Substrate hydrolysis by the H+-pyrophosphatase (pyrophosphate phosphohydrolase, H+-PPase) of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum follows a two-pathway reaction scheme in which preformed 1:1 and 1:2 enzyme · Mg2+ complexes (EMg and EMg2) convert dimagnesium pyrophosphate (the substrate). This scheme;is applicable to isolated enzyme, uncoupled chromatophores and chromatephores energized by a K+/valinomycin diffusion potential. Tris and other amine buffers exert a specific effect on the bacterial H+-PPase by increasing the Michaelis constant for substrate binding to EMg by a factor of 26-32, while having only small effect on substrate binding to EMg2. Formation of EMg requires a basic group with pK(a) of 7.2-7.7 and confers resistance against inactivation by mersalyl and N-ethylmaleimide to H+-PPase. The dissociation constants governing EMg and EMg2 formation, as estimated from the mersalyl-protection assays and steady-state kinetics of PP(i) hydrolysis, respectively, differ by an order of magnitude. Comparison with the data on soluble PPases suggests that, in spite of gross structural differences between H+-PPase and soluble PPases and the added ability of H+-PPase to act as a proton pump, the two classes of enzyme utilize the same reaction mechanism in PP(i) hydrolysis.
CITATION STYLE
Baykov, A. A., Sergina, N. V., Evtushenko, O. A., & Dubnova, E. B. (1996). Kinetic characterization of the hydrolytic activity of the H+-pyrophosphatase of Rhodospirillum rubrum in membrane-bound and isolated states. European Journal of Biochemistry, 236(1), 121–127. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1996.00121.x
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