The activity, stability and spectroscopic properties of yeast K+ -activated aldehyde dehydrogenase were measured at various times after removal from, and after returning to a solution containing K+. Enzyme activity is rapidly lost on removal of most of the K+ and rapidly regained if K+ is replaced immediately. These activity changes are slower than likely rates of K+ dissociation and association. These rapid changes in concentration result in altered enzyme stability with enzyme in K+ the more stable. U.v. difference spectra are produced whenever enzyme in an activating environment (K+ or Tl+) is compared with enzyme in a non-activating environment (Tris+ or Li+). These spectral changes occur within 10s. The saturation characteristics with K+ are hyperbolic for all three phenomena of activation, stabilization and spectral change, with estimated apparent dissociation constants (Ks) for K+ of 7.5 mM, 5.5 mM and 6 mM respectively. Continued incubation of enzyme in the absence of K+ results in the accumulation of an enzyme form that re-activates only slowly on replacing K+. Stability characteristics in various concentrations of K+ over equivalent time scales are consistent with the existence of additional conformations. Spectroscopic evidence also indicates such additional slow conformation changes. Results have been interpreted in terms of two separate conformation transitions induced or stabilized by K+.
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