Abstract

Circular dichroism spectra and circular dichroism difference spectra, generated when porcine heart mitochondrial and supernatant malate dehydrogenase bind coenzymes or when enzyme dihydroincotinamide nucleotide binary complexes bind substrate analogs, are presented. No significant changes are observed in protein chromophores in the 200- to 240-nm spectral range indicating that there is apparently little or no perturbation of the alpha helix or peptide backbone when binary or ternary complexes are formed. Quite different spectral perturbances occur in the two enzymes with reduced coenzyme binding as well as with substrate-analog binding by enzyme-reduced coenzyme binding. Comparison of spectral perturbations in both enzymes with oxidized or reduced coenzyme binding suggests that the dihydronicotinamide moiety of the coenzyme interacts with or perturbs indirectly the environment of aromatic amino acid residues. Reduced coenzyme binding apparently perturbs tyrosine residues in both mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase and lactic dehydrogenase. Reduced coenzyme binding perturbs tyrosine and tryptophan residues in supernatant malate dehydrogenase. The number of reduced coenzyme binding sites was determined to be two per 70,000 daltons in the mitochondrial enzyme, and the reduced coenzyme dissociation constants, determined through the change in ellipticity at 260 nm, with dihydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide binding, were found to be good agreement with published values (Holbrook, J. J., and Wolfe, R. G. (1972) Biochemistry 11, 2499-2502) obtained through fluorescence-binding studies and indicate no apparent extra coenzyme binding sites. When D-malate forms a ternary complex with malate dehydrogenase-reduced coenzyme complexes, perturbation of both adenine and dihydronicotinamide chromophores is evident. L-Malate binding, however, apparently produces only a perturbation of the adenine chromophore in such complexes. Since the coenzyme has been found to bind in an open conformation on the surface of the enzyme and the substrate analogs bind at or very near the dihydronicotinamide moiety binding site, protein conformational changes are implicated during ternary complex formation with D-malate which can effect the adenine chromophore at some distance from the substrate binding site.

Highlights

  • Circular dichroism spectra and circular dichroism diBerence spectra, generated when porcine heart mitochondrial and supematant malate dehydrogenase bind coenzymes or when enzyme diiydronicotinamide nucleotide binary complexes bind substrate analogs, are presented

  • Since the coenzyme has been found to bind in an open conformation on the surface of the enzyme and the substrate analogs bind at or very near the dihydronicotinamide moiety binding site, protein conformational changes are implicated during ternary complex formation with D-malate which can effect the adenine chromophore at some distance from the substrate binding site

  • Was designed to build a foundation of basic information primarily in two nonallosteric dimeric enzymes which might give useful information related to apparent functional asymmetry through difference circular dichroism spectroscopy

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Summary

SUMMARY

Circular dichroism spectra and circular dichroism diBerence spectra, generated when porcine heart mitochondrial and supematant malate dehydrogenase bind coenzymes or when enzyme diiydronicotinamide nucleotide binary complexes bind substrate analogs, are presented. When n-malate forms a ternary complex with malate dehydrogenase-reduced coenzyme complexes, perturbation of both the adenine and dihydronicotinamide chromophores is evident. Since the coenzyme has been found to bind in an open conformation on the surface of the enzyme and the substrate analogs bind at or very near the dihydronicotinamide moiety binding site, protein conformational changes are implicated during ternary complex formation with D-malate which can effect the adenine chromophore at some distance from the substrate binding site. Porcine heart mitochondrial and supernatant malate dehydrogenases both contain two identical or very similar subunits [1, 2] of about 35,600 daltons in size [3] These two enzymes are representative of the simplest system in which the significance of oligomeric protein structures can be studied. Was designed to build a foundation of basic information primarily in two nonallosteric dimeric enzymes which might give useful information related to apparent functional asymmetry through difference circular dichroism spectroscopy

Circular dichroism mertsurementa were performed with a Cary
The best available grade of NAD and NADH from the Sigma
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
This interpretation is supported further by the occurrence of the
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