Abstract
Substrate specificity of human mitochondrial low K m aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3) E2 isozyme has been investigated employing p-nitrophenyl esters of acyl groups of two to six carbon atoms and comparing with that of aldehydes of one to eight carbon atoms. The esterase reaction was studied under three conditions: in the absence of coenzyme, in the presence of NAD (1 m m), and in the presence of NADH (160 μ m). The maximal velocity of the esterase reaction with p-nitrophenyl acetate and propionate as substrates in the presence of NAD was 3.9–4.7 times faster than that of the dehydrogenase reaction. Under all other conditions the velocities of dehydrogenase and esterase reactions were similar; the lowest k cat was for p-nitrophenyl butyrate in the presence of NAD. Stimulation of esterase activity by coenzymes was confined to esters of short acyl chain length; with longer acyl chain lengths or increased bulkiness ( p-nitrophenyl guanidinobenzoate) no effect or even inhibition was observed. Comparison of kinetic constants for esters demonstrates that p-nitrophenyl butyrate is the worst substrate of all esters tested, suggesting that the active site topography is uniquely unfavorable for p-nitrophenyl butyrate. This fact is, however, not reflected in kinetic constants for butyraldehyde, which is a good substrate. The substrate specificity profile as determined by comparison of k cat K m ratios was found to be quite different for aldehydes and esters. For aldehydes k cat K m ratios increased with the increase of chain length; with esters under all three conditions, a V-shaped curve was produced with a minimum at p-nitrophenyl butyrate.
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