Radiation inactivation of oligomeric enzyme systems: theoretical considerations.

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RESUMO

Radiation inactivation has been used as a tool to explore the size, structure, and function of soluble and membrane-bound enzymes. Enzyme systems consisting of a single functional unit yield a single exponential dependence of enzyme activity on radiation dose. Complex, nonexponential, inactivation curves suggest the presence of a multiunit enzyme system. A concave-upward inactivation curve suggests the presence of multiple independent functional units of distinct size and activity that do not interact with each other. An oligomeric enzyme, consisting of n identical subunits in equilibrium with monomers, can give simple exponential decay curves or more complex inactivation curves with various degrees of upward or downward concavity, depending upon the extent of oligomer-monomer equilibration among subunits after radiation, oligomer-to-monomer size and activity ratios, and multihit requirements for oligomer inactivation. For each of these possibilities, equations for the inactivation curves are derived, calculated numerically, and discussed in qualitative terms. A systematic approach to the evaluation of complex radiation inactivation curves is proposed and limitations of the radiation inactivation method are reviewed.

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