Abstract

The ability of Drosophila alcohol dehydrogenase (D-ADH) to catalyze the oxidation of aldehydes to carboxylic acids has been re-examined. Prior studies are shown to have been compromised by a nonenzymic reaction between the aldehydic substrates and amine-containing buffers, e.g., glycine or Tris, and an amine-catalyzed addition of aldehyde to NAD+. These reactions interfere with spectrophotometric assays for monitoring aldehyde oxidation and obscure the nature and scope of D-ADH-catalyzed aldehyde oxidation, particularly at physiological pH. Use of nonreactive buffers, such as pyrophosphate or phosphate, and 1H NMR spectroscopy to monitor all the components of the reaction mixture reveals the facile dismutation of aldehydes into equimolar quantities of the corresponding acids and alcohols at both neutral and high pH. At high pH, dismutation is accompanied by a small burst of NADH production to a steady-state concentration ( < 10 microM) that represents a partitioning between NADH dissociation and aldehyde reduction. The increase in A340 is therefore not a direct measure of the aldehyde oxidation reaction, and the resulting kinetic values cannot be compared to those for alcohol dehydrogenation. The present results for D-ADH, combined with data from the literature, establish that aldehyde oxidation, manifest as dismutation, is a widespread property of alcohol dehydrogenases with potential physiological importance in alcohol metabolism and aldehyde detoxification.

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