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1.
The glyoxalase system of human promyelocytic leukaemia HL60 cells was substantially modified during differentiation to neutrophils. The activity of glyoxalase I was decreased and the activity of glyoxalase II was markedly increased relative to the level in control HL60 promyelocytes. There was a decrease in the apparent maximum velocity, Vmax, of glyoxalase I, and an increase in the Vmax of glyoxalase II. The apparent Michaelis constants for both enzymes remained unchanged. The flux of intermediates metabolised via the glyoxalase system increased during differentiation, as judged by the formation of D-lactic acid, whereas the percentage of glucotriose metabolised via the glyoxalase system remained unchanged. The cellular concentrations of the glyoxalase substrates, methylglyoxal and S-D-lactoylglutathione, were markedly decreased during differentiation. The maturation of HL60 promyelocytes is associated with an increased ability to metabolise S-D-lactoylglutathione by glyoxalase II and a concomitant decrease in the mean intracellular concentrations of S-D-lactoylglutathione and methylglyoxal. The maintenance of a high concentration of S-D-lactoylglutathione in HL60 promyelocytes may be related to the status of the microtubular cytoskeleton, since S-D-lactoylglutathione potentiates the GTP-promoted assembly of microtubules.  相似文献   

2.
The accumulation of triosephosphates and the increased formation of the potent glycating agent methylglyoxal in intracellular hyperglycaemia are implicated in the development of diabetic complications. A strategy to counter this is to stimulate the anaerobic pentosephosphate pathway of glycolysis by maximizing transketolase activity by thiamine supplementation, with the consequent consumption of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate and increased formation of ribose-5-phosphate. To assess the effect of thiamine supplementation on the accumulation of triosephosphates and methylglyoxal formation in cellular hyperglycaemia, we incubated human red blood cell suspensions (50% v/v) in short-term culture with 5 mM glucose and 50 mM glucose in Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer at 37 degrees C as models of cellular metabolism under normoglycaemic and hyperglycaemic conditions. In hyperglycaemia, there is a characteristic increase in the concentration of the triosephosphate pool of glycolytic intermediates and a consequent increase in the concentration and metabolic flux of the formation of methylglyoxal. The addition of thiamine (50-500 microM) increased the activity of transketolase, decreased the concentration of the triosephosphate pool, decreased the concentration and metabolic flux of the formation of methylglyoxal, and increased the concentration of total sedoheptulose-7-phosphate and ribose-5-phosphate. Biochemical changes implicated in the development of diabetic complications were thereby prevented. This provides a biochemical basis for high dose thiamine therapy for the prevention of diabetic complications.  相似文献   

3.
Chaplen FW 《Cytotechnology》1998,26(3):173-183
Methylglyoxal is a toxic metabolite unavoidably produced in mammalian systems as a by-product of glycolysis. Detoxification of this compound occurs principally through the glyoxalase pathway, which consists of glyoxalase I and glyoxalase II, and requires reduced glutathione as a co-enzyme. Recently, it has been demonstrated that variations in glucose, glutamine and fetal bovine serum levels can cause significant changes in the intracellular concentration of methylglyoxal. More importantly, comparative studies involving wild-type Chinese hamster ovary cells and clones overexpressing glyoxalase I indicate that glucose and glutamine, within the range normally found in cell culture media, can cause decreased cell viability mediated solely through increased production of methylglyoxal. In addition, endogenously produced methylglyoxal has been shown to cause apoptosis in cultured HL60 cells. While the exact mechanism of the impact of methylglyoxal on cultured cells is unknown, methylglyoxal is a potent protein and nucleic acid modifying agent at physiological concentrations and under physiological conditions. Protein modification occurs mainly at arginine, lysine and cysteine residues and is believed to be an important signal for the degradation of senescent proteins. Modification of arginine and lysine results in the irreversible formation of advanced glycation endproducts, whereas modification of cysteine results in the formation of a highly reversible hemithioacetal. Methylglyoxal also forms adducts with nucleic acids, principally with guanyl residues. At high extracellular concentrations, it is genotoxic to cells grown in culture. Even at physiological concentrations (100 nM free methylglyoxal), methylglyoxal can modify unprotected plasmid DNA and cause gene mutation and abnormal gene expression. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

4.
The glyoxalase pathway of Leishmania infantum was kinetically characterized as a trypanothione-dependent system. Using time course analysis based on parameter fitting with a genetic algorithm, kinetic parameters were estimated for both enzymes, with trypanothione derived substrates. A K(m) of 0.253 mm and a V of 0.21 micromol.min(-1).mg(-1)for glyoxalase I, and a K(m) of 0.098 mm and a V of 0.18 micromol.min(-1).mg(-1) for glyoxalase II, were obtained. Modelling and computer simulation were used for evaluating the relevance of the glyoxalase pathway as a potential therapeutic target by revealing the importance of critical parameters of this pathway in Leishmania infantum. A sensitivity analysis of the pathway was performed using experimentally validated kinetic models and experimentally determined metabolite concentrations and kinetic parameters. The measurement of metabolites in L. infantum involved the identification and quantification of methylglyoxal and intracellular thiols. Methylglyoxal formation in L. infantum is nonenzymatic. The sensitivity analysis revealed that the most critical parameters for controlling the intracellular concentration of methylglyoxal are its formation rate and the concentration of trypanothione. Glyoxalase I and II activities play only a minor role in maintaining a low intracellular methylglyoxal concentration. The importance of the glyoxalase pathway as a therapeutic target is very small, compared to the much greater effects caused by decreasing trypanothione concentration or increasing methylglyoxal concentration.  相似文献   

5.
Methylglyoxal metabolism was studied during Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown with D-glucose as the sole carbon and energy source. Using for the first time a specific assay for methylglyoxal in yeast, metabolic fluxes of its formation and D-lactate production were determined. D-Glucose consumption and ethanol production were determined during growth. Metabolic fluxes were also determined in situ, at the glycolytic triose phosphate levels and glyoxalase pathway. Maximum fluxes of ethanol production and glucose consumption correspond to maxima of methylglyoxal and D-lactate formation fluxes during growth. Methylglyoxal formation is quantitatively related to glycolysis, representing 0.3% of the total glycolytic flux in S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

6.
The glyoxalase pathway catalyzes the formation of d-lactate from methylglyoxal, a toxic byproduct of glycolysis. In trypanosomatids, trypanothione replaces glutathione in this pathway, making it a potential drug target, since its selective inhibition might increase methylglyoxal concentration in the parasites. Two glyoxalase II structures were solved. One with a bound spermidine molecule (1.8 A) and the other with d-lactate at the active site (1.9 A). The second structure was obtained by crystal soaking with the enzyme substrate (S)-d-lactoyltrypanothione. The overall structure of Leishmania infantum glyoxalase II is very similar to its human counterpart, with important differences at the substrate binding site. The crystal structure of L. infantum glyoxalase II is the first structure of this enzyme from trypanosomatids. The differential specificity of glyoxalase II toward glutathione and trypanothione moieties was revealed by differential substrate binding. Evolutionary analysis shows that trypanosomatid glyoxalases II diverged early from eukaryotic enzymes, being unrelated to prokaryotic proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Glyoxalase I is the first enzyme in a two-enzyme glyoxalase system that metabolizes physiological methylglyoxal (MGO). MGO reacts with proteins to form irreversible adducts that may lead to crosslinking and aggregation of lens proteins in diabetes. This study examined the effect of hyperglycemia on glyoxalase I activity and its mRNA content in mouse lens epithelial cells (mLE cells) and in diabetic mouse lenses and investigated the relationship between GSH and MGO in organ cultured lenses. mLE cells cultured with 25 mM D-glucose (high glucose) showed an upregulation of glyoxalase I activity and a higher content of glyoxalase I mRNA when compared with either cells cultured with 5 mM glucose (control) or with 20 mM L-glucose + 5 mM D-glucose. MGO concentration was significantly elevated in cells cultured with high D-glucose, but not in L-glucose. GSH levels were lower in cells incubated with high glucose compared to control cells. Glyoxalase I activity and mRNA levels were elevated in diabetic lenses compared to non-diabetic control mouse lenses. MGO levels in diabetic lenses were higher than in control lenses. Incubation of lenses with buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) resulted in a dramatic decline in GSH but the MGO levels were similar to lenses incubated without BSO. Our data suggest that in mouse lenses MGO accumulation may occur independent of GSH concentration and in diabetes there is an upregulation of glyoxalase I, but this upregulation is inadequate to normalize MGO levels, which could lead to MGO retention and chemical modification of proteins.  相似文献   

8.
2-Oxoaldehyde metabolism in microorganisms   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The properties of methylglyoxal-metabolizing enzymes in prokaryotic and eukaryotic microorganisms were studied systematically and compared with those of mammalian enzymes. The enzymes constitute a glycolytic bypass and convert methylglyoxal into pyruvate via lactate. The first step in this conversion is catalyzed by glyoxalase I, methylglyoxal reductase, or methylglyoxal dehydrogenase. The regulation of the yeast glyoxalase system was analyzed. The system was closely related to the proliferative states of yeast cells, the activity of the system being high in dividing cells and low in nondividing ones. The gene for the glyoxalase I of Pseudomonas putida and the genes responsible for the activity of glyoxalase I and methylglyoxal reductase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae were cloned and their structural and phenotypic characters studied.  相似文献   

9.
The incubation of human platelets with methylglyoxal and glucose produces a rapid transformation of the ketoaldehyde to D-lactate by the glyoxalase system and a partial reduction in GSH. Glucose utilization is affected at the level of the glycolytic pathway. No effect of the ketoaldehyde on glycogenolysis and glucose oxidation through the hexose monophosphate shunt was demonstrated. Phosphofructokinase, fructose 1,6 diphosphate (F1, 6DP) aldolase, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase and 3-phosphoglycerate mutase were mostly inhibited by methylglyoxal. A decrease in lactate and pyruvate formation and an accumulation of some glycolytic intermediates (fructose 1,6 diphosphate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, 3-phosphoglycerate) was observed. Moreover methylglyoxal induced a fall in the metabolic ATP concentration. Since methylglyoxal is an intermediate of the glycolytic bypass system from dihydroxyacetone phosphate to D-lactate, it may be assumed that ketoaldehyde exerts a regulating effect on triose metabolism.  相似文献   

10.
Retinal capillary pericytes undergo premature death, possibly by apoptosis, during the early stages of diabetic retinopathy. The alpha-oxoaldehyde, methylglyoxal (MGO), has been implicated as a cause of cell damage in diabetes. We have investigated the role of MGO and its metabolizing enzyme, glyoxalase I, in high glucose-induced apoptosis (annexin V binding) of human retinal pericyte (HRP). HRP incubated with high glucose (30 mm d-glucose) for 7 days did not undergo apoptosis despite accumulation of MGO. However, treatment with a combination of high glucose and S-p-bromobenzylglutathione cyclopentyl diester, a competitive inhibitor of glyoxalase I, resulted in apoptosis along with a dramatic increase in MGO. Overexpression of glyoxalase I in HRP protected against S-p-bromobenzylglutathione cyclopentyl diester-induced apoptosis under high glucose conditions. Incubation of HRP with high concentrations of MGO resulted in an increase of apoptosis relative to untreated controls. We found an elevation of nitric oxide (NO.) in HRP that was incubated with high glucose when compared with those incubated with either the l-glucose or untreated controls. When HRP were incubated with an NO. donor, DETANONOATE ((Z)-1-[2-(2-aminoethyl)-N-(2-ammonioethyl)amino]diazen-1-ium-1,2-diolate), we observed both decreased glyoxalase I expression and activity relative to untreated control cells. Further studies showed that HRP underwent apoptosis when incubated with DETANONOATE and that apoptosis increased further on co-incubation with high glucose. Our findings indicate that glyoxalase I is critical for pericyte survival under hyperglycemic conditions, and its inactivation and/or down-regulation by NO. may contribute to pericyte death by apoptosis during the early stages of diabetic retinopathy.  相似文献   

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