Publication | Open Access
Mechanism-Based Inactivation of Ammonia Monooxygenase in <i>Nitrosomonas europaea</i> by Allylsulfide
39
Citations
24
References
1993
Year
Bioorganic ChemistryChemical BiologyOxidative StressReactive Nitrogen SpecieBioenergeticsComplete InactivationMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyBiochemistryMechanism-based InactivationAmmoniaN. EuropaeaReactive Oxygen SpeciePharmacologyNatural SciencesAmmonia-dependent O 2MicrobiologyMedicineNitrosative Stress
Allylsulfide caused an irreversible inactivation of ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) activity (ammonia-dependent O 2 uptake) in Nitrosomonas europaea . The hydroxylamine oxidoreductase activity (hydrazine-dependent O 2 uptake) of cells was unaffected by allylsulfide. Anaerobic conditions or the presence of allylthiourea, a reversible noncompetitive AMO inhibitor, protected AMO from inactivation by allylsulfide. Ammonia did not protect AMO from inactivation by allylsulfide but instead increased the rate of inactivation. The inactivation of AMO followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, but the observed rates did not saturate with increasing allylsulfide concentrations. The time course of recovery of AMO-dependent nitrite production after complete inactivation by allylsulfide required de novo protein synthesis. Incubation of cells with allylsulfide prevented the 14 C label from 14 C 2 H 2 (a suicide mechanism-based inactivator of AMO) from being incorporated into the 27-kDa polypeptide of AMO. Some compounds structurally related to allylsulfide were unable to inactivate AMO. We conclude that allylsulfide is a specific, mechanism-based inactivator of AMO in N. europaea.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1