Inactivation of immobilized penicillin acylase has been studied in the presence of substrate (penicillin G) and products (phenylacetic acid and 6-aminopenicillanic acid), underthe hypothesis that substances which interact with the enzyme molecule during catalysis will have an effect on enzyme stabil
The Use of Chromogenic Reference Substrates for the Kinetic Analysis of Penicillin Acylases
✍ Scribed by Wynand B.L. Alkema; René Floris; Dick B. Janssen
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 83 KB
- Volume
- 275
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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✦ Synopsis
Determination of kinetic parameters of penicillin acylases for phenylacetylated compounds is complicated due to the low K m values for these substrates, the lack of a spectroscopic signal, and the strong product inhibition by phenylacetic acid. To overcome these difficulties, a spectrophotometric method was developed, with which kinetic parameters could be determined by measuring the effects on the hydrolysis of the chromogenic reference substrate 2-nitro-5-[(phenylacetyl)amino]benzoic acid (NIPAB). To that end, spectrophotometric progress curves with NIPAB in the absence and presence of the phenylacetylated substrates and their products were measured and analyzed by numerical fitting to the appropriate equations for competing substrates with product inhibition. This analysis yielded kinetic constants for phenylacetylated substrates such as penicillin G, which are in close agreement with those obtained in independent initial velocity experiments. Using NIPAB analogs with lower k cat /K m values, kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis of cephalexin and penicillin V were determined. This method was suitable for determining the kinetic constants of penicillin acylases in periplasmic extracts from Escherichia coli, Alcaligenes faecalis, and Kluyvera citrophila. The use of chromogenic reference substrates thus appears to be a rapid and reliable method for determining kinetic constants with various substrates and enzymes.
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