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: UNIPROT:O14944 (
EPR
)
13,097
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bacterial
acetone carboxylase
catalyzes the ATP-dependent carboxylation of acetone to acetoacetate with the concomitant production of AMP and two inorganic phosphates. The importance of manganese in Rhodobacter capsulatus
acetone carboxylase
has been established through a combination of physiological, biochemical, and spectroscopic studies. Depletion of manganese from the R. capsulatus growth medium resulted in inhibition of acetone-dependent but not malate-dependent cell growth. Under normal growth conditions (0.5 microm Mn2+ in medium), growth with acetone as the carbon source resulted in a 4-fold increase in intracellular protein-bound manganese over malate-grown cells and the appearance of a Mn2+
EPR
signal centered at g = 2 that was absent in malate-grown cells. Acetone carboxylase purified from cells grown with 50 microm Mn2+ had a 1.6-fold higher specific activity and 1.9-fold higher manganese content than cells grown with 0.5 microm Mn2+, consistently yielding a stoichiometry of 1.9 manganese/alpha2beta2gamma2 multimer, or 0.95 manganese/alphabetagamma protomer. Manganese in
acetone carboxylase
was tightly bound and not removed upon dialysis against various metal ion chelators. The addition of acetone to malate-grown cells grown in medium depleted of manganese resulted in the high level synthesis of
acetone carboxylase
(15-20% soluble protein), which, upon purification, exhibited 7% of the activity and 6% of the manganese content of the enzyme purified from acetone-grown cells.
EPR
analysis of purified
acetone carboxylase
indicates the presence of a mononuclear Mn2+ center, with possible spin coupling of two mononuclear sites. The addition of Mg.ATP or Mg.AMP resulted in
EPR
spectral changes, whereas the addition of acetone, CO2, inorganic phosphate, and acetoacetate did not perturb the
EPR
. These studies demonstrate that manganese is essential for acetone carboxylation and suggest a role for manganese in nucleotide binding and activation.
...
PMID:Bacterial acetone carboxylase is a manganese-dependent metalloenzyme. 1533 55