Pyruvate Decarboxylase from Zea mays L.
Author(s) -
Thomas C. M. Lee,
Pat J. Langston-Unkefer
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.79.1.242
Subject(s) - chemistry , kinetics , biochemistry , pyruvate decarboxylase , zea mays , potassium , enzyme kinetics , enzyme , biology , agronomy , active site , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , alcohol dehydrogenase
Pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC) was purified from mature, dry maize kernels and from roots of anaerobically treated maize seedlings and partially characterized. PDC was purified to a specific activity of 96 units per milligram protein from kernels and to 41 units per milligram protein from root. The subunit molecular masses were estimated to be 61,000 and 60,000 for kernel PDC and 59,000 and 58,000 for root PDC. The pH optimum for each enzyme was 5.8. Since the pH optimum is nearly one pH unit below the value reported for the cytoplasm of anaerobically metabolizing maize roots (pH 6.7 +/- 0.2), we investigated the effects of pH 5.8 and 6.6 on the cooperative kinetics observed for PDC from each source. The maximum Hill coefficients (n(H)) were much greater at each pH for the kernel PDC (pH 5.8, n(H) = 2.5 and pH 6.6, n(H) = 3.2) than for the root PDC (pH 5.8, n(H) = 1.4 and pH 6.6, n(H) = 1.8). The cooperative kinetics observed with respect to pyruvate were asymmetric. Potassium inhibited maize PDC and was competitive with pyruvate (root PDC K(i) = 16 millimolar and kernel PDC K(i) = 10 millimolar).
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