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1.
The specific activities of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle enzymes in Thiobacillus versutus were invariably lower after aerobic growth as compared to denitrifying growth in acetate- or succinate-limited chemostat cultures. Of the glyoxylate cycle enzymes, isocitrate lyase (ICL) activity was nil during aerobic and 76 nmol·min-1·mg-1 protein during denitrifying growth on acetate whereas malate synthase (MS) did not change. In succinate-grown cells ICL was always near nil. The change in ICL and MS was followed after pulse additions of acetate and nitrate to an aerobic acetate-limited chemostat culture made anaerobic prior to the first pulse. ICL remained nil during denitrifying growth after the first pulse but increased to 47 and 81 nmol ·min-1·mg-1 protein after the second and third pulse, respectively. MS remained unaltered. The appearance of ICL was dependent upon de novo protein synthesis. During transition in a steady state culture on acetate from oxygen to nitrate as terminal electron acceptor, denitrifying growth started after 0.6 volume replacements. The resumption of growth was concomitant with an increase in TCA cycle enzyme activities. ICL was observed only after two volume replacements. During the reverse transition, ICL disappeared at a rate twice the dilution rate. SDS polyacrylamide gelectrophoresis of cell-free extracts containing ICL showed a major protein band with a Rf value identical to purified ICL and a mol·wt. of 60,000. ICL from T. versutus was inhibited by 1.5 mM itaconate but not by 10 mM phosphoenolpyruvate. Its activity was dependent upon the presence of Mg2+ and cysteine.Abbreviations TCA Tricarboxylic acid - ICL isocitrate lyase - MS malate synthase - FPLC fast protein liquid chromatography - maximum specific oxygen consumption rate  相似文献   

2.
Bradyrhizobium japonicum, the nitrogen-fixing symbiotic partner of soybean, was grown on various carbon substrates and assayed for the presence of the glyoxylate cycle enzymes, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase. The highest levels of isocitrate lyase [165–170 nmol min–1 (mg protein)–1] were found in cells grown on acetate or β-hydroxybutyrate, intermediate activity was found after growth on pyruvate or galactose, and very little activity was found in cells grown on arabinose, malate, or glycerol. Malate synthase activity was present in arabinose- and malate-grown cultures and increased by only 50–80% when cells were grown on acetate. B. japonicum bacteroids, harvested at four different nodule ages, showed very little isocitrate lyase activity, implying that a complete glyoxylate cycle is not functional during symbiosis. The apparent K m of isocitrate lyase for d,l-isocitrate was fourfold higher than that of isocitrate dehydrogenase (61.5 and 15.5 μM, respectively) in desalted crude extracts from acetate-grown B. japonicum. When isocitrate lyase was induced, neither the V max nor the d,l-isocitrate K m of isocitrate dehydrogenase changed, implying that isocitrate dehydrogenase is not inhibited by covalent modification to facilitate operation of the glyoxylate cycle in B. japonicum. Received: 10 October 1997 / Accepted: 16 January 1998  相似文献   

3.
Studies on acetate utilization by Rhodopseudomonas capsulata strain St. Louis indicated that the wild type grew poorly on acetate and made little if any of the glyoxylate cycle enzyme isocitrate lyase. A spontaneous mutant, Ac-l, capable of vigorous and immediate growth on acetate and exhibiting high levels of isocitrate lyase activity, was isolated in the course of those studies.Isocitrate lyase was not formed when the mutant was grown on malate. Addition of malate to cultures of Ac-l growing on acetate resulted in loss of the enzyme by dilution through growth.Starvation of acetate-grown Ac-l for acetate resulted in a rapid and complete loss of isocitrate lyase activity which was shown to be energy dependent. Readdition of acetate to a starved culture previously grown on acetate resulted in a rapid recovery of enzyme activity. The recovery required energy and was sensitive to chloramphenicol inhibition at any time during the recovery phase.  相似文献   

4.
The key enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, were present in cell-free extracts of the phototrophic, green, thermophilic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus grown with acetate as the sole organic carbon source.The optimum temperature of these enzymes was 40° C, and their specific activities were high enough to account for the observed growth rate. Lower levels of the enzymes were found in extracts from cells grown on a complete medium.Itaconate was shown to inhibit isocitrate lyase from C. aurantiacus 96% at a concentration of 0.25 mM and also had a profound effect on the growth of the organism on acetate, 0.25 mM inhibiting completely. Itaconate also inhibited the growth when added to the complex medium, but in this case much higher concentrations were required.  相似文献   

5.
The glyoxylate shunt enzymes, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, were present at high levels in mycelium grown on acetate as sole source of carbon, compared with mycelium grown on sucrose medium. The glyoxylate shunt activities were also elevated in mycelium grown on glutamate or Casamino Acids as sole source of carbon, and in amino acid-requiring auxotrophic mutants grown in sucrose medium containing limiting amounts of their required amino acid. Under conditions of enhanced catabolite repression in mutants grown in sucrose medium but starved of Krebs cycle intermediates, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase levels were derepressed compared with the levels in wild type grown on sucrose medium. This derepression did not occur in related mutants in which Krebs cycle intermediates were limiting growth but catabolite repression was not enhanced. No Krebs cycle intermediate tested produced an efficient repression of isocitrate lyase activity in acetate medium. Of the two forms of isocitrate lyase in Neurospora, isocitrate lyase-1 constituted over 80% of the isocitrate lyase activity in acetate-grown wild type and also in each of the cases already outlined in which the glyoxylate shunt activities were elevated on sucrose medium. On the basis of these results, it is concluded that the synthesis of isocitrate lyase-1 and malate synthase in Neurospora is regulated by a glycolytic intermediate or derivative. Our data suggest that isocitrate lyase-1 and isocitrate lyase-2 are the products of different structural genes. The metabolic roles of the two forms of isocitrate lyase and of the glyoxylate cycle are discussed on the basis of their metabolic control and intracellular localization.  相似文献   

6.
The metabolic fate of acetate, produced during taurine catabolism in Pseudomonas aeruginosa TAU-5, appear to involve the glyoxylate cycle. Organisms grown on taurine have significantly higher levels of malate synthetase and isocitrate lyase than cells grown on nutrient broth, but were comparable to the levels found in acetate-grown organisms. Itaconate, an isocitrate lyase inhibitor, produced a prolonged lag phase and reduced the growth rate of organisms when it was present in the taurine or acetate growth medium. Ethylmethanesulfonate treatment of TAU-5 yielded mutant strains unable to grow on taurine or acetate as sole carbon sources, due to a lack of either malate synthetase or isocitrate lyase. Spontaneous revertants derived from these mutant strains regained the missing enzyme activity and the ability to grow on taurine or acetate.  相似文献   

7.
Bacillus caldotenax was cultivated in chemostat experiments at 65°C with a chemically defined minimal medium. Glycolysis, tricarboxylic acid cycle, pentose phosphate pathway and the respiratory chain were active as demonstrated by measuring the corresponding enzymes. No enzyme activity of the Entner-Doudoroff pathway could be detected. The specific activities of the citrate cycle enzymes were up to 10 times higher as compared to the enzymes of glycolysis. At dilution rates between 0.3 and 2.2 h-1 none of the main metabolic pathways was regulated. In contrast the isocitrate lyase was regulated (drop of activity with increasing growth rates). As a result of a batch culture with glucose and acetate as carbon sources a regulation model was proposed: glucose, or a metabolite of glucose, represses the isocitrate lyase; in the absence of glucose acetate acts as an inducer.Abbreviations DCIP dichlorphenol indophenol - ED Entner-Doudoroff pathway - EMP Emden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway - ICL isocitrate lyase - PP pentose phosphate pathway - TCC tricarbonic acid cycle  相似文献   

8.
The succinate analog itaconic acid was observed to be a competitive inhibitor of the glyoxylate cycle specific enzyme isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1) in cell-free extracts of Tetrahymena pyriformis. Itaconic acid also inhibited net in vivo glycogen synthesis from glyoxylate cycle-dependent precursors such as acetate but not from glyoxylate cycle-independent precursors such as fructose. The effect of itaconic acid on the incorporation of 14C into glycogen from various 14C-labeled precursors was also consistent with inhibition of isocitrate lyase by this compound. Another analog of succinate which shares a common metabolic fate with itaconic acid, mesaconic acid, had no effect on isocitrate lyase activity in vitro or on 14C-labeled precursor incorporation into glycogen in vivo. In addition, itaconic acid did not affect gluconeogenesis from lactate in isolated perfused rat livers, a system lacking the enzyme isocitrate lyase. These results are taken as evidence that itaconic acid is an inhibitor of glyoxylate cycle-dependent glyconeogenesis Tetrahymena pyriformis via specific competitive inhibition of isocitrate lyase activity.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Isocitrate lyase is a key enzyme of the glyoxylate cycle. This cycle plays an essential role in cell growth on acetate, and is important for gluconeogenesis as it bypasses the two oxidative steps of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle in which CO2 is evolved. In this paper, a null icl mutant of the green microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is described. Our data show that isocitrate lyase is required for growth in darkness on acetate (heterotrophic conditions), as well as for efficient growth in the light when acetate is supplied (mixotrophic conditions). Under these latter conditions, reduced acetate assimilation and concomitant reduced respiration occur, and biomass composition analysis reveals an increase in total fatty acid content, including neutral lipids and free fatty acids. Quantitative proteomic analysis by 14N/15N labelling was performed, and more than 1600 proteins were identified. These analyses reveal a strong decrease in the amounts of enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle and gluconeogenesis in parallel with a shift of the TCA cycle towards amino acid synthesis, accompanied by an increase in free amino acids. The decrease of the glyoxylate cycle and gluconeogenesis, as well as the decrease in enzymes involved in β–oxidation of fatty acids in the icl mutant are probably major factors that contribute to remodelling of lipids in the icl mutant. These modifications are probably responsible for the elevation of the response to oxidative stress, with significantly augmented levels and activities of superoxide dismutase and ascorbate peroxidase, and increased resistance to paraquat.  相似文献   

11.
Oxidation of ethanol, acetaldehyde, and acetate in Rhodococcus erythropolis EK-1, producer of surface-active substances (SAS), is catalyzed by N,N-dimethyl-4-nitrosoaniline (DMNA)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase, NAD+/NADP+-dependent dehydrogenases (optimum pH 9.5), and acetate kinase/acetyl-CoA-synthetase, respectively. The glyoxylate cycle and complete tricarboxylic acid cycle function in the cells of R. erythropolis EK-1 growing on ethanol; the synthesis of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) is provided by the two key enzymes of gluconeogenesis, PEP carboxykinase and PEP synthetase. Introduction of citrate (0.1%) and fumarate (0.2%) into the cultivation medium of R. erythropolis EK-1 containing 2% ethanol resulted in the 1.5-and 3.5-fold increase in the activities of isocitrate lyase and PEP synthetase (the key enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle and gluconeogenesis branch of metabolism, respectively) and of lipid synthesis, as evidenced by the 1.5-fold decrease of isocitrate dehydrogenase activity. In the presence of fumarate and citrate, the indices of SAS synthesis by strain R. erythropolis EK-1 grown on ethanol increased by 40–100%.  相似文献   

12.
Acetone degradation by cell suspensions of Desulfobacterium cetonicum was CO2-dependent, indicating initiation by a carboxylation reaction. Degradation of butyrate was not CO2-dependent, and acetate accumulated at a ratio of 1 mol acetate per mol butyrate degraded. In cultures grown on acetone, no CoA transfer apparently occurred, and no acetate accumulated in the medium. No CoA-ligase activities were detected in cell-free crude extracts. This suggested that the carboxylation of acetone to acetoacetate, and its activation to acetoacetyl-CoA may occur without the formation of free acetoacetate. Acetoacetyl-CoA was thiolytically cleaved to two acetyl-CoA, which were oxidized to CO2 via the acetyl-CoA/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase pathway. The measured intracellular acyl-CoA ester concentrations allowed the calculation of the free energy changes involved in the conversion of acetone to acetyl-CoA. At in vivo concentrations of reactants and products, the initial steps (carboxylation and activation) must be energy-driven, either by direct coupling to ATP, or coupling to transmembrane gradients. The G of acetone conversion to two acetyl-CoA at the expense of the energetic equivalent of one ATP was calculated to lie very close to 0kJ (mol acetone)-1. Assimilatory metabolism was by an incomplete citric acid cycle, lacking an activity oxidatively decarboxylating 2-oxoglutarate. The low specific activities of this cycle suggested its probable function in anabolic metabolism. Succinate and glyoxylate were formed from isocitrate by isocitrate lyase. Glyoxylate thus formed was condensed with acetyl-CoA to form malate, functioning as an anaplerotic sequence. A glyoxylate cycle thus operates in this strictly anaerobic bacterium. Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase formed PEP from oxaloacetate. No pyruvate kinase activity was detected. PEP presumably served as a precursor for polyglucose formation and other biosyntheses.Abbreviations MV 2+ Oxidized methyl viologen - PEP Phosphoenolpyruvate - PHB Poly--hydroxybutyrate  相似文献   

13.
The presence and some properties of the key enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle, isocitrate lyase (threo-Ds-isocitrate glyoxylate-lyase, EC 4.1.3.1) and malate synthase (L-malate glyoxylate-lyase (CoA-acetylating) EC 4.1.3.2), were investigated in Leptospira biflexa. Isocitrate lyase activity was found for the first time in the organism. The enzyme was induced by ethanol but not by acetate. The optimum pH was 6.8. The activity was inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate, a specific inhibitor of isocitrate lyase. The optimum pH of malate synthase of L. biflexa was about 8.5. The Km value for glyoxylate was 3.0 × 10?3 M and the activity was inhibited by glycolate, the inhibitor. The results strongly suggested the presence of a glyoxylate cycle in Leptospira. The possibility that the glyoxylate cycle plays an essential role in the synthesis of sugars, amino acids and other cellular components as an anaplerotic pathway of the tricarboxylic acid cycle in Leptospira was discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Rhodopseudomonas capsulata strain St. Louis can grow anaerobically in the light-with acetate as the carbon source. The organism is sensitive to acetate, however, initial concentrations exceeding 25 mM resulting in an extensive growth lag. Bicarbonate is not required for growth of this strain on acetate, but addition of bicarbonate shortens the lag phase in media with high initial acetate concentration. A spontaneous mutant which exhibited a minimal lag phase and rapid growth rates on acetate media was derived from strain St. Louis. This mutant possessed elevated levels of the glyoxylate cycle enzyme, isocitrate lyase.  相似文献   

15.
Cell extracts of Rhodobacter capsulatus grown on acetate contained an apparent malate synthase activity but lacked isocitrate lyase activity. Therefore, R. capsulatus cannot use the glyoxylate cycle for acetate assimilation, and a different pathway must exist. It is shown that the apparent malate synthase activity is due to the combination of a malyl-coenzyme A (CoA) lyase and a malyl-CoA-hydrolyzing enzyme. Malyl-CoA lyase activity was 20-fold up-regulated in acetate-grown cells versus glucose-grown cells. Malyl-CoA lyase was purified 250-fold with a recovery of 6%. The enzyme catalyzed not only the reversible condensation of glyoxylate and acetyl-CoA to L-malyl-CoA but also the reversible condensation of glyoxylate and propionyl-CoA to beta-methylmalyl-CoA. Enzyme activity was stimulated by divalent ions with preference for Mn(2+) and was inhibited by EDTA. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined, and a corresponding gene coding for a 34.2-kDa protein was identified and designated mcl1. The native molecular mass of the purified protein was 195 +/- 20 kDa, indicating a homohexameric composition. A homologous mcl1 gene was found in the genomes of the isocitrate lyase-negative bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodospirillum rubrum in similar genomic environments. For Streptomyces coelicolor and Methylobacterium extorquens, mcl1 homologs are located within gene clusters implicated in acetate metabolism. We therefore propose that L-malyl-CoA/beta-methylmalyl-CoA lyase encoded by mcl1 is involved in acetate assimilation by R. capsulatus and possibly other glyoxylate cycle-negative bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
The metabolic fate of acetate, produced during taurine catabolism in Pseudomonas aeruginosa TAU-5, appears to involve the glyoxylate cycle. Organisms grown on taurine have significantly higher levels of malate synthetase and isocritrate lyase than cells grown on nutrient broth, but were comparable to the levels found in acetate-grown organisms. Itaconate, an isocitrate lyase inhibitor, produced a prolonged lag phase and reduced the growth rate of organisms when it was present in the taurine or acetate growth medium. Ethylmethanesulfonate treatment of TAU-5 yielded mutant strains unable to grow on taurine or acetate as sole carbon sources, due to a lack of either malate synthetase or isocitrate lyase. Spontaneous revertants derived from these mutant strains regained the missing enzyme activity and the ability to grow on taurine or acetate.  相似文献   

17.
When Rhodopseudomonas gelatinosa was grown on acetate aerobically in the dark both enzymes of the glyoxylate bypass, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, could be detected. However, under anaerobic conditions in the light only isocitrate lyase, but not malate synthase, could be found.The reactions, which bypass the malate synthase reaction are those catalyzed by alanine glyoxylate aminotransferase and the enzymes of the serine pathway.Other Rhodospirillaceae were tested for isocitrate lyase and malate synthase activity after growth with acetate; they could be divided into three groups: I. organisms possessing both enzymes; 2. organisms containing malate synthase only; 3. R. gelatinosa containing only isocitrate lyase when grown anaerobically in the light.  相似文献   

18.
Isocitrate lyase was purified partially from n-alkane-grown cells and glucose-grown cells of Candida tropicalis by means of ammonium sulfate fractionation and DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. The preparation from alkane-grown cells showed one peak of the enzyme activity, while that from glucose-grown cells showed two distinct peaks of the activity, on DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. These enzymes, having the similar pH optima (around 7.0) and Km values with dl-isocitrate (1.2 ~ 1.7 mm), were inhibited by various metabolic intermediates, such as 6-phosphogluconate and phosphoenolpyruvate.

Time-course changes in the activities of isocitrate lyase and isocitrate dehydrogenases of C. tropicalis during the growth indicated that the lyase would participate preferentially in alkane assimilation and NAD-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase in glucose utilization of the yeast.

Regulation of isocitrate metabolism in C. tropicalis through glyoxylate cycle and tricarboxylic acid cycle is discussed based on the kinetic properties, cellular localization and time- course changes in the levels of isocitrate lyase and NAD-linked and NADP-linked isocitrate dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

19.
The enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle, isocitrate lyase (EC.4.1.3.1) and malate synthase (EC.4.1.3.2), were measured in cell-free extracts from the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans Drouet during photoautotrophic growth in medium aerated with ordinary air (0.03% CO2). Isocitrate lyase had an average specific activity of 112 nmoles·min?1·mg protein?1 whereas malate synthase had an average specific activity of 12.5 nmoles·min?1·mg protein?1. Unpurified isocitrate lyase showed classical Michaelis kinetics with a Km of 8 mM. Isocitrate lyase activity was strongly inhibited by numerous cellular metabolites at 10 mM concentration. The previously reported low specific activity for isocitrate lyase may be due to metabolite inhibition caused by growth in high CO2 concentrations. The activities reported for isocitrate lyase and malate synthase suggest the operation of the glyoxylate cycle in Anacystis nidulans under CO2-limiting growth conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Glyoxylate cycle in Mucor racemosus.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The dimorphic phycomycete Mucor racemosus was grown in media containing acetate, glutamate, and peptone as carbon sources. The component enzymes of the glyoxylate bypass, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, were present under these conditions throughout the growth cycles. Highest specific activities for each enzyme were found in media with acetate as the carbon source. In an enriched peptone medium containing glucose, neither activity was detected until glucose was exhausted from the medium. Treatment of acetate-grown cells with glucose resulted in a rapid decline in the specific activities of both enzymes. The importance of this cycle in acetate-grown cells was indicated by the ability of itaconic acid (100 mM) to inhibit the growth of M. racemosus in acetate but not glutamate media. Itaconate was also shown to be a potent inhibitor of isocitrate lyase activity in vitro.  相似文献   

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