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The oxidative decarboxylation of D-malate catalyzed by tartrate dehydrogenase has been analyzed by transient-state kinetic methods and kinetic isotope effect measurements. The reaction time courses show a burst of NADH formation prior to the attainment of the steady-state velocity. The binding of the inhibitor tartronate to the enzyme was examined by monitoring the quenching of the protein's intrinsic fluorescence; the tartronate concentration dependence of the observed rate constant for association was hyperbolic, supporting a two-step model for inhibitor binding. Analysis of the time courses for D-malate oxidation yielded values for many of the microscopic rate constants governing the reaction. The range of possible solutions for the microscopic rate constants was constrained by comparison of the time course for oxidation of unlabeled malate with that of deuterated malate; this analysis relied on the determination of the intrinsic isotope effect on hydride transfer via measurement of D(V/K), T(V/K), and the oxaloacetate partition ratio. The results of the transient-state kinetic analyses suggest that the rate of D-malate oxidation is largely limited by the rate of decarboxylation of the intermediate oxaloacetate which occurs at 11 s-1. Hydride transfer from D-malate to NAD+ occurs with a rate constant of 300 s-1, and (D)k for this step is 5.5. The agreement between experimentally measured steady-state kinetic parameters and kinetic isotope effects and their values calculated from the microscopic rate constants derived from the transient-state kinetic analyses was quite good.  相似文献   

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We have selected fullerene-60 and -70 cavities as model systems in order to test several methods for characterizing inclusion molecules. The methods are based on different technical foundations such as a square and triangular tessellation of the molecule taken as a unitary sphere, spherical tessellation of the molecular surface, numerical integration of the atomic volumes and surfaces, triangular tessellation of the molecular surface, and a cubic lattice approach to a molecular space. Accurate measures of the molecular volume and surface area have been performed with the pseudo-random Monte Carlo (MCVS) and uniform Monte Carlo (UMCVS) methods. These calculations serve as a reference for the rest of the methods. The SURMO2 and MS methods have not recognized the cavities and may not be convenient for intercalation compounds. The programs that have detected the cavities never exceed 5% deviation relative to the reference values for molecular volume and surface area. The GEPOL algorithm, alone or combined with TOPO, shows results in good agreement with those of the UMCVS reference. The uniform random number generator provides the fastest convergence for UMCVS and a correct estimate of the standard deviations. The effect of the internal cavity on the accessible surfaces has been calculated.  相似文献   

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Kainate is an excitatory neurotransmitter that binds to the kainate and AMPA receptor subtypes of the glutamate receptor and triggers the formation of cation permeable transmembrane channels in these receptors. In the present report the channel-opening mechanism of the AMPA receptors by kainate has been determined in rat hippocampal neurons using two different kinetic methods, namely, the rapid-flow method (cell-flow) with a 10 ms time resolution and a laser-pulse photolysis technique with a approximately 65 microseconds time resolution. The whole-cell currents induced by kainate, using the cell-flow method, are nondesensitizing and inhibited significantly by CNQX and hence pertain to activation of the AMPA receptors and not the kainate receptors. The cell-flow measurements were used to evaluate the constants pertaining to the minimum mechanism that could account for the concentration of the receptor in the open-channel form over a 500-fold range of kainate concentration. These constants, namely, the intrinsic dissociation constant of kainate from the AMPA receptor and the channel-opening equilibrium constant, were determined to be 140 +/- 30 microM and 8 +/- 2, respectively. On the other hand, the kinetics of the steps leading to channel opening was evaluated using the laser-pulse photolysis techniques. In this technique whole-cell currents were obtained by releasing kainate in the submillisecond time scale near the cell by photolysis of N-(alpha-carboxy-2-nitrobenzyl) kainate. The concentration of the released kainate was calculated by comparing the whole-cell currents obtained from the laser-pulse photolysis experiments with the whole currents obtained with 100 microM kainate on the same cell using cell-flow measurements. The rate constants for channel opening and closing were then determined from the observed rate constants for the current rise obtained as a function of kainate concentration. These rates were 5000 +/- 2000 and 640 +/- 30 s-1, respectively. The rate and equilibrium constants obtained in the present report allow an evaluation of the fraction of the receptors in the open-channel form as a function of time and kainate concentration, hence providing insight into the role of kainate in neuronal signal transmission.  相似文献   

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A number of experimental paradigms have been used to demonstrate that NCAM, N-cadherin, and L1 stimulate axonal growth. The molecular basis of this response has been extensively studied and a range of agents that inhibit neurite outgrowth stimulated by the above CAMs, but not integrins, have now been identified. These studies pointed to the activation of a tyrosine kinase-PLCgamma cascade as being important for the neurite outgrowth responses stimulated by all three CAMs, and this was substantiated by the identification of agents that could activate the cascade and mimic the growth response. In this review we will suggest that the neurite growth response stimulated by these CAMs is mediated by activation of the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) in neurons and that this results in the recruitment and activation of PLCgamma via interactions of its SH2 domain with the activated receptor. In this context the key events downstream from activation of PLCgamma required for neurite growth appear to be the conversion of diacylglycerol (DAG) to arachidonic acid (AA) via DAG lipase activity, followed by an increased influx of calcium into the neurons. The evolutionary conservation of putative binding motifs between the above CAMs and the FGFR suggests that activation of the FGFR-PLCgamma cascade by the CAMs might involve a direct CAM-FGFR interaction. The identification of the binding motifs also allows for predictions to be made concerning whether other CAMs might directly interact with the FGFR.  相似文献   

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The Ffh-4.5S ribonucleoprotein particle (RNP) and FtsY from Escherichia coli are homologous to essential components of the mammalian signal recognition particle (SRP) and SRP receptor, respectively. The ability of these E. coli components to function in a bona fide co-translational targeting pathway remains unclear. Here we demonstrate that the Ffh-4.5S RNP and FtsY can efficiently replace their mammalian counterparts in targeting nascent secretory proteins to microsomal membranes in vitro. Targeting in the heterologous system requires a hydrophobic signal sequence, utilizes GTP and, moreover, occurs co-translationally. Unlike mammalian SRP, however, the Ffh-4.5S RNP is unable to arrest translational elongation, which results in a narrow time window for the ribosome nascent chain to interact productively with the membrane-bound translocation machinery. The highly negatively charged N-terminal domain of FtsY, which is a conserved feature among prokaryotic SRP receptor homologs, is important for translocation and acts to localize the protein to the membrane. Our data illustrate the extreme functional conservation between prokaryotic and eukaryotic SRP and SRP receptors and suggest that the basic mechanism of co-translational protein targeting is conserved between bacteria and mammals.  相似文献   

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The bioaccumulation of trace elements in aquatic organisms can be described with a kinetic model that includes linear expressions for uptake and elimination from dissolved and dietary sources. Within this model, trace element trophic transfer is described by four parameters: the weight-specific ingestion rate (IR); the assimilation efficiency (AE); the physiological loss rate constant (ke); and the weight-specific growth rate (g). These four parameters define the trace element trophic transfer potential (TTP = IR.AE/[ke + g]) which is equal to the ratio of the steady-state trace element concentration in a consumer due to trophic accumulation to that in its prey. Recent work devoted to the quantification of AE and ke for a variety of trace elements in aquatic invertebrates has provided the data needed for comparative studies of trace element trophic transfer among different species and trophic levels and, in at least one group of aquatic consumers (marine bivalves), sensitivity analyses and field tests of kinetic bioaccumulation models. Analysis of the trophic transfer potentials of trace elements for which data are available in zooplankton, bivalves, and fish, suggests that slight variations in assimilation efficiency or elimination rate constant may determine whether or not some trace elements (Cd, Se, and Zn) are biomagnified. A linear, single-compartment model may not be appropriate for fish which, unlike many aquatic invertebrates, have a large mass of tissue in which the concentrations of most trace elements are subject to feedback regulation.  相似文献   

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