Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. A number of detergents were used to dissolve calf thymus plasma membranes rich in
alkaline phosphatase
(orthophosporic-monoester phosphohydrolase (alkaline optimum),
EC 3.1.3.1
) activity. 2. The Stokes' radius (r) of
alkaline phosphatase
in each detergent was measured by gel filtraton. The size of the solubilized enzyme varied from r = 6.2 nm in sodium cholate to r = 8.3 nm in
Berol
EMU-043. With N-alkylsulphates, the apparent size increased with alkyl chain length, with r = 6.4 nm (C9) and r = 7.3 nm (C12). Tween 20 failed to solubilise the enzyme. 3. The effect of each detergent on the catalytic activity of
alkaline phosphatase
was determined. The non-ionic detergents Triton X-100, Nonidet P-40,
Berol
EMU-043, Tween 20 and the zwitterionic detergent Empigen BB increased V by 10--50% without substantially altering the Km for p-nitrophenylphosphate. The bile salts sodium deoxycholate and sodium cholate decreased V and increased the apparent affinity of the enzyme for nitrophenylphosphate. Inhibition was concentration-dependent up to the critical micellar concentration, above which it remained constant (deoxycholate, 33% cholate, 76%). Alkylsulphates (C8-12) had no significant inhibitory effect during 24 h at 23 degrees C. 4. Exchanging one detergent for another altered
alkaline phosphatase
activity to a state characteristic for the second detergent, e.g. the activity of cholate-inhibited
alkaline phosphatase
was restored to normal levels by excess of Triton X-100 and vice versa. The inhibitory effect of deoxycholate and cholate therefore result primarily from interactions between detergent and alkaline phosphate, rather than from selective removal of lipids from the enzyme. 5. Pure lecithin, lysolecithin and an ether-deoxylysolecithin each reactivated cholate-inhibited
alkaline phosphatase
in a concentration-dependent fashion. Cholesterol had no effect. 6. The half-life (t1/2) of membrane-bound
alkaline phosphatase
at 55 degrees C was 64 min. With the exception of
Berol
, solubilisation in non-ionic detergents caused no marked change in this sensitivity. The enzyme became more labile in deoxycholate (t1/2) = 31 min), but less labile in cholate (t1/2 = 99 min). Alkylsulphates, which are strong denaturants, markedly increased the sensitivity of the enzyme to heat-inactivation (C8, t1/2 = 13 min; C9--12, t1/2 less than 2 min). 7. It is concluded that membrane-bound
alkaline phosphatase
is separated from most if not all of its neighbouring lipid moieties by these detergents, which bind to the solubilised enzyme. The number and character of molecules binding to the enzyme influence its size and shape, its susceptibility to inactivation and its catalytic activity.
...
PMID:Calf thymus alkaline phosphatase. II. Interaction with detergents. 83 32