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Purification and Characterization of <i>S</i>‐adenosyl‐<scp>l</scp>‐methionine:norcoclaurine 6‐<i>O</i>‐Methyltransferase from Cultured <i>Coptis japonica</i> Cells

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References

1994

Year

Abstract

S-adenosyl-L-methionine:norcoclaurine 6-O-methyltransferase (norcoclaurine 6-O-methyltransferase), which catalyzes the transfer of the S-methyl group of S-adenosyl-L-methionine to the 6-hydroxyl group of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-1-[(4-hydroxyphenyl)methyl]-6,7- isoquinolinediol (norcoclaurine), was purified from cultured Coptis japonica cells and its enzymic properties were characterized. Purified norcoclaurine 6-O-methyltransferase had apparent pI 4.7, a native molecular mass of 95 kDa (determined by gel filtration) and subunit molecular mass of 40 kDa (SDS/PAGE). The enzyme did not require a divalent cation for activity, and the addition of Fe2+, Cu2+, Co2+, Zn2+, Mn2+, or Ni2+ at 5 mM severely inhibited enzyme activity. Neither p-chloromercuribenzoate, N-methylmaleimide nor iodoacetamide inhibited enzyme activity at 1 mM. 5,6-Dihydro-9,10-dimethoxybenzo[g]-1,3-benzodioxolo[5,6-a]qu inolizinium (berberine, the end-product of the biosynthetic pathway in which norcoclurine 6-O-methyltransferase catalyzes an intermediate step) also inhibited the activity by 50% at 10 mM. Norcoclaurine 6-O-methyltransferase methylated both (S)-norcoclaurine and (R)-norcoclaurine and (R,S)-norlaudanosoline. Further characterization of substrate-saturation kinetics and product inhibition of the purified enzyme indicated that norcoclaurine 6-O-methyltransferase follows a bi-bi ping-pong mechanism with Km values of 2.23 mM and 3.95 mM for (R,S)-norlaudanosoline and S-adenosyl-L-methionine, respectively, while Ki values for S-adenosylhomocysteine versus S-adenosyl-L-methionine and (R,S)-norlaudanosoline were 2.1 mM and 0.18 mM, respectively.

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