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1.
Transfer of tritium from [3-3H]pyruvate into propionyl-CoA is found during the reaction of transcarboxylase: Methylmalonyl-CoA + pyruvate leads to oxalacetate + propionyl-CoA. About 5% of the tritium counts that are labilized in the reaction are found in a position of the propionate that exchanges rapidly with water in the presence of transcarboxylase. Transfer from [2-3H]propionate of propionyl-CoA to pyruvate is real but only about one-tenth as great. The tritium transfers between reactants on two subunits are difficult to explain by a "carbanion" mechanism of --C--H bond cleavage and support the cyclic mechanism in which carboxybiotin itself is the base and the enol form of biotin is the proton-transferring agent.  相似文献   

2.
Propionate is used to protect bread and animal feed from moulds. The mode of action of this short-chain fatty acid was studied using Aspergillus nidulans as a model organism. The filamentous fungus is able to grow slowly on propionate, which is oxidized to acetyl-CoA via propionyl-CoA, methylcitrate and pyruvate. Propionate inhibits growth of A. nidulans on glucose but not on acetate; the latter was shown to inhibit propionate oxidation. When grown on glucose a methylcitrate synthase deletion mutant is much more sensitive towards the presence of propionate in the medium as compared to the wild-type and accumulates 10-fold higher levels of propionyl-CoA, which inhibits CoA-dependent enzymes such as pyruvate dehydrogenase, succinyl-CoA synthetase and ATP citrate lyase. The most important inhibition is that of pyruvate dehydrogenase, as this affects glucose and propionate metabolism directly. In contrast, the blocked succinyl-CoA synthetase can be circumvented by a succinyl-CoA:acetate/propionate CoA-transferase, whereas ATP citrate lyase is required only for biosynthetic purposes. In addition, data are presented that correlate inhibition of fungal polyketide synthesis by propionyl-CoA with the accumulation of this CoA-derivative. A possible toxicity of propionyl-CoA for humans in diseases such as propionic acidaemia and methylmalonic aciduria is also discussed.  相似文献   

3.
α-Ketobutyrate, an intermediate in the catabolism of threonine and methionine, is metabolized to CO2 and propionyl-CoA. Recent studies have suggested that propionyl-CoA may interfere with normal hepatic oxidative metabolism. Based on these observations, the present study examined the effect of α-ketobutyrate on palmitic acid and pyruvate metabolism in hepatocytes isolated from fed rats. α-Ketobutyrate (10 mM) inhibited the oxidation of palmitic acid by 34%. In the presence of 10 mM carnitine, the inhibition of palmitic acid oxidation by α-ketobutyrate was reduced to 21%. These observations are similar to those previously reported using propionate as an inhibitor of fatty acid oxidation, suggesting that propionyl-CoA may be responsible for the inhibition. α-Ketobutyrate (10 mM) inhibited 14CO2 generation from [14C]pyruvate by more than 75%. This inhibition was quantitatively larger than seen with equal concentrations of propionate. Carnitine (10 mM) had no effect on the inhibition of pyruvate oxidation by α-ketobutyrate despite the generation of large amounts of propionylcarnitine during the incubation. α-Ketobutyate inhibited [14C]glucose formation from [14C]pyruvate by more than 60%. This contrasted to a 30% inhibition caused by propionate. These results suggest that α-ketobutyrate inhibits hepatic pyruvate metabolism by a mechanism independent of propionyl-CoA formation. The present study demonstrates that tissue accumulation of α-ketobutyrate may lead to disruption of normal cellular metabolism. Additionally, the production of propionyl-CoA from α-ketobutyrate is associated with increased generation of propionylcarnitine. These observations provide further evidence that organic acid accumulation associated with a number of disease states may result in interference with normal hepatic metabolism and increased carnitine requirements.  相似文献   

4.
Experiments with 14C labelled propionyl-CoA, methylmalonyl-CoA and succinyl-CoA showed that these compounds are intermediates of propionate synthesis in fermentative metabolism of Rhodospirillum rubrum. The rate of propionate and succinate production is dependent on the CO2 concentration of the medium. There is, however, no evidence for a transcarboxylation, and high concentrations of propionate in the medium did not inhibit propionate synthesis as in the case in propionibacteria. PEP-carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.32) and propionyl-CoA-carboxylase (EC 6.4.1.3) showed high activities, whereas the other two PEP-carboxylases (EC 4.1.1.31, EC 4.1.1.38), and the pyruvate-carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.1.) showed only very low activity. It is probable that in pyruvate fermentation metabolism of R. rubrum no specific enzymes are activated for propionate formation and all enzymes are still present from aerobic or phototrophic preculture.  相似文献   

5.
Mechanisms of growth inhibition by propionate on the growth of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides were studied. Partially purified pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) from R. sphaeroides was inhibited by propionyl-CoA, one of the metabolic intermediates of propionate, while propionate itself did not inhibit the enzyme. This suggests that the inhibitor of the growth in vivo is not propionate but propionyl-CoA. The inhibition by propionyl-CoA was competitive with respect to coenzyme A concentration. The K1 value for propionyl-CoA was 0.84 mM. Addition of NaHCO3, which restored the growth of this bacterium in the presence of propionate, increased the rate of propionate incorporation by 1.7-fold and decreased the intracellular level of propionyl-CoA by half. These findings suggest that HCO3-ion lowers the level of propionyl-CoA by accelerating its carboxylation reaction, which is catalyzed by propionyl-CoA carboxylase. Effects of NaHCO3 and acetate on the growth restoration were also studied by the use of propionyl-CoA carboxylase-deficient mutants. NaHCO3 did not restore the growth of the mutants, indicating an essential role of propionyl-CoA carboxylase on the restoration of growth by NaHCO3 as suggested above. Addition of acetate restores the growth of the mutants in the presence of propionate. Acetate probably restores the growth by supplying acetyl-CoA.  相似文献   

6.
While a number of studies underline the importance of anaplerotic pathways for hepatic biosynthetic functions and cardiac contractile activity, much remains to be learned about the sites and regulation of anaplerosis in these tissues. As part of a study on the regulation of anaplerosis from propionyl-CoA precursors in rat livers and hearts, we investigated the degree of reversibility of the reactions of the propionyl-CoA pathway. Label was introduced into the pathway via NaH13CO3, [U-13C3]propionate, or [U-13C3]lactate + [U-13C3]pyruvate, under various concentrations of propionate. The mass isotopomer distributions of propionyl-CoA, methylmalonyl-CoA, and succinyl-CoA revealed that, in intact livers and hearts, (i) the propionyl-CoA carboxylase reaction is slightly reversible only at low propionyl-CoA flux, (ii) the methylmalonyl-CoA racemase reaction keeps the methylmalonyl-CoA enantiomers in isotopic equilibrium under all conditions tested, and (iii) the methylmalonyl-CoA mutase reaction is reversible, but its reversibility decreases as the flow of propionyl-CoA increases. The thermodynamic dis-equilibrium of the combined reactions of the propionyl-CoA pathway explains the effectiveness of anaplerosis from propionyl-CoA precursors such as heptanoate.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Methylcitrate synthase is a key enzyme of the methylcitrate cycle and required for fungal propionate degradation. Propionate not only serves as a carbon source, but also acts as a food preservative (E280-283) and possesses a negative effect on polyketide synthesis. To investigate propionate metabolism from the opportunistic human pathogenic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus, methylcitrate synthase was purified to homogeneity and characterized. The purified enzyme displayed both, citrate and methylcitrate synthase activity and showed similar characteristics to the corresponding enzyme from Aspergillus nidulans. The coding region of the A. fumigatus enzyme was identified and a deletion strain was constructed for phenotypic analysis. The deletion resulted in an inability to grow on propionate as the sole carbon source. A strong reduction of growth rate and spore colour formation on media containing both, glucose and propionate was observed, which was coincident with an accumulation of propionyl-CoA. Similarly, the use of valine, isoleucine and methionine as nitrogen sources, which yield propionyl-CoA upon degradation, inhibited growth and polyketide production. These effects are due to a direct inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and blockage of polyketide synthesis by propionyl-CoA. The surface of conidia was studied by electron scanning microscopy and revealed a correlation between spore colour and ornamentation of the conidial surface. In addition, a methylcitrate synthase deletion led to an attenuation of virulence, when tested in an insect infection model and attenuation was even more pronounced, when whitish conidia from glucose/propionate medium were applied. Therefore, an impact of methylcitrate synthase in the infection process is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
10.
In this study, the product of the CIT3 gene has been identified as a dual specificity mitochondrial citrate and methylcitrate synthase and that of the CIT1 gene as a specific citrate synthase. Recombinant Cit1p had catalytic activity only with acetyl-CoA whereas Cit3p had similar catalytic efficiency with both acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA. Deletion of CIT1 dramatically shifted the ratio of these two activities in whole cell extracts towards greater methylcitrate synthase. Deletion of CIT3 had little effect on either citrate or methylcitrate synthase activities. A Deltacit2Deltacit3 strain showed no methylcitrate synthase activity, suggesting that Cit2p, a peroxisomal isoform, may also have methylcitrate synthase activity. Although wild-type strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae did not grow with propionate as a sole carbon source, deletion of CIT2 allowed growth on propionate, suggesting a toxic production of methylcitrate in the peroxisomes of wild-type cells. The Deltacit2Deltacit3 double mutant did not grow on propionate, providing further evidence for the role of Cit3p in propionate metabolism. (13)C NMR analysis showed the metabolism of 2-(13)C-propionate to acetate, pyruvate, and alanine in wild-type, Deltacit1 and Deltacit2 cells, but not in the Deltacit3 mutant. (13)C NMR and GC-MS analysis of pyruvate metabolism revealed an accumulation of acetate and of isobutanol in the Deltacit3 mutant, suggesting a metabolic alteration possibly resulting from inhibition of the lipoamide acetyltransferase subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex by propionyl-CoA. In contrast to Deltacit3, pyruvate metabolism in a Deltapda1 (pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 alpha subunit) mutant strain was only shifted towards accumulation of acetate.  相似文献   

11.
Aspergillus nidulans was used as a model organism to investigate the fungal propionate metabolism and the mechanism of growth inhibition by propionate. The fungus is able to grow slowly on propionate as sole carbon and energy source. Propionate is oxidized to pyruvate via the methylcitrate cycle. The key enzyme methylcitrate synthase was purified and the corresponding gene mcsA, which contains two introns, was cloned, sequenced and overexpressed in A. nidulans. The derived amino acid sequence of the enzyme shows more than 50% identity to those of most eukaryotic citrate synthases, but only 14% identity to the sequence of the recently detected bacterial methylcitrate synthase from Escherichia coli. A mcsA deletion strain was unable to grow on propionate. The inhibitory growth effect of propionate on glucose medium was enhanced in this strain, which led to the assumption that trapping of the available CoA as propionyl-CoA and/or the accumulating propionyl-CoA itself interferes with other biosynthetic pathways such as fatty acid and polyketide syntheses. In the wild-type strain, however, the predominant inhibitor may be methylcitrate. Propionate (100 mM) not only impaired hyphal growth of A. nidulans but also synthesis of the green polyketide-derived pigment of the conidia, whereas in the mutant pigmentation was abolished with 20 mM propionate.  相似文献   

12.
Mitochondrial dysfunction during acute metabolic crises is considered an important pathomechanism in inherited disorders of propionate metabolism, i.e. propionic and methylmalonic acidurias. Biochemically, these disorders are characterized by accumulation of propionyl-CoA and metabolites of alternative propionate oxidation. In the present study, we demonstrate uncompetitive inhibition of PDHc (pyruvate dehydrogenase complex) by propionyl-CoA in purified porcine enzyme and in submitochondrial particles from bovine heart being in the same range as the inhibition induced by acetyl-CoA, the physiological product and known inhibitor of PDHc. Evaluation of similar monocarboxylic CoA esters showed a chain-length specificity for PDHc inhibition. In contrast with CoA esters, non-esterified fatty acids did not inhibit PDHc activity. In addition to PDHc inhibition, analysis of respiratory chain and tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes also revealed an inhibition by propionyl-CoA on respiratory chain complex III and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex. To test whether impairment of mitochondrial energy metabolism is involved in the pathogenesis of propionic aciduria, we performed a thorough bioenergetic analysis in muscle biopsy specimens of two patients. In line with the in vitro results, oxidative phosphorylation was severely compromised in both patients. Furthermore, expression of respiratory chain complexes I-IV and the amount of mitochondrial DNA were strongly decreased, and ultrastructural mitochondrial abnormalities were found, highlighting severe mitochondrial dysfunction. In conclusion, our results favour the hypothesis that toxic metabolites, in particular propionyl-CoA, are involved in the pathogenesis of inherited disorders of propionate metabolism, sharing mechanistic similarities with propionate toxicity in micro-organisms.  相似文献   

13.
In adult F. hepatica pyruvate is decarboxylated via pyruvate dehydrogenase to acetyl-CoA; acetyl-CoA is then cleaved to acetate via three possible mechanisms (1) carnitine dependent hydrolysis, (2) CoA transferase, (3) reversal of a GTP dependent acyl-CoA synthetase. Of these three systems, CoA transferase has by far the greatest activity. Propionate production by F. hepatica is similar to the mammalian system, succinate being metabolized via succinic thiokinase, methylmalonyl-CoA isomerase, methyl-malonyl-CoA racemase and propionyl-CoA carboxylase to propionyl-CoA. Propionyl-CoA is then cleaved to propionate by the same three pathways as acetyl-CoA. No ATP or GTP production could be demonstrated when acetyl- or propionyl-CoA were incubated with homogenates of F. hepatica. This indicates that carnitine dependent hydrolysis or CoA transferase are the major pathways of acetyl- or propionyl-CoA breakdown. The CoA transferase reaction would result in the conservation of the bond energy although there is no net ATP synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
1. The rate of gluconeogenesis from propionate in rat kidney-cortex slices was stimulated up to 3.5-fold by dl-carnitine and by bicarbonate, and was inhibited by inorganic phosphate or high concentrations of propionate (above 3mm). 2. The stimulatory effect of carnitine was dependent on the bicarbonate concentration and could be replaced at low propionate concentration by addition of 25mm-bicarbonate-carbon dioxide buffer. At low bicarbonate concentration the carnitine concentration can be rate-limiting. 3. All observations are in accordance with the view that the action of carnitine is in principle the same as that established for other fatty acids in other tissues, namely that carnitine promotes the appearance of propionyl-CoA within the mitochondrion by acting as a carrier. 4. The accelerating effects of carnitine and bicarbonate and the inhibitory effect of phosphate can be explained on the basis of the known properties of key enzymes of propionate metabolism, i.e. the reversibility of the reactions leading to the formation of methylmalonyl-CoA from propionyl-CoA. 5. 5mm-Propionate caused a five- to ten-fold fall in the free CoA content of the tissue. This fall can account for the inhibition of respiration and gluconeogenesis caused by high propionate concentration. 6. Relatively large quantities of propionyl-l-carnitine (15% of the propionate removed) were formed when dl-carnitine was present; thus the ;activation' of propionate proceeded at a faster rate than the carboxylation of propionyl-CoA. The metabolism of added propionyl-l-carnitine was accompanied by glucose synthesis. 7. The appearance of radioactivity from [2-(14)C]propionate in both glucose and carbon dioxide was as expected on account of the randomization of C-2 and C-3 of propionate, i.e. the formation of succinate as an intermediate. 8. The maximum rate of glucose synthesis from propionate (93.3+/-3.3mumoles/g. dry wt./hr.) was not affected by dietary changes aimed at varying the rate of caecal volatile fatty acid formation in the rat. 9. Inhibition of gluconeogenesis by high propionate concentration was not found in those species where the rate of caecal or ruminal propionate production is high under normal conditions (rabbit, sheep and cow).  相似文献   

15.
We previously identified the prpBCDE operon, which encodes catabolic functions required for propionate catabolism in Salmonella typhimurium. Results from (13)C-labeling experiments have identified the route of propionate breakdown and determined the biochemical role of each Prp enzyme in this pathway. The identification of catabolites accumulating in wild-type and mutant strains was consistent with propionate breakdown through the 2-methylcitric acid cycle. Our experiments demonstrate that the alpha-carbon of propionate is oxidized to yield pyruvate. The reactions are catalyzed by propionyl coenzyme A (propionyl-CoA) synthetase (PrpE), 2-methylcitrate synthase (PrpC), 2-methylcitrate dehydratase (probably PrpD), 2-methylisocitrate hydratase (probably PrpD), and 2-methylisocitrate lyase (PrpB). In support of this conclusion, the PrpC enzyme was purified to homogeneity and shown to have 2-methylcitrate synthase activity in vitro. (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and negative-ion electrospray ionization mass spectrometry identified 2-methylcitrate as the product of the PrpC reaction. Although PrpC could use acetyl-CoA as a substrate to synthesize citrate, kinetic analysis demonstrated that propionyl-CoA is the preferred substrate.  相似文献   

16.
Zhang YQ  Brock M  Keller NP 《Genetics》2004,168(2):785-794
Propionyl-CoA is an intermediate metabolite produced through a variety of pathways including thioesterification of propionate and catabolism of odd chain fatty acids and select amino acids. Previously, we found that disruption of the methylcitrate synthase gene, mcsA, which blocks propionyl-CoA utilization, as well as growth on propionate impaired production of several polyketides-molecules typically derived from acetyl-CoA and malonyl-CoA-including sterigmatocystin (ST), a potent carcinogen, and the conidiospore pigment. Here we describe three lines of evidence that demonstrate that excessive propionyl-CoA levels in the cell can inhibit polyketide synthesis. First, inactivation of a putative propionyl-CoA synthase, PcsA, which converts propionate to propionyl-CoA, restored polyketide production and reduced cellular propionyl-CoA content in a DeltamcsA background. Second, inactivation of the acetyl-CoA synthase, FacA, which is also involved in propionate utilization, restored polyketide production in the DeltamcsA background. Third, fungal growth on several compounds (e.g., heptadecanoic acid, isoleucine, and methionine) whose catabolism includes the formation of propionyl-CoA, were found to inhibit ST and conidiospore pigment production. These results demonstrate that excessive propionyl-CoA levels in the cell can inhibit polyketide synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
The propionyl-CoA synthetase (PrpE) enzyme of Salmonella enterica catalyzes the first step of propionate catabolism, i.e., the activation of propionate to propionyl-CoA. The PrpE enzyme was purified, and its kinetic properties were determined. Evidence is presented that the conversion of propionate to propionyl-CoA proceeds via a propionyl-AMP intermediate. Kinetic experiments demonstrated that propionate was the preferred acyl substrate (kcat/Km = 1644 mM(-1) x s(-1)). Adenosine 5'-propyl phosphate was a potent inhibitor of the enzyme, and inhibition kinetics identified a Bi Uni Uni Bi Ping Pong mechanism for the reaction catalyzed by the PrpE enzyme. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to change the primary sequence of the wild-type protein at positions G245A, P247A, K248A, K248E, G249A, K592A, and K592E. Mutant PrpE proteins were purified, and the effects of the mutations on enzyme activity were investigated. Both PrpEK592 mutant proteins (K592A and K592E) failed to convert propionate to propionyl-CoA, and plasmids containing these alleles of prpE failed to restore growth on propionate of S. enterica carrying null prpE alleles on their chromosome. Both PrpEK592 mutant proteins converted propionyl-AMP to propionyl-CoA, suggesting residue K592 played no discernible role in thioester bond formation. To the best of our knowledge, these mutant proteins are the first acyl-CoA synthetases reported that are defective in adenylation activity.  相似文献   

18.
Anaplerosis from propionate was investigated in rat hearts perfused with 0-2mM [(13)C(3)]propionate and physiological concentrations of glucose, lactate, and pyruvate. The data show that when the concentration of [(13)C(3)]propionate was raised from 0 to 2mM, total anaplerosis increased from 5% to 16% of the turnover of citric acid cycle intermediates. Then, [(13)C(3)]propionate abolished anaplerosis from endogenous substrates, glucose, lactate, and pyruvate. Also, while the contents of propionyl-CoA and methylmalonyl-CoA increased with [(13)C(3)]propionate concentration, the content of succinyl-CoA decreased, presumably via activation of succinyl-CoA hydrolysis by a decrease in free CoA. Under our conditions, [(13)C(3)]propionate was a purely anaplerotic substrate since there was no labeling of mitochondrial acetyl-CoA, reflected by the labeling of the acetyl moiety of citrate.  相似文献   

19.
It has been shown in the experiments on rat liver mitochondria under glucose hexo-kinase load that excess of substrates of (1-20 mM) pyruvate, acetate, propionate, pent-4-enoate and malate may induce oxidation of NAD(P)H and inhibition of mitochondrial respiration (by 20-50% and more) due to a decreased rate of hydrogen production by tricarboxylic acid cycle. It has been concluded from the analysis of mathematical models and metabolite-testings which remove this inhibition that for pyruvate and acetate this inhibition is an autocatalytic one. It is related to a decreased level of CoA and oxaloacetate due to the formation of "traps" such as acetyl-CoA and alpha-kotoglutarate. For propionate and pent-4-enoate in the bicarbonate-free medium suppression of the flux in the cycle is concerned with a decreased level of CoA, acetyl-CoA and succionoyl CoA due to the accumulation of propionyl-CoA. It seems to be also concerned with the inhibition of citrate-synthetase and alpha-ketoglutarate-dehydrogenase by propionyl-CoA. Malate (in the presence of malonate) can inhibit respiration at the expense of direct inhibition of citrate-synthetase.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The anaerobic transformation of malate and succinate into propionate was demonstrated in homogenates and mitochondria isolated from the body wall musculature ofArenicola marina, a facultative anaerobic polychaete. Synthesis of propionate from succinate was enhanced by the addition of malate and ADP. In the presence of malate, acetate was formed in addition to propionate. Maximal quantities of both fatty acids were produced by mitochondria incubated with malate, succinate, and ADP. Since the rate of propionate production in this case was about the same as in homogenates when related to fresh weight, it is concluded that the enzymatic system involved is localized exclusively in the mitochondria. The rate of propionate production is correlated with the concentration of succinate, saturation being reached at about 5 mM. In tracer experiments using (methyl-14C)-malonyl-CoA, 2,3-14C-succinate, and 1-14C-propionate as precursors, the pathway of the transformation of succinate into propionate was examined. The results indicate that methylmalonyl-CoA is an intermediary product. It was shown that the synthesis of propionate from succinate is coupled to the formation of ATP. The ratio ATP/propionate was 0.76. Dinitrophenol had only a slight effect on this ratio, although the utilization of succinate was inhibited considerably. It is concluded that in vivo substrate level phosphorylation occurs equimolar to the formation of propionate from succinate.Abbreviations Ap 5 A P1,P5-di(adenosine-5-)pentaphosphate - DNP 2,4-dinitrophenol - mma methylmalonic acid - mm-CoA methylmalonyl-CoA Enzymes EC 6.2.1.1 Acetate thiokinase (AMP) - EC 3.6.1.3 actomyosin ATPase - EC 2.7.4.3 adenylate kinase - EC 2.8.3.1 CoA transferase - EC 2.7.1.1 hexokinase - EC 2.1.3.1 methylmalonyl-CoA carboxyltransferase - EC 5.4.99.1 methylmalonyl-CoA isomerase - EC 5.1.99.1 methylmalonyl-CoA racemase - EC 6.4.1.3 propionyl-CoA carboxylase - EC 1.2.4.1 pyruvate dehydrogenase Supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Gr 456/6  相似文献   

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