NADH --> E.NADH step takes place with a rate constant of 15 s(-1), and the rate constant of ternary-complex interconversion (3.8 s(-1)) largely determines xylitol turnover (0.9 s(-1)). The bound-state equilibrium constant for C. tenuis xylose reductase is estimated to be approximately 45 (=170/3.8), thus greatly favoring aldehyde reduction. Formation of productive complexes, E.NAD(+) and E.NADH, leads to a 7- and 9-fold decrease of dissociation constants of initial binary complexes, respectively, demonstrating that 12-fold differential binding of NADH (K(i) = 16 microM) vs NAD(+) (K(i) = 195 microM) chiefly reflects difference in stabilities of E.NADH and E.NAD(+). Primary deuterium isotope effects on k(cat) and k(cat)/K(xylose) were, respectively, 1.55 +/- 0.09 and 2.09 +/- 0.31 in H(2)O, and 1.26 +/- 0.06 and 1.58 +/- 0.17 in D(2)O. No deuterium solvent isotope effect on k(cat)/K(xylose) was observed. When deuteration of coenzyme selectively slowed the hydride transfer step, (D)()2(O)(k(cat)/K(xylose)) was inverse (0.89 +/- 0.14). The isotope effect data suggest a chemical mechanism of carbonyl reduction by xylose reductase in which transfer of hydride ion is a partially rate-limiting step and precedes the proton-transfer step.  相似文献   

10.
Cell-free particulate fractions of extracts from the obligate methylotroph Methylococcus capsulatus catalyze the reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and O2-dependent oxidation of methane (methane hydroxylase). The only oxidation product detected was formate. These preparations also catalyze the oxidation of methanol and formaldehyde to formate in the presence or absence of phenazine methosulphate with oxygen as the terminal electron acceptor. Methane hydroxylase activity cannot be reproducibly obtained from disintegrated cell suspensions even though the whole cells actively respired when methane was presented as a substrate. Varying the disintegration method or extraction medium had no significant effect on the activities obtained. When active particles were obtained, hydroxylase activity was stable at 0 C for days. Methane hydroxylase assays were made by measuring the methane-dependent oxidation of NADH by O2. In separate experiments, methane consumption and the accumulation of formate were also demonstrated. Formate is not oxidized by these particulate fractions. The effects of particle concentration, temperature, pH, and phosphate concentration on enzymic activity are described. Ethane is utilized in the presence of NADH and O2. The stoichiometric relationships of the reaction(s) with methane as substrate were not established since (i) the presumed initial product, methanol, is also oxidized to formate, and (ii) the contribution that NADH oxidase activity makes to the observed consumption of reactants could not be assessed in the presence of methane. Studies with known inhibitors of electron transport systems indicate that the path of electron flow from NADH to oxygen is different for the NADH oxidase, methane hydroxylase, and methanol oxidase activities.  相似文献   

11.
Citrate is fermented by Klebsiella pneumoniae to 2 acetate, 0.5 formate and 1.2 CO2. The formation of less than 1 formate and greater than 1 CO2 per citrate can be accounted for by the oxidation of formate to CO2 in order to provide reducing equivalents for the assimilation of citrate into cell carbon. A membrane-bound electron transport chain is apparently involved in NADH synthesis by these cells. The electrons from formate oxidation to CO2 are used to reduce ubiquinone to ubiquinol by membrane-bound formate dehydrogenase and ubiquinol further delivers its electrons to NAD+, if this endergonic reaction is powered by delta mu Na+. The endogenous NADH level of K. pneumoniae cells thus increased in the presence of formate in response to a delta pNa+ greater than -100 mV. NADH formation was completely abolished in the presence of oxygen or after addition of hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, a specific inhibitor of the Na(+)-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase. The increase of endogenous NADH was dependent on the delta pNa+ applied to the cells. Inverted membrane vesicles of K. pneumoniae catalysed the reduction of NAD+ to NADH with formate as electron donor after application of delta mu Na+ of about 120 mV consisting of delta pNa+ of 60 mV and delta psi of the same magnitude. Neither the delta pNa+ nor the delta psi of this size alone was sufficient to drive the endergonic reaction. Strictly anaerobic conditions were required for NADH formation and hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide completely inactivated the reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The reaction mechanism of the F1 isozyme of horse liver aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) was investigated using both steady-state and rapid kinetic techniques. Using the steady-state substrate velocity patterns, the NADH inhibition patterns at several aldehyde concentrations, and the substrate analog (adenosine diphosphoribose and chloral hydrate) inhibition patterns, the enzymic catalysis was shown to involve ordered addition of NAD followed by aldehyde. This mechanism was confirmed using the kinetics of the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl acetate as an indicator of the dehydrogenase substrate binding. Steady-state experiments with deuteroacetaldehyde showed the V to be unchanged, but the Km increased (Km CH3CDOKm CH3CHO = 3.4). Stopped flow experiments where E-NAD was rapidly mixed with aldehyde showed a burst of NADH formation followed by slower steady-state turnover. This result clearly indicates that the rate limiting step lies after NAD reduction. The NADH off rate (0.7 s?1) as estimated by displacement of NADH from the E-NADH complex upon rapid addition of NAD was found to be very close to the steady-state site turnover number (0.3 s?1). This fact and the relatively small effect of aldehyde R-group on maximal velocity suggest that the slow rate of NADH release contributes significantly to limitation of the enzyme catalytic velocity.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetic mechanism of octopine dehydrogenase has been investigated by stopped-flow and isotope replacement techniques. When the enzyme is saturated by substrate and coenzyme, both for NADH oxidation and NAD+ reduction, the stationary phase is preceded by a rapid burst. Under these saturation conditions, furthermore, the stationary phase shows a secondary isotope effect when 4S-[4(2)H]NADH is substituted for NADH and when (on the other reaction end) D-[2H] octopine is substituted for D-octopine. The data are taken to indicate that the rate-limiting step for enzyme turnover is a step following a very fast chemical transformation of the reagents. However, when the substrate concentration is lowered below the corresponding Km value keeping the coenzyme concentration at saturating levels, the time course of the reaction shows no burst and the stationary phase has a larger isotope effect. This indicated that under those non-saturating conditions, the enzyme turnover has a larger contribution than the hydrogen-transfer step. Changing the coenzyme concentration alone has very little or no effect on the amplitude of the burst or on the isotope effect. These features are discussed in terms of the other known kinetic properties of the enzyme, and in terms of analogous studies reported in the literature for other dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

14.
Carbon-carbon double bond of α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds can be reduced by enoate reductase (ER), which is an important reaction in fine chemical synthesis. A putative enoate reductase gene from Lactobacillus casei str. Zhang was cloned into pET-21a+ and expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) host cells. The encoded enzyme (LacER) was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation and treatment in an acidic buffer. This enzyme was identified as a NADH-dependent enoate reductase, which had a K(m) of 0.034 ± 0.006 mM and k(cat) of (3.2 ± 0.2) × 103 s?1 toward NADH using 2-cyclohexen-1-one as the substrate. Its K(m) and k(cat) toward substrate 2-cyclohexen-1-one were 1.94 ± 0.04 mM and (8.4 ± 0.2) × 103 s?1, respectively. The enzyme showed a maximum activity at pH 8.0-9.0. The optimum temperature of the enzyme was 50-55°C, and LacER was relatively stable below 60 °C. The enzyme was active toward aliphatic alkenyl aldehyde, ketones and some cyclic anhydrides. Substituted groups of cyclic α,β-unsaturated ketones and its ring size have positive or negative effects on activity. (R)-(-)-Carvone was reduced to (2R,5R)-dihydrocarvone with 99% conversion and 98% (diasteromeric excess: de) stereoselectivity, indicating a high synthetic potential of LacER in asymmetric synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
While annotation of the genome sequence of Clostridium thermocellum has allowed predictions of pathways catabolizing cellobiose to end products, ambiguities have persisted with respect to the role of various proteins involved in electron transfer reactions. A combination of growth studies modulating carbon and electron flow and multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mass spectrometry measurements of proteins involved in central metabolism and electron transfer was used to determine the key enzymes involved in channeling electrons toward fermentation end products. Specifically, peptides belonging to subunits of ferredoxin-dependent hydrogenase and NADH:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (NFOR) were low or below MRM detection limits when compared to most central metabolic proteins measured. The significant increase in H2 versus ethanol synthesis in response to either co-metabolism of pyruvate and cellobiose or hypophosphite mediated pyruvate:formate lyase inhibition, in conjunction with low levels of ferredoxin-dependent hydrogenase and NFOR, suggest that highly expressed putative bifurcating hydrogenases play a substantial role in reoxidizing both reduced ferredoxin and NADH simultaneously. However, product balances also suggest that some of the additional reduced ferredoxin generated through increased flux through pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase must be ultimately converted into NAD(P)H either directly via NADH-dependent reduced ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (NfnAB) or indirectly via NADPH-dependent hydrogenase. While inhibition of hydrogenases with carbon monoxide decreased H2 production 6-fold and redirected flux from pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase to pyruvate:formate lyase, the decrease in CO2 was only 20 % of that of the decrease in H2, further suggesting that an alternative redox system coupling ferredoxin and NAD(P)H is active in C. thermocellum in lieu of poorly expressed ferredoxin-dependent hydrogenase and NFOR.  相似文献   

16.
Using 4-methoxybenzoate monooxygenase from Pseudomonas putida, the substrate deuterium isotope effect on product formation and the solvent isotope effect on the stoichiometry of oxygen uptake, NADH oxidation, product and/or H2O2 (D2O2) formation for tight couplers, partial uncouplers, and uncouplers as substrates were measured. These studies revealed for the true, intrinsic substrate deuterium isotope effect on the oxygenation reaction a k1H/k2H ratio of < 2.0, derived from the inter- and intramolecular substrate isotope effects. This value favours a concerted oxygenation mechanism of the substrate. Deuterium substitution in a tightly coupling substrate initiated a partial uncoupling of oxygen reduction and substrate oxygenation, with release of H2O2 corresponding to 20% of the overall oxygen uptake. This H2O2 (D2O2) formation (oxidase reaction) almost completely disappeared when the oxygenase function was increased by deuterium substitution in the solvent. The electron transfer from NADH to oxygen, however, was not affected by deuterium substitution in the substrate and/or the solvent. With 4-trifluoromethylbenzoate as uncoupling substrate and D2O as solvent, a reduction (peroxidase reaction) of the active oxygen complex was initiated in consequence of its extended lifetime. These additional two electron-transfer reactions to the active oxygen complex were accompanied by a decrease of both NADH oxidation and oxygen uptake rates. These findings lead to the following conclusions: (a) under tightly coupling conditions the rate-limiting step must be the formation time and lifetime of an active transient intermediate within the ternary complex iron/peroxo/substrate, rather than an oxygenative attack on a suitable C-H bond or electron transfer from NADH to oxygen. Water is released after the monooxygenation reaction; (b) under uncoupling conditions there is competition in the detoxification of the active oxygen complex between its protonation (deuteronation), with formation of H2O2 (D2O2) and its further reduction to water. The additional two electron-transfer reactions onto the active oxygen complex then become rate limiting for the oxygen uptake rate.  相似文献   

17.
The NAD-dependent, formate dehydrogenase-catalyzed oxidation of formate anion into CO2 is known as the method for the regeneration of NADH in reductive enzymatic syntheses. Inhibition by formate and inactivation by alkaline pH-shift that occurs when oxidation of formate is carried out at pH approximately 7.0 may, however, hamper the efficient application of this NADH recycling reaction. Here, we have devised a fed-batch process using pH-controlled feeding of formic acid that can overcome enzyme inhibition and inactivation. The reaction pH is thus kept constant by addition of acid, and formate dehydrogenase is supplied continuously with substrate as required, but the concentration of formate is maintained at a constant, non- or weakly inhibitory level throughout the enzymatic conversion, thus enabling a particular NADH-dependent dehydrogenase to operate stably and at high reaction rates. For xylitol production from xylose using yeast xylose reductase (Ki,Formate 182 mM), a fed-batch conversion of 0.5M xylose yielded productivities of 2.8 g (L h)-1 that are three-fold improved when contrasted to a conventional batch reaction that employed equal initial concentrations of xylose and formate.  相似文献   

18.
To better understand substrate recognition and catalysis by RNase III, we examined steady-state and pre-steady-state reaction kinetics, and changes in intrinsic enzyme fluorescence. The multiple turnover cleavage of a model RNA substrate shows a pre-steady-state burst of product formation followed by a slower phase, indicating that the steady-state reaction rate is not limited by substrate cleavage. RNase III catalyzed hydrolysis is slower at low pH, permitting the use of pre-steady-state kinetics to measure the dissociation constant for formation of the enzyme-substrate complex (K(d)=5.4(+/-0.6) nM), and the rate constant for phosphodiester bond cleavage (k(c)=1.160(+/-0.001) min(-1), pH 5.4). Isotope incorporation analysis shows that a single solvent oxygen atom is incorporated into the 5' phosphate of the RNA product, which demonstrates that the cleavage step is irreversible. Analysis of the pH dependence of the single turnover rate constant, k(c), fits best to a model for two or more titratable groups with pK(a) of ca 5.6, suggesting a role for conserved acidic residues in catalysis. Additionally, we find that k(c) is dependent on the pK(a) value of the hydrated divalent metal ion included in the reaction, providing evidence for participation of a metal ion hydroxide in catalysis, potentially in developing the nucleophile for the hydrolysis reaction. In order to assess whether conformational changes also contribute to the enzyme mechanism, we monitored intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. During a single round of binding and cleavage by the enzyme we detect a biphasic change in fluorescence. The rate of the initial increase in fluorescence was dependent on substrate concentration yielding a second-order rate constant of 1.0(+/-0.1)x10(8) M(-1) s(-1), while the rate constant of the second phase was concentration independent (6.4(+/-0.8) s(-1); pH 7.3). These data, together with the unique dependence of each phase on divalent metal ion identity and pH, support the hypothesis that the two fluorescence transitions, which we attribute to conformational changes, correlate with substrate binding and catalysis.  相似文献   

19.
Oxidation of NADH by decavanadate, a polymeric form vanadate with a cage-like structure, in presence of rat liver microsomes followed a biphasic pattern. An initial slow phase involved a small rate of oxygen uptake and reduction of 3 of the 10 vanadium atoms. This was followed by a second rapid phase in which the rates of NADH oxidation and oxygen uptake increased several-fold with a stoichiometry of NADH: O2 of 11. The burst of NADH oxidation and oxygen uptake which occurs in phosphate, but not in Tris buffer, was prevented by SOD, catalase, histidine, EDTA, MnCl2 and CuSO4, but not by the hydroxyl radical quenchers, ethanol, methanol, formate and mannitol. The burst reaction is of a novel type that requires the polymeric structure of decavanadate for reduction of vanadium which, in presence of traces of H2O2, provides a reactive intermediate that promotes transfer of electrons from NADH to oxygen.  相似文献   

20.
An important aspect of the catalytic mechanism of microsomal glutathione transferase (MGST1) is the activation of the thiol of bound glutathione (GSH). GSH binding to MGST1 as measured by thiolate anion formation, proton release, and Meisenheimer complex formation is a slow process that can be described by a rapid binding step (K(GSH)d = 47 +/- 7 mM) of the peptide followed by slow deprotonation (k2 = 0.42 +/- 0.03 s(-1). Release of the GSH thiolate anion is very slow (apparent first-order rate k(-2) = 0.0006 +/- 0.00002 s(-)(1)) and thus explains the overall tight binding of GSH. It has been known for some time that the turnover (kcat) of MGST1 does not correlate well with the chemical reactivity of the electrophilic substrate. The steady-state kinetic parameters determined for GSH and 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) are consistent with thiolate anion formation (k2) being largely rate-determining in enzyme turnover (kcat = 0.26 +/- 0.07 s(-1). Thus, the chemical step of thiolate addition is not rate-limiting and can be studied as a burst of product formation on reaction of halo-nitroarene electrophiles with the E.GS- complex. The saturation behavior of the concentration dependence of the product burst with CDNB indicates that the reaction occurs in a two-step process that is characterized by rapid equilibrium binding ( = 0.53 +/- 0.08 mM) to the E.GS- complex and a relatively fast chemical reaction with the thiolate (k3 = 500 +/- 40 s(-1). In a series of substrate analogues, it is observed that log k3 is linearly related (rho value 3.5 +/- 0.3) to second substrate reactivity as described by Hammett sigma- values demonstrating a strong dependence on chemical reactivity that is similar to the nonenzymatic reaction (rho = 3.4). Microsomal glutathione transferase 1 displays the unusual property of being activated by sulfhydryl reagents. When the enzyme is activated by N-ethylmaleimide, the rate of thiolate anion formation is greatly enhanced, demonstrating for the first time the specific step that is activated. This result explains earlier observations that the enzyme is activated only with more reactive substrates. Taken together, the observations show that the kinetic mechanism of MGST1 can be described by slow GSH binding/thiolate formation followed by a chemical step that depends on the reactivity of the electrophilic substrate. As the chemical reactivity of the electrophile becomes lower the rate-determining step shifts from thiolate formation to the chemical reaction.  相似文献   

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