Inorganic pyrophosphate-phosphohydrolytic activity associated with rat osseous plate alkaline phosphatase


Autoria(s): Rezende, L. A.; Ciancaglini, P.; Pizauro, J. M.; Leone, F. A.
Contribuinte(s)

Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)

Data(s)

20/05/2014

20/05/2014

01/03/1998

Resumo

Purified membrane-bound alkaline phosphatase from rat osseous plate hydrolyzed pyrophosphate in the presence of magnesium ions, with a specific activity of 92.7 U/mg. Optimal apparent pH for pyrophosphatase activity was 8.0 and it remained unchanged on increasing the pyrophosphate concentration. In the absence of magnesium ions the enzyme had a K-m = 88 mu M and V = 36.7 U/mg for pyrophosphate and no inhibition by excess substrate was observed. Pyrophosphatase activity was rapidly destroyed at temperatures above 40 degrees C, but magnesium ions apparently protected the enzyme against danaturation. Sodium metavanadate (Ki = 1.0 mM) was a competitive inhibitor of pyrophosphatase activity, while levamisole (Ki = 8.2 mM) and theophylline (Ki = 7.4 mM) were uncompetitive inhibitors. Magnesium ions (K-0.5 = 1.7 mu M) stimulated pyrophosphatase activity, while cobalt (Ki = 48.5 mu M) and zinc (Ki = 22.0 mu M) ions were non-competitive inhibitors. Manganese and calcium ions had no effect on pyrophosphatase activity. The M-w of the pyrophosphatase: protein was 130 kDa by gel filtration, but a value of 65 kDa was obtained by dissociative gel electrophoresis, suggesting that it was a dimer of apparently identical subunits. These results suggested that pyrophosphatase activity stems from the membrane-bound osseous plate alkaline phosphatase and not from a different protein.

Formato

293-302

Identificador

http://chiroptera.unb.br/index.php/cn/article/view/31

Cellular and Molecular Biology. Noisy-le-grand: Cellular & Molecular Biology, v. 44, n. 2, p. 293-302, 1998.

0145-5680

http://hdl.handle.net/11449/3956

WOS:000073280000004

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Cellular & Molecular Biology

Relação

Cellular and Molecular Biology

Direitos

closedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Alkaline phosphatase #Osseous plate #pyrophosphatase #divalent ions #thermal inactivation
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article