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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (
trypsin
)
42,187
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mutants of Bacillus megaterium displaying malate-driven ATP synthesis resistant to uncouplers of oxidative posphorylation are further characterized. Both the pH gradient and electrical potential generated across the membrane by malate respiration are equally sensitive to uncouplers in the wild type and uncoupler-resistant mutants. The mutants possess 0 to 10% of the wild type ATPase activity which is not activated by pretreatment with heat or
trypsin
. Despite this inability to measure ATPase activity, the mutants demonstrate acid-pulse-driven ATPase synthesis which is sensitive to uncouplers as well as malate-driven ATP synthesis which becomes uncoupler sensitive at pH 5.5. N,N' -
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
and valinomycin plus potassium inhibition of ATP synthesis is reversed by uncouplers in the mutants but not in the wild type. The data support the existence of a specific site on the ATPase complex for uncoupler binding which, if altered by mutation, affects uncoupler binding to the complex. The retention of malate-driven ATP synthesis in the absence of a significant pH gradient or electrical potential suggests that an alternative intermediate is involved in coupling oxidation to phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Membrane bioenergetic parameters in uncoupler-resistant mutants of Bacillus megaterium. 2 41
1. The cell-membrane ATP phosphohydrolase of vegetatively grown Clostridium pasteurianum was specifically Mg2+-dependent, but demonstrated significant activity with GTP, CTP and UTP. It displayed approximate Michaelis-Menten kinetics only in the presence of certain effectors (e.g. phosphoenolpyruvate, fructose 1,6-bis-phosphate) which decreased the Km for ATP (to below 2 mM) but also V, whilst extending to pH 5.8 the effective pH range of activity of the enzyme. 2. ATP phosphohydrolase activity of the membrane ATPase (BF0F1) was inhibited by
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
, butyricin 7423, Dio-9, 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan, efrapeptin, leucinostatin and quercetin, and to a lesser degree by aurovertin and citreoviridin. The enzyme was not inhibited by oligomycin, spegazzinine, tributyl tin, triethyl tin or venturicidin. The soluble ATPase (BF1) component differed in not being inhibited by
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
, butyricin 7423 or leucinostatin. 3. The ATPase (BF0F1) complex and its soluble (BF1) component were separately purified. 4. Dodecylsulphate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separated only four polypeptide components in the purified ATPase (BF0F1), with approximate molecular weights (+/- 10%) as follows: subunit a, 65 500; subunit c, 57 500; subunit da, 43 000; subunit fa, 15 000. The soluble (BF1 component contained only the three polypeptide subunits a, c and da. These were present in the BF0F1 preparation in the ratio 2 : 1 : 2; the contribution of subunit fa could not satisfactorily be quantified. 5. Subunit a was identified as the component binding 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan and subunit fa as the component binding
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
. The ATP phosphohydrolase activity of the membrane ATPase was not activated by
trypsin
treatment and the ATPase (BF0F1) contained no
trypsin
-sensitive inhibitor protein subunit. 6. Purified ATPase (BF0F1) was incorporated into artificial proteoliposomes which demonstrated ATP-dependent enhancement of 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulphonate fluorescence and ATP-dependent proton influx. These reactions were abolished by proton conductors (e.g. carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone) by valinomycin in the presence of a high external concentration of K+, or by
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
, butyricin 7423, Dio-9, 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan or leucinostatin. Oligomycin, tributyl tin, triethyl tin and venturicidin were not inhibitory. 7. When stripped of the soluble BF1 component, such ATPase-proteoliposomes demonstrated nil ATP phosphohydrolase activity and did not display ATP-dependent enhancement of 8-anilino-naphthalene-1-sulphonate fluorescence or ATP-dependent protein influx. All of these activities were restored by incubation of the BF1-depleted proteoliposomes with a purified preparation of the soluble BF1 component.
...
PMID:The proton-translocating adenosine triphosphatase of the obligately anaerobic bacterium Clostridium pasteurianum. 1. ATP phosphohydrolase activity. 3 58
Basal and
trypsin
-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase activities of Escherichia coli K 12 have been characterized at pH 7.5 in the membrane-bound state and in a soluble form of the enzyme. The saturation curve for Mg2+/ATP = 1/2 was hyperbolic with the membrane-bound enzyme and sigmoidal with the soluble enzyme. Trypsin did not modify the shape of the curves. The kinetic parameters were for the membrane-bound ATPase: apparent Km = 2.5 mM, Vmax (minus
trypsin
) = 1.6 mumol-min-1-mg protein-1, Vmax (plus
trypsin
) = 2.44 mumol-min-1-mg protein-1; for the soluble ATPase: [S0.5] = 1.2 mM, Vmax (-
trypsin
) = 4 mumol-min-1-mg protein-1; Vmax (+
trypsin
) = 6.6 mumol-min-1-mg protein-1. Hill plot analysis showed a single slope for the membrane-bound ATPase (n = 0.92) but two slopes were obtained for the soluble enzyme (n = 0.98 and 1.87). It may suggest the existence of an initial positive cooperativity at low substrate concentrations followed by a lack of cooperativity at high ATP concentrations. Excess of free ATP and Mg2+ inhibited the ATPase but excess of Mg/ATP (1/2) did not. Saturation for ATP at constant Mg2+ concentration (4 mM) showed two sites (groups) with different Kms: at low ATP the values were 0.38 and 1.4 mM for the membrane-bound and soluble enzyme; at high ATP concentrations they were 17 and 20 mM, respectively. Mg2+ saturation at constant ATP (8 mM) revealed michealian kinetics for the membrane-bound ATPase and sigmoid one for the protein in soluble state. When the ATPase was assayed in presence of
trypsin
we obtained higher Km values for Mg2+. These results might suggest that
trypsin
stimulates E. coli ATPase by acting on some site(s) involved in Mg2+ binding. Adenosine diphosphate and inorganic phosphate (Pi) act as competitive inhibitors of Escherichia coli ATPase. The Ki values for Pi were 1.6 +/- 0.1 mM for the membrane-bound ATPase and 1.3 +/- 0.1 mM for the enzyme in soluble form, the Ki values for ADP being 1.7 mM and 0.75 mM for the membrane-bound and soluble ATPase, respectively. Hill plots of the activity of the soluble enzyme in presence of ADP showed that ADP decreased the interaction coefficient at ATP concentrations below its Km value. Trypsin did not modify the mechanism of inhibition or the inhibition constants.
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
(0.4 mM) inhibited the membrane-bound enzyme by 60-70% but concentrations 100 times higher did not affect the residual activity nor the soluble ATPase. This inhibition was independent of
trypsin
. Sodium azide (20 muM) inhibited both states of E. coli ATPase by 50%. Concentrations 25-fold higher were required for complete inhibition. Ouabain, atebrin and oligomycin did not affect the bacterial ATPase.
...
PMID:Membrane bound and soluble adenosine triphosphatase of Escherichia coli K 12. Kinetic properties of the basal and trypsin-stimulated activities. 12 30
The adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP)-linked transhydrogenase reaction, present in the particulate fractions of Escherichia coli, was previously shown to be inhibited in these fractions when the bacteria were treated with colicins K or El. The purpose of this study was to characterized the ATP-linked transhydrogenase reaction and the colicin-caused inhibition of the reaction in purified cytoplasmic membranes. Particulate fractions from bacteria treated or untreated with colicins were separated on sucrose gradients into cell wall membrane and cytoplasmic membrane fractions. The ATP-linked transhydrogenase reaction was found to be exclusively associated with the cytoplasmic membrane fractions. The reaction was inhibited by carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenlhdrazone, dinitrophenol,
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
, and
trypsin
. Although the cytoplasmic membrane fractions were purified from the majoriy of the cell wall membrane and its bound colicins, they showed the inhibitory effects of colicins K and El on the ATP-linked transhydrogenase reaction. The inhibition of ATP-linked transhydrogenase reaction induced by the colicin could not be reversed by subjection the isolated membranes to a variety of physical and chemical treatments. Cytoplasmic membranes depleted of energy-transducing adenosine triphosphatase ATPase) complex (coupling factor) lost the ATP-linked transhydrogenase activity. The ATPase complexes isolated from membranes of bacteria treated or untreated with colicins El or K reconstituted high levels of ATP-linded transhydrogenase activity to depleted membranes of untreated bacteria. The same ATPase complexes reconstituted low levels of activity to depleted membranes of the treated bacteria.
...
PMID:Adenosine 5'-triphosphate-linked transhydrogenase in cytoplasmic membranes of colicin-treated and untreated Escherichia coli. 13 1
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
(
DCCD
) inhibits the (Ca2+)ATPase, Ca2+ uptake by sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles and Ca2+ binding to the (Ca2+)ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum. Ca2+ (at micron concentrations) specifically protects against
DCCD
inhibition. The inhibition can, therefore, be readily demonstrated only in the presence of Ca2+ chelating agents such as EGTA. In the presence of EGTA, the ionophore A-23187 increased the sensitivity to
DCCD
. The ionophore also increased the phosphorylation of the enzyme by inorganic phosphate in the presence of Mg2+. These results indicate that tightly bound Ca2+ is located in a hydrophobic region of the enzyme which is not accessible to EGTA. Complete inhibition of the (Ca2+)ATPase is accompanied by binding of 4--5 nmol of [14C]
DCCD
per mg of ATPase protein in the absence of Ca2+ compared with 2 nmol bound per mg in the presence of Ca2+ with no ATPase inhibition. Assuming a molecular weight of 100 000 for the ATPase monomer, about 1 nmol of
DCCD
inhibits 4 nmol of ATPase. This result suggests that the minimal functional unit of the enzyme is a tetramer. Following
trypsin
digestion of the [14C]
DCCD
-labeled ATPase most of the radioactivity appears in the 20 000-dalton fragment. We propose that
DCCD
reacts with the Ca2+-binding site of the ATPase.
...
PMID:Inhibition of the (Ca2+)ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide: evidence for location of the Ca2+ binding site in a hydrophobic region. 15 44
The topology of the and subunit of the Escherichia coli adenosinetriphosphatase (ECF1) has been explored by proteinase digestion and chemical labeling methods. The delta subunit of ECF1 could be cleaved selectively by reaction of the enzyme complex with very low amounts of
trypsin
(1:5000, w/w). Cleavage of the delta subunit occurred serially from the C-terminus. The N-terminal fragments of the delta subunit remained bound to the core ECF1 complex through sucrose gradient centrifugation, indicating that part of the binding of this subunit involves the N-terminal segment. ECF1, in which around 20 amino acids had been removed from the C-terminus of delta, still bound to ECF0 but
DCCD
sensitivity of the ATPase activity was lost. When ECF1 was reacted with N-ethyl[14C]maleimide ([14C]NEM) in the native state, only one of the two Cys residues on the delta subunit was modified. This residue, Cys-140, was also labeled in ECF1F0. Cys-140 was shown to be involved in the disulfide bridge between alpha and delta subunits that is generated when ECF1 is treated with CuCl2. Thus, the C-terminal part of the delta subunit around Cys-140 can interact with the core ECF1 complex. These results suggest a model for the delta subunit in which the central part of polypeptide is a part of the stalk, with both N- and C-termini associated with ECF1.
...
PMID:Structure-function relationships of domains of the delta subunit in Escherichia coli adenosine triphosphatase. 165 28
In addition to its bactericidal mode of action, the peptide antibiotic AS-48 exhibits a bacteriolytic effect on Enterococcus faecalis S-47 that is associated with autolysin activation. Bacteriolysis induced by the antibiotic can be modulated by addition of EDTA, divalent cations and autolysin activators (
trypsin
) or inhibitors (cardiolipin), suggesting that topologic regulation of the autolysins is involved in the process. In addition, inhibitors of protein and RNA synthesis interfere markedly with bacteriolysis, as do ionophores and the ATPase inhibitor
DCCD
, suggesting the participation of an internal messenger in autolysin activation in the presence of AS-48.
...
PMID:Induction of autolysis in Enterococcus faecalis S-47 by peptide AS-48. 170 Sep 74
In the absence of MgATP, the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase is irreversibly inhibited by the hydrophobic carbodiimide dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, and this inhibition is most likely due to the formation of a cross-link between a carboxyl group and a lysine residue in the active site (Toner-Webb & Taylor, 1987). In order to identify these cross-linked residues, the catalytic subunit was modified by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and then treated with acetic anhydride and digested with
trypsin
. The resulting peptides were resolved by high-performance liquid chromatography. One major absorbing tryptic peptide and one smaller peptide consistently and reproducibly showed a decrease in absorbance after the catalytic subunit had been treated with
DCCD
. These peptides correspond to residues 166-190 and 57-93, respectively. A unique peptide was isolated from the modified catalytic subunit, and the sequence of this peptide established that the cross-linking occurred between Asp-184 and Lys-72. The cross-linking of these two residues, which were both identified previously as essential residues, confirms the likelihood that each plays a role in the functioning of this enzyme. The fact that Asp-184 and Lys-72 appear to be invariant in all protein kinases further supports the hypothesis that these two residues, located close to one another at the active site of the enzyme, play essential roles in catalysis.
...
PMID:Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide cross-links two conserved residues, Asp-184 and Lys-72, at the active site of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. 249 73
The membrane F0 sector of mitochondrial ATP synthase complex was rapidly isolated by direct extraction with CHAPS from F1-depleted submitochondrial particles. The preparation thus obtained is stable and can be reconstituted in artificial phospholipid membranes to result in oligomycin-sensitive proton conduction, or recombined with purified F1 to give the oligomycin-sensitive F0F1-ATPase complex. The F0 preparation and constituent polypeptides were characterized by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblot analysis. The functional role of F0 polypeptides was examined by means of
trypsin
digestion and reconstitution studies. It is shown that, in addition to the 8 kDa
DCCD
-binding protein, the nuclear encoded protein [(1987) J. Mol. Biol. 197, 89-100], characterized as an intrinsic component of F0 (F0I, PVP protein [(1988) FEBS Lett. 237,9-14]) [corrected] is involved in H+ translocation and the sensitivity of this process to the F0 inhibitors,
DCCD
and oligomycin.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial F0F1 H+-ATP synthase. Characterization of F0 components involved in H+ translocation. 254 59
Digestion of the F1-ATPase of Escherichia coli with
trypsin
stimulated ATP hydrolytic activity and removed the delta and epsilon subunits of the enzyme. A species represented by the formula alpha 1(3) beta 1(3) gamma 1, where alpha 1, beta 1 and gamma 1 are forms of the native alpha, beta and gamma subunits which have been attacked by
trypsin
, was formed by
trypsin
digestion in the presence of ATP. In the presence of ATP and MgCl2, conversion of gamma to gamma 1 was retarded and the enzyme retained the epsilon subunit. These results imply that binding of ATP to the beta subunits alters the conformation of ECF1 to increase the accessibility of the gamma subunit to
trypsin
. The likely
trypsin
cleavage sites in the alpha, beta and gamma subunits are discussed. ECF1 from the alpha subunit-defective mutant uncA401, or after treatment with
N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide
or 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan, was present in a conformation in which the gamma subunit was readily accessible to
trypsin
and could not be protected by the presence of ATP and MgCl2. In a similar manner to native E. coli F1-ATPase, the hydrolytic activity of the
trypsin
-digested enzyme was stimulated by the detergent lauryldimethylamine N-oxide. Since the digested enzyme lacked the epsilon subunit, a putative inhibitor of hydrolytic activity, a mechanism for the stimulation which involves loss or movement of this subunit is untenable.
...
PMID:Ligand-induced conformational changes in the Escherichia coli F1 adenosine triphosphatase probed by trypsin digestion. 289 Mar 77
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