Dickinson F M, Dack S
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Hull, Cottingham Road, HU6 7RX, Hull, UK.
Chem Biol Interact. 2001 Jan 30;130-132(1-3):417-23. doi: 10.1016/s0009-2797(00)00266-0.
The activities of yeast ADH I and ADH II towards long chain alcohols and diols were studied using rather unusual conditions (1.0 M Tris pH 8.75, approximately 0.3 mg/ml enzyme and [S]<<<K(m) ) where the alcohols are oxidised quantitatively in a first-order manner. Plots of the apparent first-order rate constant versus primary alcohol chain length show double peaks with similar values for ethanol and 1-decanol and relatively low values for 1-butanol through to 1-octanol. With the alpha,omega diols only one peak of activity was observed with 1,14-tetradecanediol, the preferred substrate, being oxidised about the same rate as ethanol. Both enzymes were essentially inactive with short-chain diols (C(2)-C(8)). For all of these assays normalised rates with ADH II were about threefold faster than with ADH I.