![]()
|
|
||||||||
JBC, Vol. 250, Issue 14, 5450-5454, Jul, 1975
E. V. Groman, R. M. Schultz and L. L. Engel
Human placental estradiol-17beta dehydrogenase is rapidly inactivated upon treatment with 3-bromoacetoxyestrone. Pseudo-first order kinetic data are obtained and inactivation is accompanied by incorporation of 1 mol of 3-acetoxyestrone/mol of subunit (Mr =34,000). Treatment of the inactivated enzyme with (4S)-[4-2H]DPNH results in the formation of covalently bound [17alpha-2H]estradiol-17beta, which can be released by hydrolysis and identified by gas chromatography-mass sepctrometry. When (4R)-[4-2H]DPNH was used, deuterium was not transferred. Thus, the normal stereochemistry of hydridetransfer is preserved for both partners. After treatment with p-mercuribenzoate, affinity-labeled estradiol-17beta dehyrogenase is no longer able to caralyze reduction its covalently bound estrone; in the presence of DPNH and native enzyme, however, reduction occurs, demonstrating that affinity-labeled enzyme can itself serve as subtrate for native estradiol-17beta dehydrogenase. The reversible enzymatic interconversion of covalently bound estrone was demonstrated using a transhydrogenase assay. The ability of an enzyme to catalyze its normal reaction with a covalently bound substrate is termed catalytic competence, and is considered to be a new criterion for affinity labeling.
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| All ASBMB Journals | Molecular and Cellular Proteomics |
| Journal of Lipid Research | ASBMB Today |