Choline Kinase and Ethanolamine Kinase are Separate, Soluble Enzymes in Rat Liver

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Abstract

Choline kinase and ethanolamine kinase are located in the cytosol from rat liver and have been copurified more than 500‐fold by affinity chromatography [P. J. Brophy and D. E. Vance (1976) FEBS Lett. 62, 123–125]. Kinetic properties of the two activities were determined. Choline kinase had a Km for choline of 0.033 mM and ethanolamine was a competitive inhibitor (Ki= 6.2 mM). Ethanolamine kinase had a Km for ethanolamine of 7.7 mM and choline was a ‘mixed’ type of inhibitor with a Ki of 0.037 mM. Both enzyme activities responded in a similar fashion to the adenylate energy charge. Betaine and choline phosphate partially inhibited both kinases with a 93% inhibition of the ethanolamine kinase by 5 mM choline phosphate. CTP and ethanolaminephosphate partially inhibited the ethanolamine kinase, but not the choline kinase. Other metabolites tested had negligible effects on both kinases. The affinity‐column‐purified enzyme was analyzed by disc gel electrophoresis which resolved the two activities. Hence, although many of the properties of the two activities are similar, choline kinase and ethanolamine kinase must be separate enzymes. Analysis of rat liver cytosol by disc gel electrophoresis indicated four isoenzymes for choline kinase and ethanolamine kinase. Copyright © 1977, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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BROPHY, P. J., CHOY, P. C., TOONE, J. R., & VANCE, D. E. (1977). Choline Kinase and Ethanolamine Kinase are Separate, Soluble Enzymes in Rat Liver. European Journal of Biochemistry, 78(2), 491–495. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1977.tb11761.x

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