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1.
The recent placement of major Gram-negative prokaryotes (Superfamily B) on a phylogenetic tree (including, e.g., lineages leading to Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Acinetobacter calcoaceticus) has allowed initial insights into the evolution of the biochemical pathway for aromatic amino acid biosynthesis and its regulation to be obtained. Within this prokaryote grouping, Xanthomonas campestris ATCC 12612 (a representative of the Group V pseudomonads) has played a key role in facilitating deductions about the major evolutionary events that shaped the character of aromatic biosynthesis within this grouping. X. campestris is like P. aeruginosa (and unlike E. coli) in its possession of dual flow routes to both L-phenylalanine and L-tyrosine from prephenate. Like all other members of Superfamily B, X. campestris possesses a bifunctional P-protein bearing the activities of both chorismate mutase and prephenate dehydratase. We have found an unregulated arogenate dehydratase similar to that of P. aeruginosa in X. campestris. We separated the two tyrosine-branch dehydrogenase activities (prephenate dehydrogenase and arogenate dehydrogenase); this marks the first time this has been accomplished in an organism in which these two activities coexist. Superfamily B organisms possess 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-P (DAHP) synthase as three isozymes (e.g., in E. coli), as two isozymes (e.g., in P. aeruginosa), or as one enzyme (in X. campestris). The two-isozyme system has been deduced to correspond to the ancestral state of Superfamily B. Thus, E. coli has gained an isozyme, whereas X. campestris has lost one. We conclude that the single, chorismate-sensitive DAHP synthase enzyme of X. campestris is evolutionarily related to the tryptophan-sensitive DAHP synthase present throughout the rest of Superfamily B. In X. campestris, arogenate dehydrogenase, prephenate dehydrogenase, the P-protein, chorismate mutase-F, anthranilate synthase, and DAHP synthase are all allosteric proteins; we compared their regulatory properties with those of enzymes of other Superfamily B members with respect to the evolution of regulatory properties. The network of sequentially operating circuits of allosteric control that exists for feedback regulation of overall carbon flow through the aromatic pathway in X. campestris is thus far unique in nature.  相似文献   

2.
The biosynthetic route to L-tyrosine was identified in isogenic suspension-cultured cells of N. silvestris. Arogenate (NADP+) dehydrogenase, the essential enzyme responsible for the conversion of L-arogenato L-tyrosine, was readily observed in crude extracts. In contrast, prephenate dehydrogenase (EC 1.3.1.13) activity with either NAD+ or NADP+ was absent altogether. Therefore, it seems likely that this tobacco species utilizes the arogenate pathway as the exclusive metabolic route to L-tyrosine. L-Tyrosine (but not L-phenylalanine) was a very effective endproduct inhibitor of arogenate dehydrogenase. In addition, analogs of L-tyrosine (m-fluoro-DL-tyrosine [MFT], D-tyrosine and N-acetyl-DL-tyrosine), but not of L-phenylalanine (o-fluoro-DL-phenylalanine and p-fluoro-DL-phenylalanine), were able to cause inhibition of arogenate dehydrogenase. The potent antimetabolite of L-tryptophan, 6-fluoro-DL-tryptophan, had no effect upon arogenate dehydrogenase activity. Of the compounds tested, MFT was actually more effective as an inhibitor of arogenate dehydrogenase than was L-tyrosine. Since MFT was found to be a potent antimetabolite inhibitor of growth in N. silvestris and since inhibition was specifically and effectively reversed by L-tyrosine, arogenate dehydrogenase is an outstanding candidate as the in vivo target of analog action. Although chorismate mutase (EC 5.4.99.5) cannot be the prime target of MFT action, MFT can mimick L-tyrosine in partially inhibiting this enzyme activity. The activity of 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase (EC 4.1.2.15) was insensitive to L-phenylalanine or L-tyrosine. The overall features of this system indicate that MFT should be a very effective analog mimick for selection of feedback-insensitive regulatory mutants L-tyrosine biosynthesis.Abbreviations DAHP synthase 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase - 6FT 6-fluoro-DL-tryptophan - MFT m-fluoro-DL-tyrosine - OFP o-fluoro-DL-phenylalanine - PFP p-fluoro-DL-phenylalanine  相似文献   

3.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is representative of a large group of pseudomonad bacteria that possess coexisting alternative pathways to L-phenylalanine (as well as to L-tyrosine). These multiple flow routes to aromatic end products apparently account for the inordinate resistance of P. aeruginosa to end product analogs. Manipulation of carbon source nutrition produced a physiological state of sensitivity to p-fluorophenylalanine and m-fluorophenylalanine, each a specific antimetabolite of L-phenylalanine. Analog-resistant mutants obtained fell into two classes. One type lacked feedback sensitivity of prephenate dehydratase and was the most dramatic excretor of L-phenylalanine. The presence of L-tyrosine curbed phenylalanine excretion to one-third, a finding explained by potent early-pathway regulation of 3-deoxy-D-arabinoheptulosonate 7-phosphate (DAHP) synthase-Tyr (a DAHP synthase subject to allosteric inhibition by L-tyrosine). The second class of regulatory mutants possessed a completely feedback-resistant DAHP synthase-Tyr, the major species (greater than 90%) of two isozymes. Deregulation of DAHP synthase-Tyr resulted in the escape of most chorismate molecules produced into an unregulated overflow route consisting of chorismate mutase (monofunctional), prephenate aminotransferase, and arogenate dehydratase. In the wild type the operation of the overflow pathway is restrained by factors that restrict early-pathway flux. These factors include the highly potent feedback control of DAHP synthase isozymes by end products as well as the strikingly variable abilities of different carbon source nutrients to supply the aromatic pathway with beginning substrates. Even in the wild type, where all allosteric regulation in intact, some phenylalanine overflow was found on glucose-based medium, but not on fructose-based medium. This carbon source-dependent difference was much more exaggerated in each class of regulatory mutants.  相似文献   

4.
The pathway construction and allosteric regulation of phenylalanine and tyrosine biosynthesis was examined in Neisseria gonorrhoeae. A single 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate (DAHP) synthase enzyme sensitive to feedback inhibition by l-phenylalanine was found. Chorismate mutase and prephenate dehydratase appear to co-exist as catalytic components of a bifunctional enzyme, known to be present in related genera. The latter enzyme activities were both feedback inhibited by l-phenylalanine. Prephenate dehydratase was strongly activated by l-tyrosine. NAD+-linked prephenate dehydrogenase and arogenate dehydrogenase activities coeluted following ion-exchange chromatography, suggesting their identity as catalytic properties of a single broad-specificity cyclohexadienyl dehydrogenase. Each dehydrogenase activity was inhibited by 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate, but not by l-tyrosine. Two aromatic aminotransferases were resolved, one preferring the l-phenylalanine:2-ketoglutarate substrate combination and the other preferring the l-tyrosine: 2-ketoglutarate substrate combination. Each aminotransferase was also able to transaminate prephenate. The overall picture of regulation is one in which l-tyrosine modulates l-phenylalanine synthesis via activation of prephenate dehydratase. l-Phenylalanine in turn regulates early-pathway flow through inhibition of DAHP synthase. The recent phylogenetic positioning of N. gonorrhoeae makes it a key reference organism for emerging interpretations about aromatic-pathway evolution.  相似文献   

5.
A pattern of allosteric control for aromatic biosynthesis in cyanobacteria relies upon early-pathway regulation as the major control point for the entire branched pathway. In Synechococcus sp. strain PCC6301 (Anacystis nidulans), two enzymes which form precursors for L-phenylalanine biosynthesis are subject to control by feedback inhibition. 3-Deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase (first pathway enzyme) is feedback inhibited by L-tyrosine, whereas prephenate dehydratase (enzyme step 9) is feedback inhibited by L-phenylalanine and allosterically activated by L-tyrosine. Mutants lacking feedback inhibition of prephenate dehydratase excreted relatively modest quantities of L-phenylalanine. In contrast, mutants deregulated in allosteric control of 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase excreted large quantities of L-phenylalanine (in addition to even greater quantities of L-tyrosine). Clearly, in the latter mutants, the elevated levels of prephenate must overwhelm the inhibition of prephenate dehydratase by L-phenylalanine, an effect assisted by increased intracellular L-tyrosine, an allosteric activator. The results show that early-pathway flow regulated in vivo by 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase is the dominating influence upon metabolite flow-through to L-phenylalanine. L-Tyrosine biosynthesis exemplifies such early-pathway control even more simply, since 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase is the sole regulatory enzyme subject to end-product control by L-tyrosine.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The recent placement of major Gramnegative prokaryotes (Superfamily B) on a phylogenetic tree (including, e.g., lineages leading toEscherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, andAcinetobacter calcoaceticus) has allowed initial insights into the evolution of the biochemical pathway for aromatic amino acid biosynthesis and its regulation to be obtained. Within this prokaryote grouping,Xanthomonas campestris ATCC 12612 (a representative of the Group V pseudomonads) has played a key role in facilitating deductions about the major evolutionary events that shaped the character of aromatic biosynthesis within this grouping.X. campestris is likeP. aeruginosa (and unlikeE. coli) in its possession of dual flow routes to bothl-phenylalanine andl-tyrosine from prephenate. Like all other members of Superfamily B,X. campestris possesses a bifunctional P-protein bearing the activities of both chorismate mutase and prephenate dehydratase. We have found an unregulated arogenate dehydratase similar to that ofP. aeruginosa inX. campestris. We separated the two tyrosine-branch dehydrogenase activities (prephenate dehydrogenase and arogenate dehydrogenase); this marks the first time this has been accomplished in an organism in which these two activities coexist. Superfamily B organisms possess 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate 7-P (DAHP) synthase as three isozymes (e.g., inE. coli), as two isozymes (e.g., inP. aeruginosa), or as one enzyme (inX. campestris). The two-isozyme system has been deduced to correspond to the ancestral state of Superfamily B. Thus,E. coli has gained an isozyme, whereasX. campestris has lost one. We conclude that the single, chorismate-sensitive DAHP synthase enzyme ofX. campestris is evolutionarily related to the tryptophan-sensitive DAHP synthase present throughout the rest of Superfamily B. InX. campestris, arogenate dehydrogenase, prephenate dehydrogenase, the P-protein, chorismate mutase-F, anthranilate synthase, and DAHP synthase are all allosteric proteins; we compared their regulatory properties with those of enzymes of other Superfamily B members with respect to the evolution of regulatory properties. The network of sequentially operating circuits of allosteric control that exists for feedback regulation of overall carbon flow through the aromatic pathway inX. campestris is thus far unique in nature.  相似文献   

7.
The recently characterized amino acid L-arogenate (Zamir et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 102:4499-4504, 1980) may be a precursor of either L-phenylalanine or L-tyrosine in nature. Euglena gracilis is the first example of an organism that uses L-arogenate as the sole precursor of both L-tyrosine and L-phenylalanine, thereby creating a pathway in which L-arogenate rather than prephenate becomes the metabolic branch point. E. gracilis ATCC 12796 was cultured in the light under myxotrophic conditions and harvested in late exponential phase before extract preparation for enzymological assays. Arogenate dehydrogenase was dependent upon nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate for activity. L-Tyrosine inhibited activity effectively with kinetics that were competitive with respect to L-arogenate and noncompetitive with respect to nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate. The possible inhibition of arogenate dehydratase by L-phenylalanine has not yet been determined. Beyond the latter uncertainty, the overall regulation of aromatic biosynthesis was studied through the characterization of 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase and chorismate mutase. 3-Deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase was subject to noncompetitive inhibition by L-tyrosine with respect to either of the two substrates. Chorismate mutase was feedback inhibited with equal effectiveness by either L-tyrosine or L-phenylalanine. L-Tryptophan activated activity of chorismate mutase, a pH-dependent effect in which increased activation was dramatic above pH 7.8 L-Arogenate did not affect activity of 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase or of chorismate mutase. Four species of prephenate aminotransferase activity were separated after ion-exchange chromatography. One aminotransferase exhibited a narrow range of substrate specificity, recognizing only the combination of L-glutamate with prephenate, phenylpyruvate, or 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate. Possible natural relationships between Euglena spp. and fungi previously considered in the literature are discussed in terms of data currently available to define enzymological variation in the shikimate pathway.  相似文献   

8.
We examined the enzymology and regulatory patterns of the aromatic amino acid pathway in 48 strains of cyanobacteria including representatives from each of the five major grouping. Extensive diversity was found in allosteric inhibition patterns of 3-deoxy-D-arabinoheptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase, not only between the major groupings but also within several of the generic groupings. Unimetabolite inhibition by phenylalanine occurred in approximately half of the strains examined; in the other strains unimetabolite inhibition by tyrosine and cumulative, concerted, and additive patterns were found. The additive patterns suggest the presence of regulatory isozymes. Even though both arogenate and prephenate dehydrogenase activities were found in some strains, it seems clear that the arogenate pathway to tyrosine is a common trait that has been highly conserved among cyanobacteria. No arogenate dehydratase activities were found. In general, prephenate dehydratase activities were activated by tyrosine and inhibited by phenylalanine. Chorismate mutase, arogenate dehydrogenase, and shikimate dehydrogenase were nearly always unregulated. Most strains preferred NADP as the cofactor for the dehydrogenase activities. The diversity in the allosteric inhibition patterns for 3-deoxy-D-arabinoheptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase, cofactor specificities, and the presence or absence of prephenate dehydrogenase activity allowed the separation of subgroupings within several of the form genera, namely, Synechococcus, Synechocystis, Anabaena, Nostoc, and Calothrix.  相似文献   

9.
The activity levels of enzymes of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis respond to changing physiological states of growth, as illustrated by results obtained from suspension-cultured cells of Nicotiana silvestris Speg. et Comes line ANS 1 (2N=24). The experimental system provides a foundation for interpretations about overall regulation of enzyme levels in relationship to growth physiology. Levels of activity for shikimate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.25), prephenate aminotransferase and arogenate dehydrogenase were followed throughout a growth cycle obtained by a conventional subculture protocol. Enzyme date were also obtained from cell cultures maintained in continuous exponential growth for greater than 10 generations (EE cells). Both shikimate dehydrogenase and prephenate aminotransferase exhibited elevated stationary-phase levels of enzyme, much of which was carried over into a subsequent subculture. At least 4 generations of exponential growth were required before diminution of the latter two enzymes to the levels characteristic of truly exponential-phase growth (EE cells) occurred. This is reminiscent of the overall behavior of 3-deoxy-D- arabino -heptulosonate 7-phosphate (DAHP) synthase (EC 4.1.2.15), specifically attributed to the properties of the cytosolic isozyme species (DAHP synthase-Co). Elevation of arogenate dehydrogenase also occurred in stationary-phase cells, but diminished rapidly during lag phase to reach the level characteristic of EE cells.  相似文献   

10.
Terminal phenylalanine and tyrosine biosynthesis of Microtetraspora glauca   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The enzymes of the terminal steps of the phenylalanine and tyrosine biosynthesis were partially purified and characterized in Microtetraspora glauca, a spore-forming member of the order Actinomycetales. This bacterium relies exclusively on the phenylpyruvate route for phenylalanine synthesis, no arogenate dehydratase activity being found. Prephenate dehydratase is subject to feedback inhibition by phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan, each acting as competitive inhibitor by increasing the Km of 72 microM for prephenate. Based on the results of gel chromatography on Sephadex G-200, the molecular mass of about 110,000 Da is not altered by any of the effectors. The enzyme is quite sensitive to inhibition by 4-hydroxymercuribenzoate. Microtetraspora glauca can utilize arogenate and 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate as intermediates in tyrosine biosynthesis. Prephenate and arogenate dehydrogenase activities copurifying from ion exchange columns with coincident profiles were detected. From gel-filtration columns the two activities eluted at an identical molecular-mass position of about 68,000 Da. The existence of a single protein exhibiting substrate ambiguity is consistent with the findings, that both dehydrogenases have similar chromatographic properties, exhibit cofactor requirement for NAD and are inhibited to the same extent by tyrosine and 4-hydroxymercuribenzoate.  相似文献   

11.
In Brevibacterium flavum, prephenate dehydratase in the phenylalanine specific biosynthetic pathway was strongly inhibited by phenylalanine and activated by tyrosine. Furthermore. the inhibition by phenylalanine was completely reversed by tyrosine. Inhibition by tyrosine of prephenate dehydrogenase in the tyrosine specific pathway was very weak. Overall regulation mechanism of the aromatic amino acid biosynthesis in B. flavum was proposed on the bases of these results and the previous findings on 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate-7- phosphate synthetase(DAHP synthetase*) of the common pathway and on anthranilate synthetase of the tryptophan specific pathway. Two types of m-fluorophenylalanine(mFP) resistant mutants which accumulated phenylalanine alone or both phenylalanine and tyrosine, respectively, were derived. The accumulation in the former mutants was inhibited by tyrosine, but that in the latter was affected neither by tyrosine nor by phenylalanine. DAHP synthetase of the latter mutants had been desensitized from the synergistic feedback inhibition by tyrosine and phenylalanine, while prephenate dehydratase of the former mutants had been desensitized in the feedback inhibition by phenylalanine. Tyrosine auxotroph accumulated phenylalanine under tyrosine limitation and its accumulation was inhibited by the excessive addition of tyrosine. Phenylalanine auxotroph accumulated tyrosine under phenylalanine limitation and its accumulation was inhibited by the excessive addition of phenylalanine. These results in vivo strongly supported the proposed regulation mechanism in which synthesis of phenylalanine in preference to tyrosine was assumed.  相似文献   

12.
Regulation of phenylalanine biosynthesis in Rhodotorula glutinis.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The phenylalanine biosynthetic pathway in the yeast Rhodotorula glutinis was examined, and the following results were obtained. (i) 3-Deoxy-D-arabinoheptulosonate-7-phosphate (DAHP) synthase in crude extracts was partially inhibited by tyrosine, tryptophan, or phenylalanine. In the presence of all three aromatic amino acids an additive pattern of enzyme inhibition was observed, suggesting the existence of three differentially regulated species of DAHP synthase. Two distinctly regulated isozymes inhibited by tyrosine or tryptophan and designated DAHP synthase-Tyr and DAHP synthase-Trp, respectively, were resolved by DEAE-Sephacel chromatography, along with a third labile activity inhibited by phenylalanine tentatively identified as DAHP synthase-Phe. The tyrosine and tryptophan isozymes were relatively stable and were inhibited 80 and 90% by 50 microM of the respective amino acids. DAHP synthase-Phe, however, proved to be an extremely labile activity, thereby preventing any detailed regulatory studies on the partially purified enzyme. (ii) Two species of chorismate mutase, designated CMI and CMII, were resolved in the same chromatographic step. The activity of CMI was inhibited by tyrosine and stimulated by tryptophan, whereas CMII appeared to be unregulated. (iii) Single species of prephenate dehydratase and phenylpyruvate aminotransferase were observed. Interestingly, the branch-point enzyme prephenate dehydratase was not inhibited by phenylalanine or affected by tyrosine, tryptophan, or both. (iv) The only site for control of phenylalanine biosynthesis appeared to be DAHP synthase-Phe. This is apparently sufficient since a spontaneous mutant, designated FP9, resistant to the growth-inhibitory phenylalanine analog p-fluorophenylalanine contained a feedback-resistant DAHP synthase-Phe and cross-fed a phenylalanine auxotroph of Bacillus subtilis.  相似文献   

13.
Acinetobacter calcoaceticus belongs to a large phylogenetic cluster of gram-negative procaryotes that all utilize a bifunctional P-protein (chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydratase) [EC 5.4.99.5-4.2.1.51] for phenylalanine biosynthesis. These two enzyme activities from Ac. calcoaceticus were inseparable by gel-filtration or DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The molecular weight of the P-protein in the absence of effectors was 65,000. In the presence of L-tyrosine (dehydratase activator) or L-phenylalanine (inhibitor of both P-protein activities), the molecular weight increased to 122,000. Maximal activation (23-fold) of prephenate dehydratase was achieved at 0.85 mM L-tyrosine. Under these conditions, dehydratase activity exhibited a hysteretic response to increasing protein concentration. Substrate saturation curves for prephenate dehydratase were hyperbolic at L-tyrosine concentrations sufficient to give maximal activation (yielding a Km,app of 0.52 mM for prephenate), whereas at lower L-tyrosine concentrations the curves were sigmoidal. Dehydratase activity was inhibited by L-phenylalanine, and exhibited cooperative interactions for inhibitor binding. A Hill plot yielded an n' value of 3.1. Double-reciprocal plots of substrate saturation data obtained in the presence of L-phenylalanine indicated cooperative interactions for prephenate in the presence of inhibitor. The n values obtained were 1.4 and 3.0 in the absence or presence of 0.3 mM L-phenylalanine, respectively. The hysteretic response of chorismate mutase activity to increasing enzyme concentration was less dramatic than that of prephenate dehydratase. A Km,app for chorismate of 0.63 mM was obtained. L-Tyrosine did not affect chorismate mutase activity, but mutase activity was inhibited both by L-phenylalanine and by prephenate. Interpretations are given about the physiological significance of the overall pattern of allosteric control of the P-protein, and the relationship between this control and the effector-induced molecular-weight transitions. The properties of the P-protein in Acinetobacter are considered within the context of the ubiquity of the P-protein within the phylogenetic cluster to which this genus belongs.  相似文献   

14.
Nester, E. W. (University of Washington, Seattle), and R. A. Jensen. Control of aromatic acid biosynthesis in Bacillus subtilis: sequential feedback inhibition. J. Bacteriol. 91:1594-1598. 1966.-The three major end products of aromatic acid synthesis, tyrosine, phenylalanine, and tryptophan, were tested for their ability to inhibit the first enzymes of the three terminal branches of the pathway as well as the enzyme common to both tyrosine and phenylalanine synthesis. Tyrosine inhibits the activity of prephenate dehydrogenase and also prephenate dehydratase to a limited extent. Phenylalanine inhibits the activity of prephenate dehydratase and, at much higher concentrations, prephenate dehydrogenase. Tryptophan inhibits the activity of anthranilate synthetase and, to some extent, prephenate dehydrogenase and prephenate dehydratase. Chorismate mutase is not inhibited by either 1 mm tyrosine or 1 mm phenylalanine when these are present singly or together in the reaction mixture. The significance of the feedback control of the terminal branches to the feedback control of that part of the pathway common to the synthesis of all three amino acids is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Dual biosynthetic pathways diverge from prephenate to L-tyrosine in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, with 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate and L-arogenate being the unique intermediates of these pathways. Prephenate dehydrogenase and arogenate dehydrogenase activities could not be separated throughout fractionation steps yielding a purification of more than 200-fold, and the ratio of activities was constant throughout purification. Thus, the enzyme is a cyclohexadienyl dehydrogenase. The native enzyme has a molecular weight of 150,000 and is a hexamer made up of identical 25,500 subunits. The enzyme is specific for NAD+ as an electron acceptor, and identical Km values of 0.25 mM were obtained for NAD+, regardless of whether activity was assayed as prephenate dehydrogenase or as arogenate dehydrogenase. Km values of 0.07 mM and 0.17 mM were calculated for prephenate and L-arogenate, respectively. Inhibition by L-tyrosine was noncompetitive with respect to NAD+, but was strictly competitive with respect to either prephenate or L-arogenate. With cyclohexadiene as variable substrate, similar Ki values for L-tyrosine of 0.06 mM (prephenate) and 0.05 mM (L-arogenate) were obtained. With NAD+ as the variable substrate, similar Ki values for L-tyrosine of 0.26 mM (prephenate) and 0.28 mM (L-arogenate), respectively, were calculated. This is the first characterization of a purified, monofunctional cyclohexadienyl dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

16.
The pattern of allosteric control in the biosynthetic pathway for aromatic amino acids provides a basis to explain vulnerability to growth inhibition by l-phenylalanine (0.2 mM or greater) in the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. 29108. We attribute growth inhibition to the hypersensitivity of 3-deoxy-d-arabinoheptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase to feedback inhibition by l-phenylalanine. Hyperregulation of this initial enzyme of aromatic biosynthesis depletes the supply of precursors needed for biosynthesis of l-tyrosine and l-tryptophan. Consistent with this mechanism is the total reversal of phenylalanine inhibition by a combination of tyrosine and tryptophan. Inhibited cultures also contained decreased levels of phycocyanin pigments, a characteristic previously correlated with amino acid starvation in cyanobacteria. l-Phenylalanine is a potent noncompetitive inhibitor (with both substrates) of 3-deoxy-d-arabinoheptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase, whereas l-tyrosine is a very weak inhibitor. Prephenate dehydratase also displays allosteric sensitivity to phenylalanine (inhibition) and to tyrosine (activation). Both 2-fluoro and 4-fluoro derivatives of phenylalanine were potent analog antimetabolites, and these were used in addition to l-phenylalanine as selective agents for resistant mutants. Mutants were isolated which excreted both phenylalanine and tyrosine, the consequence of an altered 3-deoxy-d-arabinoheptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase no longer sensitive to feedback inhibition. Simultaneous insensitivity to l-tyrosine suggests that l-tyrosine acts as a weak analog mimic of l-phenylalanine at a common binding site. Prephenate dehydratase in the regulatory mutants was unaltered. Surprisingly, in view of the lack of regulation in the tyrosine branchlet of the pathway, such mutants excrete more phenylalanine than tyrosine, indicating that l-tyrosine activation dominates l-phenylalanine inhibition of prephenate dehydratase in vivo. In mutant Phe r19 the loss in allosteric sensitivity of 3-deoxy-d-arabinoheptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase was accompanied by a threefold increase in specific activity. This could suggest that existence of a modest degree of repression control (autogenous) over 3-deoxy-d-arabinoheptulosonate synthase, although other explanations are possible. Specific activities of chorismate mutase, prephenate dehydratase, shikimate/nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate dehydrogenase, and arogenate/nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate dehydrogenase in mutant Phe r19 were identical with those of the wild type.  相似文献   

17.
Dual biosynthetic pathways diverge from prephenate to L-phenylalanine in Erwinia herbicola, the unique intermediates of these pathways being phenylpyruvate and L-arogenate. After separation from the bifunctional P-protein (one component of which has prephenate dehydratase activity), the remaining prephenate dehydratase activity could not be separated from arogenate dehydratase activity throughout fractionation steps yielding a purification of more than 1200-fold. The ratio of activities was constant after removal of the P-protein, and the two dehydratase activities were stable during purification. Hence, the enzyme is a cyclohexadienyl dehydratase. The native enzyme has a molecular mass of 73 kDa and is a tetramer made up of identical 18-kDa subunits. Km values of 0.17 mM and 0.09 mM were calculated for prephenate and L-arogenate, respectively. L-Arogenate inhibited prephenate dehydratase competitively with respect to prephenate, whereas prephenate inhibited arogenate dehydratase competitively with respect to L-arogenate. Thus, the enzyme has a common catalytic site for utilization of prephenate or L-arogenate as alternative substrates. This is the first characterization of a purified monofunctional cyclohexadienyl dehydratase.  相似文献   

18.
In Pseudomonas aeruginosa the initial enzyme of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis, 3-deoxy-D-arabinoheptulosonate 7-phosphate (DAHP) synthase, has been known to be subject to feedback inhibition by a metabolite in each of the three major pathway branchlets. Thus, an apparent balanced multieffector control is mediated by L-tyrosine, by L-tryptophan, and phenylpyruvate. We have now resolved DAHP synthase into two distinctive regulatory isozymes, herein denoted DAHP synthase-tyr (Mr = 137,000) and DAHP synthase-trp (Mr = 175,000). DAHP synthase-tyr comprises greater than 90% of the total activity. L-Tyrosine was found to be a potent effector, inhibiting competitively with respect to both phosphoenolpyruvate (Ki = 23 microM) and erythrose 4-phosphate (Ki = 23 microM). Phenylpyruvate was a less effective competitive inhibitor: phosphoenolpyruvate (Ki = 2.55 mM) and erythrose 4-phosphate (Ki = 1.35 mM). DAHP synthase-trp was found to be inhibited noncompetitively by L-tryptophan with respect to phosphoenolpyruvate (Ki = 40 microM) and competitively with respect to erythrose 4-phosphate (Ki = 5 microM). Chorismate was a relatively weak competitive inhibitor: phosphoenolpyruvate (Ki = 1.35 mM) and erythrose 4-phosphate (Ki = 2.25 mM). Thus, each isozyme is strongly inhibited by an amino acid end product and weakly inhibited by an intermediary metabolite.  相似文献   

19.
Enzymological basis for herbicidal action of glyphosate   总被引:8,自引:8,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The effects of 1 millimolar glyphosate (N-[phosphonomethyl]glycine) upon the activities of enzymes of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis, partially purified by ion-exchange chromatography from mung bean seedings (Vigna radiata [L.] Wilczek), were examined. Multiple isozyme species of shikimate dehydrogenase, chorismate mutase, and aromatic aminotransferase were separated, and these were all insensitive to inhibition by glyphosate. The activities of prephenate dehydrogenase and arogenate dehydrogenase were also not sensitive to inhibition. Two molecular species of 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate (DAHP) synthase were resolved, one stimulated several-fold by Mn2+ (DAHP synthase-Mn), and the other absolutely dependent upon the presence of Co2+ for activity (DAHP synthase-Co). Whereas DAHP synthase-Mn was invulnerable to glyphosate, greater than 95% inhibition of DAHP synthase-Co was found in the presence of glyphosate. Since Co2+ is a Vmax activator with respect to both substrates, glyphosate cannot act simply by Co2+ chelation because inhibition is competitive with respect to erythrose-4-phosphate. The accumulation of shikimate found in glyphosate-treated seedlings is consistent with in vivo inhibition of both 5-enolpyruvylshikimic acid 3-phosphate synthase and one of the two DAHP synthase isozymes. Aromatic amino acids, singly or in combination, only showed a trend towards reversal of growth inhibition in 7-day seedlings of mung bean. The possibilities are raised that glyphosate may act at multiple enzyme targets in a given organism or that different plants may vary in the identity of the prime enzyme target.  相似文献   

20.
The regulatory properties of three key enzymes in the phenylalanine biosynthetic pathway, 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthetase (DAHP synthetase) [EC 4.1.2.15], chorismate mutase [EC 5.4.99.5], and prephenate dehydratase [prephenate hydro-lyase (decarboxylating), EC 4.2.1.51] were compared in three phenylalanine-excreting mutants and the wild strain of Brevibacterium flavum. Regulation of DAHP synthetase by phenylalanine and tyrosine in these mutants did not change at all, but the specific activities of the mutant cell extracts increased 1.3- to 2.8-fold, as reported previously (1). Chorismate mutase activities in both the wild and the mutant strains were cumulatively inhibited by phenylalanine and tyrosine and recovered with tryptophan, while the specific activities of the mutants increased 1.3- to 2.8-fold, like those of DAHP synthetase. On the other hand, the specific activities of prephenate dehydratase in the mutant and wild strains were similar, when tyrosine was present. While prephenate dehydratase of the wild strain was inhibited by phenylalanine, tryptophan, and several phenylalanine analogues, the mutant enzymes were not inhibited at all but were activated by these effectors. Tyrosine activated the mutant enzymes much more strongly than the wild-type enzyme: in mutant 221-43, 1 mM tyrosine caused 28-fold activation. Km and the activation constant for tyrosine were slightly altered to a half and 6-fold compared with the wild-type enzyme, respectively, while the activation constants for phenylalanine and tryptophan were 500-fold higher than the respective inhibition constants of the wild-type enzyme. The molecular weight of the mutant enzyme was estimated to be 1.2 x 10(5), a half of that of the wild-type enzyme. The molecular weight of the mutant enzyme was estimated to be 1.2 X 10(5) a half of that of the wild type enzyme, while in the presence of tyrosine, phenylalanine, or tryptophan, it increased to that of the wild-type enzyme. Immediately after the mutant enzyme had been activated by tyrosine and then the tyrosine removed, it still showed about 10-fold higher specific activity than before the activation by tyrosine. However, on standing in ice the activity gradually fell to the initial level before the activation by tyrosine. Ammonium sulfate promoted the decrease of the activity. On the basis of these results, regulatory mechanisms for phenylalanine biosynthesis in vivo as well as mechanisms for the phenylalanine overproduction in the mutants are discussed.  相似文献   

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