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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Purification of delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase from genetically engineered yeast.

Saccharomyces cerevisiae transformed with a multicopy plasmid carrying the yeast structural gene HEM2, which codes for delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase, was enriched 20-fold in the enzyme. Beginning with cell-free extracts of transformed cells, the dehydratase was purified 193-fold to near-homogeneity. This represents a 3900-fold purification relative to the enzyme activity in normal, untransformed yeast cells. The specific activity of the purified enzyme was 16.2 mumol h-1 per mg protein at pH 9.4 and 37.5 degrees C. In most respects the yeast enzyme resembles mammalian enzymes. It is a homo-octamer with an apparent Mr of 275,000, as determined by centrifugation in glycerol density gradients, and under denaturing conditions behaved as a single subunit of Mr congruent to 37,000. The enzyme requires reduced thiol compounds to maintain full activity, and maximum activity was obtained in the presence of 1.0 mM-Zn2+. It is sensitive to inhibition by the heavy metal ions Pb2+ and Cu2+. The enzyme exhibits Michaelis-Menten kinetics and has an apparent Km of 0.359 mM. Like dehydratases from animal tissues, the yeast enzyme is rather thermostable. During the purification process an enhancement in total delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase activity suggested the possibility that removal of an inhibitor of the enzyme could be occurring.[1]

References

  1. Purification of delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase from genetically engineered yeast. Borralho, L.M., Ortiz, C.H., Panek, A.D., Mattoon, J.R. Yeast (1990) [Pubmed]
 
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