Literature DB >> 3017986

The catalytic bimodality of mammalian phosphoglycerate mutase.

P J Stankiewicz, L F Hass.   

Abstract

Rabbit muscle phosphoglycerate mutase, presumed to manifest an absolute cofactor requirement for activity, has been found to express catalysis (3 +/- 1% of optimum) in the absence of added D-glycerate-2,3-P2. Isotope experiments indicate that this catalysis proceeds through a binary phosphoryl enzyme-glycerate intermediate which dissociates into free enzyme and monophosphoglycerate. 32P-Labeled phosphoglycerate mutase is formed by reaction with either D-32P-glycerate-3-P or D-U32P-glycerate-2,3-P2. In each case, the acid lability and alkali stability of the covalent adduct, phosphoenzyme, is consistent with a phosphohistidyl residue having been formed within the active site. D-[U-14C]Glycerate reacts with phosphoenzyme to generate D-[U-14C]monophosphoglycerate which, in turn, can react further with phosphoenzyme to yield D-[U-14C]glycerate-2,3-P2. The pH profile for the cofactor-independent activity exhibits an optimum at 6.0 as opposed to 7.0 when D-glycerate-2,3-P2 is present in the reaction medium. Bisubstrate kinetics (pH 7.0, 23 degrees C) with D-glycerate-3-P concentration as the variable, yields a family of reciprocal plots which is in accord with a modified ping-pong mechanism when D-glycerate-2,3-P2 concentrations are greater than 10(-1) Km (where Km = 0.33 microM). Progressively diminishing concentrations (much less than Km) of D-glycerate-2,3-P2 produce curvilinear reciprocal plots that approach linearity as a limit in accordance with single substrate kinetics.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3017986

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  4 in total

1.  Dynamics of muscle glycogenolysis modeled with pH time course computation and pH-dependent reaction equilibria and enzyme kinetics.

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2.  The multifunctional PE_PGRS11 protein from Mycobacterium tuberculosis plays a role in regulating resistance to oxidative stress.

Authors:  Rashmi Chaturvedi; Kushagra Bansal; Yeddula Narayana; Nisha Kapoor; Namineni Sukumar; Shambhuprasad Kotresh Togarsimalemath; Nagasuma Chandra; Saurabh Mishra; Parthasarathi Ajitkumar; Beenu Joshi; Vishwa Mohan Katoch; Shripad A Patil; Kithiganahalli N Balaji
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2010-06-17       Impact factor: 5.157

3.  Phosphocreatine-dependent protein phosphorylation in rat skeletal muscle.

Authors:  M Ouellet; E A Shoubridge
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1992-05-15       Impact factor: 3.857

4.  Schistosoma mansoni phosphoglycerate mutase: a glycolytic ectoenzyme with thrombolytic potential.

Authors:  David B Pirovich; Akram A Da'dara; Patrick J Skelly
Journal:  Parasite       Date:  2022-09-09       Impact factor: 3.020

  4 in total

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