phosphorus-radioisotopes has been researched along with phosphoramidic-acid* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for phosphorus-radioisotopes and phosphoramidic-acid
Article | Year |
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GTP:GTP guanylyltransferase: trapping procedures for detecting and characterizing chemical nature of enzyme-nucleotide phosphoramidate reaction intermediate.
Topics: Amides; Amino Acids; Animals; Artemia; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Chromatography, Thin Layer; Dinucleoside Phosphates; Enzyme Inhibitors; Enzyme Stability; Guanosine Triphosphate; Molecular Structure; Nucleotidyltransferases; Phosphoric Acids; Phosphorus Radioisotopes | 2002 |
Synthesis of [(32)P]phosphoramidate for use as a low molecular weight phosphodonor reagent.
Phosphoramidate serves as a useful phosphodonor reagent in protein and peptide phosphorylation, notably in studying two-component signal transduction systems in which low molecular weight phosphodonors can substitute for the phosphodonor function of histidine protein kinases in in vitro phosphorylation studies of response regulator proteins. A convenient method for the synthesis of radiolabeled phosphoramidate has not been developed, and this has limited its broader use. Here we report the synthesis of radiolabeled ammonium hydrogen phosphoramidate [(NH(4))H(32)PO(3)NH(2)] which is achieved by activation of [(32)P]orthophosphate with ethyl isocyanate followed by aminolysis with ammonium hydroxide to form the desired phosphoramidate. The procedure is conveniently carried out in a microfuge tube and requires only two successive precipitation steps to obtain pure ammonium hydrogen phosphoramidate. Molar yields of 15-30% and specific activities of 10-20 Ci/mol are readily achieved. Phosphorylation of microgram quantities of response regulator proteins CheY, CheB, and DrrA is shown. Low level, but detectable, nonspecific phosphorylation was observed for reactions near ambient temperatures when substrate response regulators lacking the active site aspartate but containing histidine residues are used. More significant levels of nonspecific phosphorylation were observed for reactions at elevated temperatures when using a nonresponse regulator control protein (RNase A). Topics: Amides; Bacterial Proteins; Chromatography, Thin Layer; Membrane Proteins; Methyl-Accepting Chemotaxis Proteins; Molecular Weight; Phosphoric Acids; Phosphorus Radioisotopes; Phosphorylation; Salmonella typhimurium | 2000 |