Pw. Hager et al., RECOMBINANT HUMAN INOSINE MONOPHOSPHATE DEHYDROGENASE TYPE-I AND TYPE-II PROTEINS - PURIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF INHIBITOR BINDING, Biochemical pharmacology, 49(9), 1995, pp. 1323-1329
Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH) activity results from the
expression of two separate genes, and the resulting proteins (type I a
nd type II) are 84% identical at the amino acid level. Although the ty
pe II mRNA is expressed at higher levels in proliferating cells, both
mRNAs, and by extrapolation both proteins, are present in normal and m
alignant cells. Since IMPDH is an important target for the development
of drugs with both chemotherapeutic and immunosuppressive activity, w
e have compared the kinetic and physical properties of the two human e
nzymes expressed in and purified from Escherichia coil. Type I and II
IMPDH had k(cat) values of 1.8 and 1.4 sec(-1) respectively, with K-m
values for IMP of 14 and 9 mu M and K-m values for NAD of 42 and 32 mu
M. The two enzymes were inhibited competitively by the immunosuppress
ive agent mizoribine 5'-monophosphate (MMP) with K-i Values of 8 and 4
nM and inhibited uncompetitively by mycophenolic acid with K-i values
of 11 and 6 nM. The association of MMP to either isozyme, as monitore
d by fluorescence quenching, was relatively slow with k(on) values of
3-8 x 10(4) M(-1) sec(-1) and k(off) values of 3 x 10(-4) sec(-1) (hal
f-lives of 36-43 min). Thus, MMP is a potent, tight-binding competitiv
e inhibitor that does not discriminate between the two IMPDH isozymes.