Polymerizable phosphatidylcholines: Importance of phospholipid motions for optimum phospholipase A2 and C activity
- 21 September 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 32 (37) , 9545-9552
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00088a005
Abstract
Cross-linkable short-chain phosphatidylcholines with thiols at the chain terminus have been synthesized and characterized. These micelle-forming species were used to investigate two water-soluble phospholipases. When reduced, the thiol lipids were excellent substrates for phospholipase A2. Once cross-linked, they became extremely poor substrates. This is consistent with a mechanism in which a key step is the partial extraction of the substrate phosphatidylcholine from an aggregate. In contrast, phospholipase C activity was slightly enhanced if the product diglyceride was tethered to the aggregate through disulfide formation. For this enzyme such a kinetic effect is consistent with the hydrophobic diglyceride biasing the enzyme to the interface.Keywords
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