cobamamide and alpha-beta-methyleneadenosine-5--triphosphate

cobamamide has been researched along with alpha-beta-methyleneadenosine-5--triphosphate* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for cobamamide and alpha-beta-methyleneadenosine-5--triphosphate

ArticleYear
A protein factor is essential for in situ reactivation of glycerol-inactivated adenosylcobalamin-dependent diol dehydratase.
    Bioscience, biotechnology, and biochemistry, 1997, Volume: 61, Issue:10

    The adenosylcobalamin-dependent diol dehydratase of Klebsiella oxytoca undergoes suicidal inactivation by glycerol during catalysis involving irreversible dissociation of the Co-C bond of the coenzyme. The glycerol-inactivated holoenzyme in permeabilized cells (in situ) of E. coli harboring a plasmid containing the diol dehydratase genes and their flanking regions was rapidly reactivated in the presence of free AdoCbl, ATP, and Mg2+. beta,gamma-Methylene ATP was not able to replace ATP. Inactive complexes of the enzyme with aqCbl, CN-Cbl, and PeCbl were activated in situ in the presence of AdoCbl, ATP, and Mg2+, but the complex with AdePeCbl was not. These results suggest that the inactivated holoenzyme is reactivated in situ in the presence of ATP and Mg2+ by exchange of the inactivated coenzyme lacking the adenine moiety for free intact AdoCbl. The in situ reactivation was also observed when an analog lacking the alpha-ribose moiety of the nucleotide loop was used as coenzyme. The results with a recombinant E. coli strains carrying a deletion mutant plasmid demonstrate that certain protein(s) encoded by the 3'-flanking region of the diol dehydratase genes are essential for the in situ reactivation of inactivated diol dehydratase.

    Topics: Adenosine Triphosphate; Cloning, Molecular; Cobamides; Culture Media; DNA; Enzyme Activation; Enzyme Reactivators; Escherichia coli; Klebsiella; Magnesium; Mutation; Plasmids; Propanediol Dehydratase

1997