The two alcohol dehydrogenases found in Zymomonas mobilis have each been purified using dye-ligand chromatography and affinity elution with nucleotides. The isoenzyme with lower electrophoretic mobility (ZADH-1) is a zinc enzyme with properties essentially similar to preparations described elsewhere. The faster isoenzyme (ZADH-2) accounted for some 90% of the ethanol-oxidizing activity in freshly prepared extracts and corresponded to the iron-activated enzyme previously described. This enzyme was inactivated by zinc; activity could only be retained during purification by including either ferrous ions or cobaltous ions in the buffers. ZADH-2 has relatively low acetaldehyde reductase activity; consequently ZADH-1 is responsible for about half of the physiological activity (acetaldehyde reduction) in Zymomonas cells. Kinetic studies showed that ZADH-2 is activated by ethanol in both reaction directions; a hypothesis for the mechanism of activation is presented. Metal ion analyses of ZADH-2 prepared in the presence of iron or cobalt indicated one atom of the relevant metal per subunit, with no significant zinc content. N-terminal sequence analyses showed that the ZADH-1 has some homology with the Bacillus stearothermophilus enzyme, whereas ZADH-2 resembles the yeast enzyme more closely.
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