Purification and properties of NAD(P)H:(quinone-acceptor) oxidoreductase of sugarbeet cells.

Autor: Trost, Paolo, Bonora, Patrizia, Scagliarini, Sandra, Pupillo, Paolo
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Zdroj: European Journal of Biochemistry; 12/1/95, Vol. 234 Issue 2, p452-458, 7p
Abstrakt: NAD(P)H:(quinone-acceptor) oxidoreductase [NAD(P)H-QR], a plant cytosolic protein, was purified from cultured sugarbeet cells by a combination of ammonium sulfate fractionation, FPLC Superdex 200 gel filtration, Q-Sepharose anion-exchange chromatography, and a final Blue Sepharose CL-6B affinity chromatography with an NADPH gradient. The subunit molecular mass is 24 kDa and the active protein (94 kDa) is a tetramer. The isoelectric point is 4.9. The enzyme was characterized by ping-pong kinetics and extremely elevated catalytic capacity. It prefers NADPH over NADH as electron donor (keat/Km ratios of 1.7 x 108M-1s-1 and 8.3 x 107M-1s-1 for NADPH and NADH, respectively, with benzoquinone as electron acceptor). The acridone derivative 7-iodo-acridone-4-carboxylic acid is an efficient inhibitor (I0.5 = 5 x 10-5 M), dicumarol is weakly inhibitory. The best acceptor substrates are hydrophilic, short-chain quinines such as ubiquinone-0 (Q-0), benzoquinone and menadione, followed by duroquinone and ferricyanide, whereas hydrophobic quinines, cytochrome c and oxygen are reduced at negligible rates at best. Quinone acceptors are reduced by a two-electron reaction with no apparent release of free semiquinonic intermediates. This and the above properties suggest some relationship of NAD(P)H-QR to DT-diaphorase, an animal flavoprotein which, however, has distinct structural properties and is strongly inhibited by dicumarol. It is proposed that NAD(P)H-QR by scavenging unreduced quinines and making them prone to conjugation may act in plant tissues as a functional equivalent of DT-diaphorase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index