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1.
Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate is an essential cofactor for many enzymes responsible for the metabolic conversions of amino acids. Two pathways for its de novo synthesis are known. The pathway utilized by Escherichia coli consists of six enzymatic steps catalyzed by six different enzymes. The fourth step is catalyzed by 4-hydroxythreonine-4-phosphate dehydrogenase (PdxA, E.C. 1.1.1.262), which converts 4-hydroxy-l-threonine phosphate (HTP) to 3-amino-2-oxopropyl phosphate. This divalent metal ion-dependent enzyme has a strict requirement for the phosphate ester form of the substrate HTP, but can utilize either NADP+ or NAD+ as redox cofactor. We report the crystal structure of E. coli PdxA and its complex with HTP and Zn2+. The protein forms tightly bound dimers. Each monomer has an alpha/beta/alpha-fold and can be divided into two subdomains. The active site is located at the dimer interface, within a cleft between the two subdomains and involves residues from both monomers. A Zn2+ ion is bound within each active site, coordinated by three conserved histidine residues from both monomers. In addition two conserved amino acids, Asp247 and Asp267, play a role in maintaining integrity of the active site. The substrate is anchored to the enzyme by the interactions of its phospho group and by coordination of the amino and hydroxyl groups by the Zn2+ ion. PdxA is structurally similar to, but limited in sequence similarity with isocitrate dehydrogenase and isopropylmalate dehydrogenase. These structural similarities and the comparison with a NADP-bound isocitrate dehydrogenase suggest that the cofactor binding mode of PdxA is very similar to that of the other two enzymes and that PdxA catalyzes a stepwise oxidative decarboxylation of the substrate HTP.  相似文献   

2.
The three isozymes of 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase from Escherichia coli were overproduced, purified, and characterized with respect to their requirement for metal cofactor. The isolated isozymes contained 0.2-0.3 mol of iron/mol of enzyme monomer, variable amounts of zinc, and traces of copper. Enzymatic activity of the native enzymes was stimulated 3-4-fold by the addition of Fe2+ ions to the reaction mixture and was eliminated by treatment of the enzymes with EDTA. The chelated enzymes were reactivated by a variety of divalent metal ions, including Ca2+, Cd2+, Co2+, Cu2+, Fe2+, Mn2+, Ni2+, and Zn2+. The specific activities of the reactivated enzymes varied widely with the different metals as follows: Mn2+ greater than Cd2+, Fe2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Ni2+, Cu2+, Zn2+ much greater than Ca2+. Steady state kinetic analysis of the Mn2+, Fe2+, Co2+, and Zn2+ forms of the phenylalanine-sensitive isozyme (DAHPS(Phe)) revealed that metal variation significantly affected the apparent affinity for the substrate, erythrose 4-phosphate, but not for the second substrate, phosphoenolpyruvate, or for the feedback inhibitor, L-phenylalanine. The tetrameric DAHPS(Phe) exhibited positive homotropic cooperativity with respect to erythrose 4-phosphate, phophoenolpyruvate, and phenylalanine in the presence of all metals tested.  相似文献   

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

4.
Hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (refers to hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from any species in general) has been purified to apparent homogeneity from the teleost fish Fundulus heteroclitus. The enzyme was characterized for native (210 kDa) and subunit molecular mass (54 kDa), isoelectric point (6.65), amino acid composition, substrate specificity, and metal dependence. Glucose 6-phosphate, galactose 6-phosphate, 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate, glucose 6-sulfate, glucosamine 6-phosphate, and glucose were found to be substrates in the reaction with NADP+, but only glucose was a substrate when NAD+ was used as coenzyme. A unique reaction mechanism for the forward direction was found for this enzyme when glucose 6-phosphate and NADP+ were used as substrates; ordered with glucose 6-phosphate binding first. NAD+ was found to be a competitive inhibitor toward NADP+ and an uncompetitive inhibitor with regard to glucose 6-phosphate in this reaction; Vmax = 7.56 mumol/min/mg, Km(NADP+) = 1.62 microM, Km(glucose 6-phosphate) = 7.29 microM, Kia(glucose 6-phosphate) = 8.66 microM, and Ki(NAD+) = 0.49 microM. The use of alternative substrates confirmed this result. This type of reaction mechanism has not been previously reported for a dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

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

6.
J E Scheffler  H J Fromm 《Biochemistry》1986,25(21):6659-6665
The fluorescent nucleotide analogue formycin 5'-monophosphate (FMP) inhibits rabbit liver fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (I50 = 17 microM, Hill coefficient = 1.2), as does the natural regulator AMP (I50 = 13 microM, Hill coefficient = 2.3), but exhibits little or no cooperativity of inhibition. Binding of FMP to fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase can be monitored by the increased fluorescence emission intensity (a 2.7-fold enhancement) or the increased fluorescence polarization of the probe. A single dissociation constant for FMP binding of 6.6 microM (4 sites per tetramer) was determined by monitoring fluorescence intensity. AMP displaces FMP from the enzyme as evidenced by a decrease in FMP fluorescence and polarization. The substrates, fructose 6-phosphate and fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, and inhibitors, methyl alpha-D-fructofuranoside 1,6-bisphosphate and fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, all increase the maximal fluorescence of enzyme-bound FMP but have little or no effect on FMP binding. Weak metal binding sites on rabbit liver fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase have been detected by the effect of Zn2+, Mn2+, and Mg2+ in displacing FMP from the enzyme. This is observed as a decrease in FMP fluorescence intensity and polarization in the presence of enzyme as a function of divalent cation concentration. The order of binding by divalent cations is Zn2+ = Mn2+ greater than Mg2+, and the Kd for Mn2+ displacement of FMP is 91 microM. Methyl alpha-D-fructofuranoside 1,6-bisphosphate, as well as fructose 6-phosphate and inorganic phosphate, enhances metal-mediated FMP displacement from rabbit liver fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides is irreversibly inactivated by the 2,3'-dialdehyde of NADP+ (oNADP+) in the absence of substrate. The inactivation is first order with respect to NADP+ concentration and follows saturation kinetics, indicating that the enzyme initially forms a reversible complex with the inhibitor followed by covalent modification (KI = 1.8 mM). NADP+ and NAD+ protect the enzyme from inactivation by oNADP+. The pK of inactivation is 8.1. oNADP+ is an effective coenzyme in assays of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (Km = 200 microM). Kinetic evidence and binding studies with [14C] oNADP+ indicate that one molecule of oNADP+ binds per subunit of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase when the enzyme is completely inactivated. The interaction between oNADP+ and the enzyme does not generate a Schiff's base, or a conjugated Schiff's base, but the data are consistent with the formation of a dihydroxymorpholino derivative.  相似文献   

8.
Aldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDHs) convert aldehydes into their corresponding carboxylic acids. ALDH1A1, also known as ALDH class 1 (ALDH1) or retinaldehyde dehydrogenase (RALDH1), prefers retinal to acetaldehyde as a substrate. To investigate the effects of divalent cations on the dehydrogenase activity of Xenopus laevis ALDH1A1, the formation of acetate and retinoic acid from acetaldehyde and retinal, respectively, was investigated in the presence of Ca2+, Mg2+, Mn2+ or Zn2+. All divalent cations tested inhibited the oxidation of acetaldehyde and retinal by ALDH1A1. When acetaldehyde was used as a substrate, the 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50) were 10, 24, 35 and 220 microM for Zn2+, Mn2+, Mg2+ and Ca2+, respectively. Kinetic studies of ALDH1A1 dehydrogenase activity in the presence or absence of each cation revealed that the inhibition mode by cations was uncompetitive against acetaldehyde, retinal, and NAD+, and that their inhibitory potencies were greater against acetaldehyde than retinal. It was concluded that the divalent cations inhibited X. laevis ALDH1A1 activity in a substrate-dependent manner by affecting a step of the dehydrogenase reaction that occurred after the formation of the ternary complex of the enzyme, substrate, and coenzyme.  相似文献   

9.
A novel enzyme system, myo-inositol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase, has been isolated from germinating mung bean seeds. The dehydrogenation and cleavage of myo-inositol 1-phosphate by this enzyme leads to the synthesis of a pentose phosphate which appears to be ribulose 5-phosphate. The pH optimum of the enzyme is 8.6; NAD+ is required as coenzyme and no other nucleotides can replace NAD+. Mono- or divalent cations are not essential for the enzyme activity. Stoichiometry of the reaction suggests that 2 mol of NAD+ are reduced per mol of ribulose-5-P generated.  相似文献   

10.
The algC gene from Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been shown to encode phosphomannomutase (PMM), an essential enzyme for biosynthesis of alginate and lipopolysaccharide (LPS). This gene was overexpressed under control of the tac promoter, and the enzyme was purified and its substrate specificity and metal ion effects were characterized. The enzyme was determined to be a monomer with a molecular mass of 50 kDa. The enzyme catalyzed the interconversion of mannose 1-phosphate (M1P) and mannose 6-phosphate, as well as that of glucose 1-phosphate (G1P) and glucose 6-phosphate. The apparent Km values for M1P and G1P were 17 and 22 microM, respectively. On the basis of Kcat/Km ratio, the catalytic efficiency for G1P was about twofold higher than that for M1P. PMM also catalyzed the conversion of ribose 1-phosphate and 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate to their corresponding isomers, although activities were much lower. Purified PMM/phosphoglucomutase (PGM) required Mg2+ for maximum activity; Mn2+ was the only other divalent metal that showed some activation. The presence of other divalent metals in addition to Mg2+ in the reaction inhibited the enzymatic activity. PMM and PGM activities could not be detected in nonmucoid algC mutant strain 8858 and in LPS-rough algC mutant strain AK1012, while they were present in the wild-type strains as well as in algC-complemented mutant strains. This evidence suggests that AlgC functions as PMM and PGM in vivo, converting phosphomannose and phosphoglucose in the biosynthesis of both alginate and LPS.  相似文献   

11.
Enzymatic properties, renaturation and metabolic role of mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli. D-mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase was purified to homogeneity from Escherichia coli, and its physicochemical and enzymatic properties were investigated. The molecular weight of the polypeptide chain is 45,000 as determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in denaturing conditions. High performance size exclusion chromatography gives an apparent molecular weight of 47,000 for the native enzyme, showing that D-mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase is a monomeric NAD-dependent dehydrogenase. D-mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase is rapidly denatured by 6 M guanidine hydrochloride. Non-superimposable transition curves for the loss of activity and the changes in fluorescence suggest the existence of a partially folded inactive intermediate. The protein can be fully renatured after complete unfolding, and the regain of both native fluorescence and activity occurs rapidly within a few seconds at pH 7.5 and 20 degrees C. Such a high rate of reactivation is unusual for a protein of this size. D-mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase is specific for mannitol-1-phosphate (or fructose-6-phosphate) as a substrate and NAD+ (or NADH) as a cofactor. Zinc is not required for the activity. The affinity of D-mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase for the reduced or oxidized form of its substrate or cofactor remains constant with pH. The affinity for NADH is 20-fold higher than for NAD+. The forward and reverse catalytic rate constants of the reaction: mannitol-1-phosphate + NAD+ in equilibrium fructose-6-phosphate + NADH have different pH dependences. The oxidation of mannitol-1-phosphate has an optimum pH of 9.5, while the reduction of fructose-6-phosphate has its maximum rate at pH 7.0. At pH values around neutrality the maximum rate of reduction of fructose-6-phosphate is much higher than that of oxidation of mannitol-1-phosphate. The enzymatic properties of isolated D-mannitol-1-phosphate dehydrogenase are discussed in relation to the role of this enzyme in the intracellular metabolism.  相似文献   

12.
Treatment of E. coli extract with iron/ascorbate preferentially inactivated NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase without affecting glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. NADP-Isocitrate dehydrogenase required divalent metals such as Mg2+, Mn2+ or Fe2+ ion. Iron/ascorbate-dependent inactivation of the enzyme was accompanied with the protein fragmentation as judged by SDS-PAGE. Catalase protecting the enzyme from the inactivation suggests that hydroxyl radical is responsible for the inactivation with fragmentation. TOF-MS analysis showed that molecular masses of the enzyme fragments were 36 and 12, and 33 and 14 kDa as minor components. Based on the amino acid sequence analyses of the fragments, cleavage sites of the enzyme were identified as Asp307-Tyr308 and Ala282-Asp283, which are presumed to be the metal-binding sites. Ferrous ion bound to the metal-binding sites of the E. coli NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase may generate superoxide radical that forms hydrogen peroxide and further hydroxyl radical, causing inactivation with peptide cleavage of the enzyme. Oxidative inactivation of NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase without affecting glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase shows only a little influence on the antioxidant activity supplying NADPH for glutathione regeneration, but may facilitate flux through the glyoxylate bypass as the biosynthetic pathway with the inhibition of the citric acid cycle under aerobic growth conditions of E. coli.  相似文献   

13.
1. Physiological concentrations of either Ca2+ or Mg2+ stimulated L-glycerol 3-phosphate oxidation by intact mitochondria isolated from various mammalian tissues (hamster brown adipose tissue, rat brain, liver of normal and hyperthyroid rats). A higher cation concentration was required for stimulation by Mg2+ than by Ca2+. L-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was the target of the stimulation by both cations as revealed by measurements with intact mitochondria as well as with the solubilized enzyme. With different electron acceptors Ca2+ and Mg2+ stimulation occurred at significantly different cation concentrations. 2. Substrate activation of mitochondrial L-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was observed in intact mitochondria and with the solubilized enzyme isolated from hyperthyroid rats in the absence of Ca2+ and Mg2+. According to kinetic analysis two independent binding sites, functioning with different turnovers and with different affinities for the substrate, could account for the phenomenon. In the presence of Ca2+ or Mg2+ substrate activation could not be detected; the kinetic parameters apparently correspond to the tight substrate-binding site functioning with high turnover. 3. Thiol group(s), which in the absence of Ca2+ and Mg2+ did not participate in the functioning of the enzyme, played an essential role in the binding of these cations to the enzyme, as shown by chemical modification studies. 4. From the solubilized mitochondrial proteins L-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was bound selectively to the hydrophobic phenyl-Sepharose 4B matrix in the presence Ca2+, and the bound enzyme could be eluted with EDTA. This suggests that Ca2+ caused an alteration in the conformation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
A single-vial assay has been developed for N-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate deacetylase, in which [3H]acetate released from 3H-acetyl-labeled substrate is measured in a biphasic liquid scintillation counting system after acidification of the reaction mixture. The deacetylase was partially purified from rat liver, and some of its properties were determined. Chromatography on a calibrated Sepharose CL-6B column indicated a molecular weight of 345,000. The Km for the substrate at pH 8.0 was 0.3 mM. Glucosamine 6-phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate inhibited the enzyme, whereas N-acetylgalactosamine, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylglucosamine 1-phosphate, and glucosamine 1-phosphate were without effect. The effects of several divalent cations were also examined. Under the conditions tested, Ca2+, Mg2+, and Ba2+ had essentially no effect, whereas Mn2+, Ni2+, and Cu2+ were inhibitory and Co2+ stimulated activity at low concentrations but inhibited above 5 mM. An increase in the ionic strength of the reaction mixture to 0.3 M decreased the activity by 40%.  相似文献   

15.
The specificity and kinetic parameters of the reactions catalyzed by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides has been examined under a range of conditions in order to elucidate details about the mechanism of action of this enzyme. The rate of oxidation of glucose 6-phosphate is inhibited by the addition of various organic solvents. However, the low, inherent glucose dehydrogenase activity of this enzyme was stimulated under these conditions, and was further activated by divalent anions that were observed to be inhibitors of the glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenation. From an examination of the pH variation of the enzyme kinetic parameters two groups on the enzyme that appear to be involved in the binding of the phosphate group of the sugar substrate have been detected. An enzyme catalytic group, probably a carboxylic acid, has been identified that accepts the proton from the hydroxyl group at carbon-1 of the sugar substrate during its oxidation to a lactone. The ionization of a group on the enzyme with a pK of 8.7 resulted in an increase in the maximum velocity of the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity of the enzyme as a consequence of a pH-dependent product release step that is no longer rate limiting at high pH. Stabilization of gluconic acid-delta-lactone against nonenzymatic hydrolysis by organic solvents has allowed the kinetic parameters of the reverse reaction to be reliably measured for the first time in a narrow pH range.  相似文献   

16.
Perdeuterated spin label (DSL) analogs of NAD+, with the spin label attached at either the C8 or N6 position of the adenine ring, have been employed in an EPR investigation of models for negative cooperativity binding to tetrameric glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and conformational changes of the DSL-NAD+-enzyme complex during the catalytic reaction. C8-DSL-NAD+ and N6-DSL-NAD+ showed 80 and 45% of the activity of the native NAD+, respectively. Therefore, these spin-labeled compounds are very efficacious for investigations of the motional dynamics and catalytic mechanism of this dehydrogenase. Perdeuterated spin labels enhanced spectral sensitivity and resolution thereby enabling the simultaneous detection of spin-labeled NAD+ in three conditions: (1) DSL-NAD+ freely tumbling in the presence of, but not bound to, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, (2) DSL-NAD+ tightly bound to enzyme subunits remote (58 A) from other NAD+ binding sites, and (3) DSL-NAD+ bound to adjacent monomers and exhibiting electron dipolar interactions (8-9 A or 12-13 A, depending on the analog). Determinations of relative amounts of DSL-NAD+ in these three environments and measurements of the binding constants, K1-K4, permitted characterization of the mathematical model describing the negative cooperativity in the binding of four NAD+ to glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. For enzyme crystallized from rabbit muscle, EPR results were found to be consistent with the ligand-induced sequential model and inconsistent with the pre-existing asymmetry models. The electron dipolar interaction observed between spin labels bound to two adjacent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase monomers (8-9 or 12-13 A) related by the R-axis provided a sensitive probe of conformational changes of the enzyme-DSL-NAD+ complex. When glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate was covalently bound to the active site cysteine-149, an increase in electron dipolar interaction was observed. This increase was consistent with a closer approximation of spin labels produced by steric interactions between the phosphoglyceryl residue and DSL-NAD+. Coenzyme reduction (DSL-NADH) or inactivation of the dehydrogenase by carboxymethylation of the active site cysteine-149 did not produce changes in the dipolar interactions or spatial separation of the spin labels attached to the adenine moiety of the NAD+. However, coenzyme reduction or carboxymethylation did alter the stoichiometry of binding and caused the release of approximately one loosely bound DSL-NAD+ from the enzyme. These findings suggest that ionic charge interactions are important in coenzyme binding at the active site.  相似文献   

17.
L-Sorbose degradation in Klebsiella pneumoniae was shown to follow the pathway L-sorbose leads to L-sorbose-1-phosphate leads to D-glucitol-6-phosphate leads to D-fructose-6-phosphate. Transport and phosphorylation of L-sorbose was catalyzed by membrane-bound enzyme IIsor of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent carbohydrate:phosphotransferase system, specific for and regulated by this ketose and different from all other enzymes II described thus far. Two soluble enzymes, an L-sorbose-1-phosphate reductase and a D-glucitol-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, were involved in the conversion of L-sorbose-1-phosphate to D-fructose-6-phosphate. This dehydrogenase was temperature sensitive, preventing growth of wild-type strains of K. pneumoniae at temperatures above 35 degrees C in the presence of L-sorbose. The enzyme was distinct from a second D-glucitol-6-phosphate dehydrogenase involved in the metabolism of D-glucitol. The sor genes were transferred from the chromosome of nonmotile strains of K. pneumoniae by means of a new R'sor+ plasmid to motile strains of Escherichia coli K-12. Such derivatives not only showed the temperature-sensitive Sor+ phenotype characteristic for K. pneumoniae or Sor+ wild-type strains of E. coli, but also reacted positively to sorbose in chemotaxis tests.  相似文献   

18.
Rat liver microsomal fraction generates 14CO2 from [1(-14)C]glucose 6-phosphate in the presence of NADP+ and a detergent. The activity is mediated through an enzyme system consisting of hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase inherent to the microsomes, with the latter enzyme reaction being a rate-determining step. Both enzymes of the system in microsomes are extremely resistant to trypsin digestion, thereby distinguishing them from the corresponding cytosol enzymes. A stoichiometric relationship was obtained between the generations of NADPH and 14CO2 (2: 1 on a molar basis), indicating that the observed generation of NADPH in microsomes could entirely be accounted for by the action of the enzyme system. A method was devised to measure NADP(H) inside or outside the microsomal vesicles, and it was found that a considerable amount of the cofactor was present within the vesicles. Subfractionation of various intracellular fractions on sucrose density gradients confirmed the close association of NADP(H) with liver microsomes. It is suggested that both enzymes of the system function to generate the reduced form of NADP+ in the luminal space of the endoplasmic reticulum, where NADP(H) and glucose 6-phosphate are available.  相似文献   

19.
6-Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase is the pivotal enzyme that links the gluconate route and the oxidative phase of the pentose phosphate pathway in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The enzyme differs from the known 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenases of other sources in that the Schizosaccharomyces enzyme is tetrameric having a subunit mass of 38 kDa, that it requires NADP+ obligatorily for activity, and that it can be activated by divalent metal ions such as Co2+ and Mn2+. Steady-state kinetic studies were undertaken. Initial rate and product inhibition results suggest that 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase from Schizosaccharomyces pombe catalyzes NADP(+)-linked oxidative decarboxylation of 6-phosphogluconate by an equilibrium random mechanism with two independent binding sites, namely one site for the nicotinamide coenzyme, NADP+/NADPH, and another site for 6-phosphogluconate-D-ribulose-5-phosphate and for CO2. Studies of pH dependence implicated a basic residue with a pK value of 7.4 in the binding of 6-phosphogluconate and an acidic residue with a pK value of 6.7 in the cation-mediated interaction of NADP+ with the enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
The in vitro instability of the phenylalanine-sensitive 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase [DAHPS(Phe)] from Escherichia coli has been found to be due to a metal-catalyzed oxidation mechanism. DAHPS(Phe) is one of three differentially feedback-regulated isoforms of the enzyme which catalyzes the first step of aromatic biosynthesis, the formation of DAHP from phosphoenolpyruvate and D-erythrose-4-phosphate. The activity of the apoenzyme decayed exponentially, with a half-life of about 1 day at room temperature, and the heterotetramer slowly dissociated to the monomeric state. The enzyme was stabilized by the presence of phosphoenolpyruvate or EDTA, indicating that in the absence of substrate, a trace metal(s) was the inactivating agent. Cu2+ and Fe2+, but none of the other divalent metals that activate the enzyme, greatly accelerated the rate of inactivation and subunit dissociation. Both anaerobiosis and the addition of catalase significantly reduced Cu2+-catalyzed inactivation. In the spontaneously inactivated enzyme, there was a net loss of two of the seven thiols per subunit; this value increased with increasing concentrations of added Cu2+. Dithiothreitol completely restored the enzymatic activity and the two lost thiols in the spontaneously inactivated enzyme but was only partially effective in reactivation of the Cu2+-inactivated enzyme. Mutant enzymes with conservative replacements at either of the two active-site cysteines, Cys61 or Cys328, were insensitive to the metal attack. Peptide mapping of the Cu2+-inactivated enzyme revealed a disulfide linkage between these two cysteine residues. All results indicate that DAHPS(Phe) is a metal-catalyzed oxidation system wherein bound substrate protects active-site residues from oxidative attack catalyzed by bound redox metal cofactor. A mechanism of inactivation of DAHPS is proposed that features a metal redox cycle that requires the sequential oxidation of its two active-site cysteines.  相似文献   

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