ADSORPTION OF ALKALINE PHOSPHATES ON PALYGORSKITE AND SEPIOLITE: A TRADEOFF BETWEEN ENZYME PROTECTION AND INHIBITION

2020 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 287-295
Author(s):  
Mehran Shirvani ◽  
Banafshe Khalili ◽  
Mahmoud Kalbasi ◽  
Hossein Shariatmadari ◽  
Farshid Nourbakhsh
Keyword(s):  
1977 ◽  
Vol 38 (03) ◽  
pp. 0677-0684 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymund Machovich ◽  
Péter Arányi

SummaryHeat inactivation of thrombin at 54° C followed first order kinetics with a rate constant of 1.0 min−1 approximately. Addition of heparin resulted in protection against thermal denaturation and, at the same time, rendered denaturation kinetics more complex. Analysis of the biphasic curve of heat inactivation in the presence of heparin revealed that the rate constants of the second phase changed systematically with heparin concentrations. Namely, at 4.5 × 10−6M, 9 × 10−6M, 1.8 × 10−5M and 3.6 × 10−5M heparin concentrations, the rate constants were 0.27 min−1, 0.17 min−1, 0.11 min−1 and 0.06 min−1, respectively.Sulfate as well as phosphate ions displayed also enzyme protection against heat inactivation, however, the same effect was obtained already at a heparin concentration, lower by three orders of magnitude.The kinetics of enzyme denaturation was not affected by calcium ions, whereas in the presence of heparin the inactivation rate of thrombin changed, i. e. calcium ions abolished the biphasic character of time course of thermal denaturation.Thus, the data suggest that calcium ions contribute to the effect of heparin on thrombin.


2019 ◽  
Vol 87 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Hahn Kim ◽  
Akhilesh Kumar Chaurasia ◽  
Nayab Batool ◽  
Kwan Soo Ko ◽  
Kyeong Kyu Kim

ABSTRACTPrecise enumeration of living intracellular bacteria is the key step to estimate the invasion potential of pathogens and host immune responses to understand the mechanism and kinetics of bacterial pathogenesis. Therefore, quantitative assessment of host-pathogen interactions is essential for development of novel antibacterial therapeutics for infectious disease. The gentamicin protection assay (GPA) is the most widely used method for these estimations by counting the CFU of intracellular living pathogens. Here, we assess the longstanding drawbacks of the GPA by employing an antistaphylococcal endopeptidase as a bactericidal agent to kill extracellularStaphylococcus aureus. We found that the difference between the two methods for the recovery of intracellular CFU ofS. aureuswas about 5 times. We prove that the accurate number of intracellular CFU could not be precisely determined by the GPA due to the internalization of gentamicin into host cells during extracellular bacterial killing. We further demonstrate that lysostaphin-mediated extracellular bacterial clearance has advantages for measuring the kinetics of bacterial internalization on a minute time scale due to the fast and tunable activity and the inability of protein to permeate the host cell membrane. From these results, we propose that accurate quantification of intracellular bacteria and measurement of internalization kinetics can be achieved by employing enzyme-mediated killing of extracellular bacteria (enzyme protection assay [EPA]) rather than the host-permeative drug gentamicin, which is known to alter host physiology.


1975 ◽  
Vol 149 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
S S Chen ◽  
P C Engel

1. Pig M4 lactate dehydrogenase treated in the dark with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate at pH8.5 and 25 degrees C loses activity gradually. The maximum inactivation was 66%, and this did not increase with concentrations of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate above 1 mM. 2. Inactivation may be reversed by dialysis or made permanent by reducing the enzyme with NaBH4. 3. Spectral evidence indicates modification of lysine residues, and 6-N-pyridoxyl-lysine is present in the hydrolsate of inactivated, reduced enzyme. 4. A second cycle of treatment with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and NaBH4 further decreases activity. After three cycles only 9% of the original activity remains. 5. Apparent Km values for lactate and NAD+ are unaltered in the partially inactivated enzyme. 6. These results suggest that the covalently modified enzyme is inactive; failure to achieve complete inactivation in a single treatment is due to the reversibility of Schiff-base formation and to the consequent presence of active non-covalently bonded enzyme-modifier complex in the equilibrium mixture. 7. Although several lysine residues per subunit are modified, only one appears to be essential for activity: pyruvate and NAD+ together (both 5mM) completely protect against inactivation, and there is a one-to-one relationship between enzyme protection and decreased lysine modification. 8. NAD+ or NADH alone gives only partial protection. Substrates give virtually none. 9. Pig H4 lactate dehydrogenase is also inactivated by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. 10. The possible role of the essential lysine residue is discussed.


1999 ◽  
Vol 342 (3) ◽  
pp. 641-646 ◽  
Author(s):  
Su J. YANG ◽  
Shih S. JIANG ◽  
Soong Y. KUO ◽  
Shu H. HUNG ◽  
Ming F. TAM ◽  
...  

A vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase (EC 3.6.1.1) that catalyses PPi hydrolysis and the electrogenic translocation of protons from the cytosol to the vacuole lumen, was purified from etiolated hypocotyls of mung bean seedlings (Vigna radiata L.). Group-specific modification was used to identify a carboxylic residue involved in the inhibition of vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase. Carbodi-imides, such as N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodi-imide (DCCD) and 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylamino-propyl)carbodi-imide, and Woodward's reagent K caused a progressive decline in the enzymic activity of vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. The stoichiometry of labelling of the vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase by [14C]DCCD determined that DCCD modifies one carboxylic residue per subunit of the enzyme. Protection studies suggest that the DCCD-reactive carboxylic residue resides at or near the substrate-binding site. Furthermore, peptide mapping analysis reveals that Asp283, located in the putative loop V of a tentative topological model of vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase on the cytosolic side, was labelled by radioactive [14C]DCCD. Cytosolic loop V contains both DCCD-sensitive Asp283 and a conserved motif sequence, rendering it a candidate for the catalytic site of vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase. A topological picture of the active domain of vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase is tentatively proposed.


Author(s):  
Luxi Yang ◽  
Yiming Wang ◽  
Shengju Long ◽  
Zhongqun He ◽  
Yan Chen ◽  
...  

ACS Catalysis ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 476-483
Author(s):  
Shaohua Zhang ◽  
Yishan Zhang ◽  
Yu Chen ◽  
Dong Yang ◽  
Shihao Li ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (72) ◽  
pp. 16712-16717 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qianyu Yu ◽  
Xiaoteng Ma ◽  
Yingze Liu ◽  
Hanying Zhao

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