Literature DB >> 235289

Comparison of the cerebroside sulphatase and the arylsulphatase activity of human sulphatase A in the absence of activators.

K Stinshoff, H Jatzkewitz.   

Abstract

A cerebroside sulphatase (cerebroside-3-sulphate 3 sulphohydrolase, EC 3.1.6.8) assay based on radio thin-layer chromatography is described. The substrate was labelled by the catalytic addition of tritium to cerebroside sulphate. Using this assay the cerebroside sulphatase activity of sulphatase A (Aryl-sulphate sulphohydrolase, EC 3.1.6.1) from human liver and kidney in the absence of activators was investigated. The pH optimum of this reaction depends on the buffer concentration, being pH 4.5 at 50 mM and 5.3 at 10 mM sodium formate. With the latter concentration the apparent Km for cerebroside sulphate is 0.06 mM; SO2-4 and nitrocatechol sulphate inhibit noncompetitively with a Ki of 4.51 mM for Na2SO4 and 0.43 mM for nitrocatechol sulphate. The cerebroside sulphatase activity of sulphatase A is highly dependent on the ionic strength. The optimum sodium formate concentration is 10 mM, and the cerebroside suophatase activity decreases rapidly with increasing buffer concentration. The same concentration dependence is observed in the inhibitory effect of cerebroside sulphate on the arylsulphatase reaction. The inhibition decreases at increasing buffer concentrations, becoming an activation at 70 mM sodium formate. The progress curve of the cerebroside sulphatase reaction shows a deviation from linearity similar to that of the arylsulphatase reaction. Investigation of the effect of preincubation with cerebroside sulphate on the arylsulphatase activity of the enzyme shows that cerebroside sluphatase activity and inactivation of the enzyme by cerebroside sulphate occur simultaneously. These observations are interpreted as supporting the assumption that cerebroside suophate and arylsulphates are degraded at an identical active site on the same enzyme. Differences in the properties of the cerebroside sulphatase and the arylsulphatase reaction of the enzyme may be attributed to the differences in the physiocochemical state of the two substrates.

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Year:  1975        PMID: 235289     DOI: 10.1016/0005-2744(75)90293-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta        ISSN: 0006-3002


  7 in total

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3.  Late-onset Krabbe disease initially diagnosed as cerebroside sulfatase activator deficiency.

Authors:  A L Fluharty; L Neidengard; D Holtzman; H Kihara
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Review 4.  The anomalous kinetics of sulphatase A.

Authors:  A B Roy; T J Mantle
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5.  Heterozygote detection in MLD. allelic mutations at the ARA locus.

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6.  Differential repression of arylsulphatase synthesis in Aspergillus oryzae.

Authors:  G R Burns; C H Wynn
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1977-09-15       Impact factor: 3.857

7.  Saposin B-dependent reconstitution of arylsulfatase A activity in vitro and in cell culture models of metachromatic leukodystrophy.

Authors:  Ulrich Matzner; Bernadette Breiden; Günter Schwarzmann; Afshin Yaghootfam; Arvan L Fluharty; Andrej Hasilik; Konrad Sandhoff; Volkmar Gieselmann
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  7 in total

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