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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Wild-type and mutant forms of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex from Bacillus subtilis.

J A Hodgson, +2 more
- 01 May 1983 - 
- Vol. 211, Iss: 2, pp 463-472
TLDR
Pyruvate dehydrogenase complexes were purified from two ace (acetate-requiring) mutants of B. subtilis and found to be inactive, owing to an inactive E1 component, which was bound less tightly than wild-type E1 and was gradually lost from the E2E3 subcomplex during purification.
Abstract
A simple procedure is described for the purification of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase from Bacillus subtilis. The method is rapid and applicable to small quantities of bacterial cells. The purified pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (s0(20),w = 73S) comprises multiple copies of four different types of polypeptide chain, with apparent Mr values of 59 500, 55 000, 42 500 and 36 000: these were identified as the polypeptide chains of the lipoate acetyltransferase (E2), dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (E3) and the two types of subunit of the pyruvate decarboxylase (E1) components respectively. Pyruvate dehydrogenase complexes were also purified from two ace (acetate-requiring) mutants of B. subtilis. That from mutant 61142 was found to be inactive, owing to an inactive E1 component, which was bound less tightly than wild-type E1 and was gradually lost from the E2E3 subcomplex during purification. Subunit-exchange experiments demonstrated that the E2E3 subcomplex retained full enzymic activity, suggesting that the lesion was limited to the E1 component. Mutant 61141R elaborated a functional pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, but this also contained a defective E1 component, the Km for pyruvate being raised from 0.4 mM to 4.3 mM. The E1 component rapidly dissociated from the E2E3 subcomplex at low temperature (0-4 degrees C), leaving an E2E3 subcomplex which by subunit-exchange experiments was judged to retain full enzymic activity. These ace mutants provide interesting opportunities to analyse defects in the self-assembly and catalytic activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex.

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Citations
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Anaerobic growth of a “strict aerobe” (bacillus subtilis)

TL;DR: B. subtilis has two distinct nitrate reductases, one for the assimilation of nitrate nitrogen and the other for nitrate respiration, and one nitrite reductase functions both in nitrite nitrogen assimilation and nitrite respiration.
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Acetoin Metabolism in Bacteria

TL;DR: This is the first integrated review on acetoin metabolism in bacteria, especially with regard to catabolic aspects, and the relationship between the two conflicting acetoin cleavage pathways is discussed.
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Characterization of anaerobic fermentative growth of Bacillus subtilis: identification of fermentation end products and genes required for growth.

TL;DR: Results show that nitrate respiration and fermentation of B. subtilis are governed by divergent regulatory pathways, and suggest that PDH is involved in most or all acetyl coenzyme A production in B.subilis.
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Biosynthesis of branched-chain fatty acids in Bacillus subtilis. A decarboxylase is essential for branched-chain fatty acid synthetase.

TL;DR: The very high affinity of BCKA decarboxylase toward branched-chain alpha-keto acids is responsible for its function in fatty acid synthesis, but not pyruvate decar boxylase, is essential for the synthesis of branching-chain fatty acids.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A simplification of the protein assay method of Lowry et al. which is more generally applicable

TL;DR: A simple method based on a linear log-log protein standard curve is presented to permit rapid and totally objective protein analysis using small programmable calculators.
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Reversible binding of Pi by beef heart mitochondrial adenosine triphosphatase.

TL;DR: Aurovertin, an inhibitor of oxidative phosphorylation, enhanced Pi binding via a 4-fold increase in the affinity of the enzyme for Pi (KD = 20 micronM) but did not alter binding stoichiometry.
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Processing of adenovirus 2-induced proteins

TL;DR: It is proposed that at least two of the adenovirus 2 virion components are derived by the cleavage of higher molecular weight precursor polypeptides, which imply precursor-product relationships for these components.
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