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1.
Kinetic studies were carried out on mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) isolated from sheep liver. Steady-state studies over a wide range of acetaldehyde concentrations gave a non-linear double-reciprocal plot. The dissociation of NADH from the enzyme was a biphasic process with decay constants 0.6s-1 and 0.09s-1. Pre-steady-state kinetic data with propionaldehyde as substrate could be fitted by using the same burst rate constant (12 +/- 3s-1) over a wide range of propionaldehyde concentrations. The quenching of protein fluorescence on the binding of NAD+ to the enzyme was used to estimate apparent rate constants for binding (2 X 10(4) litre.mol-1.s-1) and dissociation (4s-1). The kinetic properties of the mitochondrial enzyme, compared with those reported for the cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase from sheep liver, show significant differences, which may be important in the oxidation of aldehydes in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
In the presence of acetic anhydride or butyric anhydride, liver aldehyde dehydrogenases catalyse the oxidation of NADH at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. The maximum velocities and Michaelis constants for NADH at saturating anhydride concentrations are independent of which anhydride is used, the values being V'max. = 12 min-1 and Km for NADH = 9 micrometer for the mitochondrial enzyme and V'max = 25 min-1 and Km for NADH = 20 micrometer for the cytoplasmic enzyme. Substitution of [4A-2H]NADH for NADH resulted in 2-fold and 4-fold decreases in rate for the mitochondrial and cytoplasmic enzymes respectively.  相似文献   

3.
The binding of NADH and NAD+ to the human liver cytoplasmic, E1, and mitochondrial, E2, isozymes at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C was studied by the NADH fluorescence enhancement technique, the sedimentation technique, and steady-state kinetics. The binding of radiolabeled [14C]NADH and [14C]NAD+ to the E1 isozyme when measured by the sedimentation technique yielded linear Scatchard plots with a dissociation constant of 17.6 microM for NADH and 21.4 microM for NAD+ and a stoichiometry of ca. two coenzyme molecules bound per enzyme tetramer. The dissociation constant, 19.2 microM, for NADH as competitive inhibitor was found from steady-state kinetics. With the mitochondrial E2 isozyme, the NADH fluorescence enhancement technique showed only one, high-affinity binding site (KD = 0.5 microM). When the sedimentation technique and radiolabeled coenzymes were used, the binding studies showed nonlinear Scatchard plots. A minimum of two binding sites with lower affinity was indicated for NADH (KD = 3-6 microM and KD = 25-30 microM) and also for NAD+ (KD = 5-7 microM and KD = 15-30 microM). A fourth binding site with the lowest affinity (KD = 184 microM for NADH and KD = 102 microM for NAD+) was observed from the steady-state kinetics. The dissociation constant for NAD+, determined by the competition with NADH via fluorescence titration, was found to be 116 microM. The number of binding sites found by the fluorescence titration (n = 1 for NADH) differs from that found by the sedimentation technique (n = 1.8-2.2 for NADH and n = 1.2-1.6 for NAD+).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
1. The properties and distribution of the NAD-linked unspecific aldehyde dehydrogenase activity (aldehyde: NAD+ oxidoreductase EC 1.2.1.3) has been studied in isolated cytoplasmic, mitochondrial and microsomal fractions of rat liver. The various types of aldehyde dehydrogenase were separated by ion exchange chromatography and isoelectric focusing. 2. The cytoplasmic fraction contained 10-15, the mitochondrial fraction 45-50 and the microsomal fraction 35-40% of the total aldehyde dehydrogenase activity, when assayed with 6.0 mM propionaldehyde as substrate. 3. The cytoplasmic fraction contained two separable unspecific aldehyde dehydrogenases, one with high Km for aldehydes (in the millimolar range) and the other with low Km for aldehydes (in the micromolar range). The latter can, however, be due to leakage from mitochondria. The high-Km enzyme fraction contained also all D-glucuronolactone dehydrogenase activity of the cytoplasmic fraction. The specific formaldehyde and betaine aldehyde dehydrogenases present in the cytoplasmic fraction could be separated from the unspecific activities. 4. In the mitochondrial fraction there was one enzyme with a low Km for aldehydes and another with high Km for aldehydes, which was different from the cytoplasmic enzyme. 5. The microsomal aldehyde dehydrogenase had a high Km for aldehydes and had similar properties as the mitochondrial high-Km enzyme. Both enzymes have very little activity with formaldehyde and glycolaldehyde in contrast to the other aldehyde dehydrogenases. They are apparently membranebound.  相似文献   

5.
The displacement of NADH from cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) from sheep liver was studied by using NAD+, 1,10-phenanthroline, ADP-ribose, deamino-NAD+ and pyridine-3-aldehyde-adenine dinucleotide as displacing agents, by following the decrease in fluorescence as a function of time. The data obtained could be fitted by assuming two first-order processes were occurring, a faster process with an apparent rate constant of 0.85 +/- 0.20 s-1 and a relative amplitude of 60 +/- 10% and a slower process with an apparent rate constant of 0.20 +/- 0.05 s-1 and a relative amplitude of 40 +/- 10% (except for pyridine-3-aldehyde-adenine dinucleotide, where the apparent rate constant for the slow process was 0.05 s-1). The displacement rates did not change significantly when the pH was varied from 6.0 to 9.0. Kinetic data are also reported for the dependence of the rate of binding of NADH to the enzyme on the total concentration of NADH. Detailed arguments are presented based on the isolation and purification procedures, the equilibrium coenzyme-binding studies and the kinetic data, which lead to the following model for the release of NADH from the enzyme: (formula: see article). The parameters that best fit the data are: k + 1 = 0.2 s-1; k - 1 = 0.05 s-1; k + 2 = 0.8 s-1 and k - 2 = 5 X 10(5)litre-mol-1-s-1. The slow phase of the NADH release is similar to the steady-state turnover number for substrates such as acetaldehyde and propionaldehyde and appears to contribute significantly to the limitation of the steady-state rate.  相似文献   

6.
Mitochondrial NADH fluorescence has been a useful tool in evaluating mitochondrial energetics both in vitro and in vivo. Mitochondrial NADH fluorescence is enhanced several-fold in the matrix through extended fluorescence lifetimes (EFL). However, the actual binding sites responsible for NADH EFL are unknown. We tested the hypothesis that NADH binding to Complex I is a significant source of mitochondrial NADH fluorescence enhancement. To test this hypothesis, the effect of Complex I binding on NADH fluorescence efficiency was evaluated in purified protein, and in native gels of the entire porcine heart mitochondria proteome. To avoid the oxidation of NADH in these preparations, we conducted the binding experiments under anoxic conditions in a specially designed apparatus. Purified intact Complex I enhanced NADH fluorescence in native gels approximately 10-fold. However, no enhancement was detected in denatured individual Complex I subunit proteins. In the Clear and Ghost native gels of the entire mitochondrial proteome, NADH fluorescence enhancement was localized to regions where NADH oxidation occurred in the presence of oxygen. Inhibitor and mass spectroscopy studies revealed that the fluorescence enhancement was specific to Complex I proteins. No fluorescence enhancement was detected for MDH or other dehydrogenases in this assay system, at physiological mole fractions of the matrix proteins. These data suggest that NADH associated with Complex I significantly contributes to the overall mitochondrial NADH fluorescence signal and provides an explanation for the well established close correlation of mitochondrial NADH fluorescence and the metabolic state.  相似文献   

7.
Although the three-dimensional structure of the dimeric class 3 rat aldehyde dehydrogenase has recently been published (Liu ZJ et al., 1997, Nature Struct Biol 4:317-326), few mechanistic studies have been conducted on this isoenzyme. We have characterized the enzymatic properties of recombinant class 3 human stomach aldehyde dehydrogenase, which is very similar in amino acid sequence to the class 3 rat aldehyde dehydrogenase. We have determined that the rate-limiting step for the human class 3 isozyme is hydride transfer rather than deacylation as observed for the human liver class 2 mitochondrial enzyme. No enhancement of NADH fluorescence was observed upon binding to the class 3 enzyme, while fluorescence enhancement of NADH has been previously observed upon binding to the class 2 isoenzyme. It was also observed that binding of the NAD cofactor inhibited the esterase activity of the class 3 enzyme while activating the esterase activity of the class 2 enzyme. Site-directed mutagenesis of two conserved glutamic acid residues (209 and 333) to glutamine residues indicated that, unlike in the class 2 enzyme, Glu333 served as the general base in the catalytic reaction and E209Q had only marginal effects on enzyme activity, thus confirming the proposed mechanism (Hempel J et al., 1999, Adv Exp Med Biol 436:53-59). Together, these data suggest that even though the subunit structures and active site residues of the isozymes are similar, the enzymes have very distinct properties besides their oligomeric state (dimer vs. tetramer) and substrate specificity.  相似文献   

8.
The role of phospholipid in the binding of coenzyme, NAD(H), to 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, a lipid-requiring membrane enzyme, has been studied with the ultrafiltration binding method, which we optimized to quantitate weak ligand binding (KD in the range 10-100 microM). 3-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase has a specific requirement of phosphatidylcholine (PC) for optimal function and is a tetramer quantitated both for the apodehydrogenase, which is devoid of phospholipid, and for the enzyme reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles in either the presence or absence of PC. We find that (i) the stoichiometry for NADH and NAD binding is 0.5 mol/mol of enzyme monomer (2 mol/mol of tetramer); (ii) the dissociation constant for NADH binding is essentially the same for the enzyme reconstituted into the mixture of mitochondrial phospholipids (MPL) (KD = 15 +/- 3 microM) or into dioleoyl-PC (KD = 12 +/- 3 microM); (iii) the binding of NAD+ to the enzyme-MPL complex is more than an order of magnitude weaker than NADH binding (KD approximately 200 microM versus 15 microM) but can be enhanced by formation of a ternary complex with either 2-methylmalonate (apparent KD = 1.1 +/- 0.2 microM) or sulfite to form the NAD-SO3- adduct (KD = 0.5 +/- 0.1 microM); (iv) the binding stoichiometry for NADH is the same (0.5 mol/mol) for binary (NADH alone) and ternary complexes (NADH plus monomethyl malonate); (v) binding of NAD+ and NADH together totals 0.5 mol of NAD(H)/mol of enzyme monomer, i.e., two nucleotide binding sites per enzyme tetramer; and (vi) the binding of nucleotide to the enzyme reconstituted with phospholipid devoid of PC is weak, being detected only for the NAD+ plus 2-methylmalonate ternary complex (apparent KD approximately 50 microM or approximately 50-fold weaker binding than that for the same complex in the presence of PC). The binding of NADH by equilibrium dialysis or of spin-labeled analogues of NAD+ by EPR spectroscopy gave complementary results, indicating that the ultrafiltration studies approximated equilibrium conditions. In addition to specific binding of NAD(H) to 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, we find significant binding of NAD(H) to phospholipid vesicles. An important new finding is that the nucleotide binding site is present in 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase in the absence of activating phospholipid since (a) NAD+, as the ternary complex with 2-methylmalonate, binds to the enzyme reconstituted with phospholipid devoid of PC and (b) the apodehydrogenase, devoid of phospholipid, binds NADH or NAD-SO3- weakly (half-maximal binding at approximately 75 microM NAD-SO3- and somewhat weaker binding for NADH).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
T Koivula 《Life sciences》1975,16(10):1563-1569
The subcellular distribution of human liver aldehyde dehydrogenases (E.C. 1.2.1.3) have been studied and the different types have been separated by ion exchange chromatography. The cytoplasmic fraction contained at least two chromatographically separable aldehyde dehydrogenases, which accounted for about 30% of the total activity. One of the cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenases had a high Km for aldehydes (in the millimolar range). A considerable part of the activity found in this fraction was due to an enzyme with a low Km for aldehydes (in the micromolar range). It had properties similar to those of the mitochondrial main enzyme fraction, from where it may have originated as a contamination during subcellular fractionation. Specific betaine aldehyde and formaldehyde dehydrogenases were separated from these unspecific activities in the cytoplasmic fraction. In mitochondria, where more than 50% of the total aldehyde dehydrogenase activity was found, there was also evidence for slight high-Km activity. The microsomal fraction contained only a high-Km aldehyde dehydrogenase, which accounted for about 10% of the total activity.  相似文献   

10.
The pH dependence of proton uptake upon binding of NADH to porcine heart mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (l-malate: NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.37) has been investigated. The enzyme has been shown to exhibit a pH-dependent uptake of protons upon binding NADH at pH values from 6.0 to 8.5. Enzyme in which one histidine residue has been modified per subunit by the reagent iodoacetamide (E. M. Gregory, M. S. Rohrbach, and J. H. Harrison, 1971, Biochim. Biophys. Acta253, 489–497) was used to establish that this specific histidine residue was responsible for the uptake of a proton upon binding of NADH to the native enzyme. It has also been established that while there is no enhancement of the nucleotide fluorescence upon addition of NADH to the iodoacetamide-modified enzyme, NADH is nevertheless binding to the modified enzyme with the same stoichiometry as with native enzyme. The data are discussed in relation to the involvement of the essential histidine residue in the catalytic mechanism of “histidine dehydrogenases” recently proposed by Lodola et al. (A. Lodola, D. M. Parker, R. Jeck, and J. J. Holbrook, 1978, Biochem. J.173, 597–605) and the catalytic mechanism of “malate dehydrogenases” recently proposed by L. H. Bernstein and J. Everse (1978, J. Biol. Chem.253, 8702–8707).  相似文献   

11.
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) plays a critical role in oxidative phosphorylation as the primary source of reducing equivalents to the respiratory chain. Using a modified fluorescence microscope, we have obtained spectra and images of the blue autofluorescence from single rat cardiac myocytes. The optical setup permitted rapid acquisition of fluorescence emission spectra (390-595 nm) or intensified digital video images of individual myocytes. The spectra showed a broad fluorescence centered at 447 +/- 0.2 nm, consistent with mitochondrial NADH. Addition of cyanide resulted in a 100 +/- 10% increase in fluorescence, while the uncoupler FCCP resulted in a 82 +/- 4% decrease. These two transitions were consistent with mitochondrial NADH and implied that the myocytes were 44 +/- 6% reduced under the resting control conditions. Intracellular fluorescent structures were observed that correlated with the distribution of a mitochondrial selective fluorescent probe (DASPMI), the mitochondrial distribution seen in published electron micrographs, and a metabolic digital subtraction image of the cyanide fluorescence transition. These data are consistent with the notion that the blue autofluorescence of rat cardiac myocytes originates from mitochondrial NADH.  相似文献   

12.
Citrate synthase from Escherichia coli enhances the fluorescence of its allosteric inhibitor, NADH, and shifts the peak of emission of the coenzyme from 457 to 428 nm. These effects have been used to measure the binding of NADH to this enzyme under various conditions. The dissociation constant for the NADH-citrate synthase complex is about 0.28 muM at pH 6.2, but increases toward alkaline pH as if binding depends on protonation of a group with a pKa of about 7.05. Over the pH range 6.2-8.7, the number of binding sites decreases from about 0.65 to about 0.25 per citrate synthase subunit. The midpoint of this transition is at about pH 7.7, and it may be one reflection of the partial depolymerization of the enzyme which is known to occur in this pH range. A gel filtration method has been used to verify that the fluorescence enhancement technique accurately reveals all of the NADH molecules bound to the enzyme in the concentration range of interest. NAD+ and NADP+ were weak competitive inhibitors of NADH binding at pH 7.8 (Ki values greater than 1 mM), but stronger inhibition was shown by 5'-AMP and 3'-AMP, with Ki values of 83 +/- 5 and 65 +/- 4 muM, respectively. Acetyl-CoA, one of the substrates, and KCl, an activator, also inhibit the binding in a weakly cooperative manner. All of these effects are consistent with kinetic observations on this system. We interpret our results in terms of two types of binding site for nucleotides on citrate synthase: an active site which binds acetyl-CoA, the substrate, or its analogue 3'-AMP; and an allosteric site which binds NADH or its analogue 5'-AMP and has a lesser affinity for other nicotinamide adenine dinucloetides. When the active site is occupied, we propose that NADH cannot bind to the allosteric site, but 5'-AMP can; conversely, when NADH is the in the allosteric site, the active site cannot be occupied. In addition to these two classes of sites, there must be points for interaction with KCl and other salts. Oxaloacetate, the second substrate, and alpha-ketoglutarate, an inhibitor whose mode of action is believed to be allosteric, have no effect on NADH binding to citrate synthase at pH 7.8. When NADH is bound to citrate synthase, it quenches the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of the enzyme. The amount of quenching is proportional to the amount of NADH bound, at least up to a binding ratio of 0.50 NADH per enzyme subunit. This amount of binding leads to the quenching of 53 +/- 5% of the enzyme fluorescence, which means that one NADH molecule can quench all the intrinsic fluorescence of the subunit to which it binds.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetic properties of highly purified preparations of sheep liver cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase (preparations that had been shown to be free from contamination with the corresponding mitochondrial enzyme) were investigated with both propionaldehyde and butyraldehyde as substrates. At low aldehyde concentrations, double-reciprocal plots with aldehyde as the variable substrate are linear, and the mechanism appears to be ordered, with NAD+ as the first substrate to bind. Stopped-flow experiments following absorbance and fluorescence changes show bursts of NADH production in the pre-steady state, but the observed course of reaction depends on the pre-mixing conditions. Pre-mixing enzyme with NAD+ activates the enzyme in the pre-steady state and we suggest that the reaction mechanism may involve isomeric enzyme--NAD+ complexes. High concentrations of aldehyde in steady-state experiments produce significant activation (about 3-fold) at high concentrations of NAD+, but inhibition at low concentrations of NAD+. Such behaviour may be explained by postulating the participation of an abortive complex in product release. Stopped-flow measurements at high aldehyde concentrations indicate that the mechanism of reaction under these conditions is complex.  相似文献   

14.
The binding of NADH to porcine mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase in phosphate buffer at pH 7.5 has been studied by equilibrium and kinetic methods. Hyperbolic binding was obtained by fluorimetric titration of enzyme with NADH, in the presence or absence of hydroxymalonate. Identical results were obtained for titrations of NADH with enzyme in the presence or absence of hydroxymalonate, measured either by fluorescence emission intensity or by the product of intensity and anisotropy. The equilibrium constant for NADH dissociation was 3.8 +/- 0.2 micrometers, over a 23-fold range of enzyme concentration, and the value in the presence of saturating hydroxymalonate was 0.33 +/- 0.02 micrometer over a 10-fold range of enzyme concentration. The rate constant for NADH binding to the enzyme in the presence of hydroxymalonate was 3.6 X 10(7) M-1 s-1, while the value for dissociation from the ternary complex was 30 +/- 1 s-1. No limiting binding rate was obtained at pseudo-first order rate constants as high as 200 s-1, and the rate curve for dissociation was a single exponential for at least 98% of the amplitude. In addition to demonstrating that the binding sites are independent and indistinguishable, the absence of effects of enzyme concentration on the KD value indicates that NADH binds with equal affinity to monomeric and dimeric enzyme forms.  相似文献   

15.
V G Neef  F M Huennekens 《Biochemistry》1976,15(18):4042-4047
The 1,N6-ethenoadenine derivatives of triphosphopyridine and reduced triphosphopyridine nucleotides (TPN and TPNH) epsilon-TPN and epsilon-TPNH) have been synthesized and used as fluorescent probes to examine the pyridine nucleotide binding site of L1210 dihydrofolate reductase. Epsilon-TPNH (Km = 16.7 muM) was able to replace TPNH (Km = 3.8 muM) in the enzyme-catalyzed reduction of dihyrdofolate, and both epsilon-TPN and epsilon-TPNH formed binary complexes with the enzyme that were stable to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The fluorescence of epsilon-TPN was enhanced and the emission maximum shifted from 415 to 405 nm when the nucleotide was bound to the enzyme. The ethenoadenine moiety in epsilon-TPNH behaved similarily, but the fluorescence changes were complicated by concurrent effects of binding upon the dihydronicotinamide fluorophore. Fluorescence enhancement titrations yielded values of 1.8 and 0.59 muM, respectively, for the dissociation constants of the enzyme-epsilon-TPN and enzyme-epsilon-TPNH complexes. Titration experiments based upon quenching of enzyme fluorescence gave similar values, viz., 2.1 and 0.53 muM for the dissociation constants of these complexes. Fluorimetric titration of the enzyme-TPNH complex with epsilon-TPN (or of the enzyme-TPN complex with epsilon-TPNH) failed to reveal the presence of a second pyridine nucleotide binding site. The fluorescence enhancement of enzyme-bound epsilon-TPN or dihydrofolate was quenched when amethopterin or epsilon-TPN, respectively, was added to form a ternary complex. These results provide information concerning the nature of the pyridine nucleotide binding site and its spatial relationship to the dihydrofolate/amethopterin binding site.  相似文献   

16.
1. The effect of disulfiram on the activity of the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenases of sheep liver was studied. 2. Disulfiram causes an immediate inhibition of the enzyme reaction. The effect on the cytoplasmic enzyme is much greater than on the mitochondrial enzyme. 3. In both cases, the initial partial inhibition is followed by a gradual irreversible loss of activity. 4. The pH-rate profile of the inactivation of the mitochondrial enzyme by disulfiram and the pH-dependence of the maximum velocity of the enzyme-catalysed reaction are both consistent with the involvement of a thiol group. 5. Excess of 2-mercaptoethanol or GSH abolishes the effect of disulfiram. However, equimolar amounts of either of these reagents and disulfiram cause an effect greater than does disulfiram alone. It was shown that the mixed disulphide, Et2N-CS-SS-CH2-CH2OH, strongly inhibits aldehyde dehydrogenase. 6. The inhibitory effect of diethyldithiocarbamate in vitro is due mainly to contamination by disulfiram.  相似文献   

17.
1. Sheep liver cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase can be purified from contamination with the mitochondrial form of the enzyme by pH-gradient ion-exchange chromatography. The method is simple, reproducible and efficient. 2. The purified cytoplasmic enzyme retains about 2% of its original activity in the presence of a large excess of disulfiram. This suggests that the disulfiram-reactive thiol groups are not essential for covalent interaction with the aldehyde substrate during catalysis, as has sometimes been suggested. 3. Between 1.5 and 2.0 molecules of disulfiram per tetrameric enzyme molecule account for the observed loss of activity, suggesting that the enzyme may have only two functional active sites. 4. Experiments show that disulfiram-modified enzyme retains the ability to bind NAD+ and NADH.  相似文献   

18.
Acylation of the aldehyde dehydrogenase.NADH complex by acetic anhydride leads to the production of acetaldehyde and NAD+. By monitoring changes in nucleotide fluorescence, the rate constant for acylation of the active site of the *enzyme.NADH complex was found to be 11 +/- 3 s-1. The rate of acylation by acetic anhydride at the group that binds aldehydes on the oxidative pathway is clearly rapid enough to maintain significant steady-state concentrations of the required active-site-acylated *enzyme.NADH intermediate despite the rapid hydrolysis of this *enzyme.acyl.NADH intermediate (5-10 s-1) [Blackwell, Motion, MacGibbon, Hardman & Buckley (1987) Biochem. J. 242, 803-808]. Hence reversal of the normal oxidative pathway can occur. However, although acylation of the aldehyde dehydrogenase.NADH complex by 4-nitrophenyl acetate also occurs rapidly with a rate constant of 10.9 +/- 0.6 s-1, even under the most extreme trapping conditions only very small amounts of acetaldehyde are detected [Loomes & Kitson (1986) Biochem. J. 235, 617-619]. Furthermore enzyme-catalysed hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl acetate is limited by the rate of deacylation of a group on the enzyme (0.4 s-1), which is an order of magnitude less than deacylation of the group at the active site (5-10 s-1). It is concluded that the enzyme-catalysed 4-nitrophenyl ester hydrolysis involves a group on the enzyme that is different from the active-site group that binds aldehydes on the normal oxidative pathway.  相似文献   

19.
1. The activation of sheep liver cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenase by diethylstilboestrol and by 2,2'-dithiodipyridine is described. The effects of the two modifiers are very similar with respect to variation with acetaldehyde concentration, pH and temperature. Thus the degree of activation is maximal when the enzyme is assayed at approx. 1 mM-acetaldehyde, is greater at 25 degrees C than at 37 degrees C, and is greater at pH 7.4 than at pH 9.75. With low concentrations of acetaldehyde both modifiers decrease the enzyme activity. 2. Diethylstilboestrol affects the sheep liver cytoplasmic enzyme in a very similar way to that previously described for a rabbit liver cytoplasmic enzyme. Preliminary experiments show that the same is true for a preparation of human liver aldehyde dehydrogenase. It is proposed that sensitivity to diethylstilboestrol (and steroids) is a common property of all mammalian cytoplasmic aldehyde dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

20.
The formation of binary complexes between sturgeon apoglyceralddhyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, coenzymes (NAD+ and NADH) and substrates (phosphate, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate and 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate) has been studied spectrophotometrically and spectrofluorometrica-ly. Coenzyme binding to the apoenzyme can be characterized by several distinct spectroscopic properties: (a) the low intensity absorption band centered at 360 nm which is specific of NAD+ binding (Racker band); (b) the quenching of the enzyme fluorescence upon coenzyme binding; (c) the quenching of the fluorescence of the dihydronicotinamide moiety of the reduced coenzyme (NADH); (D) the hypochromicity and the red shift of the absorption band of NADH centered at 338 nm; (e) the coenzyme-induced difference spectra in the enzyme absorbance region. The analysis of these spectroscopic properties shows that up to four molecules of coenzyme are bound per molecule of enzyme tetramer. In every case, each successively bound coenzyme molecule contributes identically to the total observed change. Two classes of binding sites are apparent at lower temperatures for NAD+ Binding. Similarly, the binding of NADH seems to involve two distinct classes of binding sites. The excitation fluorescence spectra of NADH in the binary complex shows a component centered at 260 nm as in aqueous solution. This is consistent with a "folded" conformation of the reduced coenzyme in the binary complex, contradictory to crystallographic results. Possible reasons for this discrepancy are discussed. Binding of phosphorylated substrates and orthophosphate induce similar difference spectra in the enzyme absorbance region. No anticooperativity is detectable in the binding of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. These results are discussed in light of recent crystallographic studies on glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

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