48 resultados para kinetics


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Exocytosis of transmitter at most synapses is a very fast process triggered by the entry of Ca2+ during an action potential. A reasonable expectation is that the fast step of exocytosis is followed by slow steps readying another vesicle for exocytosis but the identity and kinetics of these steps are presently unclear. By voltage clamping both pre- and postsynaptic neurons in an isolated pair of retinal amacrine cells, we have measured evoked synaptic currents and responses to single vesicles of transmitter (minis). From these currents, we have computed the rate of exocytosis during a sustained presynaptic depolarization. We show here that for these cells, release is consistent with a scheme of "fire and reload." Large Ca2+ influx causes the rapid release of a small number of vesicles, typically approximately 10 per presynaptic neuron, likely corresponding to those vesicles already docked. After this spike of exocytosis whose peak is 150 quanta per release site per s, continued Ca2+ influx sustains release at only 22 quanta per release site per s, probably rate-limited by the docking of fresh vesicles.

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To elucidate the mechanism of recognition of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) by homopyrimidine polyamide ("peptide") nucleic acid (PNA) leading to the strand-displacement, the kinetics of the sequence-specific PNA/DNA binding have been studied. The binding was monitored with time by the gel retardation and nuclease S1 cleavage assays. The experimental kinetic curves obey pseudo-first-order kinetics and the dependence of the pseudo-first-order rate constant, kps, on PNA concentration, P, obeys a power law kps approximately P gamma with 2 < gamma < 3. The kps values for binding of decamer PNA to dsDNA target sites with one mismatch are hundreds of times slower than for the correct site. A detailed kinetic scheme for PNA/DNA binding is proposed that includes two major steps of the reaction of strand invasion: (i) a transient partial opening of the PNA binding site on dsDNA and incorporation of one PNA molecule with the formation of an intermediate PNA/DNA duplex and (ii) formation of a very stable PNA2/DNA triplex. A simple theoretical treatment of the proposed kinetic scheme is performed. The interpretation of our experimental data in the framework of the proposed kinetic scheme leads to the following conclusions. The sequence specificity of the recognition is essentially provided at the "search" step of the process, which consists in the highly reversible transient formation of duplex between one PNA molecule and the complementary strand of duplex DNA while the other DNA strand is displaced. This search step is followed by virtually irreversible "locking" step via PNA2/DNA triplex formation. The proposed mechanism explains how the binding of homopyrimidine PNA to dsDNA meets two apparently mutually contradictory features: high sequence specificity of binding and remarkable stability of both correct and mismatched PNA/DNA complexes.

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A sensitive test for kinetic unfolding intermediates in ribonuclease A (EC 3.1.27.5) is performed under conditions where the enzyme unfolds slowly (10 degrees C, pH 8.0, 4.5 M guanidinium chloride). Exchange of peptide NH protons (2H-1H) is used to monitor structural opening of individual hydrogen bonds during unfolding, and kinetic models are developed for hydrogen exchange during the process of protein unfolding. The analysis indicates that the kinetic process of unfolding can be monitored by EX1 exchange (limited by the rate of opening) for ribonuclease A in these conditions. Of the 49 protons whose unfolding/exchange kinetics was measured, 47 have known hydrogen bond acceptor groups. To test whether exchange during unfolding follows the EX2 (base-catalyzed) or the EX1 (uncatalyzed) mechanism, unfolding/exchange was measured both at pH 8.0 and at pH 9.0. A few faster-exchanging protons were found that undergo exchange by both EX1 and EX2 processes, but the 43 slower-exchanging protons at pH 8 undergo exchange only by the EX1 mechanism, and they have closely similar rates. Thus, it is likely that all 49 protons undergo EX1 exchange at the same rate. The results indicate that a single rate-limiting step in unfolding breaks the entire network of peptide hydrogen bonds and causes the overall unfolding of ribonuclease A. The additional exchange observed for some protons that follows the EX2 mechanism probably results from equilibrium unfolding intermediates and will be discussed elsewhere.