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Plant Physiology 1971-Aug

l-Phenylalanine Ammonia-Lyase (Maize): Evidence for a Common Catalytic Site for l-Phenylalanine and l-Tyrosine.

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E A Havir

Keywords

Abstract

l-Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (E.C. 4.3.1.5) from maize is active with l-tyrosine and l-phenylalanine and exhibits atypical Michaelis-Menten kinetics with both substrates. With phenylalanine as a substrate, the pH optimum is 8.7 and with tyrosine, 7.7. The estimated Km at high substrate concentrations is 0.27 mm for phenylalanine and 0.029 mm for tyrosine. However, the V(max) with phenylalanine is eight times higher than the V(max) with tyrosine when both are measured at pH 8.7, and 7 times higher when both are measured at their pH optima. The following evidence leads us to the conclusion that there is a common catalytic site for both substrates: (a) It is impossible to appreciably alter the ratio of the two activities during purification and isoelectric focusing. (b) The ratio of the products formed in mixed substrate experiments is in good agreement with the ratio predicted from the estimated Km values. (c) NaBH(4) reduces both activities to the same degree and l-phenylalanine, l-tyrosine, cinnamate, and p-coumarate protect both activities against NaBH(4) reduction to the same degree. In contrast, the enzyme isolated from potato, which does not act on l-tyrosine, is not protected against reduction by either l-tyrosine or p-coumarate. However, both enzymes appear to have a dehydroalanine-containing prosthetic group.

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