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Featured researches published by Linda C. Kurz.


Biochemistry | 2009

The Partial Substrate Dethiaacetyl-Coenzyme A Mimics All Critical Carbon Acid Reactions in the Condensation Half-Reaction Catalyzed by Thermoplasma acidophilum Citrate Synthase

Linda C. Kurz; Charles Z. Constantine; Hong Jiang; T. Joseph Kappock

Citrate synthase (CS) performs two half-reactions: the mechanistically intriguing condensation of acetyl-CoA with oxaloacetate (OAA) to form citryl-CoA and the subsequent, slower hydrolysis of citryl-CoA that generally dominates steady-state kinetics. The condensation reaction requires the abstraction of a proton from the methyl carbon of acetyl-CoA to generate a reactive enolate intermediate. The carbanion of that intermediate then attacks the OAA carbonyl to furnish citryl-CoA, the initial product. Using stopped-flow and steady-state fluorescence methods, kinetic substrate isotope effects, and mutagenesis of active site residues, we show that all of the processes that occur in the condensation half-reaction performed by Thermoplasma acidophilum citrate synthase (TpCS) with the natural thioester substrate, acetyl-CoA, also occur with the ketone inhibitor dethiaacetyl-CoA. Free energy profiles demonstrate that the nonhydrolyzable product of the condensation reaction, dethiacitryl-CoA, forms a particularly stable complex with TpCS but not pig heart CS.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1977

The kinetics of the alkaline dissociation of myosin.

Linda C. Kurz; Alfred Holtzer

Abstract The rates of two processes in alkaline (pH 10.5–11.5) myosin solutions at 0 °C have been investigated: production of ionized tyrosine residues and production of light subunits. The progressive absorbance change is shown to result from a first-order irrevocable exposure to solvent and subsequent ionization of 40% of the tyrosine residues. Extrapolation to zero time gives the spectrophotometric ionization curve for native myosin; the p K of the abnormal tyrosines exceeds 12. Similarly, extrapolation to infinite time gives the curve for denatured myosin; the p K of the normal tyrosines (and of all tyrosines after denaturation) is 11.0–11.6. From the pH dependence of the rate, it is found that activation requires ionization of six residues and that their p K is much greater than 11.3. The rate of production of subunits was determined by fractionating the reaction mixture and determining the weight of light subunits produced. The process is also first order. Within experimental error, the rate constants for these two processes are equal. We conclude that they have the same rate-determining step. The data are consistent with either of two simple possible mechanisms. These are a rapid conformation change, followed by rate-determining subunit dissociation, followed by a rapid, irrevocable conformation change; or, a rapid conformation change, followed by a rate-determining, irrevocable conformation change, followed by rapid subunit dissociation.


Biochemistry | 1980

Adenosine deaminase and adenylate deaminase: comparative kinetic studies with transition state and ground state analogue inhibitors.

Carl Frieden; Linda C. Kurz; Helen R. Gilbert


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1972

Mechanism of proton transfer in solution. Factors determining whether the activated complex has an equilibrated environment

Joseph L. Kurz; Linda C. Kurz


Biochemistry | 1987

Adenosine deaminase: viscosity studies and the mechanism of binding of substrate and of ground- and transition-state analogue inhibitors.

Linda C. Kurz; Emma Weitkamp; Carl Frieden


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1980

Anomalous equilibrium and kinetic .alpha.-deuterium secondary isotope effects accompanying hydride transfer from reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide

Linda C. Kurz; Carl Frieden


Biochemistry | 1992

The rate of formation of transition-state analogues in the active site of adenosine deaminase is encounter-controlled : implications for the mechanism

Linda C. Kurz; Luke Moix; Marian C. Riley; Carl Frieden


Biochemistry | 1987

Adenosine deaminase converts purine riboside into an analogue of a reactive intermediate: a 13C NMR and kinetic study.

Linda C. Kurz; Carl Frieden


Biochemistry | 1983

Adenosine deaminase: solvent isotope and pH effects on the binding of transition-state and ground-state analogue inhibitors.

Linda C. Kurz; Carl Frieden


Biochemistry | 1989

Transition-state stabilization by adenosine deaminase: 1,6-addition of water to purine ribonucleoside, the enzyme's affinity for 6-hydroxy-1,6-dihydropurine ribonucleoside, and the effective concentration of substrate water at the active site

Walda. Jones; Linda C. Kurz; Richard Wolfenden

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Carl Frieden

Washington University in St. Louis

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George R. Drysdale

Washington University in St. Louis

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Joseph L. Kurz

Washington University in St. Louis

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Claudia T. Evans

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Marian C. Riley

Washington University in St. Louis

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Paul A. Srere

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Tanuj Nakra

Washington University in St. Louis

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Hua Deng

City University of New York

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