1993
DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1993.tb18115.x
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Basic features of class‐I alcohol dehydrogenase: variable and constant segments coordinated by inter‐class and intra‐class variability

Abstract: The enzymatic and structural properties of alligator liver alcohol dehydrogenase have been determined. Aliphatic and alicyclic alcohols serve as substrates for this first reptilian form of the enzyme characterized, with K,, values decreasing rapidly from methanol to hexanol, as for the human class I enzymes, and a K,, of 1.2 mM for ethanol at pH 9.9. The N-terminus of the 374-residue protein chain is acetyl-blocked.The enzyme is related in descending order to class I > 111 > V > I1 of the structurally characte… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…(31,32). Their properties can be compared with those of the classical liver alcohol dehydrogenase ofclass I, whose structure, within the same family, has been analyzed recently to a level showing approximately the same residue divergence (conserved residues, 42%) by analysis of five major vertebrate lines (40).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(31,32). Their properties can be compared with those of the classical liver alcohol dehydrogenase ofclass I, whose structure, within the same family, has been analyzed recently to a level showing approximately the same residue divergence (conserved residues, 42%) by analysis of five major vertebrate lines (40).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although this is still in the millimolar range typical of class I enzymes, as noted above, the value is considerably higher than, for example, for chicken (0.5 mM), alligator (1.2 mM), and the human PIP, (1.2mM) and ylyl (1.1 mM) enzymes (at pH 10.0) [3,21,281. They all have Arg at position 271, instead of the less basic His271 unique to ostrich, and branched-chain residues at position 141, instead of the smaller Ala seen in the ostrich form.…”
Section: H F N Y G V S V I V G V P P a A E K L S F D P M L L F S G R mentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Thus, it has a K,, for ethanol in the millimolar range at pH 10 and a K, for 4-methylpyrazole with ethanol in the micromolar range (see above). Furthermore, it has a residue identity with class I enzymes of 86-87% toward those characterized from two other birds [21, 221, of 82% toward that characterized from one reptile (alligator) [3], and of 72-76% toward those 14 subunits characterized from 8 mammals (18, lo].…”
Section: Relationship To Other Alcohol Dehydrogenasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, this requires knowledge of variants in each case. Regarding classes I and P, many species variants have long been known (Sun and Plapp, 1992;Yokoyama and Harry, 1993;Persson et al, 1993;Shafqat et al, 1996b), although the internal patterns of class I/P molecular variation have not been compared. Regarding class I11 in plants, glutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase activity has been reported for a few species (Uotila and Koivusalo, 1979;Giese et al, 1994) and recently also amino acid sequences for pea and maize class 111 alcohol dehydrogenases (Shafqat et al, 1996a;Sugaya and Sakai, 1996), but further variants and intra-class divergence are unknown.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%