Abstract

The accessibility of pyridoxal 5'-phosphates of the phosphorylase ab hybrid to resolution by imidazole citrate and cysteine was studied and compared with that of the b and a forms. Promotion of resolution of phosphorylated forms by raising the temperature or in the presence of glycogen indicates that the resistance of phosphorylase a and ab to resolution at 0 degrees C is due rather to their tetrameric state than their phosphorylation-related active conformation. The pattern of resolution of the ab hybrid was similar to that of the a and differed from that of the b forms in that it occurred at 30 degrees C and 37 degrees C but not at 0 degrees C, moreover, it did not show first-order kinetics. On the other hand, inhibition of resolution by ligands binding to the nucleotide site of phosphorylase reflected an intermediate sensitivity of the ab form between that of the b and a forms. We conclude that partial phosphorylation of phosphorylase b elicits conformational change(s) in both subunits which influence the monomer-monomer interactions and resolution of pyridoxal 5'-phosphates. Resistance of ab hybrid to monomerizing agents as imidazole citrate, comparable to that of other forms, argues for its stability, ruling out its reshuffling into mixtures of phosphorylase b and a.

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