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1.
Quinolinate inhibits several aminotransferases (ornithine, alanine, and aspartate). However, it is considerably more potent as an inhibitor of liver and heart cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase. It is a much less potent inhibitor of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferases. Quinolinate is bound to the active site of cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase. It has a much greater affinity for the pyridoximine-P than the pyridoxal-P form of the enzyme. According to kinetic results, the inhibition or dissociation constant of quinolinate is 0.2 and 20 mm, respectively, for the pyridoxamine-P and the pyridoxal-P forms of the enzyme. Since quinolinate is mainly bound to the pyridoxamine-P form: (a) it is a potent competitive inhibitor of α-ketoglutarate but has little effect when α-ketoglutarate is saturating even if the level of aspartate is low; (b) it decreases the effect of α-ketoglutarate on the absorption spectrum of the pyridoxamine-P form; and (c) it enhances the effect of glutamate on the absorption spectrum of the pyridoxal-P form. Quinolinate is also apparently bound to the apoenzyme since it inhibits reconstitution by either pyridoxamine-P or pyridoxal-P. Since quinolinate is a competitive inhibitor of α-ketoglutarate, it is possible that part of the inhibitory effect of quinolinate on hepatic gluconeogenesis could result from quinolinate inhibiting the conversion of aspartate to oxalacetate by the cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase. Quinolinate has no effect on either rat or bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase or on kidney glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

2.
Binding of 8-anilinonaphthalene sulfonate (ANS) to glutamate dehydrogenase results in enzyme inhibition and a marked increase in the fluorescence of ANS. Perphenazine and GTP increase the fluorescence of ANS-glutamate dehydrogenase secondary to their known ability to alter the conformation of this enzyme. Aspartate aminotransferases, which form enzyme-enzyme complexes with glutamate dehydrogenase, produce a slight decrease in the fluorescence of ANS-glutamate dehydrogenase.While ANS and perphenazine are allosteric inhibitors of reactions catalyzed by free glutamate dehydrogenase, they do not inhibit reactions catalyzed by aminotransferaseglutamate dehydrogenase complexes. This is in spite of the fact that the aminotransferase does not prevent either ANS or perphenazine from being bound to glutamate dehydrogenase. Therefore, reactions catalyzed by the enzyme-enzyme complex are apparently not inhibited by ANS or perphenazine because binding of the aminotransferase to glutamate dehydrogenase prevents these ligands from altering the conformation of glutamate dehydrogenase. This is consistent with the fact that the aminotransferase also prevents perphenazine from enhancing the fluorescence of ANS-glutamate dehydrogenase.Reactions catalyzed by the enzyme-enzyme complex are inhibited by GTP and the aminotransferase does not prevent GTP from enhancing the fluorescence of ANS-glutamate dehydrogenase. Therefore, binding of the aminotransferase to glutamate dehydrogenase does not prevent GTP from altering the conformation of glutamate dehydrogenase.The fact that the aminotransferase completely prevents perphenazine from increasing the fluorescence of ANS-glutamate dehydrogenase suggests that in the enzymeenzyme complex each glutamate dehydrogenase polypeptide chain can be bound to an aminotransferase polypeptide chain. This would mean that three aminotransferase molecules can be bound to each monomeric unit (Mr 3 × 105) of glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

3.
Five synthetic, conformationally restricted alpha-ketoglutarate analogues were tested as substrates of a variety of dehydrogenases and aminotransferases. The compounds were found not to be detectable substrates of glutamate dehydrogenase, L-leucine dehydrogenase, L-phenylalanine dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, glutamine transaminase K, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex. However, two thermostable aminotransferases were identified that catalyze transamination between several L-amino acids (e.g., phenylalanine, glutamate) and the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues of interest. Transamination between L-glutamate (or L-phenylalanine) and the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues was found to be 0.13 to 1.08 micromol/h/mg at 45 degrees C. The products resulting from transamination between L-phenylalanine and the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues were separated by reverse-phase HPLC, and the newly formed amino acid analogues were analyzed by LC-MS in an ion selective mode. In each case, the ions obtained were consistent with the expected product and a representative example is provided. The possibility existed that although the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues are not substrates of the dehydrogenases and most of the aminotransferases investigated, they might be good inhibitors. Weak inhibition of aminotransferases and glutamate dehydrogenase was found with some of the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues. The newly available thermostable aminotransferases may have general utility in the synthesis of bulky L-amino acids from the corresponding alpha-keto acids.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of added ammonia on the intracellular fluxes in hybridoma cells was investigated by metabolic-flux balancing techniques. It was found that, in ammonia-stressed hybridoma cells, the glutamate-dehydrogenase flux is in the reverse direction compared to control cells. This demonstrates that hybridoma cells are able to prevent the accumulation of ammonia by converting ammonia and alpha-ketoglutarate into glutamate. The additional glutamate that is produced by this flux, as compared to the control culture, is converted by the reactions catalyzed by alanine aminotransferase (45% of the extra glutamate) and aspartate aminotransferase (37%), and a small amount is used for the biosynthesis of proline (6%). The remaining 12% of the extra glutamate is secreted into the culture medium. The data suggest that glutamate dehydrogenase is a potential target for metabolic engineering to prevent ammonia accumulation in high-cell-density culture.  相似文献   

5.
Binding experiments indicate that mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase can associate with the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex and that mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase can associate with this binary complex to form a ternary complex. Formation of this ternary complex enables low levels of the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex, in the presence of the aminotransferase, to reverse inhibition of malate oxidation by glutamate. Thus, glutamate can react with the aminotransferase in this complex without glutamate inhibiting production of oxalacetate by the malate dehydrogenase in the complex. The conversion of glutamate to alpha-ketoglutarate could also be facilitated because in the trienzyme complex, oxalacetate might be directly transferred from malate dehydrogenase to the aminotransferase. In addition, association of malate dehydrogenase with these other two enzymes enhances malate dehydrogenase activity due to a marked decrease in the Km of malate. The potential ability of the aminotransferase to transfer directly alpha-ketoglutarate to the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex in this multienzyme system plus the ability of succinyl-CoA, a product of this transfer, to inhibit citrate synthase could play a role in preventing alpha-ketoglutarate and citrate from accumulating in high levels. This would maintain the catalytic activity of the multienzyme system because alpha-ketoglutarate and citrate allosterically inhibit malate dehydrogenase and dissociate this enzyme from the multienzyme system. In addition, citrate also competitively inhibits fumarase. Consequently, when the levels of alpha-ketoglutarate and citrate are high and the multienzyme system is not required to convert glutamate to alpha-ketoglutarate, it is inactive. However, control by citrate would be expected to be absent in rapidly dividing tumors which characteristically have low mitochondrial levels of citrate.  相似文献   

6.
We have developed an effective method for the synthesis of various D-amino acids from the corresponding α-keto acids and ammonia by coupling four enzyme reactions catalyzed by D-amino acid aminotransferase, glutamate racemase, glutamate dehydrogenase, and formate dehydrogenase. In this system, D-glutamate is continuously regenerated from α-ketoglutarate, ammonia and NADH by the coupled reaction of glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamate racemase, and used as an amino donor for the enantioselective D-amino acid synthesis by the D-amino acid aminotransferase reaction. The unidirectional formate dehydrogenase reaction is also coupled to regenerate NADH consumed. Under the optimum conditions, D-enantiomers of valine, alanine, α-keto analogues with a molar yield higher than 80%.  相似文献   

7.
Short-term metabolic fate of [13N]ammonia in rat liver in vivo   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The short-term metabolic fate of [13N]ammonia in the livers of adult male, anesthetized rats was determined. Following a bolus injection of tracer quantities of [13N]ammonia into the portal vein, the single pass extraction was approximately 93%, in good agreement with the portal-hepatic vein difference of approximately 90%. High performance liquid chromatographic analysis of deproteinized liver samples indicated that labeled nitrogen is exchanged rapidly among components of: mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase reactions and cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase reactions (t1/2 for the exchange of label toward equilibrium is on the order of seconds). Comparison of specific activities of glutamate and ammonia suggests that at 5 s most labeled glutamate was mitochondrial, whereas at 60 s approximately 93% was cytosolic; this change is presumably brought about by the combined action of the mitochondrial and cytosolic aspartate aminotransferases and the aspartate carrier of the malate-aspartate shuttle. Specific activity measurements of glutamate, alanine, and aspartate are in accord with the proposal by Williamson et al. (Williamson, D.H., Lopes-Vieira, O., and Walker, B. (1967) Biochem. J. 104, 497-502) that the components of the aspartate aminotransferase reaction are in thermodynamic equilibrium, whereas the components of the alanine aminotransferase reaction are in equilibrium but compartmented in the rat liver. Despite considerable label in citrulline at early time points, no radioactivity (less than or equal to 0.25% of the total) was detected in carbamyl phosphate, suggesting very efficient conversion to citrulline with little free carbamyl phosphate accumulating in the mitochondria. Our data also show that some portal vein-derived ammonia is metabolized to glutamine in the rat liver, but the amount is small (approximately 7% of that metabolized to urea) in part because liver glutamine synthetase is located in a small population of perivenous cells "downstream" from the urea cycle-containing periportal cells. Finally, no tracer evidence could be found for the participation of the purine nucleotide cycle in ammonia production from aspartate. The present work continues to emphasize the usefulness of [13N]ammonia for short-term metabolic studies under truly tracer conditions, particularly when turnover times are on the order of seconds.  相似文献   

8.
Ornithine aminotransferase and 4-aminobutyrate aminotransferase are related pyridoxal phosphate-dependent enzymes having different substrate specificities. The atomic structures of these enzymes have shown (i) that active site differences are limited to the steric positions occupied by two tyrosine residues in ornithine aminotransferase and (ii) that, uniquely among related, structurally characterized aminotransferases, the conserved arginine that binds the alpha-carboxylate of alpha-amino acids interacts tightly with a glutamate residue. To determine the contribution of these residues to the specificities of the enzymes, we analyzed site-directed mutants of ornithine aminotransferase by rapid reaction kinetics, x-ray crystallography, and 13C NMR spectroscopy. Mutation of one tyrosine (Tyr-85) to isoleucine, as found in aminobutyrate aminotransferase, decreased the rate of the reaction of the enzyme with ornithine 1000-fold and increased that with 4-aminobutyrate 16-fold, indicating that Tyr-85 is a major determinant of specificity toward ornithine. Unexpectedly, the limiting rate of the second half of the reaction, conversion of ketoglutarate to glutamate, was greatly increased, although the kinetics of the reverse reaction were unaffected. A mutant in which the glutamate (Glu-235) that interacts with the conserved arginine was replaced by alanine retained its regiospecificity for the delta-amino group of ornithine, but the glutamate reaction was enhanced 650-fold, whereas only a 5-fold enhancement of the ketoglutarate reaction rate resulted. A model is proposed in which conversion of the enzyme to its pyridoxamine phosphate form disrupts the internal glutamate-arginine interaction, thus enabling ketoglutarate but not glutamate to be a good substrate.  相似文献   

9.
A new spectrophotometric procedure is described for determining glutamate-dependent activities of aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and ornithine aminotransferase with NADPH-linked glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) from nitrate-grown Stichococcus bacillaris. The algal NADPH-GDH is highly specific for oxoglutarate and can catalyze the reduction of this keto acid in the presence of high glutamate concentrations, and thus is suitable for the measurement of oxoglutarate produced in glutamate-dependent amino-transferase reactions. The alga produces large amounts of NADPH-GDH which can be adequately purified in a few simple steps. The purified enzyme can be stored at 4 degrees C for several weeks without any detectable loss of activity. The algal NADPH-GDH can also be used for the estimation of small amounts of oxoglutarate in aqueous extracts.  相似文献   

10.
D Cotariu  S Evans  J L Zaidman 《Enzyme》1985,34(4):196-200
Previous observations that valproic acid (VPA) causes hepatic damage prompted us to investigate the effect of large doses of the drug (0.6, 1.2 and 1.8 mmol/kg/day) on a number of liver enzymes located on different subcellular fractions. In mitochondria, glutamate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase and ornithine carbamoyltransferase were significantly increased (1.8 mmol/kg/day). In microsomes, gamma-glutamyltransferase activity increased significantly (1.8 mmol/kg) and cytochrome P-450 content decreased significantly (1.2 and 1.8 mmol/kg). In cytosol, both aspartate and alanine aminotransferase activities were increased at all dose levels. These results indicate that VPA induces dose-dependent changes in some liver enzyme activities.  相似文献   

11.
Leucine and monomethyl succinate initiate insulin release, and glutamine potentiates leucine-induced insulin release. Alanine enhances and malate inhibits leucine plus glutamine-induced insulin release. The insulinotropic effect of leucine is at least in part secondary to its ability to activate glutamate oxidation by glutamate dehydrogenase (Sener, A., Malaisse-Lagae, F., and Malaisse, W. J. (1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 78, 5460-5464). The effect of these other amino acids or Krebs cycle intermediates on insulin release also correlates with their effects on glutamate dehydrogenase and their ability to regulate inhibition of this enzyme by alpha-ketoglutarate. For example, glutamine enhances insulin release and islet glutamate dehydrogenase activity only in the presence of leucine. This could be because leucine, especially in the presence of alpha-ketoglutarate, increases the Km of glutamate and converts alpha-ketoglutarate from a noncompetitive to a competitive inhibitor of glutamate. Thus, in the presence of leucine, this enzyme is more responsive to high levels of glutamate and less responsive to inhibition by alpha-ketoglutarate. Malate could decrease and alanine could increase insulin release because malate increases the generation of alpha-ketoglutarate in islet mitochondria via the combined malate dehydrogenase-aspartate aminotransferase reaction, and alanine could decrease the level of alpha-ketoglutarate via the alanine transaminase reaction. Monomethyl succinate alone is as stimulatory of insulin release as leucine alone, and glutamine enhances the action of both. Succinyl coenzyme A, leucine, and GTP are all bound in the same region on glutamate dehydrogenase, where GTP is a potent inhibitor and succinyl coenzyme A and leucine are comparable activators. Thus, the insulinotropic properties of monomethyl succinate could result from it increasing the level of succinyl coenzyme A and decreasing the level of GTP via the succinate thiokinase reaction.  相似文献   

12.
The total production of alpha-ketoglutarate from glutamate and isocitrate was estimated in isolated rat liver mitochondria. Mitochondrial alanine aminotransferase converts glutamate to alpha-ketoglutarate [A.K. Groen et al. (1982) Eur. J. Biochem. 122, 87-93], thus participating in the net formation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates from glutamate. The present investigation indicates a significant contribution of the alanine aminotransferase reaction to glutamate oxidation by isolated rat liver mitochondria in the presence of bicarbonate. It amounted to 41-74 and 7-31% of the total utilization of glutamate in States 4 and 3, respectively, in various conditions in vitro, at pyruvate concentrations in the range of 0.1-10 mM. The participation of glutamate in the total production of alpha-ketoglutarate at physiological concentrations of glutamate, citrate, and isocitrate varied in the range of 72-82%. It was calculated that alpha-ketoglutarate formation by the reaction of alanine aminotransferase amounted to 30 and 5% of the total mitochondrial alpha-ketoglutarate production in States 4 and 3, respectively, at physiological concentrations of its precursors and in the presence of 0.5 mM malate and 0.1 mM pyruvate. It constituted 77-97% of the net production of the tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates from glutamate in rat liver mitochondria. The importance of alpha-ketoglutarate production via the alanine aminotransferase reaction under various physiological conditions is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The developmental change of endogenous glutamate, as correlated to that of gamma-glutamyl transferase and other glutamate metabolizing enzymes such as phosphate activated glutaminase, glutamate dehydrogenase and aspartate, GABA and ornithine aminotransferases, has been investigated in cultured cerebral cortex interneurons and cerebellar granule cells. These cells are considered to be GABAergic and glutamatergic, respectively. Similar studies have also been performed in cerebral cortex and cerebellum in vivo. The developmental profiles of endogenous glutamate in cultured cerebral cortex interneurons and cerebellar granule cells corresponded rather closely with that of gamma-glutamyl transferase and not with other glutamate metabolizing enzymes. In cerebral cortex and cerebellum in vivo the developmental profiles of endogenous glutamate, gamma-glutamyl transferase and phosphate activated glutaminase corresponded with each other during the first 14 days in cerebellum, but this correspondence was less good in cerebral cortex. During the time period from 14 to 28 days post partum the endogenous glutamate concentration showed no close correspondence with any particular enzyme. It is suggested that gamma-glutamyltransferase regulates the endogenous glutamate concentration in culture neurons. The enzyme may also be important for regulation of endogenous glutamate in brain in vivo and particularly in cerebellum during the first 14 days post partum. Gamma-glutamyl transferase in cultured neurons and brain tissue in vivo appears to be devoid of maleate activated glutaminase.Abbreviations used Asp-T aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1) - GABA-T GABA aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.19) - GAD glutamate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.15) - gamma-GT gamma-glutamyl transferase (gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase) (EC. 2.3.2.2) - Glu glutamate - GDH glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3) - GS glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) - MAG maleate activated glutaminase - Orn-T ornithine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.13) - PAG phosphate activated glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.1)  相似文献   

14.
Experiments performed in polyethylene glycol and with a divalent crosslinker indicate that both mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase can form hetero enzyme—enzyme complexes with either glutamate dehydrogenase or citrate synthase. In general, these as previous results indicate that complexes with the aminotransferase are favored over those with malate dehydrogenase and complexes with glutamate dehydrogenase are favored over those with citrate synthase. When the levels of enzymes are low, the only detectable complex is between the aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase. Under these conditions, palmitoyl-CoA is required for complexes between the other three enzyme pairs, however, palmitoyl-CoA also enhances interactions between glutamate dehydrogenase and the aminotransferase. DPNH disrupts complexes with malate dehydrogenase and has little effect on those with the aminotransferase, while oxalacetate disrupts complexes with citrate synthase but has little effect on those with glutamate dehydrogenase. The citrate synthase-aminotransferase complex was favored in the presence of DPNH plus malate, which disrupt the other three enzyme-enzyme complexes. Glutamate dehydrogenase has a higher affinity and capacity than citrate synthase for palmitoyl-CoA. Consequently, lower levels of palmitoyl-CoA are required to enhance interactions with glutamate dehydrogenase. Furthermore, glutamate dehydrogenase can compete with citrate synthase for palmitoyl-CoA and thus can prevent palmitoyl-CoA from enhancing interactions between citrate synthase and either malate dehydrogenase or the aminotransferase.  相似文献   

15.
The RS-isomers of beta-mercapto-alpha-ketoglutarate, beta-methylmercapto-alpha-ketoglutarate and beta-methylmercapto-alpha-hydroxyglutarate have been synthesized. Beta-Mercapto-alpha-ketoglutarate was a potent inhibitor, competitive with isocitrate and noncompetitive with NADP+, of the mitochondrial NADP-specific isozyme from pig heart (Ki = 5 nM; Km (DL-isocitrate)/Ki(RS-beta-mercapto-alpha-ketoglutarate) = 650) and pig liver, the cytosolic isozyme from pig liver (I0.5 = 23 nM), and the NADP-linked enzymes from yeast (Ki = 58 nM) and Escherichia coli (Ki = 58 nM) at pH 7.4 and with Mg2+ as activator. beta-Mercapto-alpha-ketoglutarate was also an effective inhibitor of NADP-isocitrate-dehydrogenase activity in intact liver mitochondria. beta-Mercapto-alpha-ketoglutarate was a much less potent inhibitor for heart NAD-isocitrate dehydrogenase (Ki = 520 nM) than for the NADP-specific enzyme. beta-Methylmercapto-alpha-ketoglutarate (I0.5 = 10 microM) was a much less effective inhibitor than the beta-mercapto derivative for heart NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase. The beta-sulfur substituted alpha-ketoglutarates were substrates for the oxidation of NADPH by heart NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase without requiring CO2. beta-Methylmercapto-alpha-hydroxyglutarate, the expected product of reduction of beta-methylmercapto-alpha-ketoglutarate, did not cause reduction of NADP+ but it was an inhibitor competitive with isocitrate for NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase. The beta-sulfur substituted alpha-ketoglutarate derivatives were alternate substrates for alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase and the cytosolic and mitochondrial isozymes of heart aspartate aminotransferase but had no effect on glutamate dehydrogenase or alanine aminotransferase.  相似文献   

16.
Since ethanol consumption decreases hepatic aminotransferase activities in vivo, mechanisms of ethanol-mediated transaminase inhibition were explored in vitro using mitochondria-depleted rat liver homogenates. When homogenates were incubated at 37 degrees with 50 mM ethanol for 1 hr, alanine aminotransferase decreased by 20%, while aspartate aminotransferase was unchanged. After 2 hr, aspartate aminotransferase decreased by 20% and by 3 hr, alanine and aspartate aminotransferases were decreased by 31 and 23%, respectively. Levels of acetaldehyde generated during ethanol oxidation were 525 +/- 47 microM at 1 hr, 855 +/- 14 microM at 2 hr, and 1293 +/- 140 microM at 3 hr. Although inhibition of alcohol oxidation with methylpyrazole or cyanide markedly decreased ethanol-mediated transaminase inhibition, neither incubation with acetate nor generation of reducing equivalents by oxidation of lactate, malate, xylitol, or sorbitol altered the activity of either enzyme. However, semicarbazide, an aldehyde scavenger, prevented inhibition of both aminotransferases by ethanol. Moreover, incubation with 5 mM acetaldehyde for 1 hr inhibited alanine and aspartate aminotransferases by 36 and 26%, respectively. Cyanamide, an aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitor, had little effect on ethanol-mediated transaminase inhibition. Thus, metabolism of ethanol by rat liver homogenates produces transaminase inhibition similar to that described in vivo and this effect requires acetaldehyde generation but not acetaldehyde oxidation. Since addition of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate to assay mixes did not reverse ethanol effects, aminotransferase inhibition does not result from displacement of vitamin B6 coenzymes.  相似文献   

17.
Few data are available on enzyme activity in amphibian plasma or erythrocytes. We measured the activity of several blood enzymes in the urodele amphibian Pleurodeles waltl reared under standard laboratory conditions. In subsequent experiments, we will estimate and compare the physiological and biochemical conditions of P. waltl when reared under extreme temperature or microgravity conditions. The enzymes selected were glutamate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, superoxide dismutase, catalase, isocitrate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. In fresh plasma samples, enzyme activity in females was higher than in males, except for aspartate and alanine aminotransferases, which were equivalent in females and males. Glutamate dehydrogenase activity was higher in males than in females. In female erythrocytes, the activity of all enzymes was higher than in male erythrocytes. We have also studied the storage conditions of samples and observed that for most enzymes, the activity in freshly isolated plasma and erythrocyte preparations decreased after storage at -18 or +4 degrees C.  相似文献   

18.
An aminotransferase which catalyzes the final step in methionine recycling from methylthioadenosine, the conversion of alpha-ketomethiobutyrate to methionine, has been purified from Klebsiella pneumoniae and characterized. The enzyme was found to be a homodimer of 45-kDa subunits, and it catalyzed methionine formation primarily using aromatic amino acids and glutamate as the amino donors. Histidine, leucine, asparagine, and arginine were also functional amino donors but to a lesser extent. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme was determined and found to be almost identical to the N-terminal sequence of both the Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium tyrosine aminotransferases (tyrB gene products). The structural gene for the tyrosine aminotransferase was cloned from K. pneumoniae and expressed in E. coli. The deduced amino acid sequence displayed 83, 80, 38, and 34% identity to the tyrosine aminotransferases from E. coli, S. typhimurium, Paracoccus denitrificans, and Rhizobium meliloti, respectively, but it showed less than 13% identity to any characterized eukaryotic tyrosine aminotransferase. Structural motifs around key invariant residues placed the K. pneumoniae enzyme within the Ia subfamily of aminotransferases. Kinetic analysis of the aminotransferase showed that reactions of an aromatic amino acid with alpha-ketomethiobutyrate and of glutamate with alpha-ketomethiobutyrate proceed as favorably as the well-known reactions of tyrosine with alpha-ketoglutarate and tyrosine with oxaloacetate normally associated with tyrosine aminotransferases. The aminotransferase was inhibited by the aminooxy compounds canaline and carboxymethoxylamine but not by substrate analogues, such as nitrotyrosine or nitrophenylalanine.  相似文献   

19.
Citrate, malate, and high levels of ATP dissociate the mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase-glutamate dehydrogenase complex and have an inhibitory effect on the latter enzyme. These effects are opposed by Mg2+, leucine, Mg2+ plus ATP, and carbamyl phosphate synthase-I. In addition, Mg2+ directly facilitates formation of a complex between glutamate dehydrogenase and the aminotransferase and displaces the aminotransferase from the inner mitochondrial membrane which could enable it to interact with glutamate dehydrogenase in the matrix. Zn2+ also favors an aminotransferase-glutamate dehydrogenase complex. It, however, is a potent inhibitor of and has a high affinity for glutamate dehydrogenase. Leucine, however, enhances binding of Mg2+ and decreases binding of and the effect of Zn2+ on the enzyme. Thus, since both metal ions enhance enzyme-enzyme interaction and Zn2+ is a more potent inhibitor, the addition of leucine in the presence of both metal ions results in activation of glutamate dehydrogenase without disruption of the enzyme-enzyme complex. Furthermore, the combination of leucine plus Mg2+ produces slightly more activation than leucine alone. These results indicate that leucine, carbamyl phosphate synthase-I, and its substrate and cofactor, ATP and Mg2+, operate synergistically to facilitate glutamate dehydrogenase activity and interaction between this enzyme and the aminotransferase. Alternatively, Krebs cycle intermediates, such as citrate and malate, have opposing effects.  相似文献   

20.
Intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf peroxisomes converted glycerate to serine in the presence of NAD and alanine. The reaction proceeded optimally at pH9. Addition of oxaloacetate or alpha-ketoglutarate plus aspartate enhanced the conversion about three-fold. Alteration of the concentration of one of the reaction components, consisting of 2 mM glycerate, 0.2 mM NAD, 0.5 mM oxaloacetate, and 2 mM alanine, revealed half-saturation constants of 0.45 mM for glycerate, 0.06 mM for NAD, 0.02 mM for oxaloacetate, and 0.33 mM for alanine. The conversion proceeded with the formation of hydroxypyruvate followed by serine; hydroxypyruvate did not accumulate to a high amount in the presence or absence of alanine. The amino group donor could be alanine (half-saturation constant, 0.33 mM), glycine (0.45 mM), or asparagine (0.67 mM); the three amino acids produced roughly similar Vmax values. The results indicate that, in the conversion of glycerate to serine, the transamination is catalyzed by a hydroxypyruvate aminotransferase with characteristics unknown among all other studied leaf peroxisomal aminotransferases. The peroxisomal membrane is sparsely permeable to NAD/NADH, and the participation of the peroxisomal malate dehydrogenase in an electron shuttle system across the membrane in the regeneration of NAD/NADH is suggested.  相似文献   

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