| Literature DB >> 728421 |
J V Schloss, I L Norton, C D Stringer, F C Hartman.
Abstract
Phenylglyoxal rapidly and completely inactivates spinach and Rhodospirillum rubrum ribulosebisphosphate carboxylases. Inactivation exhibits pseudo-first-order kinetics and a reaction order of approximately one for both enzymes, suggesting that modification of a single residue per protomeric unit suffices for inactivation. Loss of enzymic activity is directly proportional to incorporation of [14C]phenylglyoxal until only 30% of the initial activity remains. For both enzymes, extrapolation of incorporation to 100% inactivation yields 4-5 mol of [14C]phenylglyoxal per mol protomer. Amino acid analyses confirm the expected 2:1 stoichiometry between phenylglyoxal incorporation and arginyl modification and suggest that other kinds of amino acid residues are not modified. (Thus, inactivation correlates with modification of 2-3 arginyl residues per protomer). The substrate ribulose bis-phosphate and some competitive inhibitors reduce the rates of inactivation of the carboxylases and prevent modification of about 0.5-1.0 arginyl residue per protomer. Inactivation is therefore a consequence of modification of a small number of residues out of the 35 and 29 total arginyl residues per protomer in spinach and R. rubrum carboxylases, respectively.Entities:
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Year: 1978 PMID: 728421 DOI: 10.1021/bi00619a007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162