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1: Eur J Biochem. 1990 Sep 11;192(2):557-62.Click here to read Links

Subunit constitution of carbonic anhydrase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.

Institute of Applied Microbiology, University of Tokyo, Japan.

Carbonic anhydrase purified from the cell surface of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was inactivated by treatment with dithiothreitol. This treatment caused dissociation of the holoenzyme into 35-kDa (A) and 4-kDa (B) subunits as revealed by SDS/PAGE. The 35-kDa subunit was further separated into two components A1 (35 kDa) and A2 (36.5 kDa) by SDS/PAGE using a gradient gel. These two components have the same amino acid sequence up to at least the 10th amino acid from the N-terminus. The molecular masses were estimated at 76 kDa and 35 kDa for the holoenzyme and the large subunit, respectively, and the molar ratio of the former to the latter at 1:2, by using the techniques of low-angle laser light-scattering photometry and precision differential refractometry combined with gel-filtration HPLC. The molar ratio of the 35-kDa/4-kDa subunits was estimated at 1:1 the gel-filtration HPLC monitored with precision differential refractometry. Atomic-absorption spectrophotometry revealed that the holoenzyme contains two atoms of zinc. These results suggest that the holoenzyme is a heterotetramer composed of two large subunits (A1 and A2) and two small subunits (B).

PMID: 2120056 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]