Author:
Dixon Nicholas E.,Hinds John A.,Fihelly Ann K.,Gazzola Carlo,Winzor Donald J.,Blakeley Robert L.,Zerner Burt
Abstract
Kinetic, spectral, and other studies establish that hydroxamic acids bind reversibly to active-site nickel ion in jack bean urease. Equilibrium ultracentrifugation studies establish that the molecular weight of native urease is 590 000 ± 30 000 while that of the subunit formed in 6 M guanidinium chloride in the presence of β-mercaptoethanol is ~95 000. Essentially the same subunit molecular weight (~93 000) is found by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, subsequent to denaturation in a guanidinium chloride – β-mercaptoethanol system at various temperatures. Coupled with an equivalent weight of 96 600 for binding of the inhibitors acetohydroxamic acid and phosphoramidate, these results establish securely that urease is a hexamer with one active site per 96 600-dalton subunit. Consistent values for the equivalent weight are obtained by a routine spectrophotometric titration of the active site of freshly prepared urease with trans-cinnamoylhydroxamic acid. General equations are derived which describe spectrophotometric titrations of binding sites of any enzyme with a reversible inhibitor. These equations allow the evaluation of the difference spectrum of the protein–inhibitor complex even when the binding sites cannot readily be saturated with the inhibitor or vice versa.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Cited by
141 articles.
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