Kinetic mechanism of NAD:malic enzyme from Ascaris suum in the direction of reductive carboxylation. 1991

S Mallick, and B G Harris, and P F Cook
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine, Fort Worth 76107.

Initial velocity studies in the absence and presence of product and dead-end inhibitors suggest a steady-state random mechanism for malic enzyme in the direction of reductive carboxylation of pyruvate. For this quadreactant enzymatic reaction (Mn2+ is a pseudoreactant), initial velocity patterns were obtained under conditions in which two substrates were maintained at saturating concentrations while one reactant was varied at several fixed concentrations of the other. Data from the resulting reciprocal plots, analyzed in terms of a bireactant mechanism, are consistent with a sequential mechanism with an obligatory order of addition of metal prior to pyruvate. NAD is competitive against NADH whether pyruvate and CO2 are maintained at low or high concentrations, whereas it is noncompetitive against pyruvate and CO2. Thio-NADH, alpha-ketobutyrate, and nitrite were used as dead-end analogs of NADH, pyruvate, and CO2, respectively. Thio-NADH is competitive against NADH, whereas it is noncompetitive against pyruvate and CO2, in accordance with a random mechanism. alpha-Ketobutyrate and nitrite gave noncompetitive inhibition against all substrates. The noncompetitive patterns observed for alpha-ketobutyrate versus pyruvate and nitrite versus CO2 suggest binding of the inhibitor to both the E.Mn.NADH and E.Mn.NAD complexes. Primary deuterium isotope effects are equal on all kinetic parameters, in agreement with the random mechanism, and suggest equal off-rates for NAD from E.Mn.NAD as well as pyruvate and NADH from E.Mn.NADH.pyruvate. Data are consistent with an overall symmetry in the malic enzyme reaction in the two reaction directions with a requirement for metal bound prior to pyruvate and malate.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008291 Malate Dehydrogenase An enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of (S)-malate and NAD+ to oxaloacetate and NADH. EC 1.1.1.37. Malic Dehydrogenase,NAD-Malate Dehydrogenase,Dehydrogenase, Malate,Dehydrogenase, Malic,Dehydrogenase, NAD-Malate,NAD Malate Dehydrogenase
D010084 Oxidation-Reduction A chemical reaction in which an electron is transferred from one molecule to another. The electron-donating molecule is the reducing agent or reductant; the electron-accepting molecule is the oxidizing agent or oxidant. Reducing and oxidizing agents function as conjugate reductant-oxidant pairs or redox pairs (Lehninger, Principles of Biochemistry, 1982, p471). Redox,Oxidation Reduction
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D001200 Ascaris A genus of nematodes of the superfamily ASCARIDOIDEA whose species usually inhabit the intestine. Ascari
D001667 Binding, Competitive The interaction of two or more substrates or ligands with the same binding site. The displacement of one by the other is used in quantitative and selective affinity measurements. Competitive Binding

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