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. 1963 Nov;86(5):937–944. doi: 10.1128/jb.86.5.937-944.1963

β-ETHYLMALATE SYNTHETASE

Robert Rabin a,1, Henry C Reeves a,2, Samuel J Ajl a
PMCID: PMC278549  PMID: 14080804

Abstract

Rabin, Robert (Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pa.), Henry C. Reeves, and Samuel J. Ajl. β-Ethylmalate synthetase. J. Bacteriol. 86:937–944. 1963.—Pseudomonas aeruginosa, when grown in an inorganic salts medium with butyrate as the sole carbon source, produced an enzyme which catalyzed the condensation of butyryl coenzyme A (CoA) and glyoxylate to form β-ethylmalic acid. Maximal activity was found in the 40 to 60% (NH4)2SO4 fraction of cell-free extracts. Mg++ was stimulatory, and the optimal pH was 8.0 to 8.5. β-Ethylmalic acid-C14 was demonstrable in paper chromatograms when either glyoxylate-1-C14 or butyryl CoA-3-C14 was included in complete systems incubated anaerobically. When either glyoxylate, butyryl CoA, or enzyme was omitted, β-ethylmalate was not detected. Further evidence that β-ethylmalic acid-C14 was the product of the condensation of butyryl CoA-3-C14 and nonlabeled glyoxylate was provided by synthesis of the derivative 5-ethyluracil-C14. The derivative was recrystallized to constant specific activity and identified by its melting point and spectral properties.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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