Abstract

The water proton‐relaxation times, T1 and T2, have been measured in solutions of Mn(II) and ATP in the presence and absence of rabbit muscle phosphofructokinase over a wide range of temperatures and nuclear frequencies, using pulsed nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. The equilibrium between the enzyme and the Mn · ATP complex has also been studied as a function of temperature, and the relaxation rates in the bound complex determined. An analysis of the relaxation rates in both free and enzyme‐bound Mn · ATP sites according to established theories of paramagnetic relaxation has been carried out by means of graphical and computing methods, and yielded estimates of the Mn(II) water co‐ordination number (q) and the relevant correlation times with their frequency and temperature dependence. Relaxation in the ternary enzyme complex is dipolar in nature and the correlation time (τc) is dominated by the water residence time (τM) or the Mn electron spin relaxation time (τs) according to frequency. The values obtained for both τc and τs are longer than earlier estimates. In the binary Mn · ATP complex the dipolar interactions are dominated by rotation (τR) but in addition there is a large scalar interaction governed by both τM and τs. The significance of the parameters in the structure of the ternary enzyme complex is discussed, together with the implications of the revised parameters τc and τs for earlier mapping studies of the Mn · ATP sites and the spin‐labelled enzyme. The limitations of the analysis have been stressed throughout.

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