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  4. Enzyme catalysis in microgravity: steady-state kinetic analysis of the isocitrate lyase reaction
 
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Enzyme catalysis in microgravity: steady-state kinetic analysis of the isocitrate lyase reaction

Author(s)
Ranaldi, Francesco
Vanni, Paolo
Giachetti, Eugenio
ASI Sponsor
Subjects

catalysis

enzymes

enzymes metabolism

hypogravity

isocitrate lyase

isocitrate lyase meta...

kinetics

models

pinus

pinus enzymology

space flight

theoretical

weightlessness

Date Issued
2003-01-01
Abstract
Two decades of research in microgravity have shown that certain biochemical processes can be altered by weightlessness. Approximately 10 years ago, our team, supported by the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Agenzia Spaziale Italiana, started the Effect of Microgravity on Enzyme Catalysis project to test the possibility that the microgravity effect observed at cellular level could be mediated by enzyme reactions. An experiment to study the cleavage reaction catalyzed by isocitrate lyase was flown on the sounding rocket MASER 7, and we found that the kinetic parameters were not altered by microgravity. During the 28th ESA parabolic flight campaign, we had the opportunity to replicate the MASER 7 experiment and to perform a complete steady-state analysis of the isocitrate lyase reaction. This study showed that both in microgravity and in standard g controls the enzyme reaction obeyed the same kinetic mechanism and none of the kinetic parameters, nor the equilibrium constant of the overall reaction were altered. Our results contrast with those of a similar experiment, which was performed during the same parabolic flight campaign, and showed that microgravity increased the affinity of lipoxygenase-1 for linoleic acid. The hypotheses suggested to explain this change effect of the latter were here tested by computer simulation, and appeared to be inconsistent with the experimental outcome.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/1423
Journal
Biophysical chemistry
URL
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12568939
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301462202002545
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