GLYCERIC ACID KINASE ISOLATED FROM A POLISH VARIETY OF RAPESEED (BRASSICA CAMPESTRIS L.)

1960 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ozaki ◽  
L. R. Wetter

Glyceric acid kinase from Polish variety rapeseed (Brassica campestris L.) was purified approximately 30-fold by ammonium sulphate fractionation and adsorption on alumina Cγ gel. The enzyme has a pH optimum at 7.9 and a pH stability range extending from 6.5 to 7.5. The maximum temperature for the reaction was 45 °C. The phosphorylation required ATP and a metal ion; Mg++ was slightly more effective than Mn++ and Co++, while Ni++ and Zn++ were ineffective. The Michaelis constants for the Mg–ATP complex and the substrate were 7.3 × 10−4 M and 1.6 × 10−3 M respectively. The reaction products, ADP and 3-phosphoglyceric acid, inhibited the phosphorylation. Sulphydryl reagents such as p-chloromercuribenzoate, o-iodosobenzoate, N-ethylmaleimide, and iodo-acetate completely inhibited the enzyme at low concentrations. 3-Phosphoglyceric acid was isolated and characterized from the enzyme reaction mixture.

1960 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ozaki ◽  
L. R. Wetter

Glyceric acid kinase from Polish variety rapeseed (Brassica campestris L.) was purified approximately 30-fold by ammonium sulphate fractionation and adsorption on alumina Cγ gel. The enzyme has a pH optimum at 7.9 and a pH stability range extending from 6.5 to 7.5. The maximum temperature for the reaction was 45 °C. The phosphorylation required ATP and a metal ion; Mg++ was slightly more effective than Mn++ and Co++, while Ni++ and Zn++ were ineffective. The Michaelis constants for the Mg–ATP complex and the substrate were 7.3 × 10−4 M and 1.6 × 10−3 M respectively. The reaction products, ADP and 3-phosphoglyceric acid, inhibited the phosphorylation. Sulphydryl reagents such as p-chloromercuribenzoate, o-iodosobenzoate, N-ethylmaleimide, and iodo-acetate completely inhibited the enzyme at low concentrations. 3-Phosphoglyceric acid was isolated and characterized from the enzyme reaction mixture.


1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 843-853 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ozaki ◽  
L. R. Wetter

Aminoacylase, which hydrolyzes N-acetyl amino acids, has been demonstrated in rapeseed. The enzyme was purified 150-fold by fractionation with ammonium sulphate and calcium phosphate gel. The purified preparation hydrolyzed N-acetyl amino acids and in addition certain dipeptides and chloracetyl-L-tyrosine. The enzyme was stable at −20 °C and had a wide pH optimum (7.2 to 8.8). Cobalt ion was found to be an activator, while sulphydryl-reacting agents such as p-chloromercuribenzoate and some metal-chelating agents inhibited the hydrolysis. The enzyme showed rigorous specificity for the L-isomer. A comparison of the ratio of activities obtained for different enzyme preparations indicates that more than one enzyme is concerned in the hydrolysis of the different substrates.


Author(s):  
J.R. Walton

In electron microscopy, lead is the metal most widely used for enhancing specimen contrast. Lead citrate requires a pH of 12 to stain thin sections of epoxy-embedded material rapidly and intensively. However, this high alkalinity tends to leach out enzyme reaction products, making lead citrate unsuitable for many cytochemical studies. Substitution of the chelator aspartate for citrate allows staining to be carried out at pH 6 or 7 without apparent effect on cytochemical products. Moreover, due to the low, controlled level of free lead ions, contamination-free staining can be carried out en bloc, prior to dehydration and embedding. En bloc use of lead aspartate permits the grid-staining step to be bypassed, allowing samples to be examined immediately after thin-sectioning.Procedures. To prevent precipitation of lead salts, double- or glass-distilled H20 used in the stain and rinses should be boiled to drive off carbon dioxide and glassware should be carefully rinsed to remove any persisting traces of calcium ion.


1975 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 402-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Roizin ◽  
D Orlovskaja ◽  
J C Liu ◽  
A L Carsten

A survey of the literature to date on the enzyme histochemistry of intracellular organelles has not yielded any reference to the presence of acid phosphatase reaction products in the mammalian mitochondria of the central nervous system. A combination of Gomori's acid phosphatase mehtod, however, with standard electron microscopy has disclosed the presence of enzyme reaction products in the mitochondria of the central nervous system of rats from 2 hr to 22 weeks after x-ray irradiation, as well as in a cerebral biopsy performed on a patient affected by Huntington's chorea. No enzyme reaction products, on the other hand, were observed in serial sections that had been incubated in substrates either containing sodium fluoride or lacking in beta-glycerophosphate. The abnormal mitochondrial enzyme reaction (chemical lesion) is considered to be the consequenco of the pathologic process affecting the ultrastructural-chemical organization of the organelle.


1974 ◽  
Vol 22 (8) ◽  
pp. 782-801 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOHN P. PETRALI ◽  
DENNIS M. HINTON ◽  
GWEN C. MORIARTY ◽  
LUDWIG A. STERNBERGER

Araldite sections of rat pituitary intermediate lobe were used with anti-17-39 adrenocorticotropin in the unlabeled antibody enzyme method to compare electron microscopic immunocytochemical staining by peroxidase-antiperoxidase complex (PAP) with antiserum or purified antibody to peroxidase followed by peroxidase (PO). Quantitation of normalized optical densities of secretory granules offered high significance comparison (P < 0.0001) of experimental with control values and of experimental values with each other. Use of purified antibody (prepared by a new density gradient method) yielded four times higher sensitivity than antiserum to PO, while a 6.5-fold increase would have been expected from the degree of contamination of anti-PO in the serum by nonanti-PO immunoglobulin. Use of PAP was four to five times more sensitive than purified anti-PO and 20 times more sensitive than antiserum to PO. The increased sensitivity of PAP is explained by the high over-all binding affinity of PO for anti-PO in the cyclic PAP molecule, thus preventing the losses of PO that occur during washing when anti-PO and PO have been applied in sequence. Identification of the characteristic, cyclic PAP molecules affords confirmation of specific staining at high resolution. In the sequential application of anti-PO and PO, no PAP molecules are formed, thus making distinction of specific from nonspecific deposition of enzyme reaction products ambiguous. With the use of anti-17-39 ACTH and the intermediate lobe, the unlabeled antibody enzyme method was 16,000-100,000 times more sensitive than radioimmunoassay.


2019 ◽  
Vol 201 (23) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bal Krishnan ◽  
Shanti Swaroop Srivastava ◽  
Venu Sankeshi ◽  
Rupsi Garg ◽  
Sudhakar Srivastava ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The prokaryotic βγ-crystallins are a large group of uncharacterized domains with Ca2+-binding motifs. We have observed that a vast number of these domains are found appended to other domains, in particular, the carbohydrate-active enzyme (CAZy) domains. To elucidate the functional significance of these prospective Ca2+ sensors in bacteria and this widespread domain association, we have studied one typical example from Clostridium beijerinckii, a bacterium known for its ability to produce acetone, butanol, and ethanol through fermentation of several carbohydrates. This novel glycoside hydrolase of family 64 (GH64), which we named glucanallin, is composed of a βγ-crystallin domain, a GH64 domain, and a carbohydrate-binding module 56 (CBM56). The substrates of GH64, β-1,3-glucans, are the targets for industrial biofuel production due to their plenitude. We have examined the Ca2+-binding properties of this protein, assayed its enzymatic activity, and analyzed the structural features of the β-1,3-glucanase domain through its high-resolution crystal structure. The reaction products resulting from the enzyme reaction of glucanallin reinforce the mixed nature of GH64 enzymes, in contrast to the prevailing notion of them being an exotype. Upon disabling Ca2+ binding and comparing different domain combinations, we demonstrate that the βγ-crystallin domain in glucanallin acts as a Ca2+ sensor and enhances the glycolytic activity of glucanallin through Ca2+ binding. We also compare the structural peculiarities of this new member of the GH64 family to two previously studied members. IMPORTANCE We have biochemically and structurally characterized a novel glucanase from the less studied GH64 family in a bacterium significant for fermentation of carbohydrates into biofuels. This enzyme displays a peculiar property of being distally modulated by Ca2+ via assistance from a neighboring βγ-crystallin domain, likely through changes in the domain interface. In addition, this enzyme is found to be optimized for functioning in an acidic environment, which is in line with the possibility of its involvement in biofuel production. Multiple occurrences of a similar domain architecture suggest that such a “βγ-crystallination”-mediated Ca2+ sensitivity may be widespread among bacterial proteins.


1975 ◽  
Vol 150 (3) ◽  
pp. 537-551 ◽  
Author(s):  
P H Cooper ◽  
J N Hawthorne

Tthe properties of diphosphoinositide and triphosphoinositide phosphatases from rat kidney homogenate were studied in an assay system in which non-specific phosphatase activity was eliminated. The enzymes were not completely metal-ion dependent and were activated by Mg2+. The detergent sodium deoxycholate, Triton X-100 and Cutscum inhibited the reaction; cetyltrimethylammonium bromide only activated when added with the subtrates and in the presence Mg2+. Both enzymes had a pH optimum of 7.5. Ca2+ and Li+ both activated triphosphoinositide phosphatase, but Ca2+ inhibited and L+ had little effect on diphosphoinositide phosphatase. Cyclic AMP had no effect on either enzyme. The enzymes were three times more active in kidney cortex than in the medulla. On subcellular fractionation of kidney-cortex homogenates by differential and density-gradient centrifugation, the distribution of the enzymes resembled that of thiamin pyrophosphatase (assayed in the absence of ATP), suggesting localization in the Golgi complex. However, the distribution differed from that of the liver Golgimarker galactosyltransferase. Activities of both diphosphoinositide and triphosphoinositide phosphatases and thiamin pyrophosphatase were low in purified brush-border fragments. Further experiments indicate that at least part of the phosphatase activity is soluble.


1958 ◽  
Vol 36 (11) ◽  
pp. 1149-1157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oluf L. Gamborg ◽  
Saul Zalik

Lipoxidase activity was obtained in enzyme preparations from sunflower seeds and seedlings. A partly purified preparation from seedlings was used for enzyme kinetic studies. The pH optimum was 6.8 and 100% oxygen was required for maximum activity. The Michaelis constant, with potassium linoleate as substrate, was 1.64 × 10−3 M. The reaction products were conjugated dienes. Enzyme activity was not affected by various metal and sulphydryl inhibitors nor by α-tocopherol, but catechol, α-naphthol, ethanol, and potassium oleate were inhibitory. Oil from flax, rape, and sunflower seeds reduced total oxidation of linoleate by the enzyme. Copper sulphate increased the rate and total oxidation of the linoleate–lipoxidase system, but iron, manganese, magnesium, and calcium were without effect. Lipoxidase activity was associated with mitochondrial (15,000 × g), intermediate (25,000 × g), and microsomal (100,000 × g) fractions, as well as with the soluble cytoplasmic proteins. Lipoxidase activity in seedlings increased during initial stages of germination, then decreased. The most rapid depletion of total fat in the seedlings coincided with maximum lipoxidase activity.


1972 ◽  
Vol 127 (2) ◽  
pp. 357-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine A. Lloyd-Davies ◽  
Robert H. Michell ◽  
Roger Coleman

1. A simple new assay for glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase is described, in which radioactive glycerylphosphorylcholine is used as substrate and the reaction products are separated by adsorption on an anion-exchange resin. 2. Rat liver subcellular fractions contained both particulate (58%) and soluble (42%) glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase. Both activities released free choline from glycerylphosphorylcholine. 3. The particulate glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase was recovered mainly in the nuclear and microsomal fractions and showed a distribution similar to those of 5′-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphodiesterase I, both of which are constituents of the liver plasma membrane. 4. During purification of plasma membranes glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase, 5′-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphodiesterase I showed largely similar behaviour, indicating that glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase is also localized in liver plasma membranes. Slight differences in the distributions of these three enzymes in density-gradient separations are discussed in relation to the possibility that they are unevenly distributed on different areas of the cell surface. 5. The differences between glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase and alkaline phosphodiesterase I indicate that these two activities are not functions of a single enzyme. 6. The glycerylphosphorylcholine phosphodiesterase of liver plasma membranes has a pH optimum of 8.5 and a Km for glycerylphosphorylcholine of 0.95mm. It is inhibited by EDTA and fully reactivated by a variety of bivalent cations (and Fe3+).


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