Chemical modification of chalcone isomerase by mercurials and tetrathionate. Evidence for a single cysteine residue in the active site
Chalcone isomerase from soybean is inactivated by stoichiometric amounts of p-mercuribenzoate or HgCl2. Spectral titration of the enzyme with p-mercuribenzoate indicates that a single thiol group is modified. Treatment of modified enzyme with KCN or thiols results in a complete restoration of enzyme...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1989-08, Vol.264 (24), p.14272-14276 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Chalcone isomerase from soybean is inactivated by stoichiometric amounts of p-mercuribenzoate or HgCl2. Spectral titration
of the enzyme with p-mercuribenzoate indicates that a single thiol group is modified. Treatment of modified enzyme with KCN
or thiols results in a complete restoration of enzyme activity demonstrating that the inactivation is not due to irreversible
protein denaturation. A product of the enzymatic reaction, naringenin, provides complete kinetic protection against inactivation
by both mercurials. The binding constant (33 microM) for naringenin determined from the concentration dependence of the protection
agrees with the inhibition constant (34 microM) for naringenin as a competitive inhibitor of the catalytic reaction. This
agreement demonstrates that the observed kinetic protection results from the specific binding of naringenin to the active
site. Incubation of native chalcone isomerase with sodium tetrathionate (0.1 M) results in a slow time-dependent loss of enzymatic
activity. The inactivation of chalcone isomerase by tetrathionate and N-ethylmaleimide becomes very rapid in the presence
of 6 M urea, indicating that the native tertiary structure is responsible for the low reactivity of the enzymatic thiol. The
stoichiometric modification of reduced and denatured chalcone isomerase by [3H] N-ethylmaleimide indicates that the enzyme
contains only a single cysteine residue and does not contain any disulfides. The evidence presented suggests that the only
half-cystine residue in chalcone isomerase is located in the active site and thereby provides the first clue to the location
of the active site in chalcone isomerase. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |