NCBS Home page
Accession List
Pathway List
Search
Authorized Users
Help
News archives

Accession Type:
Pathway
sGC_Stone_
Marletta
sGC
 Molecule
 Enzyme
 Reaction

Enter a Search String

Special character and space not allowed in the query term. Search string should be at least 2 characters long.
Search in: Search for Match By

Molecule List for pathway sGC (Pathway Number 69)

 Name Initial Conc. (uM) Volume (fL) Buffered
1cGMP00.0016667No
   
2GTP100.0016667No
    Concentration 10 uM (Kuroda et al., J.Neurosci., 2001, 21(15):5693-5702 ; Bhalla and Iyengar, 1999, Science, 283:381-387)
3NO00.0016667No
    Endogenously produced NO concentrations in the course of signal transduction processes are < 100 nM. (Varner et al., Nitric oxide in the nervous system, Academic press, London, UK, pp.191-206.)
4NO.sGC5accord00.0016667No
    This is the 5-coordinate complex of the enzyme sGC. This is also the active form of the enzyme.
5NO.sGC6coord00.0016667No
    This compoud, a 6-coordinate complex will be bound by another NO to an unidentified non-heme site in the next reaction step.
6NO.sGCfast00.0016667No
   
7NO.sGCslow00.0016667No
   
8NO.sGC_5coord00.0016667No
    This is the active sGC, a 5-coordinate complex formed after a series of reaction steps, involving the formation of a 6 coordinate complex which converted to a 5-coordinate complex.
9NO.SGC_6coord00.0016667No
   
10nonhemebind_int00.0016667No
    Here the new NO has bound to the unidentified non-heme site on the 6-coordinate complex, and this will convert to the 5-coordinate complex. this binding of a new NO to the non-heme site on the 6-coordinate complex is characteristic of the slow binding process of NO to sGC.
11sGCfast30.0016667No
    Stone and Marletta, Biochemistry,35(4), 1996,. They have reported that the binding of sGC with NO occurs through two phases;a slow process and a fast process. 30% of the sGC binds quickly to NO; but the rest 70% goes through a slow process which involves the binding of another NO to an unidentified non-heme site on the protein, which seems to be not necessarilythe same site used in the initial two step binding to the heme. Stone and Marletta,1995,34;14668-14674;-- report that the native heme stoichiometry is 2 per heterodimer. spectrally only one type of heme is observed, indicating that both hemes are in similar environment. They conclude that each subunit of the heterodimer binds 1 equiv of heme at a site conserved between the two subunits. Concentration 3 uM assumed on the basis of reported data (Kuroda et al., J.Neurosci., 2001, 21(15): 5693-5702 ; Ariano et al., PNAS, 1982, 79:1316-1320)
12sGCslow30.0016667No
    This is the slow reaction process of the binding of NO to sGC. we can notice the binding of another NO in the third reaction step to a non-heme site, which then converts to the 5-coordinate complex. this binding of another NO to an non-heme site is characteristic of the slow binding process of NO to sGC.(Stone and Marletta, 1996,35(4);1093-1099) Concentration 3 uM assumed on the basis of reported data (Kuroda et al., J.Neurosci., 2001, 21(15): 5693-5702 ; Ariano et al., PNAS, 1982, 79:1316-1320.)
13sGCtot00.0016667No
    This is the sumtotal of the sGC activated via two binding mecanisms as reported by Stone and Marletta, 1996, Biochemistry, 35(4):1093-1099.

Summed Molecule List

  Target Inputs
1 sGCtotNO.sGC_5coord
NO.sGC5accord
This is the sumtotal of the sGC activated via two binding mecanisms as reported by Stone and Marletta, 1996, Biochemistry, 35(4):1093-1099.


Pathway Details  Molecule List   Enzyme List   Reaction List  


Database compilation and code copyright (C) 2022, Upinder S. Bhalla and NCBS/TIFR
This Copyright is applied to ensure that the contents of this database remain freely available. Please see FAQ for details.