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The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 38, 181-196, Copyright © 1954 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

ENZYMATIC BREAKDOWN OF THREONINE BY THREONINE ALDOLASE

Shih-Chia C. Lin 1 and David M. Greenberg 1

1 From the Department of Physiological Chemistry, University of California School of Medicine, Berkeley

1. The enzyme which splits threonine to acetaldehyde and glycine has been partially purified from rat liver (five- to sixfold purification) and the name threonine aldolase proposed for it.

2. The general properties of threonine aldolase have been studied. The enzyme is unstable to a pH below 5. The pH optimum of the enzyme reaction is at 7.5–7.7. The initial rate of production of acetaldehyde is proportional to the enzyme concentration, and when the enzyme concentration is constant, the production of acetaldehyde is proportional to the time, provided that the substrate is in excess. The enzyme is inhibited by the carbonyl group reagent, hydroxylamine. Attempts to demonstrate that pyridoxal phosphate is a cofactor were unsuccessful.

3. The enzyme splits only L-allothreonine and L-threonine and is inactive against the D-forms of these amino acids.

4. The enzyme reaction on DL-allothreonine follows first order kinetics. From the first order velocity constants and the initial rates of the rates of the reaction at various substrate concentrations the Michaelis constant, Ks, for this substrate has been evaluated. Michaelis constants have also been determined for threonine.

5. The optimum temperature for the enzymatic breakdown of DL-allothreonine at pH 7.65 was found to be 50°C. in phosphate buffer and 48°C. in tris-maleate buffer. The rate of thermal inactivation of the enzyme threonine aldolase obeys a first order reaction. The heat of thermal inactivation was calculated by the aid of the van't Hoff-Arrhenius equation to be 43,000 cal. per mole for the temperature range 41.2–46.6°C.

6. Equivalent amounts of acetaldehyde and glycine were formed from DL-allothreonine and the enzymatic breakdown of DL-allothreonine was found to be irreversible.

Submitted on June 16, 1954


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