A NADH-linked oxygen-tolerant malate dehydrogenase was purified 270-fold from cell extracts of Methanospirillum hungatii. Inhibitors of the enzyme included ADP, alpha-ketoglutarate, and excess NADH. Inhibition patterns for ADP were competitive with respect to NADH and non-competitive with respect to oxalacetate. Inhibition by alpha-ketoglutarate was non-competitive with oxalacetate as variable substrate and uncompetitive with respect to NADH. alpha-Ketoglutarate is surmised to function as an end-product inhibitor of the enzyme in reactions converting oxalacetate to alpha-ketoglutarate. No enzyme activity was detected in the direction of malate conversion to oxalacetate, in keeping with a strictly biosynthetic function of the enzyme. An analysis of variance of intial rate data fit to sequential and ping-pong equations showed that a sequential mechanism was perferred. The malate dehydrogenase of M. hungatii resembles those of many other bacteria and eucaryotic cells respect to molecular weight (61,700) and reaction mechanism, but may be regulated differently.
Mechanical disruption of cells of Methanobacterium strain G2R resulted in a 78-fold increase in the specific activity of the hydrogenase as measured by the benzyl viologen reduction assay. Approximately 50% of the activity in disrupted cells was associated with the particulate fraction. Between 69 and 85% of the particulate hydrogenase was released by treatment with the detergents Triton X-100, deoxycholate, and octyl-fp-D-glucopyranoside. The relative electrophoretic
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