Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Plant Physiology 100:2035-2040 (1992)
© 1992 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Evidence for the Existence of Two Essential and Proximal Cysteinyl Residues in NADP-Malic Enzyme from Maize Leaves 1

María F. Drincovich, Claudia P. Spampinato and Carlos S. Andreo

Centro de Estudios Fotosintéticos y Bioquímicos (Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, F. M. Lillo, Universidad Nacional de Rosario), Suipacha 531, Rosario (2000), Argentina

Incubation of maize (Zea mays) leaf NADP-malic enzyme with monofunctional and bifunctional N-substituted maleimides results in an irreversible inactivation of the enzyme. Inactivation by the monofunctional reagents, N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and N-phenylmaleimide, followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. The maximum inactivation rate constant for phenylmaleimide was 10-fold higher than that for NEM, suggesting a possible hydrophobic microenvironment of the residue(s) involved in the modification of the enzyme. In contrast, the inactivation kinetics with the bifunctional maleimides, ortho-, meta-, and para-phenylenebismaleimide, were biphasic, probably due to different reactivities of the groups reacting with the two heads of these bifunctional reagents, with a possible cross-linking of two sulfhydryl groups. The inactivation by mono and bifunctional maleimides was partially prevented by Mg2+ and L-malate, and NADP prevented the inactivation almost totally. Determination of the number of reactive sulfhydryl groups of the native enzyme with [3H]NEM in the absence or presence of NADP showed that inactivation occurred concomitantly with the modification of two cysteinyl residues per enzyme monomer. The presence of these two essential residues was confirmed by titration of sulfhydryl groups with [3H]NEM in the enzyme previously modified by o-phenylenebismaleimide in the absence or presence of NADP.


1 This work was supported by grants from Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas, the Commission of the European Communities (DG XII), and Fundacion Antorchas. C.S.A. was supported, in part, by a Biotechnology Career Fellowship from the Rockefeller Foundation.




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M. J. Mitsch, R. T. Voegele, A. Cowie, M. Osteras, and T. M. Finan
Chimeric Structure of the NAD(P)+- and NADP+-dependent Malic Enzymes of Rhizobium (Sinorhizobium) meliloti
J. Biol. Chem., April 10, 1998; 273(15): 9330 - 9336.
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