作者
T Nguyen, A-M Drotar, RK Monson, R Fall
发表日期
2009/7/1
期刊
Phytochemistry
卷号
70
期号
10
页码范围
1217-1221
出版商
Pergamon
简介
Considerable evidence indicates that acetaldehyde is released from the leaves of a variety of plants. The conventional explanation for this is that ethanol formed in the roots is transported to the leaves where it is converted to acetaldehyde by the alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) found in the leaves. It is possible that acetaldehyde could also be formed in leaves by action of pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC), an enzyme with an uncertain metabolic role, which has been detected, but not characterized, in cottonwood leaves. We have found that leaf PDC is present in leaf veins and petioles, as well as in non-vein tissues. Veins and petioles contained measurable pyruvate concentrations in the range of 2mM. The leaf vein form of the enzyme was purified approximately 143-fold, and, at the optimum pH of 5.6, the Km value for pyruvate was 42μM. This Km is lower than the typical millimolar range seen for PDCs from other …
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