Hydrogen sulfide as a precursor for the synthesis of isethionate in the squid giant axon. |
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Authors: | F C Hoskin E R Kordik |
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Institution: | Department of Biology Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago, Illinois 60616 USA |
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Abstract: | Cysteine is taken up by the squid giant axon to about 200% of equivalent distribution, whereas sulfide is taken up (probably as hydrogen sulfide) to about 40% of equivalence. Thereafter, the squid axon synthesizes its major anion, isethionate, in about equal amounts from the sulfide, or from the sulfur of cysteine, but not at all from the carbons of cysteine. Squid nerve also contains rhodanese, an enzyme which transfers the outer (sulfane) sulfur of thiosulfate to cyanide to produce thiocyanate. It is speculated that, instead of “detoxifying cyanide,” as the reaction involving rhodanese is commonly described, the physiological role of this enzyme is the formation of a carbon-sulfur bond, leading finally, in the squid, to the formation of isethionate. This is the first evidence concerning the pathway for the synthesis of isethionate in squid nerve where this compound is normally present at a concentration of 150 mm. |
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