Abstract

4-Fluoro-3-nitrophenyl azide (FNPA) competitively inhibited beef liver monoamine oxidase-B (MAO-B) in the dark (Ki = 2.8 μM). Upon irradiation in the presence of FNPA, a concentration-dependent photoinactivation of MAO-B was observed. The kinetic analysis showed that the photoinactivation of MAO-B resulted in a decrease in Vmax but no change in Km. This result suggests that an irreversible linkage may be formed between the enzyme and the photolyzed FNPA. When [3H]FNPA was photoirradiated with the purified MAO-B, a single radioactive band associated with MAO-B was observed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The photo-dependent incorporation could be protected by phenylethylamine, the substrate for MAO-B, in a concentration-dependent manner. Complete tryptic-chymotryptic digestion of [3H]FNPA-labeled MAO-B resulted in three radioactive peaks on Sephadex G-25 column chromatography. With the same digestion and separation procedures, only one major radioactive peak was observed for the [3H]pargyline-labeled MAO-B, and its elution volume was different from that of [3H]FNPA-labeled peptides. These results suggest that, upon photolysis, FNPA may incorporate into a region in the active site of MAO-B which may be different from the pargyline binding site—the FAD prosthetic group of the enzyme.

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