Affiliation:
1. National Laboratory of Biomacromolecules, Institute of Biophysics, Academia Sinica, Beijing 100080
2. Department of Biological Sciences and Technology, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, People's Republic of China
Abstract
The kinetic theory of the substrate reaction during modification of enzyme activity previously described [Tsou (1988) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 61, 381-436] has been applied to a study on the kinetics of the course of inactivation of aminoacylase by 1,10-phenanthroline. Upon dilution of the enzyme that had been incubated with 1,10-phenanthroline into the reaction mixture, the activity of the inhibited enzyme gradually increased, indicating dissociation of a reversible enzyme–1,10-phenanthroline complex. The kinetics of the substrate reaction with different concentrations of the substrate chloroacetyl-L-alanine and the inactivator suggest a complexing mechanism for inactivation by, and substrate competition with, 1,10-phenanthroline at the active site. The inactivation kinetics are single phasic, showing that the initial formation of an enzyme-Zn(2+)-1,10-phenanthroline complex is a relatively rapid reaction, followed by a slow inactivation step that probably involves a conformational change of the enzyme. The presence of Zn2+ apparently stabilizes an active-site conformation required for enzyme activity.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
36 articles.
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