Free radical-induced inactivation of creatine kinase: influence on the octameric and dimeric states of the mitochondrial enzyme (Mib-CK)

Author:

KOUFEN Peter1,RüCK Alexander1,BRDICZKA Dieter1,WENDT Silke2,WALLIMANN Theo2,STARK Günther1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, Box M638, D-78457 Konstanz, Germany

2. Institute of Cell Biology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH Zürich, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland

Abstract

Free radicals of X-ray-induced water radiolysis, either directly or indirectly via their reaction products, reduce the activity of both dimeric cytoplasmic muscle-type creatine kinase (MM-CK) and octameric mitochondrial creatine kinase (Mi-CK) to virtually zero. Similarly values of the characteristic D37-dose of enzyme inactivation (dose required to reduce enzyme activity to 37%) were found for the two isoenzymes of CK under identical conditions. Octamer stability was not significantly affected within the dose range considered. However, both the dissociation of octamers into dimers by a transition-state analogue complex (TSAC), and the reassociation of the dimers into octamers, showed dose-dependent reduction. Binding of the TSAC to the active centre was found to protect the enzyme against inactivation by free radicals. No protection was observed for the radiation-induced decrease of the endogenous tryptophan fluorescence. The experimental results are in line with the following interpretation: (i) the reduction of Mib-CK dimer association is due to free radical-induced modification of Trp-264, situated at the dimer/dimer interface; (ii) the active-site Trp-223 is not a prime target for free radicals and is not involved in the inactivation of the enzyme; (iii) the inhibition of TSAC-induced dissociation of Mib-CK, like enzyme inactivation, is primarily due to a modification of the active-site Cys-278.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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