AbstractTranshydrogenase is a proton pump. It has three components: dI and dIII protrude from the membrane and contain the binding sites for NAD(H) and NADP(H), respectively, and dII spans the membrane. We have expressed dIII from Homo sapiens transhydrogenase (hsdIII) in Escherichia coli. The purified protein was associated with stoichiometric amounts of NADP(H) bound to the catalytic site. The NADP+ and NADPH were released only slowly from the protein, supporting the suggestion that nucleotide-binding by dIII is regulated by the membrane-spanning dII. HsdIII formed a catalytically active complex with recombinant dI from Rhodospirillum rubrum (rrdI), even in the absence of dII. The rates of forward and reverse transhydrogenation catalysed ...
AbstractAll transhydrogenases appear to have three components: dI, which binds NAD(H), and dIII, whi...
AbstractTranshydrogenase (E.C. 1.6.1.1) couples the redox reaction between NAD(H) and NADP(H) to the...
AbstractThe hydrophilic, extramembranous domains I (α1 subunit) and III of the Rhodospirillum rubrum...
AbstractTranshydrogenase is a proton pump. It has three components: dI and dIII protrude from the me...
AbstractA unique Trp residue in the recombinant dIII component of transhydrogenase from human heart ...
AbstractIn its forward direction, transhydrogenase couples the reduction of NADP+ by NADH to the out...
Transhydrogenase is an enzyme located in the cytoplasmic membrane of bacteria or the inner membrane ...
AbstractBackground: Membrane-bound ion pumps are involved in metabolic regulation, osmoregulation, c...
AbstractBackground: Membrane-bound ion translocators have important functions in biology, but their ...
AbstractProton-translocating transhydrogenase is found in the inner membranes of animal mitochondria...
AbstractTranshydrogenase is a proton pump found in the membranes of bacteria and animal mitochondria...
AbstractTranshydrogenase couples the reduction of NADP+ by NADH to inward proton translocation acros...
AbstractNicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase constitutes a proton pump which links the NAD(H) an...
AbstractProton-translocating transhydrogenase was solubilised and purified from membranes of Escheri...
AbstractBackground: Transhydrogenase, located in the inner membranes of animal mitochondria and the ...
AbstractAll transhydrogenases appear to have three components: dI, which binds NAD(H), and dIII, whi...
AbstractTranshydrogenase (E.C. 1.6.1.1) couples the redox reaction between NAD(H) and NADP(H) to the...
AbstractThe hydrophilic, extramembranous domains I (α1 subunit) and III of the Rhodospirillum rubrum...
AbstractTranshydrogenase is a proton pump. It has three components: dI and dIII protrude from the me...
AbstractA unique Trp residue in the recombinant dIII component of transhydrogenase from human heart ...
AbstractIn its forward direction, transhydrogenase couples the reduction of NADP+ by NADH to the out...
Transhydrogenase is an enzyme located in the cytoplasmic membrane of bacteria or the inner membrane ...
AbstractBackground: Membrane-bound ion pumps are involved in metabolic regulation, osmoregulation, c...
AbstractBackground: Membrane-bound ion translocators have important functions in biology, but their ...
AbstractProton-translocating transhydrogenase is found in the inner membranes of animal mitochondria...
AbstractTranshydrogenase is a proton pump found in the membranes of bacteria and animal mitochondria...
AbstractTranshydrogenase couples the reduction of NADP+ by NADH to inward proton translocation acros...
AbstractNicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase constitutes a proton pump which links the NAD(H) an...
AbstractProton-translocating transhydrogenase was solubilised and purified from membranes of Escheri...
AbstractBackground: Transhydrogenase, located in the inner membranes of animal mitochondria and the ...
AbstractAll transhydrogenases appear to have three components: dI, which binds NAD(H), and dIII, whi...
AbstractTranshydrogenase (E.C. 1.6.1.1) couples the redox reaction between NAD(H) and NADP(H) to the...
AbstractThe hydrophilic, extramembranous domains I (α1 subunit) and III of the Rhodospirillum rubrum...