S. W. Bailey, J. Ayling
Dec 29, 1978
Citations
0
Influential Citations
23
Citations
Journal
Biochemical and biophysical research communications
Abstract
Abstract It has been generally assumed that a tetrahydropterin (2-amino-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-4-pteridinone) is essential for activity of the three aromatic amino acid hydroxylases. In this report it is shown that appropriately substituted pyrimidines can assume the role of cofactor for phenylalanine hydroxylase. 2,5,6-Triamino-4-pyrimidinone(V) and 5-benzylamino-2,6-diamino-4-pyrimidinone(VI) possess the same Km values (0.1 mM and 0.003 mM) and stoichiometry of tyrosine generated to cofactor consumed (0.4 and 1.0) as their corresponding pteridine analogs, tetrahydropterin(III) and 6-phenyltetrahydropterin(IV). However, the rates with pyrimidines are lower. The ratio of rates V III = 0.045 and VI IV = 0.015 . These results indicate that pteridine carbons 6 and 7 are not fundamental to cofactor binding or function, though they markedly influence the maximum velocity of hydroxylation. Pyrimidine cofactors of phenylalanine hydroxylase are valuable probes for the elucidation of the binding forces, transition states, and mechanism of oxygen activation of these hydroxylases.