Activation of 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase from human red blood cells
Autor: | Gert M. Jacobsohn, John J. O'Rangers |
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Rok vydání: | 1974 |
Předmět: |
IDH1
Erythrocytes Biophysics Dehydrogenase Biochemistry Michaelis–Menten kinetics Chromatography DEAE-Cellulose chemistry.chemical_compound Ultrasonics Carbon Radioisotopes Molecular Biology chemistry.chemical_classification Binding Sites Nicotinamide biology Estradiol Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenases Substrate (chemistry) Enzyme assay Enzyme Activation Kinetics Enzyme chemistry biology.protein Spectrophotometry Ultraviolet NAD+ kinase Chromatography Thin Layer Mathematics NADP Protein Binding |
Zdroj: | Archives of biochemistry and biophysics. 161(2) |
ISSN: | 0003-9861 |
Popis: | Experiments designed to elucidate the nature of 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase from human red blood cells have shown that NADP+ activates and protects the enzyme, while also serving as substrate for the reaction. Enzyme activity was measured by the conversion of 17β-estradiol to estrone and by the production of NADPH with 17β-estradiol-3-sulfate as substrate. It appears that the reaction sequence is first, binding with NADP+ and second, binding with the steroid. The binding with NADP+ is essentially irreversible: the activated enzyme is completely protected against loss of activity by dilution. On dilution of the unactivated enzyme, much of the activity is lost. The bireactant rate equation of the sequential type has been restated for the case of activation by one of the reactants. Since it has been found that activation of enzyme is linear with NADP+ concentration, it follows that the Michaelis constant for the steroid substrate is independent of the concentration of NADP+ activating the enzyme. This is substantiated by the determination of the Michaelis constant for 17β-estradiol-3-sulfate from data on double-reciprocal plots of activated and unactivated enzyme with limiting amounts of steroid. The activating effect increases linearly up to a concentration of 1.2 × 10−5 m of NADP+ and then levels off. The activation is highly specific for NADP+; neither NAD+, ATP, NADPH, nicotinic acid, ncr nicotinamide prevent the loss of activity after storing the enzyme for 1 hr at 37 °C. The steroid substrate appears to interfere with the activation of NADP+. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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