A divalent metal ion, such as Mn2+, is required
for the catalytic reaction and allosteric regulation of
pig heart NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase. The
enzyme is irreversibly inactivated and cleaved by Fe2+
in the presence of O2 and ascorbate at pH 7.0.
Mn2+ prevents both inactivation and cleavage.
Nucleotide ligands, such as NAD, NADPH, and ADP, neither
prevent nor promote inactivation or cleavage of the enzyme
by Fe2+. The NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase
is composed of three distinct subunits in the ratio
2α:1β:1γ. The results indicate that the oxidative
inactivation and cleavage are specific and involve the 40 kDa
α subunit of the enzyme. A pair of major peptides is generated
during Fe2+ inactivation: 29.5 + 10.5 kDa, as determined
by SDS-PAGE. Amino-terminal sequencing reveals that these peptides
arise by cleavage of the Val262–His263 bond of the α
subunit. No fragments are produced when enzyme is incubated
with Fe2+ and ascorbate under denaturing conditions
in the presence of 6 M urea, indicating that the native
structure is required for the specific cleavage. These
results suggest that His263 of the α subunit may be
a ligand of the divalent metal ion needed for the reaction
catalyzed by isocitrate dehydrogenase. Isocitrate enhances
the inactivation of enzyme caused by Fe2+ in the
presence of oxygen, but prevents the cleavage, suggesting
that inactivation occurs by a different mechanism when
metal ion is bound to the enzyme in the presence of isocitrate:
oxidation of cysteine may be responsible for the rapid
inactivation in this case. Affinity cleavage caused by
Fe2+ implicates α as the catalytic subunit of
the multisubunit porcine NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase.