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1.
The effects of acute and chronic treatment with ethanol on transport of reducing equivalents into mitochondria via the malate-aspartate shuttle were studied in perfused rat liver. The shuttle capacity was estimated from the decrease in rates of glucose production from the reduced substrate sorbitol caused by an increase in the NADH/NAD+ ratio in the cytosol due to metabolism of ethanol. The greater the capacity of the malate-aspartate shuttle, the smaller the inhibition of glucose synthesis by ethanol. Glucose synthesis was decreased about 2-fold less in livers from fasted rats treated acutely 2.5 h earlier with ethanol than in untreated controls. Chronic treatment with ethanol for 3-5 weeks prevented completely the decrease in glucose synthesis from sorbitol due to ethanol oxidation. Rates of ethanol uptake were elevated significantly from 69 +/- 7 mumols/g/h in livers from control rats up to 92 +/- 7 mumols/g/h in livers from SIAM rats. Similarly, rates of ethanol uptake were stimulated by chronic ethanol treatment from 71 +/- 6 to 222 +/- 15 mumols/g/h; this increase was largely sensitive to aminooxyacetate. Taken together, these data indicate that flux of reducing equivalents over the malate-aspartate shuttle is increased by both acute and chronic treatment with ethanol and that movement of reducing equivalents from the cytosol into the mitochondria via the malate-aspartate shuttle is an important rate determinant in hepatic ethanol oxidation.  相似文献   

2.
Effects of chronic alcohol treatment have been investigated on the rates of extramitochondrial NADH utilization by hepatic mitochondria in the presence or absence of “malate-aspartate shuttle,” oxidation of ethanol, α-glycerophosphate, and the activity of succinic dehydrogenase, along with the changes in the intrahepatic distribution of aspartate aminotransferase. The rates of blood alcohol clearance, hepatic alcohol dehydrogenase activity, and NADPH-dependent microsomal ethanol oxidation were also studied after different time intervals of alcohol withdrawal from chronically alcohol-fed animals. Hepatic mitochondria from chronically ethanol-fed mice (ethanol withheld 20 hr before sacrifice) utilized extramitochondrial NADH at rates 25–40% higher than the corresponding pair-fed controls. Addition of malateaspartate shuttle components to mitochondria from control and ethanol-fed groups resulted in 70 and 90% stimulation of NADH utilization, respectively. Mitochondria from both groups showed respiratory control upon ADP addition (state 3). Preincubation with amino-oxyacetate or hydrazine, which inhibit aspartate aminotransferase activity, prevented the stimulatory effect of malate-aspartate shuttle on NADH utilization. Mitochondria from livers of chronic ethanol-fed mice in the presence of reconstituted malate-aspartate shuttle showed 30–40% higher utilization of ethanol than the corresponding pair-fed control animals. The rate of mitochondrial α-glycerophosphate utilization by alcohol-fed animals was significantly higher than the control group. Succinic dehydrogenase activity measured as an index of mitochondrial permeability in the absence of Ca2+ showed 85% higher activity in alcoholtreated group than the control animals. Chronic ethanol feeding for 4 weeks resulted in an increase in the activity of hepatic aspartate aminotransferase in the cytoplasmic fraction and a corresponding decrease in the mitochondrial fraction. Alcohol withdrawal from chronic alcohol-fed animals resulted in a decrease in the blood alcohol clearance rate after 10 days. Furthermore, a lack of correlation was observed between the rates of blood alcohol clearance and the activity of hepatic alcohol dehydrogenase on one hand, and between the rates of blood alcohol clearance and the microsomal ethanol-oxidizing activity on the other.  相似文献   

3.
A study was made of factors regulating the oxidation of ethanol in liver cells isolated from fed and fasted rats. The rate of ethanol oxidation was greater in liver cells from fed rats than from fasted rats. Inhibitors of the malate-aspartate shuttle decreased the rate of ethanol oxidation, suggesting that this shuttle contributes to the reoxidation of cytosolic NADH produced during the oxidation of ethanol. The greater inhibition of ethanol oxidation by antimycin than by rotenone suggests that the α-glycerophosphate shuttle also plays an important role in transporting reducing equivalents. The components of the malate-aspartate and α-glycerophosphate shuttles stimulated ethanol oxidation to a greater extent in liver cells from fasted rats than those from fed rats, suggesting that in the fasted state, ethanol oxidation is regulated by the intracellular concentrations of substrate shuttle components which transfer reducing equivalents into the mitochondria. Therefore, uncoupling agents, which stimulate oxygen consumption, do not stimulate ethanol oxidation, and concentrations of antimycin which depress oxygen uptake are much less effective in decreasing ethanol oxidation. By contrast, in liver cells from fed rats, the rate of ethanol oxidation was increased by uncoupling agents. Such stimulation was not observed when cells were prepared in the absence of albumin, probably due to leakage of shuttle substrates which leads to abnormally low intracellular levels. Indeed, when the shuttle substrates were added back to these preparations, uncouplers were effective in stimulating the rate of ethanol oxidation beyond the stimulation produced by the shuttle substrates alone. Thus, under conditions of sufficient intracellular levels of the intermediates of the substrate shuttles, ethanol oxidation is regulated by the capacity of the mitochondrial respiratory chain to reoxidize reducing equivalents generated by the alcohol dehydrogenase reaction.  相似文献   

4.
The role of Ca2+ in stimulation of the malate-aspartate shuttle by norepinephrine and vasopressin was studied in perfused rat liver. Shuttle capacity was indexed by measuring the changes in both the rate of production of glucose from sorbitol and the ratio of lactate to pyruvate during the oxidation of ethanol. (T. Sugano et al. (1986) Amer. J. Physiol. 251, E385-E392). Asparagine (0.5 mM), but not alanine (0.5 mM) decreased the ethanol-induced responses. Norepinephrine and vasopressin had no effect on the ethanol-induced responses when the liver was perfused with sorbitol or glycerol. In the presence of 0.25 mM alanine, norepinephrine, vasopressin, and A23187 decreased the ethanol-induced responses that occurred with the increase of flux of Ca2+. In liver perfused with Ca2+-free medium, asparagine also decreased the ethanol-induced responses, but norepinephrine and vasopressin had no effect. Aminooxyacetate inhibited the effects of norepinephrine, A23187, and asparagine. Regardless of the presence or absence of perfusate Ca2+, the combination of glucagon and alanine had no effect on the ethanol-induced responses. Norepinephrine caused a decrease in levels of alpha-ketoglutarate, aspartate, and glutamate in hepatocytes incubated with Ca2+. The present data suggest that the redistribution of cellular Ca2+ may activate the efflux of aspartate from mitochondria in rat liver, resulting in an increase in the capacity of the malate-aspartate shuttle.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, a pronounced increase of ethanol oxidation was found in hepatocytes obtained from adenosine-treated rats, or after in vitro additional of the nucleoside; this finding was accompanied by a maintenance of the normal cytoplasmic redox state. These results suggest a higher availability of cytoplasmic NAD in these cells. Therefore, the metabolic pathways which carry out the reoxidation of cytosolic reducing equivalents, namely, malate-aspartate and alpha-glycerophosphate shuttles, were examined. Isolated mitochondria from adenosine-treated rats had an increased NADH oxidation by the malate-aspartate shuttle; furthermore, in vivo and in vitro addition of adenosine to the hepatocytes induced changes in the equilibrium of the malate-aspartate shuttle, as evidenced by the subcellular distribution of the intermediates of this pathway. Acetaldehyde removal was also increased by adenosine and this fact was related to an elevated NAD/NADH ratio in the mitochondria. Thus, under these conditions, an increased ethanol uptake was accompanied by enhanced acetaldehyde removal in the animal. In conclusion, adenosine administration stimulates the transport of cytoplasmic reducing equivalents to the mitochondria, mainly through the malate-aspartate shuttle. This action, which may be located at the level of the mitochondrial membrane, is reflected by an enhancement of ethanol and acetaldehyde oxidations.  相似文献   

6.
beta-Methyleneaspartate, a specific inhibitor of aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1.), was used to investigate the role of the malate-aspartate shuttle in rat brain synaptosomes. Incubation of rat brain cytosol, "free" mitochondria, synaptosol, and synaptic mitochondria, with 2 mM beta-methyleneaspartate resulted in inhibition of aspartate aminotransferase by 69%, 67%, 49%, and 76%, respectively. The reconstituted malate-aspartate shuttle of "free" brain mitochondria was inhibited by a similar degree (53%). As a consequence of the inhibition of the aspartate aminotransferase, and hence the malate-aspartate shuttle, the following changes were observed in synaptosomes: decreased glucose oxidation via the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction and the tricarboxylic acid cycle; decreased acetylcholine synthesis; and an increase in the cytosolic redox state, as measured by the lactate/pyruvate ratio. The main reason for these changes can be attributed to decreased carbon flow through the tricarboxylic acid cycle (i.e., decreased formation of oxaloacetate), rather than as a direct consequence of changes in the NAD+/NADH ratio. Malate/glutamate oxidation in "free" mitochondria was also decreased in the presence of 2 mM beta-methyleneaspartate. This is probably a result of decreased glutamate transport into mitochondria as a result of low levels of aspartate, which are needed for the exchange with glutamate by the energy-dependent glutamate-aspartate translocator.  相似文献   

7.
Ethanol metabolism was studied in isolated hepatocytes of fed and fasted guinea pigs. Alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1) activities of fed or fasted liver cells were 2.04 and 1.88 μmol/g cells/min, respectively. Under a variety of in vitro conditions, alcohol dehydrogenase operates in fed hepatocytes at 34–74% and in fasted liver cells at 23–61% of its maximum velocity, respectively. Hepatocytes of fed animals, incubated in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer, oxidized ethanol at an average rate of 0.69 μmol/g wet weight cells/min, whereas cells of 48-h fasted animals consumed only 0.44 μmol/g/min under identical conditions. Various substrates and metabolites of intermediary metabolism significantly enhanced ethanol oxidation in fed liver cells. Maximum stimulatory effects were achieved with alanine (+138%) and pyruvate (+102%), followed in decreasing order by propionate, lactate, fructose, dihydroxyacetone, and galactose. In contrast to substrate couples such as lactate/pyruvate and glycerol/dihydroxyacetone, sorbitol with or without fructose significantly inhibited ethanol oxidation. The addition of hydrogen shuttle components such as malate, aspartate, or glutamate to fasted hepatocytes resulted in significantly higher stimulation of ethanol uptake than in fed hepatocytes. Also, the degree of inhibition of shuttle activity by n-butylmalonate was more pronounced in fasted liver cells (77% inhibition) than in fed cells (59% inhibition). These data as well as oxygen kinetic studies in intact guinea pig hepatocytes utilizing uncouplers (carbonyl cyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone, dinitrophenol), electron-transport inhibitors (rotenone, antimycin), and malate-aspartate shuttle inhibitors (aminooxyacetate, n-butylmalonate) strongly suggested that the malate-aspartate shuttle is the predominant hydrogen transport system during ethanol oxidation in guinea pig liver.Comparison of the alcohol dehydrogenase-inhibitors 4-methylpyrazole and pyrazole on ethanol oxidation demonstrated that the alcohol dehydrogenase system is quantitatively the most important alcohol-metabolizing pathway in guinea pig liver. Supporting this conclusion, it was found that the H2O2-forming substrate glycolate slightly increased ethanol oxidation in liver cells of control animals (+26%), but prior inhibition of catalase by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole resulted in a significant increase (+25%) instead of a decrease in alcohol oxidation. This finding does not support a quantitatively important role of peroxidatic oxidation of ethanol by catalase in liver.Cytosolic NADNADH ratios were greatly shifted toward reduction during ethanol oxidation. These reductive shifts were even more pronounced when cells were incubated in the presence of fatty acids (octanoate, oleate) plus ethanol. Inhibitor studies with 4-methylpyrazole demonstrated that the decrease of the cytosolic NADNADH ratio during fatty acid oxidation was due to an inhibition of hydrogen transport from cytosol to mitochondria and not the result of transfer of hydrogen, generated by fatty acid oxidation, from mitochondria to cytosol. Lactate plus pyruvate formation was slightly inhibited by ethanol in fed hepatocytes but greatly accelerated in fasted cells; this latter effect was mostly the result of increased lactate formation. Such regulation may represent a hepatic mechanism of alcoholic lactic acidosis as observed in human alcoholics. The ethanol-induced decrease of the mitochondrial NADNADH ratio was prevented by addition of 4-methylpyrazole. Endogenous ketogenesis was greatly increased (+80%) by ethanol in fed liver cells. This effect of ethanol was blunted in the presence of glucose. Propionate, by competing with fatty acid oxidation, was strongly antiketogenic. This effect was alleviated by ethanol. In 48-h fasted hepatocytes, endogenous ketogenesis was enhanced by 84%. Although ethanol did not further stimulate endogenous ketogenesis under these conditions, alcohol significantly increased ketogenesis in the presence of octanoate or oleate. This stimulatory effect of ethanol was almost completely prevented by 4-methylpyrazole. These findings demonstrate that the syndrome of alcoholic ketoacidosis may be due, at least partially, to the additional stimulation of ketogenesis by or from ethanol during fatty acid oxidation in the fasting state.  相似文献   

8.
The malate-aspartate, fatty acid, and α-glycerophosphate shuttles for the transport of reducing equivalents into mitochondria were reconstituted, using isolated hepatic mitochondria and the extramitochondrial components of the shuttles. Clofibrate and thyroxin increased, while propylthiouracil treatment decreased, the activity of mitochondrial α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase. Despite these changes, the activity of the reconstituted α-glycerophosphate shuttle was similar in mitochondria from control rats and those from rats treated with clofibrate and propylthiouracil. There was an increase in the activity of the shuttle using mitochondria from thyroxin-treated rats. Rotenone caused 60–90% inhibition of this shuttle, suggesting that rotenone-sensitive NADH dehydrogenase participates in the pathway of oxidation of extramitochondrial hydrogen. Palmitate, oleate, and octanoate were equally effective in reconstituting a cyclic fatty acid shuttle. The shuttle was inhibited by various compounds affecting mitochondrial metabolism, including oligomycin, dinitrophenol, cyanide, rotenone, atractyloside, and α-bromopalmitate. Carnitine and several dicarboxylic and tricarboxylic acids which stimulate fatty acid elongation, augmented fatty acid shuttle activity. The malate-aspartate shuttle was inhibited by cycloserine, amino-oxyacetic acid, and hydrazine, and stimulated by pyridoxal phosphate, at the same concentrations which affected the activities of cytoplasmic and mitochondrial glutamic oxalacetic transaminase. This shuttle was inhibited by uncouplers, antimycin, azide, cyanide, rotenone, amobarbital, oligomycin, and several inhibitors of anion transport including iodobenzylmalonate and avenaciolide. The reconstituted shuttle is sufficiently active to provide about 70–80% of the oxalacetate required for maximal rates of gluconeogenesis. Extrapolations based on the rates of mitochondrial oxidation of acetaldehyde and the activity of the microsomal ethanol oxidizing system suggest that any one of the shuttles could account for the rate of ethanol metabolism in vitro by the alcohol dehydrogenase pathway.  相似文献   

9.
Palmitylcarnitine oxidation by isolated liver mitochondria has been used to investigate the interaction of fatty acid oxidation with malate, glutamate, succinate, and the malate-aspartate shuttle. Mitochondria preincubated with fluorocitrate were added to a medium containing 2mM ATP and ATPase. This system, characterized by a high energy change, allowed titration of respiration to any desired rate between States 4 and 3 (Chance, B., and Williams, G. R. (1956) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 17, 65-134). When respiration (reference, with palmitylcarnitine and malate as substrates) was set at 75% of State 3, the oxidation of palmitylcarnitine was limited by acetoacetate formation. The addition of malate or glutamate approximately doubled the rate of beta oxidation. Malate circumvented this limitation by citrate formation, but the effect of glutamate apparently was due to enhancement of the capacity for ketogenesis. The rate of beta oxidation was curtailed when malate and glutamate were both present. This curtailment was more pronounced when the malate-aspartate shuttle was fully reconstituted. Among the oxidizable substrates examined, succinate was most effective in inhibiting palmitylcarnitine oxidation. Mitochondrial NADH/NAD+ ratios were correlated positively with suppression of beta oxidation. The degree of suppression of beta oxidation by the malate-aspartate shuttle (NADH oxidation) or by succinate oxidation was dependent on the respiratory state. Both substrates extensively reduced mitochondrial NAD+ and markedly suppressed beta oxidation as respiration approached State 4. Calculations of the rates of flux of hydrogen equivalents through beta oxidation show that the suppression of beta oxidation by glutamate or by the malate-aspartate shuttle is accounted for by increased flux of reducing equivalents through mitochondrial malic dehydrogenase. This increased Flux is accompanied by an increase in the steady state NADH/NAD+ ratio and a marked decrease in the synthesis of citrate. The alpha-glycerophosphate shuttle was reconstituted with mitochondria isolated from rats treated with L-thyroxine. This shuttle was about equal to the reconstructed malate-aspartate shuttle in supression of palmitylcarnitine oxidation. This interaction could not be demonstrated in euthyroid animals owing to the low activity of the mitochondrial alpha-glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase. It is concluded that beta oxidation can be regulated by the NADH/NAD+ ratio. The observed stimulation of flux through malate dehydrogenase both by glutamate and by the malate-aspartate shuttle results in an increased steady state NADH/NAD+ ratio, and is linked to a stoichiometric outward transport of aspartate. We suggest, therefore, that some of the reducing pressure exerted by the malate-aspartate shuttle and by glutamate plus malate is provided through the energy-linked, electrogenic transport of aspartate out of the mitochondria. These results are discussed with respect to the mechanism of the genesis of ethanol-induced fatty liver.  相似文献   

10.
The participation and energy dependence of the malate-aspartate shuttle in transporting reducing equivalents generated from cytoplasmic lactate oxidation was studied in isolated hepatocytes of fasted rats. Both lactate removal and glucose synthesis were inhibited by butylmalonate, aminooxyacetate or cycloserine confirming the involvement of malate and aspartate in the transfer of reducing equivalents from the cytoplasm to mitochondria. In the presence of ammonium ions the inhibition of lactate utilization by butylmalonate was considerably reduced, yet the transfer of reducing equivalents into the mitochondria was unaffected, indicating a substantially lesser role for butylmalonate-sensitive malate transport in reducing-equivalent transfer when ammonium ions were present. Ammonium ions had no stimulatory effect on uptake of sorbitol, a substrate whose oxidation principally involves the alpha-glycerophosphate shuttle. The role of cellular energy status (reflected in the mitochondrial membrane electrical potential (delta psi) and redox state), in lactate oxidation and operation of the malate-aspartate shuttle, was studied using a graded concentration range of valinomycin (0-100 nM). Lactate oxidation was strongly inhibited when delta psi fell from 130 to 105 mV whereas O2 consumption and pyruvate removal were only minimally affected over the valinomycin range, suggesting that the oxidation of lactate to pyruvate is an energy-dependent step of lactate metabolism. Our results confirm that the operation of the malate-aspartate shuttle is energy-dependent, driven by delta psi. In the presence of added ammonium ions the removal of lactate was much less impaired by valinomycin, suggesting an energy-independent utilization of lactate under these conditions. The oxidizing effect of ammonium ions on the mitochondrial matrix apparently alleviates the need for energy input for the transfer of reducing equivalents between the cytoplasm and mitochondria. It is concluded that, in the presence of ammonium ions, the transport of lactate hydrogen to the mitochondria is accomplished by malate transfer that is not linked to the electrogenic transport of glutamate across the inner membrane, and, hence, is clearly distinct from the butylmalonate-sensitive, energy-dependent, malate-aspartate shuttle.  相似文献   

11.
Lactate-stimulated ethanol oxidation in isolated hepatocytes   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. Hepatocytes isolated from starved rats and incubated without other substrates oxidized ethanol at a rate of 0.8-0.9mumol/min per g wet wt. of cells. Addition of 10mm-lactate increased this rate 2-fold. 2. Quinolinate (5mm) or tryptophan (1mm) decreased the rate of gluconeogenesis with 10mm-lactate and 8mm-ethanol from 0.39 to 0.04-0.08mumol/min per g wet wt. of cells, but rates of ethanol oxidation were not decreased. From these results it appears that acceleration of ethanol oxidation by lactate is not dependent upon the stimulation of gluconeogenesis and the consequent increased demand for ATP. 3. As another test of the relationship between ethanol oxidation and gluconeogenesis, the initial lactate concentration was varied from 0.5mm to 10mm and pyruvate was added to give an initial [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio of 10. This substrate combination gave a large stimulation of ethanol oxidation (from 0.8 to 2.6mumol/min per g wet wt. of cells) at low lactate concentrations (0.5-2.0mm), but rates remained nearly constant (2.6-3.0mumol/min per g wet wt. of cells) at higher lactate concentrations (2.0-10mm). 4. In contrast, owing to the presence of ethanol, the rate of glucose synthesis was only slightly increased (from 0.08 to 0.12mumol/min per g wet wt. of cells) between 0.5mm- and 2.0mm-lactate and continued to increase (from 0.12 to 0.65mumol/min per g wet wt. of cells) with lactate concentrations between 2 and 10mm. 5. In the presence of ethanol, O(2) uptake increased with increasing substrate concentration over the entire range. 6. Changes in concentrations of glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate closely paralleled changes in the rate of ethanol oxidation. 7. In isolated hepatocytes, rates of ethanol oxidation are lower than those in vivo apparently because of depletion of malate-aspartate shuttle intermediates during cell preparation. Rates are returned to those observed in vivo by substrates that increase the intracellular concentration of shuttle metabolites.  相似文献   

12.
Ethanol increases agonist affinity for nicotinic receptors from Torpedo   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The presence of ethanol increases the apparent affinity with which acetylcholine and carbamylcholine elicit 86Rb+ flux from Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor-rich vesicles at 4 degrees C. Affinity increased exponentially with ethanol concentration, reaching nearly 200-fold by 3.0 M ethanol without sign of saturation. At submaximal agonist concentrations 50-100 mM ethanol enhanced flux by 15-35%, but the maximum agonist-induced flux was unaffected in quenched-flow assays. The effect was independent of the agonist and of the time over which flux was measured (5 ms to 10 s), indicating that ethanol acts before agonist-induced desensitization occurs. Ethanol also caused an increase in the apparent affinity with which acetylcholine caused fast desensitization. This affinity increase was equal to that for flux-response curves, but the maximum fast desensitization rate was increased 50% at 0.5 M ethanol. This was the most pronounced of ethanol's actions and has not been reported before. Prolonged preincubation with 1.0 M ethanol alone reduced agonist-induced flux activity by only 25%. The rate of agonist-induced slow desensitization was also increased, but neither of these effects was as marked as those on fast desensitization and cation flux.  相似文献   

13.
Aminooxyacetate, an inhibitor of pyridoxal-dependent enzymes, is routinely used to inhibit gamma-aminobutyrate metabolism. The bioenergetic effects of the inhibitor on guinea-pig cerebral cortical synaptosomes are investigated. It prevents the reoxidation of cytosolic NADH by the mitochondria by inhibiting the malate-aspartate shuttle, causing a 26 mV negative shift in the cytosolic NAD+/NADH redox potential, an increase in the lactate/pyruvate ratio and an inhibition of the ability of the mitochondria to utilize glycolytic pyruvate. The 3-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio decreased significantly, indicating oxidation of the mitochondrial NAD+/NADH couple. The results are consistent with a predominant role of the malate-aspartate shuttle in the reoxidation of cytosolic NADH in isolated nerve terminals. Aminooxyacetate limits respiratory capacity and lowers mitochondrial membrane potential and synaptosomal ATP/ADP ratios to an extent similar to glucose deprivation. Thus, the inhibitor induces a functional 'hypoglycaemia' in nerve terminals and should be used with caution.  相似文献   

14.
Control of reversible intracellular transfer of reducing potential.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Isolated rat liver mitochondria were incubated in the presence of a reconstituted malate-aspartate shuttle under carboxylating conditions in the presence of glutamate, octanoyl-carnitine and pyruvate, or a preset lactate/pyruvate ratio. The respiration and attendant energy state were varied with soluble F1-ATPase. Under these conditions reducing equivalents are exported due to pyruvate carboxylation. This was shown by lactate production from pyruvate and by a substantial increase in the lactate/pyruvate ratio. This led to a competition between malate export and energy-driven malate cycling via the malate-aspartate shuttle, resulting in a lowered redox segregation of the NAD systems between the mitochondrial and extramitochondrial spaces. If pyruvate carboxylation was blocked, this egress of reducing equivalents was also blocked, leading to an elevated value of redox segregation, delta G(redox) (in kJ) = -5.7 log(NAD+/NADHout)/(NAD+/NADHin) being then equal to approximately one-half of the membrane potential, in accordance with electrogenic glutamate/aspartate exchange. Reconstitution of malate-pyruvate cycling led to a further kinetic decrease in the original malate-aspartate shuttle-driven value of delta G(redox). Therefore, the value of segregation of reducing potential between mitochondria and cytosol caused by glutamate/aspartate exchange can be diminished kinetically by processes exporting reducing equivalents from mitochondria, such as pyruvate carboxylation and pyruvate cycling.  相似文献   

15.
Several inhibitors of aspartate aminotransferase, a key enzyme of the malate-aspartate shuttle, were investigated for their effects on cerebral oxidative metabolism in vitro. beta-Methylene-D,L-aspartate (2 mM), aminooxyacetate (0.1 mM), and D,L-vinylglycine (20 mM) all significantly reduced the activity of aspartate aminotransferase and the rate of oxygen consumption of rat cerebral cortex slices respiring on glucose. In the presence of beta-methyleneaspartate, a one-to-one correlation was found between the degree of inhibition of tissue respiration and the degree of inhibition of transaminase activity. Slices of rat liver incubated in the presence of glucose and beta-methyleneaspartate showed a similar one-to-one relationship between inhibition of oxygen comsumption and inhibition of aspartate aminotransferase activity, whereas with rat kidney cortex slices, the inhibition of aspartate aminotransferase activity was greater than the inhibition of oxygen consumption. Structural analogs of beta-methyleneaspartate (D,L-beta-methyl-D,L-aspartate, gamma-methyl-D,L-glutamate, and alpha-methyl-D,L-didehydroglutamate) that did not inhibit the activity of aspartate aminotransferase similarly did not inhibit the rate of oxygen consumption by cerebral cortex slices. In the presence of beta-methyleneaspartate, pyruvate oxidation by cerebral cortex slices was inhibited to almost the same extent as was glucose oxidation, and the oxidation of succinate was decreased by approximately 20%. The artificial electron acceptor phenazine methosulfate (0.1 mM) only partially overcame the beta-methyleneaspartate-mediated inhibition of respiration with glucose as substrate. The content of ATP and phosphocreatine declined steadily in slices incubated with glucose and beta-methyleneaspartate. At 1 h the concentration of lactate and the lactate/pyruvate ratio, an indicator of the cytoplasmic redox state, increased threefold, whereas the concentrations of malate, citrate, and aspartate decreased. The findings are interpreted in the context of the hypothesis that enzymes common to the malate-aspartate shuttle and the tricarboxylic acid cycle are physically complexed in brain, so that inhibition of aspartate aminotransferase, a component of the complex, impedes the flow of carbon through both metabolic pathways.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The effect of methotrexate (MTX) on the mitochondrial oxidation of cytosolic-reducing equivalents in HeLa cells was studied. MTX inhibited (100 per cent) malate dehydrogenase activity, but no effect was observed on that of GOT. MTX (0.5 mM) inhibited (100 per cent) the activity of reconstituted enzymatic system MDH-GOT, probably as a consequence of inhibition of malate dehydrogenase activity. MTX decreased pyruvate production (54 per cent), demonstrating its inhibitory action on the malate-aspartate shuttle. Blockage of the malate-aspartate shuttle by MTX accounts for the decrease in cellular energetic gain. The results obtained are consistent with the view that in HeLa cells, as well as in other tumour cells, the transport of reducing equivalents from cytoplasmic NADH into the respiratory chain of mitochondria is via the malate-aspartate shuttle.  相似文献   

17.
The function of glycerophosphate and malate-aspartate shuttles during glucose metabolism in two strains of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells was evaluated by several experimental approaches. The activities of the enzymes involved in these shuttle systems were assayed in the cytosolic and mitochondrial compartments after cell fractionation by the digitonin method. The glycerophosphate shuttle can be ruled out because of the lack of relevant enzymatic activities, and the failure of glucose to increase rotenone-inhibited respiration. Analysis of glycolytic flux in the presence of aminooxyacetate indicates that the activity of malate-aspartate shuttle may be very low. Balance studies of glucose uptake and lactate production suggest the existence of other pathways for the reoxidation of cytosolic NADH, which are acetyl-CoA dependent. Estimation of citrate synthase and ATP citrate lyase, in addition to the observed high activity of malate dehydrogenase, suggests a malate-citrate shuttle.  相似文献   

18.
The main aim of this study was to investigate whether enzyme levels of the malate-aspartate and alpha-glycerophosphate shuttles and of cytochrome b5 reductase in human skeletal muscle are affected by strength training. Muscle biopsy samples from the deltoid muscle of the nondominant arm in untrained (n = 12) and strength-trained (n = 12) subjects were compared. The strength-trained muscles were characterized by a tendency to a higher percentage of type I fibers (67 vs. 59%), a lower percentage of type IIb fibers (12 vs. 18%), 34% larger mean fiber areas, and 19% more capillaries per fiber (P less than 0.1). No difference was noted in levels of enzymes representing the citric acid cycle, fatty acid oxidation, and glycolysis, nor in the number of capillaries per square millimeter. Neither did the levels of malate-aspartate and alpha-glycerophosphate shuttle enzymes nor cytochrome b5 reductase differ. Levels of cytochrome b5 reductase correlated (r = 0.59, P less than 0.01) with levels of the mitochondrial marker enzyme citrate synthase. It is concluded that strength training does not appear to result in increased levels of NADH shuttle enzymes and cytochrome b5 reductase.  相似文献   

19.
In mammalian cells aerobic oxidation of glucose requires reducing equivalents produced in glycolytic phase to be channelled into the phosphorylating respiratory chain for the reduction of molecular oxygen. Data never presented before show that the oxidation rate of exogenous NADH supported by the malate-aspartate shuttle system (reconstituted in vitro with isolated liver mitochondria) is comparable to the rate obtained on activation of the cytosolic NADH/cytochrome c electron transport pathway. The activities of these two reducing equivalent transport systems are independent of each other and additive. NADH oxidation induced by the malate-aspartate shuttle is inhibited by aminooxyacetate and by rotenone and/or antimycin A, two inhibitors of the respiratory chain, while the NADH/cytochrome c system remains insensitive to all of them. The two systems may simultaneously or mutually operate in the transfer of reducing equivalents from the cytosol to inside the mitochondria. In previous reports we suggested that the NADH/cytochrome c system is expected to be functioning in apoptotic cells characterized by the presence of cytochrome c in the cytosol. As additional new finding the activity of reconstituted shuttle system is linked to the amount of α-ketoglutarate generated inside the mitochondria by glutamate dehydrogenase rather than by aspartate aminotransferase.  相似文献   

20.
《Insect Biochemistry》1986,16(4):677-685
The enzymes, which constitute the malate-aspatate cycle as a hydrogen shuttle, were examined in the eggs of Bombyx mori. Glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase (GOT) and malate dehydrogenase (MDH) were found in both cytosolic and mitochondrial compartments of the eggs of silkworms and had specific kinetic properties. The activities of these enzymes were correlated with embryonic development and attained maximum levels at larval hatching. The activities of mitochondrial GOT and MDH increased in diapause eggs which were chilled at 5°C for more than 20 days. A further and rapid increase in the activities of mitochondrial GOT and MDH was induced by HCl-treatment of the chilled eggs. However, activities of the mitochondrial enzymes in non-diapause eggs were not influenced by chilling. The reconstruction experiments with intact mitochondria showed the occurrence of the malate-aspartate cycle in the silkworm eggs. The functional significance of the malate-aspartate cycle as a hydrogen shuttle is discussed in relation to NAD-sorbitol dehydrogenase at the termination of diapause in silkworm eggs.  相似文献   

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