Reptilian alcohol dehydrogenase Heterogeneity relevant to class multiplicity of the mammalian enzyme

Abstract
Liver alcohol dehydrogenase of the ethanol-active type (‘class I enzyme’) from the lizard, Uromastix hardwickii, was purified and screened for relationships with other vertebrate forms of the enzyme. Two differernt acetylated N-termini (acetyl-Gly and acetyl-Ser) and further positional differences already in the N-terminal segments establish the presence of two types of protein chain. The multiplicity is different from that hitherto detected within vertebrate class I alcohol dehydrogenase isozymes but typical of that which would be expected for subunits of different classes. In particular, relationships to class II or to class II-related forms appear likely. This may indicate yet further vertebrate alcohol dehydrogenase multiplicity or discovery of a class II non-mammalian enzyme. The results give prospects of defining gene duplications corresponding to more than one alcohol dehydrogenase class split to at an early vertebrate stage