Abstract: | We report experiments describing the isolation and characterization of ornithine transcarbamylase from normal human liver. Our preparative procedure employs initial centrifugation and heat steps, intermediate batch-wise adsorption and desorption from ion exchange resins and column chromatographic elution from hydroxylapatite, and final purification by gel filtration chromatography and glycerol density gradient centrifugation. The enzyme, purified 580-fold in this way, is homogeneous as judged by native and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Human ornithine transcarbamylase has a molecular weight of 114,000 and is a trimer of identical 38,000 molecular weight subunits. It focuses at pH 6.8 as a single band on polyacrylamide gel, has a COOH-terminal phenylalanine, an NH2-terminal glycine, an apparent Km for L-ornithine of 0.4 mM and for carbamyl phosphate of 0.16 mM, and a pH optimum of 7.7. The enzyme is quite stable over a temperature range from -50 degrees to +60 degrees C and over the pH range from 5.8 to 8.2. The quaternary structure and amino acid composition of the human enzyme are very similar to those of its bovine homologue. |