Atypical human liver alcohol dehydrogenase: the β2‐Bern subunit has an amino acid exchange that is identical to the one in the β2‐Oriental chain

Abstract
The "atypical' human liver alcohol dehydrogenase dimer, homogeneous for beta 2-Bern chains, was isolated from human liver of Caucasian individuals. It is derived from an allelic variant at the ADH2 gene locus and exhibits a considerably higher specific activity and lower pH optimum than its "typical' counterpart (isoenzyme beta 1 beta 1) from the beta 1-chain predominant in Caucasians. Peptides were prepared by trypsin or CNBr cleavage, and were purified by exclusion chromatography and reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC). Structural analysis of the peptides showed that beta 2-Bern differs at one position from beta 1. Thus, Arg-47 in beta 1 is substituted by His in beta 2-Bern. This exchange, compatible with a one-base mutation, explains all functional differences by altered interactions with the pyrophosphate moiety of the coenzyme. The difference is also structurally identical to that found for another atypical beta 2-subunit, the beta 2-Oriental type of major Asian occurrence, linking these two atypical forms of human alcohol dehydrogenase.