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Publication : Recombinant human and mouse purple acid phosphatases: expression and characterization.

First Author  Marshall K Year  1997
Journal  Arch Biochem Biophys Volume  345
Issue  2 Pages  230-6
PubMed ID  9308894 Mgi Jnum  J:42887
Mgi Id  MGI:1096708 Doi  10.1006/abbi.1997.0250
Citation  Marshall K, et al. (1997) Recombinant human and mouse purple acid phosphatases: expression and characterization. Arch Biochem Biophys 345(2):230-6
abstractText  The mammalian purple acid phosphatases (also called tartrate-resistant acid phosphatases) are expressed primarily in actively resorbing osteoclasts and activated macrophages. The enzymes are characterized by the presence of a binuclear iron center at the active site. Recent studies on transgenic mice lacking purple acid phosphatase implicate the osteoclast enzyme in both bone resorption and bone mineralization. To characterize the mammalian enzymes in more detail, particularly with respect to their substrate specificity at the low pH of the osteoclastic resorptive space (2.5-3), we have purified the recombinant human and mouse enzymes from baculovirus-infected insect cells. The properties of the recombinant mouse enzyme are compared with those of the nonrecombinant enzyme isolated from mouse spleen. The kinetics of hydrolysis of the substrates p-nitrophenyl phosphate, phosphotyrosine, and pyrophosphate and a phosphotyrosyl peptide by the recombinant human and mouse enzymes and the nonrecombinant mouse and pig enzymes were analyzed. For all the enzymes the ratio k(cat)/Km was typically approximately 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) and was higher at pH 2.5 than at 4.9. The increase was attributable to a large decrease in Km at the lower pH value. The results indicate that the enzyme exhibits high catalytic efficiency toward substrates such as pyrophosphate and acidic phosphotyrosine-containing peptides, particularly at low pH values typical of the bone resorptive space. The implications of the results for the physiological function of the enzyme are discussed.
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