1965
DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9258(18)97266-2
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Glutamic-Aspartic Transaminase

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1969
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1989
1989

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Cited by 76 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…The value for of 2.6 (Julin et al, 1989) means that quinonoid formation is a facile process, at least 2.6 times faster than the 1,3 prototropic shift, but further forward progress of the quinonoid to ketimine is slow and is not a significant factor in product formation. The value of the equilibrium constant relating the external aldimine and quinonoid cannot be determined from the results of these experiments, but the spectroscopic data (Jenkins & Taylor, 1965) suggest that the equilibrium lies well to the external aldimine side. In other words, the fully formed quinonoid produced from L-aspartate is much more readily protonated on Ca than on C4/.…”
Section: A^tq-^e + Pmentioning
confidence: 87%
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“…The value for of 2.6 (Julin et al, 1989) means that quinonoid formation is a facile process, at least 2.6 times faster than the 1,3 prototropic shift, but further forward progress of the quinonoid to ketimine is slow and is not a significant factor in product formation. The value of the equilibrium constant relating the external aldimine and quinonoid cannot be determined from the results of these experiments, but the spectroscopic data (Jenkins & Taylor, 1965) suggest that the equilibrium lies well to the external aldimine side. In other words, the fully formed quinonoid produced from L-aspartate is much more readily protonated on Ca than on C4/.…”
Section: A^tq-^e + Pmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…One consequence of a concerted 1,3 prototropic shift mechanism is that the quinonoid form of the enzyme is not a requisite intermediate in this process. The quinonoid structure, which has been observed spectrophotometrically in equilibrium mixtures of cAATase and L-aspartate (Jenkins & Taylor, 1965) and in temperature-jump experiments (Fasella & Hammes, 1967), must therefore be off the primary reaction pathway, and little product is formed from this intermediate, but we cannot rule out the possibility that a small amount of product is formed via a stepwise mechanism. The concerted and stepwise pathways would then exist as parallel routes from the external aldimine to the ketimine, with the concerted one dominating in the cAATase-aspartate reaction.…”
Section: A^tq-^e + Pmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…0006-2960/89/0428-3815$01.50/0 © 1989 American Chemical Society enzyme incubated with L-aspartate does show a minor absorption at ca. 495 nm, consistent with a quinonoid structure (Jenkins & Taylor, 1965), but this observation does not establish whether the quinonoid is on the reaction pathway.…”
mentioning
confidence: 80%
“…zyme) showed that the substrate and inhibitor parameters were nearly identical for both forms. Also, direct measurements of substrate and substrate analog affinities have revealed no differences in the two forms (Jenkins et al, 1959;Jenkins, 1961aJenkins, ,b, 1964Jenkins and Taylor, 1965;Jenkins and D'Ari, 1966a;Martinez-Carrion, 1969, 1970). The reduction of the internal Shiffs base with NaBH4 is a mild procedure which completely inactivates the enzyme.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%