Abstract
Inhibitors preferentially and covalently reactive with cysteine, arginine, histidine, and carboxyl-containing residues were inhibitory to the plant vacuolar H+-transporting inorganic pyrophosphatase (H+-PPaSe) from Vigna radiata (mung bean) and Beta vulgaris (red beet), but hydrophobic compounds and those reactive with tyrosine and lysine were less effective. Inhibition by 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide, phenylglyoxal, and N-ethylmaleimide was decreased in the presence of Mg2+ or mixtures of Mg2+ and inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) but not by PPi alone. None of these ligands affected inhibition by reagents reactive with histidine. The Mg2+ dependence of protection from 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide inhibition followed first-order kinetics and yielded a Km for free Mg2+ of 20 to 23 μM. Protection from inhibition by N-ethylmaleimide and phenylglyoxal varied as a function of Mg2PPi concentration, suggesting that this is the substrate for the H+-PPase. Protection by Mg2PPi followed MichaelisMenten kinetics with a Km of approximately 2 μM. These results are consistent with the predictions of a kinetic model for the H+-PPase (R.A. Leigh, A.J. Pope, I.R. Jennings, D. Sanders [1992] Plant Physiol 100: 1698-1750), which identified free Mg2+ as an allosteric acti-vator (Km = 25μM) and Mg2PPi as the substrate (Km = 2.5-5 μM).
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CITATION STYLE
Gordon-Weeks, R., Steele, S. H., & Leigh, R. A. (1996). The role of magnesium, pyrophosphate, and their complexes as substrates and activators of the vacuolar H+-pumping inorganic pyrophosphatase: Studies using ligand protection from covalent inhibitors. Plant Physiology, 111(1), 195–202. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.111.1.195
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