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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-4943
    Keywords: ATP-AMP transphosphorylase ; adenylate kinase ; myokinase ; nucleotide-binding peptides and peptide fragments ; ligand binding ; peptide synthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Two peptide fragments, derived from the head and tail of rabbit muscle myokinase, were found to possess remarkable and specific ligand-binding properties (Hamadaet al., 1979). By initiating systematic syntheses and measurements of equilibrium substrate-binding properties of these two sets of peptides, or portions thereof, which encompass the binding sites for (a) the magnesium complexes of the nucleotide substrates (MgATP2− and MgADP−) and (b) the uncomplexed nucleotide substrates (ADP3− and AMP2−) of rabbit muscle myokinase, some of the requirements for binding of the substrates to ATP-AMP transphosphorylase are being deduced and chemically outlined. One requirement for tight nucleotide binding appears to be a minimum peptide length of 15–25 residues. In addition, Lys-172 and/or Lys-194 may be involved in the binding of εAMP. The syntheses are described as a set of peptides corresponding to residues 31–45, 20–45, 5–45, and 1–45, and a set of peptides corresponding to residues 178–192, 178–194, and 172–194 of rabbit muscle adenylate kinase. The ligand-binding properties of the first set of synthetic peptides to the fluorescent ligands: εMgATP/εATP and εMgADP/εADP are quantitatively presented in terms of their intrinsic dissociation constants (K′d) and values ofN (maximal number of moles bound per mole of peptide); and compared with the peptide fragment MT-I (1–44) obtained from rabbit muscle myokinase (Kubyet al., 1984) and with the native enzyme (Hamadaet al., 1979). In addition, the values ofN andK′d are given for the second set of synthetic peptides to the fluorescent ligands εAMP and εADP as well as for the peptide fragments MT-XII(172–194) and CB-VI(126–194) (Kuby et al., 1984) and, in turn, compared with the native enzyme. A few miscellaneous dissociation constants which had been derived kinetically are also given for comparison (e.g., theK i for εAMP and the value of $$\bar K_{Mg\varepsilon ATP} $$ obtained for the native enzyme) (Hamada and Kuby, 1978), and theK'd measured for Cr3+ and the synthetic peptide I1–45 (Fryet al., 1985b).
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2011. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Biogeochemistry 105 (2011): 7-18, doi:10.1007/s10533-011-9597-8.
    Description: The flowpaths by which water moves from watersheds to streams has important consequences for the runoff dynamics and biogeochemistry of surface waters in the Amazon Basin. The clearing of Amazon forest to cattle pasture has the potential to change runoff sources to streams by shifting runoff to more surficial flow pathways. We applied end member mixing analysis (EMMA) to ten small watersheds throughout the Amazon in which solute composition of streamwater and groundwater, overland flow, soil solution, throughfall and rainwater were measured, largely as part of the Large-Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia. We found a range in the extent to which streamwater samples fell within the mixing space determined by potential flowpath end members, suggesting that some water sources to streams were not sampled. The contribution of overland flow as a source of stream flow was greater in pasture watersheds than in forest watersheds of comparable size. Increases in overland flow contribution to pasture streams ranged in some cases from 0% in forest to 27 to 28% in pasture and were broadly consistent with results from hydrometric sampling of Amazon forest and pasture watersheds that indicate 17- to 18-fold increase in the overland flow contribution to stream flow in pastures. In forest, overland flow was an important contribution to stream flow (45 to 57%) in ephemeral streams where flows were dominated by stormflow. Overland flow contribution to stream flow decreased in importance with increasing watershed area, from 21 to 57% in forest and 60 to 89% in pasture watersheds 〈10 ha to 0% in forest and 27 to 28% in pastures in watersheds 〉100 ha. Soil solution contributions to stream flow were similar across watershed area and groundwater inputs generally increased in proportion to decreases in overland flow. Application of EMMA across multiple watersheds indicated patterns across gradients of stream size and land cover that were consistent with patterns determined by detailed hydrometric sampling.
    Description: This work was supported by National Science Foundation (DEB-0315656, DEB-0640661), the NASA LBA Program (NCC5-686, NCC5-69, NCC5-705, NNG066E88A) and by grants from Brazilian agencies FAPESP (03/13172-2) and CNPq (20199/2005-5).
    Keywords: Cattle pasture ; Deforestation ; Flowpaths ; Principal components analysis ; Overland flow ; Soil solution
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Preprint
    Format: application/pdf
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