• Biochemistry · Jan 1977

    Purification and properties of debranching enzyme from dogfish muscle.

    • J U Becker, T J Long, and E H Fischer.
    • Biochemistry. 1977 Jan 25; 16 (2): 291-7.

    AbstractGlycogen debranching enzyme (4-alpha-glucanotransferase amylo-1,6-glucosidase, EC 2.4.1.25 + 3.2.1.33) was purified 140-fold from dogfish muscle in a rapid, high-yield procedure that takes advantage of a strong binding of the enzyme to glycogen, and its quantitative adsorption to concanavalin A-Sepharose only when the polysaccharide is present. The final product was hrophoresis in the presence and absence of dodecyl sulfate. A molecular weight of 162,000 +/- 5000 was determined by sedimentation equilibrium analysis in good agreement with the value of 160,000 estimated by gel electrophoresis, but a low-sedimentation constant of 6.5 S suggests that the enzyme is asymmetric. The molecule appears to be made up of a single polypeptide chain with no evidence for multiple repeating sequences: it could not be dissociated into smaller fragments by dodecyl sulfate even after complete carboxymethylation; tryptic cleavage of the native protein yielded only two fragments of molecular weight 20,000 and 140,000 without loss of enzymatic activity. The amino acid composition of the enzyme is reported; no covalently bound phosphate or carbohydrate could be detected. All 32 sulfhydryl groups present were titrated with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) under denaturing conditions; eight reacted readily in the native enzyme without loss of catalytic activity, while substitution of eight additional ones lowered the activity by 50%. Inactivation was greatly reduced by glycogen; the polysaccharide also influenced markedly the electrophoretic behavior of the enzyme and large filamentous aggregates were formed when solutions of both were mixed. Purified debranching enzyme releases 3 mumol of glucose min-1 mg-1 at 19 degrees C, pH 6.0, from a glycogen limit dextrin and one-tenth this amount when the native polysaccharide is used as substrate; glycogen is quantitatively degraded in the presence of phosphorylase. None of the usual sugar phosphates or nucleotide effectors of glycolysis affected enzymatic activity. No phosphorylation by either dogfish or rabbit skeletal muscle protein kinase or phosphorylase kinase could be demonstrated, nor any direct interaction with phosphorylase as measured by SH-group reactivity, enzymatic activity, or rate of phosphorylase b to a conversion. Purification of the 160,000 molecular weight M-line protein of skeletal muscle resulted in the quantitative removal of debranching enzyme, indicating that the two proteins are different.

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