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1.
Glutamate dehydrogenase preparations from several sources have been shown to have suffered limited proteolysis during purification. This proteolysis has been previously shown to involve removal of the N-terminal tetrapeptide and to result in changes in the regulatory properties of the enzyme. In the present work the previously unidentified N-terminal residue of the unproteolysed enzyme from ox brain and liver is shown to be cysteine. The thiol group of this residue is masked in the native enzyme but it becomes accessible after reduction. Exposure of solutions of the unproteolysed enzyme to air oxidation causes large changes in its sensitivity to inhibition by the antipsychotic drug perphenazine, GTP and by high concentrations of NADH. No such changes occurred in the behaviour of preparations of the enzyme that had suffered proteolysis during purification under these conditions.Special issue dedicated to Dr. Santiago Grisolia.  相似文献   

2.
Kinetic constants were determined for commercially available samples of ox liver glutamate dehydrogenase, which had previously been shown to have suffered limited proteolysis during preparation, with a range of substrates and effectors. These were compared with the values obtained with enzyme preparations purified in such a way as to prevent this proteolysis from occurring [McCarthy, Walker & Tipton (1980) Biochem. J. 191, 605-611]. The Km values and maximum velocities determined with different substrates revealed little difference between the two preparations although the proteolysed enzyme had lower Km values for NH4+ and glutamate when the activities were determined with NADPH and NADP+ respectively. This preparation was more sensitive to inhibition by Cl- ions but less sensitive to inhibition by high concentrations of the substrate NADH. The two preparations also differed in their sensitivities to allosteric effectors, with the proteolysed enzyme being the less sensitive to inhibition by GTP. At high concentrations of NADH, this preparation was also more sensitive to activation by ADP and ATP.  相似文献   

3.
The concentration-dependent aggregation behaviour of purified ox liver and brain glutamate dehydrogenase preparations was compared with that of commercially-obtained preparations of the liver enzyme, which have recently been shown to have suffered proteolytic cleavage. Although there were no significant differences in these effects, the presence of 3 mM-GTP and 3 mM-NADH had markedly different effects on the two types of preparation. In this situation, at higher protein concentrations the commercially obtained preparations existed in a higher degree of aggregation than those which had not suffered proteolysis. Studies of the effects of GTP and NADH concentrations on the sedimentation coefficients at a fixed enzyme concentration suggested these effects to be largely due to differences in the affinities of the two preparations for nucleotides.  相似文献   

4.
The 2',3'-dialdehyde derivative of NADPH (oNADPH) acts as a coenzyme for the reaction catalyzed by bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase. Incubation of 250 microM oNADPH with enzyme for 300 min at 30 degrees C and pH 8.0 yields covalent incorporation of 1.0 mol of oNADPH/mol of enzyme subunit. The modified enzyme has a functional catalytic site and is activated by ADP, but is no longer inhibited by high NADH concentrations and exhibits decreased sensitivity to GTP inhibition. Using the change in inhibition by 600 microM NADH or 1 microM GTP to monitor the reaction leads to rate constants of 44.0 and 41.5 min-1 M-1, respectively, suggesting that loss of inhibition by the two regulatory compounds results from reaction by oNADPH at a single location. The oNADPH incorporation is proportional to the decreased inhibition by 600 microM NADH or 1 microM GTP, extrapolating to less than 1 mol of oNADPH/mol of subunit when the maximum change in NADH or GTP inhibition has occurred. Modified enzyme is still 93% inhibited at saturating levels of GTP, although its K1 is increased 20-fold to 4.6 microM. The kinetic effects caused by oNADPH are not prevented by alpha-ketoglutarate, ADP, 5 mM NADH, or 200 microM GTP alone, but are prevented by 5 mM NADH with 200 microM GTP. Incorporation of oNADPH into enzyme at 255 min is 0.94 mol/mol of peptide chain in the absence of ligands but only 0.53 mol/mol of peptide chain in the presence of the protectants 5 mM NADH plus 200 microM GTP. These results indicate that oNADPH modifies specifically about 0.4-0.5 sites/enzyme subunit or about 3 sites/enzyme hexamer and that reaction occurs at a GTP-dependent inhibitory NADH site of glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

5.
D H Ozturk  D Safer  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1990,29(30):7112-7118
Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase reacts with 8-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]adenosine 5'-diphosphate (8-BDB-TA-5'-DP) and 5'-triphosphate (8-BDB-TA-5'-TP) to yield enzyme with about 1 mol of reagent incorporated/mol of enzyme subunit. The modified enzyme is catalytically active but has decreased sensitivity to inhibition by GTP, reduced extent of activation by ADP, and diminished inhibition by high concentrations of NADH. Since modified enzyme, like native glutamate dehydrogenase, reversibly binds more than 1 mol each of ADP and GTP, it is unlikely that 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP reacts directly within either the ADP or GTP regulatory sites. The rate constant for reaction of enzyme exhibits a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration with KD = 89 microM for 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP and 240 microM for 8-BDB-TA-5'-DP. The ligands ADP and GTP alone and NADH alone produce only small decreases in the rate constant for the reaction of enzyme with 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP, but the combined addition of 5 mM NADH + 200 microM GTP reduces the reaction rate constant more than 10-fold and the reagent incorporation to about 0.1 mol/mol of enzyme subunit. These results suggest that 8-BDB-TA-5'-TP reacts as a nucleotide affinity label in the region of the GTP-dependent NADH regulatory site of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

6.
Initial-rate studies were made of the oxidation of L-glutamate by NAD+ and NADP+ catalysed by highly purified preparations of dogfish liver glutamate dehydrogenase. With NAD+ as coenzyme the kinetics show the same features of coenzyme activation as seen with the bovine liver enzyme [Engel & Dalziel (1969) Biochem. J. 115, 621--631]. With NADP+ as coenzyme, initial rates are much slower than with NAD+, and Lineweaver--Burk plots are linear over extended ranges of substrate and coenzyme concentration. Stopped-flow studies with NADP+ as coenzyme give no evidence for the accumulation of significant concentrations of NADPH-containing complexes with the enzyme in the steady state. Protection studies against inactivation by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate indicate that NAD+ and NADP+ give the same degree of protection in the presence of sodium glutarate. The results are used to deduce information about the mechanism of glutamate oxidation by the enzyme. Initial-rate studies of the reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate by NADH and NADPH catalysed by dogfish liver glutamate dehydrogenase showed that the kinetic features of the reaction are very similar with both coenzymes, but reactions with NADH are much faster. The data show that a number of possible mechanisms for the reaction may be discarded, including the compulsory mechanism (previously proposed for the enzyme) in which the sequence of binding is NAD(P)H, NH4+ and 2-oxoglutarate. The kinetic data suggest either a rapid-equilibrium random mechanism or the compulsory mechanism with the binding sequence NH4+, NAD(P)H, 2-oxoglutarate. However, binding studies and protection studies indicate that coenzyme and 2-oxoglutarate do bind to the free enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
1. The reaction of 4-iodoacetamidosalicylate with bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase is dependent on pH. The pH-activity curve is bell-shaped and can be described by apparent pK values of 7.8+/-0.2 and 9.1+/-0.2. 2. Enzyme in which lysine-126 has been modified by 4-iodoacetamidosalicylate has unaltered sedimentation characteristics except when measured in the presence of GTP and NADH. 3. GTP binding to the inhibited enzyme is unaltered. However, GTP can no longer promote the binding of a second molecule of NADH, since this is already bound to the inhibited enzyme without GTP. 4. The equilibrium binding of ADP, GTP, NAD-sulphite and NADH (when measured at low concentrations) was largely unchanged by modification. 5. The number of binding sites for 2-oxoglutarate to the enzyme-NADH complex were decreased by 60% in an enzyme that has been inhibited by 70%.  相似文献   

8.
D H Ozturk  I Park  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1992,31(43):10544-10555
A new guanosine nucleotide has been synthesized and characterized: guanosine 5'-O-[S-(3-bromo-2-oxopropyl)]thiophosphate (GMPSBOP), with a reactive functional group which can be placed at a position equivalent to the pyrophosphate region of GTP. This new analog is negatively charged at neutral pH and is similar in size to GTP. GMPSBOP has been shown to react with bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase with an incorporation of 2 mol of reagent/mol of subunit. The modification reaction desensitizes the enzyme to inhibition by GTP, activation by ADP, and inhibition by high concentrations of NADH, but does not affect the catalytic activity of the enzyme. The rate constant for reaction of GMPSBOP with the enzyme exhibits a nonlinear dependence on reagent concentration with KD = 75 microM. The addition to the reaction mixture of alpha-ketoglutarate, GTP, ADP, or NADH alone results in little decrease in the rate constant, but the combined addition of 5 mM NADH with 0.4 mM GTP or with 10 mM alpha-ketoglutarate reduces the reaction rate approximately 6-fold. GMPSBOP modifies peptides containing Met-169 and Tyr-262, of which Tyr-262 is not critical for the decreased sensitivity of the enzyme toward allosteric ligands. The presence of 0.4 mM GTP plus 5 mM NADH protects the enzyme against reaction at both Met-169 and Tyr-262, but yields enzyme with 1 mol of reagent incorporated/mol of subunit which is modified at an alternate site, Met-469. In the presence of 0.2 mM GTP + 0.1 mM NADH, protection against modification of Tyr-262, but only partial protection against labeling of Met-169, is observed. In contrast, the presence of 10 mM alpha-ketoglutarate + 5 mM NADH protect only against reaction with Met-169. The results suggest that GMPSBOP reacts at the GTP-dependent NADH regulatory site [Lark, R. H., & Colman, R. F. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 10659-10666] of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase, which markedly affects the sensitivity of the enzyme to GTP inhibition. The reaction of GMPSBOP with Met-169 is primarily responsible for the altered allosteric properties of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Human glutamate dehydrogenase exists in hGDH1 (housekeeping isozyme) and in hGDH2 (nerve-specific isozyme), which differ markedly in their allosteric regulation. In the nervous system, GDH is enriched in astrocytes and is important for recycling glutamate, a major excitatory neurotransmitter during neurotransmission. Chloroquine has been known to be a potent inhibitor of house-keeping GDH1 in permeabilized liver and kidney-cortex of rabbit. However, the effects of chloroquine on nerve-specific GDH2 have not been reported yet. In the present study, we have investigated the effects of chloroquine on hGDH2 at various conditions and showed that chloroquine could inhibit the activity of hGDH2 at dose-dependent manner. Studies of the chloroquine inhibition on enzyme activity revealed that hGDH2 was relatively less sensitive to chloroquine inhibition than house-keeping hGDH1. Incubation of hGDH2 was uncompetitive with respect of NADH and non-competitive with respect of 2-oxoglutarate. The inhibitory effect of chloroquine on hGDH2 was abolished, although in part, by the presence of ADP and L-leucine, whereas GTP did not change the sensitivity to chloroquine inhibition. Our results show a possibility that chloroquine may be used in regulating GDH activity and subsequently glutamate concentration in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

10.
Human glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), an enzyme central to the metabolism of glutamate, is known to exist in housekeeping and nerve tissue-specific isoforms encoded by the GLUD1 and GLUD2 genes, respectively. As there is evidence that GDH function in vivo is regulated, and that regulatory mutations of human GDH are associated with metabolic abnormalities, we sought here to characterize further the functional properties of the two human isoenzymes. Each was obtained in recombinant form by expressing the corresponding cDNAs in Sf9 cells and studied with respect to its regulation by endogenous allosteric effectors, such as purine nucleotides and branched chain amino acids. Results showed that L-leucine, at 1.0 mM:, enhanced the activity of the nerve tissue-specific (GLUD2-derived) enzyme by approximately 1,600% and that of the GLUD1-derived GDH by approximately 75%. Concentrations of L-leucine similar to those present in human tissues ( approximately 0.1 mM:) had little effect on either isoenzyme. However, the presence of ADP (10-50 microM:) sensitized the two isoenzymes to L-leucine, permitting substantial enzyme activation at physiologically relevant concentrations of this amino acid. Nonactivated GLUD1 GDH was markedly inhibited by GTP (IC(50) = 0.20 microM:), whereas nonactivated GLUD2 GDH was totally insensitive to this compound (IC(50) > 5,000 microM:). In contrast, GLUD2 GDH activated by ADP and/or L-leucine was amenable to this inhibition, although at substantially higher GTP concentrations than the GLUD1 enzyme. ADP and L-leucine, acting synergistically, modified the cooperativity curves of the two isoenzymes. Kinetic studies revealed significant differences in the K:(m) values obtained for alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate for the GLUD1- and the GLUD2-derived GDH, with the allosteric activators differentially altering these values. Hence, the activity of the two human GDH is regulated by distinct allosteric mechanisms, and these findings may have implications for the biologic functions of these isoenzymes.  相似文献   

11.
1. One mol of diethyl pyrocarbonate will react with one mol of glutamate dehydrogenase polypeptide chains to form one mol of N(1)-carbethoxyhistidine. Reaction is prevented by NADH. 2. The 1:1 complex has an increased specific activity (1.4-2.0-fold). 3. The reason for the activation is discussed. The results are not consistent with NADH dissociation from the enzyme-glutamate-NADH complex being rate-limiting in the steady state measured. 4. The effects of modification on the properties of the enzyme were investigated. The effects of GTP and NAD(+) on the enzyme activity are unaltered by activation. NADH binding is unaltered and there is no apparent change in the molecular weight. However, the activated enzyme can still be further activated by ADP. K(s) for ADP is decreased fivefold.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: Bovine glutamate dehydrogenase (boGDH) is a homohexameric, mitochondrial enzyme that reversibly catalyzes the oxidative deamination of L-glutamate to 2-oxoglutarate using either NADP(H) or NAD(H) with comparable efficacy. GDH represents a key enzymatic link between catabolic and biosynthetic pathways, and is therefore ubiquitous in both higher and lower organisms. Only mammalian GDH exhibits strong negative cooperativity with respect to the coenzyme, however, and is regulated by a large number of allosteric effectors. RESULTS: The atomic structure of boGDH in complex with NADH, glutamate, and the allosteric inhibitor GTP has been determined to 2.8 A resolution. The major difference between the bacterial and bovine GDH structures is the presence of an additional 'antenna' in boGDH that protrudes from each trimer, twisting counterclockwise along the threefold axis. NADH and glutamate are clearly observed in the active site, but the contacts differ slightly from those observed in Clostridium symbiosum GDH. A second, inhibitory NADH molecule lies buried in the core of the hexamer. Finally, two GTP molecules bind near the hinge region connecting the NAD(+)- and glutamate-binding domains. CONCLUSIONS: We propose that the antenna serves as an intersubunit communication conduit during negative cooperativity and allosteric regulation. GTP and NADH inhibit GDH by keeping the catalytic cleft in a closed conformation. In contrast, ADP probably binds to the back of the NAD(+)-binding domain and activates the enzyme by keeping the catalytic cleft open. Extensive contacts between antennae within the crystal lattice may represent hexamer interactions in solution and, perhaps, with other enzymes within the mitochondrial matrix.  相似文献   

13.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate:NAD+ oxidoreductase (deaminating); EC 1.4.1.2) has been purified from Peptostreptococcus asaccharolyticus in a single step using dye-ligand chromatography. The enzyme (GDH) was present in high yields and was stabilized in crude extracts. A subunit molecular weight of 49000 +/- 500 was determined by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and six bands were obtained after cross-linking the subunits with dimethyl suberimidate. This bacterial GDH was predominantly NAD+-linked, but was able to utilize both NADP+ and NADPH at 4% of the rates with NAD+ and NADH, respectively. An investigation of the amino acid specificity revealed some similarities with GDH from mammalian sources and some clear differences. The values of apparent Km for the substrates ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate, NADH, NAD+ and glutamate were 18.4, 0.82, 0.066, 0.031 and 6 mM, respectively. The P. asaccharolyticus GDH was not regulated by purine nucleotides, but was subject to strong inhibition with increasing ionic strength.  相似文献   

14.
Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase reacts rapidly with 2,3-butanedione to yield modified enzyme with 29% of its original maximum activity, but no change in its Michaelis constants for substrates and coenzymes. No significant reduction in the inactivation rate is produced by the addition of the allosteric activator ADP or inhibitor GTP, while partial protection against inactivation is provided by the coenzyme NAD+ or substrate 2-oxoglutarate when added separately. The most marked decrease in the rate of inactivation (about 10-fold) is provided by the combined addition of NAD+ and 2-oxoglutarate, suggesting that modification takes place in the region of the active site. Reaction with 2,3-butanedione also results in loss of the ability of the enzyme to be activated by ADP. Addition of ADP (but not NAD+, 2-oxoglutarate or GTP) to the incubation mixture protects markedly against the loss of activatability of ADP. It is concluded that 2,3-butanedione produces two distinguishable effects on glutamate dehydrogenase: a relatively specific modification of the regulatory ADP site and a distinct modification in the active center. Reaction of two arginyl residues per peptide chain appears to be responsible for disruption of the ADP activation property of the enzyme, while alteration of a maximum of five arginyl residues can be related to the reduction of maximum catalytic activity. Electrostatic interactions between the positively charged arginine groups and the negatively charged substrate, coenzyme and allosteric purine nucleotide may be important for the normal function of glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

15.
1. We have examined systematically the relationship between the percentage reduction of cardiac mitochondrial NAD and the flux through oxidative phosphorylation, as measured by O2 uptake. Reduction of NAD was varied by varying the concentration of palmitoyl-L-carnitine, pyruvate, 2-oxoglutarate or glutamate in the presence of malate as the oxidizable substrate. 2. In the presence of ADP (State 3 respiration) there was a substantially linear positive relationship between O2 uptake and the percentage reduction of NAD. Coupled respiration in the absence of ADP also showed an increase with increasing NADH, with the exact shape of the relationship being variable. 3. When pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase activity were increased by increasing medium Ca2+ concentration within the range 5 nM to 1.23 microM, at non-saturating substrate concentrations, there was again a positive relationship between O2 uptake and the reduction of NAD; however, rates of O2 uptake tended to be higher at given values of NAD reduction when the incubation medium contained Ca2+. This is taken to indicate an activation by Ca2+ of the enzymes of phosphorylation or of the respiratory chain, in addition to the dehydrogenase activation. 4. When carboxyatractyloside plus ADP were used to generate 50% State 3 rates of O2 uptake with pyruvate or 2-oxoglutarate, sensitivity to Ca2+ was retained. However, when oligomycin plus 1 mM-ADP and 1 mM-ATP were used to generate 50% State 3, no such dependence was seen. 5. The results are interpreted to indicate a substantial role for substrate dehydrogenation in the overall regulation of oxidative phosphorylation when substrates are available at near-physiological concentrations.  相似文献   

16.
Glutamate dehydrogenase in disrupted mitochondrial preparations is activated by L-leucine to a much greater extent than is the purified enzyme. A factor, or factors, responsible for modulating the sensitivity of L-leucine is lost during the purification of the enzyme. Although both cardiolipin and phosphatidylserine are inhibitors of the enzyme, only the inhibition by the former phospholipid is reversed by L-leucine. The inhibition of glutamate dehydrogenase by its binding to cardiolipin in the disrupted mitochondrial preparations and its relief by L-leucine could account for the greater sensitivity of such preparations to activation by that amino acid.  相似文献   

17.
By reaction of adenosine 5'-monothiophosphate with benzophenone-4-maleimide, we synthesized adenosine 5'-O-[S-(4-succinimidyl-benzophenone)thiophosphate] (AMPS-Succ-BP) as a photoreactive ADP analogue. Bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase is known to be allosterically activated by ADP, but the ADP site has not been located in the crystal structure of the hexameric enzyme [Peterson, P. E., and Smith, T. J. (1999) Structure 7, 769-782]. In the dark, AMPS-Succ-BP reversibly activates GDH. Irradiation of the complex of glutamate dehydrogenase and AMPS-Succ-BP at lambda >300 nm causes a time-dependent, irreversible 2-fold activation of the enzyme. The k(obs) for photoactivation shows nonlinear dependence on the concentration of AMPS-Succ-BP, with K(R) = 4.9 microM and k(max) = 0.076 min(-)(1). The k(obs) for photoreaction by 20 microM AMPS-Succ-BP is decreased 10-fold by 200 microM ADP, but is reduced less than 2-fold by NAD, NADH, GTP, or alpha-ketoglutarate. Modified enzyme is no longer activated by ADP, but is still inhibited by GTP and high concentrations of NADH. These results indicate that reaction of AMPS-Succ-BP occurs within the ADP site. The enzyme incorporates up to 0.5 mol of [(3)H]AMPS-Succ-BP/mol of enzyme subunit or 3 mol of reagent/mol of hexamer. The peptide Lys(488)-Glu(495) has been identified as the only reaction target, and the data suggest that Arg(491) is the modified amino acid. Arg(491) (in the C-terminal helix close to the GTP #2 binding domain of GDH) is thus considered to be at or near the enzyme's allosteric ADP site. On the basis of these results, the AMPS-Succ-BP was positioned within the crystal structure of glutamate dehydrogenase, where it should also mark the ADP binding site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetic mechanism of homogeneous human glutamic-gamma-semialdehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.5.1.12) with glutamic gamma-semialdehyde as substrate was determined by initial-velocity, product-inhibition and dead-end-inhibition studies to be compulsory ordered with rapid interconversion of the ternary complexes (Theorell-Chance). Product-inhibition studies with NADH gave a competitive pattern versus varied NAD+ concentrations and a non-competitive pattern versus varied glutamic gamma-semialdehyde concentrations, whereas those with glutamate gave a competitive pattern versus varied glutamic gamma-semialdehyde concentrations and a non-competitive pattern versus varied NAD+ concentrations. The order of substrate binding and release was determined by dead-end-inhibition studies with ADP-ribose and L-proline as the inhibitors and shown to be: NAD+ binds to the enzyme first, followed by glutamic gamma-semialdehyde, with glutamic acid being released before NADH. The Kia and Kib values were 15 +/- 7 microM and 12.5 microM respectively, and the Ka and Kb values were 374 +/- 40 microM and 316 +/- 36 microM respectively; the maximal velocity V was 70 +/- 5 mumol of NADH/min per mg of enzyme. Both NADH and glutamate were product inhibitors, with Ki values of 63 microM and 15,200 microM respectively. NADH release from the enzyme may be the rate-limiting step for the overall reaction.  相似文献   

19.
A photoactive coenzyme analog of NAD+ has been synthesized by chemically coupling [32P]2-azido-AMP and NMN to produce [32P]nicotinamide 2-azidoadenosine dinucleotide (2-azido-NAD+). The utility of 2-azido-NAD+ as an effective active-site-directed photoprobe was demonstrated using bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase as a model enzyme. In the absence of ultraviolet light, 2-azido-NAD+ is a substrate for this enzyme. Photoincorporation of probe was saturable with two different apparent dissociation constants of 10 microM and 40 microM. Protection of photoinsertion was seen with the natural substrate NAD+ with apparent dissociation constants of less than 5 microM and 25 microM. This observation may be explained on the basis of negative cooperative interaction between the subunits. The photoinsertion of 2-azido-NAD+ was increased by GTP and decreased by ADP in accordance with their known effects on NAD+ binding. When the enzyme was covalently modified by photolysis in the presence of saturating amounts of photoprobe, an approximately 40% inhibition of the enzyme activity was observed. These results demonstrate that the photoaffinity coenzyme analog has potential application as a probe to characterize NAD(+)-binding proteins and to identify the active sites of these proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Inorganic phosphate, a strong activator of glutamate dehydrogenase at pH 8.0–9.0, is an inhibitor at pH 6.0–7.6. The extent of inhibition increases with the decrease of pH. The same effect is shown by other electrolytes, including Tris-hydroxymethyl-aminomethane and NaCl.The combined effect of pH and ionic strength also alters the allosteric characteristics of the enzyme. Lowering the pH minimizes the activation by high concentrations of NAD; phosphate partially restores this activation. The allosteric activation by ADP disappears at pH around neutrality; in the pH range 6.0–7.0, ADP becomes a strong inhibitor, the inhibition being enhanced by the addition of ionic compounds. Similarly, the extent of allosteric inhibition by guanosine 5′-triphosphate (pyro) (GTP), which is maximal at pH 9.0, decreases at lower pH values and a slight activation is observed in the presence of electrolytes at pH 6.0.Glutamate dehydrogenase, selectively desensitized by dinitrophenylation in the presence of ADP, can be activated by ADP at pH 9.0, but is no longer inhibited by the same effector at pH 6.0, high salt concentration. The densensitized enzyme is not inhibited by GTP at pH 9.0, but is activated by this effector at pH 6.0 in the presence of ionic compounds. Conversely, GTP-protected dinitrophenylated glutamate dehydrogenase is desensitized only to the effect of the activating modifier, ADP at pH 9.0, GTP at pH 6.0, high salt concentration. These findings suggest that the conformation of each allosteric site of glutamate dehydrogenase is changed by pH and ionic strength so that it keeps its specificity for the ligand which brings about a given effect, activation or inhibition, independently from its chemical structure.  相似文献   

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