[30] Carboxymethyl esterase of bacterial chemotaxis

1984 
Publisher Summary This chapter illustrates assay, purification, and properties of carboxylmethyl esterase of bacterial chemotaxis. Methylation of a set of transmembrane proteins, originally termed methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) and now known to be receptors, play a central role in bacterial chemotaxis. Bacterial membranes are prepared with protein methyl groups 3 H-labeled either in vitro or in vivo . Esterase activity results in the production of [ 3 H]methanol, which is distilled and counted by liquid scintillation spectrometry. One unit of activity hydrolyzes 1 fmol of methyl ester/min. Specific activity is expressed as the number of enzyme units per mg protein. All purification procedures are generally carried out at 4°. The enzyme activity is maximum at pH 5.5. Stability of the esterase is inversely related to its activity. Maximum stability and low activity is observed in phosphate buffer at pH 7 with 50-100 m M added NaCl, while [2-( N -morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid] MES and low salt afford minimum protection against inactivation but high enzyme activity. Activity is also inhibited by a variety of residue-specific reagents.
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