Abstract

A new, more gentle enzyme purification for yeast enolase was developed. A series of kinetic experiments was performed with yeast enolase where the concentration of Mg(II) is kept constant and at the Km' level; the addition of Mn(II), Zn(II), or Cu(II) gives a hyperbolic decrease in the enzyme activity. The final velocity of these mixed-metal systems is the same as the velocity obtained only with Mn(II), Zn(II), or Cu(II), respectively. The concentration of the second metal that gives half-maximal effect in the presence of Mg(II) is approximately the same as the apparent Km (Km') value measured for that cation alone. Direct binding of Mn(II) to apoenolase in the absence and presence of Mg(II) shows that Mn(II) and Mg(II) compete for the same metal site on enolase. In the presence of D-2-phosphoglycerate (PGA) and Mg(II), only a single cation site per monomer is occupied by Mn(II). Water proton relaxation rate (PRR) studies of enzyme-ligand complexes containing Mn(II) and Mn(II) in the presence of Mg(II) are consistent with Mn(II) binding at site I under both conditions. PRR titrations of ligands such as the substrate PGA or the inhibitors orthophosphate or fluoride to the enolase-Mn(II)-Mg(II) complex are similar to those obtained for the enolase-Mn(II) complex, also indicating that Mn(II) is at site I in the presence of Mg(II). High-resolution 1H and 31P NMR was used to determine the paramagnetic effect of enolase-bound Mn(II) on the relaxation rates of the nuclei of the competitive inhibitor phosphoglycolate. The distances between the bound Mn(II) and the nuclei were calculated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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