Swahili
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 1996-Jul

Site-directed mutagenesis of glycine 99 to alanine in L-lactate monooxygenase from Mycobacterium smegmatis.

Watumiaji waliosajiliwa tu ndio wanaweza kutafsiri nakala
Ingia / Ingia
Kiungo kimehifadhiwa kwenye clipboard
W Sun
C H Williams
V Massey

Maneno muhimu

Kikemikali

L-Lactate monooxygenase (LMO) from Mycobacterium smegmatis was mutated at glycine 99 to alanine, and the properties of the resulting mutant (referred to as G99A) were studied. Mutant G99A of LMO was designed to test the postulate that the smaller glycine residue in the vicinity of the alpha-carbon methyl group of lactate in wild-type LMO has less steric hindrance, leading to the retention and oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate in the active site, a unique property of LMO in contrast to other members of the FMN-dependent oxidase/dehydrogenase family. G99A has been shown to be readily reduced by L-lactate at a rate similar to that of the wild-type enzyme. The binding of pyruvate to reduced G99A is 4-fold weaker than that to the wild-type enzyme. A dramatic change of this mutation is that G99A has a much lower oxygen reactivity than the wild-type enzyme. Pyruvate-bound reduced G99A reacts with O2 at a rate approximately 10(5)-fold slower than the wild-type enzyme, and free reduced G99A reacts with O2 at a rate approximately 100-fold slower than the wild-type enzyme. Due to the very low oxygen reactivity of the pyruvate-bound reduced enzyme, G99A has been shown to catalyze the oxidation of L-lactate to pyruvate and hydrogen peroxide instead of acetate, carbon dioxide, and water, the normal decarboxylation products of pyruvate and hydrogen peroxide. Thus, the mutation alters the enzyme from its L-lactate monooxygenase activity to L-lactate oxidase activity. However, compared with L-lactate oxidase, G99A has a much lower reactivity toward oxygen. Our results also reveal that the small steric change around N-5 of the flavin causes a profound change in the electronic distribution in the catalytic cavity of the enzyme and imply that electrostatic interactions in the active site provide an important factor for control of O2 reactivity.

Jiunge na ukurasa
wetu wa facebook

Hifadhidata kamili ya mimea ya dawa inayoungwa mkono na sayansi

  • Inafanya kazi katika lugha 55
  • Uponyaji wa mitishamba unaungwa mkono na sayansi
  • Kutambua mimea kwa picha
  • Ramani ya GPS inayoshirikiana
  • Soma machapisho ya kisayansi yanayohusiana na utafutaji wako
  • Tafuta mimea ya dawa na athari zao
  • Panga maslahi yako na fanya tarehe ya utafiti wa habari, majaribio ya kliniki na ruhusu

Andika dalili au ugonjwa na usome juu ya mimea ambayo inaweza kusaidia, chapa mimea na uone magonjwa na dalili ambazo hutumiwa dhidi yake.
* Habari zote zinategemea utafiti wa kisayansi uliochapishwa

Google Play badgeApp Store badge