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The role of zinc in the stabilization of the dimeric form of bacterial alpha-amylase.

Journal article published in 1978 by D. J. Winzor, Ross Tellam ORCID, L. W. Nichol
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Bacterial alpha-amylase was shown by equilibrium and velocity-sedimentation studies to be a monomer-dimer equilibrium system in 0.10M-NaCl/0.015M-calcium acetate/0.010M-EDTA, pH7.0; an association constant of 2.4 X 10(3)M-1 is obtained. Studies of the binding of Zn2+ to alpha-amylase in 0.10M-NaCl/0.005M-calcium acetate, pH7.0, yielded binding curves that exhibit dependence on the concentration of alpha-amylase (Zn2+-free) used in the equilibrium-dialysis experiments. Results are described very satisfactorily by a reaction scheme in which Zn2+ binds exclusively to the dimer of the above monomer--dimer system with an association constant of 1.0 X 10(6)M-1. The present results refute the earlier scheme for dimer stabilization by Zn2+ in which the metal ion formed a cross-link between two non polymerizing monomer units.