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1.
2.
Regulation of pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis in Pseudomonas synxantha ATCC 9890 was investigated and the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway enzyme activities were affected by pyrimidine supplementation in cells grown on glucose or succinate as a carbon source. In pyrimidine-grown ATCC 9890 cells, the activities of four de novo enzymes could be depressed which indicated possible repression of enzyme synthesis. To learn whether the pathway was repressible, pyrimidine limitation experiments were conducted using an orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (pyrE) mutant strain identified in this study. Compared to excess uracil growth conditions for the succinate-grown mutant strain cells, pyrimidine limitation of this strain caused dihydroorotase activity to increase about 3-fold while dihydroorotate dehydrogenase and orotidine 5'-monophosphate decarboxylase activities rose about 2-fold. Regulation of de novo pathway enzyme synthesis by pyrimidines appeared to be occurring. At the level of enzyme activity, aspartate transcarbamoylase activity in P. synxantha ATCC 9890 was strongly inhibited in vitro by pyrophosphate, UTP, ADP, ATP, CTP and GTP under saturating substrate concentrations.  相似文献   

3.
In order to examine the biosynthesis, interconversion, and degradation of purine and pyrimidine nucleotides in white spruce cells, radiolabeled adenine, adenosine, inosine, uracil, uridine, and orotic acid were supplied exogenously to the cells and the overall metabolism of these compounds was monitored. [8‐14C]adenine and [8‐14C]adenosine were metabolized to adenylates and part of the adenylates were converted to guanylates and incorporated into both adenine and guanine bases of nucleic acids. A small amount of [8‐14C]inosine was converted into nucleotides and incorporated into both adenine and guanine bases of nucleic acids. High adenosine kinase and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase activities in the extract suggested that adenosine and adenine were converted to AMP by these enzymes. No adenosine nucleosidase activity was detected. Inosine was apparently converted to AMP by inosine kinase and/or a non‐specific nucleoside phosphotransferase. The radioactivity of [8‐14C]adenosine, [8‐14C]adenine, and [8‐14C]inosine was also detected in ureide, especially allantoic acid, and CO2. Among these 3 precursors, the radioactivity from [8‐14C]inosine was predominantly incorporated into CO2. These results suggest the operation of a conventional degradation pathway. Both [2‐14C]uracil and [2‐14C]uridine were converted to uridine nucleotides and incorporated into uracil and cytosine bases of nucleic acids. The salvage enzymes, uridine kinase and uracil phosphoribosyltransferase, were detected in white spruce extracts. [6‐14C]orotic acid, an intermediate of the de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis, was efficiently converted into uridine nucleotides and also incorporated into uracil and cytosine bases of nucleic acids. High activity of orotate phosphoribosyltransferase was observed in the extracts. A large proportion of radioactivity from [2‐14C]uracil was recovered as CO2 and β‐ureidopropionate. Thus, a reductive pathway of uracil degradation is functional in these cells. Therefore, white spruce cells in culture demonstrate both the de novo and salvage pathways of purine and pyrimidine metabolism, as well as some degradation of the substrates into CO2.  相似文献   

4.
Pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway of Pseudomonas fluorescens   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Pyrimidine biosynthesis in Pseudomonas fluorescens strain A126 was investigated. In this study, de novo pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway mutant strains were isolated using both conventional mutagenesis and transposon mutagenesis. The resulting mutant strains were deficient for either aspartate transcarbamoylase, dihydroorotase or orotate phosphoribosyltransferase activity. Uracil, uridine or cytosine could support the growth of every mutant strain selected. In addition, the aspartate transcarbamoylase mutant strains could utilize orotic acid to sustain their growth while the orotidine-5'-monophosphate decarboxylase mutant strains grew slowly upon uridine 5'-monophosphate. The wild-type strain and the mutant strains were used to study possible regulation of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis in P. fluorescens. Dihydroorotase specific activity more than doubled after the wild-type cells were grown in orotic acid relative to unsupplemented minimal-medium-grown cells. Starving the mutant strains of pyrimidines also influenced the levels of several de novo pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway enzyme activities.  相似文献   

5.
Katahira R  Ashihara H 《Planta》2002,215(5):821-828
In order to obtain general metabolic profiles of pyrimidine ribo- and deoxyribonucleotides in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants, the in situ metabolic fate of various (14)C-labelled precursors in disks from growing potato tubers was investigated. The activities of key enzymes in potato tuber extracts were also studied. The following results were obtained. Of the intermediates in de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis, [(14)C]carbamoylaspartate was converted to orotic acid and [2-(14)C]orotic acid was metabolized to nucleotides and RNA. UMP synthase, a bifunctional enzyme with activities of orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.10) and orotidine 5'-monophosphate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.23), exhibited high activity. The rates of uptake of pyrimidine ribo- and deoxyribonucleosides by the disks were high, in the range 2.0-2.8 nmol (g FW)(-1) h(-1). The pyrimidine ribonucleosides, uridine and cytidine, were salvaged exclusively to nucleotides, by uridine/cytidine kinase (EC 2.7.1.48) and non-specific nucleoside phosphotransferase (EC 2.7.1.77). Cytidine was also salvaged after conversion to uridine by cytidine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.5) and the presence of this enzyme was demonstrated in cell-free tuber extracts. Deoxycytidine, a deoxyribonucleoside, was efficiently salvaged. Since deoxycytidine kinase (EC 2.7.1.74) activity was extremely low, non-specific nucleoside phosphotransferase (EC 2.7.1.77) probably participates in deoxycytidine salvage. Thymidine, which is another pyrimidine deoxyribonucleoside, was degraded and was not a good precursor for nucleotide synthesis. Virtually all the thymidine 5'-monophosphate synthesis from thymidine appeared to be catalyzed by phosphotransferase activity, since little thymidine kinase (EC 2.7.1.21) activity was detected. Of the pyrimidine bases, uracil, but not cytosine, was salvaged for nucleotide synthesis. Since uridine phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.3) activity was not detected, uracil phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.9) seems to play the major role in uracil salvage. Uracil was degraded by the reductive pathway via beta-ureidopropionate, but cytosine was not degraded. The activities of the cytosine-metabolizing enzymes observed in other organisms, pyrimidine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.2) and cytosine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.1), were not detected in potato tuber extracts. Operation of the de novo synthesis of deoxyribonucleotides via ribonucleotide reductase and of the salvage pathway of deoxycytidine was demonstrated via the incorporation of radioactivity from both [2-(14)C]cytidine and [2-(14)C]deoxycytidine into DNA. A novel pathway converting deoxycytidine to uracil nucleotides was found and deoxycytidine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.14), an enzyme that may participate in this pathway, was detected in the tuber extracts.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of exogenous adenine or uracil upon the de novo pathway for synthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides in Escherichia coli K12 was investigated. Parameters studied were levels of the enzymes carbamoyl phosphate synthase (EC 2.7.2.9), aspartate carbamoyltransferase (EC 2.1.3.2) and orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.10) and the intermediates carbamoyl phosphate, aspartate and orotate, together with the contributions of exogenous uracil and aspartate to intracellular pyrimidine nucleotide. Taken with earlier data [Bagnara, A.S. & Finch, L. R. (1974) Eur. J. Biochem- 41, 421--430] on contents of UTP, CTP and 5-phosphoribosyl 1-diphosphate in cultures of this strain after the addition of adenine or uracil, the results obtained provide new insights into the regulatory mechanisms operating on the pathway in vivo. These insights enable evaluation of the contributions of such factors as limitation for a substrate, feed-back allosteric control by end products and enzyme repression/depression mechanisms. The evidence presented indicates that depressed levels of orotate phosphoribosyltransferase in E. coli K12 result in the wasteful ultilization of asparatate for excess synthesis of pyrimidine nucleotide precursors during balanced growth of the strain in minimal medium. Exogenous adenine increases the excessive accumulation of these precursors by lowering the intracellular content of 5-phosphoribosyl 1-diphosphate (Bagnara and Finch, 1974). This causes a decrease in the conversion of orotate to orotidine 5'-monophosphate, thus lowering the utilization or orotate and its precursors for synthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides. Further, since the contents of these nucleotide end products are thereby decreased (Bagnara nad Finch, 1974), theri feed-back on the early steps in the pathway is diminished and the production of the precursors is increased. It is postulated that growth of E. coli K12 under these conditions is limited by a compound that is metabolically related to precursors to aspartate.  相似文献   

7.
Pyrimidine metabolism was investigated at various stages ofsomatic embryo development of white spruce (Picea glauca). The contribution of thede novo and the salvage pathways of pyrimidine biosynthesis to nucleotide and nucleic acid formation and the catabolism of pyrimidine was estimated by the exogenously supplied [6-14C]orotic acid, an intermediate of thede novo pathway, and with [2-14C]uridine and [2-14C]uracil, substrates of the salvage pathways. Thede novo pathway was very active throughout embryo development. More than 80 percnt; of [6-14C]orotic acid taken up by the tissue was utilized for nucleotide and nucleic acid synthesis in all stages of this process. The salvage pathways of uridine and uracil were also operative. Relatively high nucleic acid biosynthesis from uridine was observed, whereas the contribution of uracil salvage to the pyrimidine nucleotide and nucleic acid synthesis was extremely limited. A large proportion of uracil was degraded as 14CO2, probably via β-ureidopropionate. Among the enzymes of pyrimidine metabolism, orotate phosphoribosyltransferase was high during the initial phases of embryo development, after which it gradually declined. Uridine kinase, responsible for the salvage of uridine, showed an opposite pattern, since its activity increased as embryos developed. Low activities of uracil phosphoribosyltransferase and non-specific nucleoside phosphotransferase were also detected throughout the developmental period. These results suggest that the flux of thede novo and salvage pathways of pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesisin vivo is roughly controlled by the amount of these enzymes. However, changing patterns of enzyme activity during embryo development that were measuredin vitro did not exactly correlate with the flux estimated by the radioactive precursors. Therefore, other fine control mechanisms, such as the fluctuation of levels of substrates and/or effectors may also participate to the real control of pyrimidine metabolism during white spruce somatic embryo development.  相似文献   

8.
9.
AIMS: To investigate the regulation of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis in the polyhydroxyalkanoate-producing bacterium Pseudomonas oleovorans at the level of enzyme synthesis and at the level of aspartate transcarbamoylase activity. METHODS AND RESULTS: The effect of pyrimidine supplementation on the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway enzyme activities was analysed relative to carbon source. Two uracil auxotrophs of P. oleovorans were isolated that were deficient for aspartate transcarbamoylase or dihydroorotase activity. Pyrimidine limitation of these auxotrophs increased the de novo pathway activities to varying degrees depending on the pathway mutation and the carbon source utilized. At the level of aspartate transcarbamoylase activity, pyrophosphate and uridine ribonucleotides were found to be strongly inhibitory of the Ps. oleovorans enzyme. CONCLUSIONS: Pyrimidine biosynthesis is regulated in Ps. oleovorans. Taxonomically, the regulation of the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway appeared dissimilar from previously studied Pseudomonas species. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: New insights regarding the regulation of nucleic acid metabolism are provided that could prove significant during the genetic manipulation of Ps. oleovorans to increase the synthesis of polyhydroxyalkanoates.  相似文献   

10.
The concentration of uridine in the media of cultured L1210 cells was maintained within the concentration range found in plasma (1 to 10 microM) to determine if such concentrations are sufficient to satisfy the pyrimidine requirements of a population of dividing cells and to determine if cells utilize de novo and/or salvage pathways when exposed to plasma concentrations of uridine. When cells were incubated in the presence of N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate to block de novo biosynthesis, plasma concentrations of uridine maintained normal cell growth. De novo pyrimidine biosynthesis, as determined by [14C]sodium bicarbonate incorporation into uracil nucleotides, was affected by the low concentrations of uridine found in the plasma. Below 1 microM uridine, de novo biosynthesis was not affected; between 3 and 5 microM uridine, de novo biosynthesis was inhibited by approximately 50%; and above 12 microM uridine, de novo biosynthesis was inhibited by greater than 95%. Inhibition of de novo biosynthesis correlated with an increase in the uracil nucleotide pool. The de novo pathway was much more sensitive to the uracil nucleotide pool size than was the salvage pathway, such that when de novo biosynthesis was inhibited by greater than 95% the uracil nucleotide pool continued to expand and the cells continued to take up [14C]uridine. Thus, the pyrimidine requirements of cultured L1210 cells can be met by concentrations of uridine found in the plasma and, when exposed to such physiologic concentrations, L1210 cells decrease their dependency on de novo biosynthesis and utilize their salvage pathway. Circulating uridine, therefore, may be of physiologic importance and could be an important determinant in anti-pyrimidine chemotherapy.  相似文献   

11.
The five de novo enzyme activities unique to the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway were found to be present in Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes ATCC 17440. A mutant strain with 31-fold reduced orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (encoded by pyrE) activity was isolated that exhibited a pyrimidine requirement for uracil or cytosine. Uptake of the nucleosides uridine or cytidine by wild-type or mutant cells was not detectable; explaining the inability of the mutant strain to utilize either nucleoside to satisfy its pyrimidine requirement. When the wildtype strain was grown in the presence of uracil, the activities of the five de novo enzymes were depressed. Pyrimidine limitation of the mutant strain led to the increase in aspartate transcarbamoylase and dihydroorotate dehydrogenase activities by more than 3-fold, and dihydroorotase and orotidine 5-monophosphate decarboxylase activities about 1.5-fold, as compared to growth with excess uracil. It appeared that the syntheses of the de novo enzymes were regulated by pyrimidines. In vitro regulation of aspartate transcarbamoylase activity in P. pseudoalcaligenes ATCC 17440 was investigated using saturating substrate concentrations; transcarbamoylase activity was inhibited by Pi, PPi, uridine ribonucleotides, ADP, ATP, GDP, GTP, CDP, and CTP.  相似文献   

12.
Giardia lamblia, an aerotolerant anaerobe, respires in the presence of oxygen by a flavin, iron-sulfur protein-mediated electron transport system. Glucose appears to be the only sugar catabolized by the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas and hexose monophosphate pathways, and energy is produced by substrate level phosphorylation. Substrates are incompletely oxidized to CO2, ethanol and acetate by nonsedimentable enzymes. The lack of incorporation of inosine, hypoxanthine, xanthine, formate or glycine into nucleotides indicates an absence of de novo purine synthesis. Only adenine, adenosine, guanine and guanosine are salvaged, and no interconversion of these purines was detected. Salvage of these purines and their nucleosides is accomplished by adenine phosphoribosyltransferase, adenosine hydrolase, guanosine phosphoribosyltransferase and guanine hydrolase. The absence of de novo pyrimidine synthesis was confirmed by the lack of incorporation of bicarbonate, orotate and aspartate into nucleotides, and by the lack of detectable levels of the enzymes of de novo pyrimidine synthesis. Salvage appears to be accomplished by the action of uracil phosphoribosyltransferase, uridine hydrolase, uridine phosphotransferase, cytidine deaminase, cytidine hydrolase, cytosine phosphoribosyltransferase and thymidine phosphotransferase. Nucleotides of uracil may be converted to nucleotides of cytosine by cytidine triphosphate synthetase, but thymidylate synthetase and dihydrofolate reductase activities were not detected. Uptake of pyrmidine nucleosides, and perhaps pyrimidines, appears to be accomplished by carrier-mediated transport, and the common site for uptake of uridine and cytidine is distinct from the site for thymidine. Thymine does not appear to be incorporated into nucleotide pools. Giardia trophozoites appear to rely on preformed lipids rather than synthesizing them de novo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Biosynthesis and scavenging of pyrimidines by pathogenic mycobacteria   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Mycobacterium microti incorporated a wide range of exogenously supplied pyrimidines into its nucleic acids. M. avium incorporated a relatively narrow range of pyrimidines but both M. avium and M. microti when recovered after growth in vivo incorporated a slightly wider range of pyrimidines than the same strains grown in vitro. M. microti and M. leprae could not take up uridine nucleotides directly but could utilize the pyrimidines by hydrolysing them to uridine and then taking up the uridine. Pyrimidine biosynthesis, judged by the ability to incorporate carbon from CO2 or aspartate into pyrimidines was readily detected in non-growing suspensions of M. microti and M. avium harvested from Dubos medium, which does not contain pyrimidines. The biosynthetic activity was diminished in mycobacteria grown in vivo when there is likely to be a source of pyrimidines which they might use. Relative activities for pyrimidine biosynthesis de novo in M. microti were 100 for cells isolated from Dubos medium, 6 for cells isolated from Dubos medium containing the pyrimidine cytidine and 11 from cells recovered after growth in mice. In contrast, relative activities for a scavenging reaction, uracil incorporation, were 100, 71 and 59, respectively. Three key enzymes in the pathway of pyrimidine biosynthesis de novo were detected in M. microti and M. avium. Two, dihydroorotate synthase and orotate phosphoribosyltransferase appeared to be constitutive in M. microti and M. avium. Aspartate transcarbamoylase activity was higher in these mycobacteria grown in vivo than in Dubos medium but it was repressed in M. microti or M. avium grown in Dubos medium in the presence of 50 microM-pyrimidine. Aspartate transcarbamoylase was strongly inhibited by the feedback inhibitors ATP, CTP and UTP. Enzymes for scavenging pyrimidines were detected at low specific activities in all mycobacteria studied. Activities of phosphoribosyltransferases, enzymes that convert bases directly to nucleotides, were not related to the ability of intact mycobacteria to take up pyrimidine bases while activities of pyrimidine nucleoside kinases were generally related to the ability of intact mycobacteria to take up nucleosides. Phosphoribosyltransferase activity for uracil, cytosine, orotic acid and--in organisms grown in Dubos medium with 50 microM-uridine-thymine, as well as kinases for uridine, deoxyuridine, cytidine and thymidine were detected in M. microti. However, M. avium only contained uracil and orotate phosphoribosyltransferase, uridine, cytidine and thymidine kinase, and additionally deoxyuridine kinase when grown axenically with 50 microM-uracil, reflecting its more limited abilities in pyrimidine scavenging.  相似文献   

14.
The imposition of a partial drying treatment (PDT) on mature white spruce somatic embryos is a necessary step for successful germination and embryo conversion into plantlets. Purine and pyrimidine metabolism was investigated during the PDT of white spruce somatic embryos by following the metabolic fate of 14C-labeled adenine, adenosine, and inosine, as purine intermediates, and orotic acid, uridine, and uracil, as pyrimidine intermediates, as well as examining the activities of key enzymes. Both the salvage and the degradation pathways of purines were operative in partially dried embryos. Adenine and adenosine were extensively salvaged by the enzymes adenine phosphoribosyltransferase and adenosine kinase, respectively. The activity of the former enzyme increased during the PDT. In both mature and partially dried embryos, a large proportion of inosine was recovered as degradation products. The de novo pathway of pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis, estimated by the incorporation of orotic acid into the nucleotides and nucleic acids, was high at the end of the maturation period and declined during the PDT. Uridine was the main substrate for the pyrimidine salvage pathway, since a large proportion of uracil was recovered as degradation products, i.e. CO2 and β - ureidopropionic acid in both mature and partially dried embryos. Uridine was mainly salvaged by uridine kinase, whose activity was found to increase during the PDT. Taken together these results indicate that the PDT might be required for increasing the activity of adenine and uridine salvage enzymes, which could contribute to the enlargement of the nucleotide pool required at the onset of germination.  相似文献   

15.
AIMS: To investigate the regulation of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis in the bacterium Pseudomonas resinovorans ATCC 14235. METHODS AND RESULTS: The pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway enzymes were measured in cell extracts from P. resinovorans ATCC 14235 and from an auxotroph lacking orotate phosphoribosyltransferase activity. Pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway enzyme activities in ATCC 14235 were affected by the addition of pyrimidine bases to the culture medium. The de novo enzyme activities of the phosphoribosyltransferase mutant strain increased after pyrimidine starvation indicating possible repression of the pathway by a pyrimidine-related compound. Aspartate transcarbamoylase activity in ATCC 14235 was inhibited in vitro by ATP, UTP and pyrophosphate. CONCLUSIONS: Pyrimidine biosynthesis in P. resinovorans was regulated at the level of enzyme synthesis and at the level of activity for aspartate transcarbamoylase. Its regulation of enzyme synthesis seemed to be similar to what has been observed in the taxonomically related species Pseudomonas oleovorans. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: This study found that pyrimidine biosynthesis is regulated in P. resinovorans. This could prove helpful to future studies investigating polyhydroxyalkanoate production by the bacterium.  相似文献   

16.
The major pathways of ribonucleotide biosynthesis in Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides have been proposed from studies on its use of radioactive purines and pyrimidines. To interpret more fully the observed pattern of pyrimidine usage, cell extracts of this organism have been assayed for several enzymes associated with the salvage synthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides. M. mycoides possessed uracil phosphoribosyltransferase, uridine phosphorylase, uridine (cytidine) kinase, uridine 5'-monophosphate kinase, and cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthetase. No activity for phosphorolysis of cytidine was detected, and no in vitro conditions were found to give measurable deamination of cytidine. Of the two potential pathways for incorporation of uridine, our data suggest that this precursor would largely undergo initial phosphorolysis to uracil and ribose-1-phosphate. Conversely, cytidine is phosphorylated directly to cytidine 5'-monophosphate in its major utilization, although conversion of cytidine to uracil, uridine, and uridine nucleotide has been observed in vivo, at least when uracil is provided in the growth medium. Measurements of intracellular nucleotide contents and their changes on additions of pyrimidine precursors have allowed suggestions as to the operation of regulatory mechanisms on pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis in M. mycoides in vivo. With uracil alone or uracil plus uridine as precursors of pyrimidine ribonucleotides, the regulation of uracil phosphoribosyltransferase and cytidine 5'-triphosphate synthetase is probably most important in determining the rate of pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis. When cytidine supplements uracil in the growth medium, control of cytidine kinase activity would also be important in this regard.  相似文献   

17.
Cellular brassinolide (BL) levels regulate the development of Brassica napus microspore-derived embryos (MDEs). Synthesis and degradation of nucleotides were measured on developing MDEs treated with BL or brassinazole (BrZ), a biosynthetic inhibitor of BL. Purine metabolism was investigated by following the metabolic fate of 14C-labelled adenine and adenosine, substrates of the salvage pathway, and inosine, an intermediate of both salvage and degradation pathways. For pyrimidine, orotic acid, uridine and uracil were employed as markers for the de novo (orotic acid), salvage (uridine and uracil), and degradation (uracil) pathways. Our results indicate that utilization of adenine, adenosine, and uridine for nucleotides and nucleic acids increased significantly in BL-treated embryos at day 15 and remained high throughout the culture period. These metabolic changes were ascribed to the activities of the respective salvage enzymes: adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.7), adenosine kinase (EC 2.7.1.20), and uridine kinase (EC 2.7.1.48), which were induced by BL applications. The BL promotion of salvage synthesis was accompanied by a reduction in the activities of the degradation pathways, suggesting the presence of competitive anabolic and catabolic mechanisms utilizing the labelled precursors. In BrZ-treated embryos, with depleted BL levels, the salvage activity of both purine and pyrimidine nucleotides was reduced and this was associated to structural abnormalities and poor embryonic performance. In these embryos, the activities of major salvage enzymes were consistently lower to those measured in their control (untreated) counterparts.  相似文献   

18.
Control of pyrimidine biosynthesis was examined in Pseudomonas mucidolens ATCC 4685 and the five de novo pyrimidine biosynthetic enzyme activities unique to this pathway were influenced by pyrimidine supplementation in cells grown on glucose or succinate as a carbon source. When uracil was supplemented to glucose-grown ATCC 4685 cells, activities of four de novo enzymes were depressed which indicated possible repression of enzyme synthesis. To learn whether the pathway was repressible, pyrimidine limitation experiments were conducted using an orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (pyrE) mutant strain identified in this study. Compared to excess uracil growth conditions for the glucose-grown mutant strain cells, pyrimidine limitation of this strain caused aspartate transcarbamoylase, dihydroorotase and dihydroorotate dehydrogenase activities to increase by more than 3-fold while OMP decarboxylase activity increased by 2.7-fold. The syntheses of the de novo enzymes appeared to be regulated by pyrimidines. At the level of enzyme activity, aspartate transcarbamoylase activity in P. mucidolens ATCC 4685 was subject to inhibition at saturating substrate concentrations. Transcarbamoylase activity was strongly inhibited by UTP, ADP, ATP, GTP and pyrophosphate.  相似文献   

19.
Pyrimidine synthesis in Burkholderia cepacia ATCC 25416   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
K. LI AND T.P. WEST. 1995. Pyrimidine synthesis in the food spoilage agent Burkholderia cepacia ATCC 25416 was investigated. The five de novo pathway enzymes of pyrimidine biosynthesis were found to be active in B. cepacia ATCC 25416 and growth of this strain on uracil had an effect on the de novo enzyme activities. The in vitro regulation of aspartate transcarbamoylase activity in B. cepacia ATCC 25416 was studied and its activity was inhibited by PPi, ATP, GTP, CTP and UTP. The enzymes cytidine deaminase, uridine phosphorylase and cytosine deaminase were found to be active in the salvage of pyrimidines in ATCC 25416. Overall, de novo pyrimidine synthesis in B. cepacia ATCC 25416 was regulated at the level of enzyme activity and its pyrimidine salvage enzymes differed from those found in B. cepacia ATCC 17759.  相似文献   

20.
The deep-sea tube worm Riftia pachyptila (Vestimentifera) from hydrothermal vents lives in an intimate symbiosis with a sulfur-oxidizing bacterium. That involves specific interactions and obligatory metabolic exchanges between the two organisms. In this work, we analyzed the contribution of the two partners to the biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides through both the "de novo" and "salvage" pathways. The first three enzymes of the de novo pathway, carbamyl-phosphate synthetase, aspartate transcarbamylase, and dihydroorotase, were present only in the trophosome, the symbiont-containing tissue. The study of these enzymes in terms of their catalytic and regulatory properties in both the trophosome and the isolated symbiotic bacteria provided a clear indication of the microbial origin of these enzymes. In contrast, the succeeding enzymes of this de novo pathway, dihydroorotate dehydrogenase and orotate phosphoribosyltransferase, were present in all body parts of the worm. This finding indicates that the animal is fully dependent on the symbiont for the de novo biosynthesis of pyrimidines. In addition, it suggests that the synthesis of pyrimidines in other tissues is possible from the intermediary metabolites provided by the trophosomal tissue and from nucleic acid degradation products since the enzymes of the salvage pathway appear to be present in all tissues of the worm. Analysis of these salvage pathway enzymes in the trophosome strongly suggested that these enzymes belong to the worm. In accordance with this conclusion, none of these enzyme activities was found in the isolated bacteria. The enzymes involved in the production of the precursors of carbamyl phosphate and nitrogen assimilation, glutamine synthetase and nitrate reductase, were also investigated, and it appears that these two enzymes are present in the bacteria.  相似文献   

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