Creatine phosphate inhibition of adenylate deaminase is mainly due to pyrophosphate
- PMID: 216695
Creatine phosphate inhibition of adenylate deaminase is mainly due to pyrophosphate
Abstract
Inhibition of rat skeletal muscle adenylate deaminase by creatine phosphate reported previously is due to inorganic pyrophosphate present as a contaminant in commercial preparations of creatine phosphate. This conclusion is based on the following evidence: a compound that inhibits adenylate deaminase can be separated from commercially prepared creatine phosphate by ion exchange chromatography; the inhibition by "creatine phosphate" and by the separated inhibitory compound is relieved by treatment with inorganic pyrophosphatase; inhibition by inorganic pyrophosphate is similar to that produced by unpurified creatine phosphate; and pyrophosphate is present in commercially available creatine phosphate in amounts sufficient to account for the inhibition. Some commercial preparations of creatine phosphate contain much less pyrophosphate than others; these preparations are only weakly inhibitory. Inorganic triphosphate is a more powerful inhibitor of the enzyme than pyrophosphate; it may also be present as a contaminant in creatine phosphate.
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