Human red cell porphobilinogen deaminase. A simpler method of purification and some unusual properties
- PMID: 4007248
- DOI: 10.1016/0020-711x(85)90144-2
Human red cell porphobilinogen deaminase. A simpler method of purification and some unusual properties
Abstract
A simpler method for purifying human red cell deaminase, using a mixture of n-butanol and chloroform, which denatures hemoglobin, followed by ammonium sulphate fractionation, heat treatment, Sephadex G-100 and DEAE-cellulose chromatography, yielding a 3400 fold purified enzyme is described. Some properties of purified deaminase were studied. The enzyme seems to have a strict requirement for oxygen, neither PBG consumption nor uroporphyrinogens formation were measured under anaerobiosis. Uroporphyrinogens formation was linear with both protein and time over a wide range of enzyme concentration and up to 2 h. The optimum pH was 7.4 and the mol. wt was 40,000 +/- 4000. The enzyme was heat-stable and increased its activity by heating. Ammonium and hydroxylamine ions inhibited the reaction. K+ and Na+ ions did not greatly affect activity, while most divalent cations tested significantly diminished uroporphyrinogen formation and to a lesser degree PBG consumption. Direct plots of velocity against PBG concentration were hyperbolic, however double-reciprocal plots were non-linear, Hill plots gave an n value of 2 and Eadie plots were bell-shaped, indicating the existence of weakly positive cooperative effect between 2 binding sites for PBG per molecule of deaminase.