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Title: Purification and characterization of nucleoside diphosphatase from rat-liver microsomes. Evidence for metalloenzyme and glycoprotein. Author: Ohkubo I, Ishibashi T, Taniguchi N, Makita A. Journal: Eur J Biochem; 1980 Nov; 112(1):111-8. PubMed ID: 6256164. Abstract: Nucleoside diphosphatase was purified from rat liver microsomes more than 3000-fold with a 16% yield using a procedure including concanavalin-A--Sepharose and phenyl-Sepharose column chromatography. The purified enzyme had a specific activity of 2500 units/mg protein and appeared homogeneous by gel electrophoresis. The enzyme had a sedimentation coefficient of 6.5 S by sucrose-density gradient centrifugation. The enzyme had a sedimentation coefficient of 6.5 S by sucrose-density gradient centrifugation, and a Stokes' radius of 4.8 nm was estimated by the gel filtration technique. Its molecular weight is 130,000, but only one single band of Mr 65,000 was detected after sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The native enzyme seems thus to be composed of two identical subunits. The purified enzyme was confirmed to be a glycoprotein containing approximately 9% carbohydrates. The enzyme had a pH optimum of 7.5, an isoelectric point of 4.85 and a Km of 2.5 mM for UDP. On the basis of direct measurement of metal content in the native enzyme, the rat liver nucleoside diphosphatase was found to be a metalloenzyme containing 0.9 mol zinc and 0.1 mol manganese/mol 65,000-Mr subunit. Metal-free nucleoside diphosphatase has been prepared. The activity of the metal-free enzyme was restored by the addition of several divalent cations, zinc being the most effective.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]