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1.
1. The metabolism of oxalate by the pink-pigmented organisms, Pseudomonas AM1, Pseudomonas AM2, Protaminobacter ruber and Pseudomonas extorquens has been compared with that of the non-pigmented Pseudomonas oxalaticus. 2. During growth on oxalate, all the organisms contain oxalyl-CoA decarboxylase, formate dehydrogenase and oxalyl-CoA reductase. This is consistent with oxidation of oxalate to carbon dioxide taking place via oxalyl-CoA, formyl-CoA and formate as intermediates, and also reduction of oxalate to glyoxylate taking place via oxalyl-CoA. 3. The pink-pigmented organisms, when grown on oxalate, contain l-serine–glyoxylate aminotransferase and hydroxypyruvate reductase but do not contain glyoxylate carboligase. The converse of this obtains in oxalate-grown Ps. oxalaticus. This indicates that, in contrast with Ps. oxalaticus, synthesis of C3 compounds from oxalate by the pink-pigmented organisms occurs by a variant of the `serine pathway' used by Pseudomonas AM1 during growth on C1 compounds. 4. Evidence in favour of this scheme is provided by the finding that a mutant of Pseudomonas AM1 that lacks hydroxypyruvate reductase is not able to grow on oxalate.  相似文献   

2.
The presence of glucose-6-phosphate markedly stimulated the anaerobic utilization of glyoxylate by either cell-free extracts or partially purified enzyme preparations of coli-aerogenes bacteria. The enzymic reduction of glyoxylate to glycollate was found to occur in the presence of TPN with the following substrates; glucose-6-phosphate, glucose plus ATP, gluconate plus ATP, glucose-1-phosphate or malate. The data indicated that the reduction of glyoxylate to glycollate was coupled to the oxidation of glucose-6-phosphate via the hexose monophosphate shunt pathway. It was propounded that the operation of the hexose monophosphate oxidative pathway might be controlled by TPN-linked glyoxylic reductase, and the mechanisms of enzymic regulation in microbial respiration were also discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Summary In Chlorella, as in most photosynthetic organisms, the reduction of nitrate to ammonia proceeds sequentially in two independent and well characterized steps, catalyzed by the enzymes of the nitrate-reducing system: 1. the reduction of nitrate to nitrite by the flavomolybdoprotein NADH-nitrate reductase, and 2. the reduction of nitrite to ammonia by the ironprotein ferredoxin-nitrite reductase. In this communication, it is shown that, in Chlorella, the cellular level of nitrite reductase activity specifically increases in response to the iron content of the culture medium. By contrast, the activity of nitrate reductase is apparently not affected by the concentration of iron in the nutrient solution under the same conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Glycolate oxidase (GO) has been identified in the endocyanom Cyanophora paradoxa which has peroxisome-like organelles and cyanelles instead of chloroplasts. The enzyme used or formed equimolar amounts of O2 or H2O2 and glyoxylate, respectively. Aerobically, the enzyme did not reduce the artificial electron acceptor dichlorophenol indophenol. However, after an inhibitor of glycolate dehydrogenase, KCN (2 millimolar), was added to the assay medium, considerable aerobic glycolate:dichlorophenol indophenol reductase activity was detectable. The leaf GO inhibitor 2-hydroxybutynoate (30 micromolar), which binds irreversibly to the flavin moiety of the active site of leaf GO, inhibited Cyanophora GO and pea (Pisum sativum L.) GO to the same extent. This suggests that the active sites of both enzymes are similar. Cyanophora GO and pea GO cannot oxidize d-lactate. In contrast to GO from pea or other organisms, the affinity of Cyanophora GO for l-lactate is very low (Km 25 millimolar). Another important difference is that Cyanophora GO produced sigmoidal kinetics with O2 as varied substrate, whereas pea GO produced normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics. It is concluded that there is considerable inhomogeneity among the glycolate-oxidizing enzymes from Cyanophora, pea, and other organisms. The specific catalase activity in Cyanophora was only one-tenth of that in leaves. NADH-and NADPH-dependent hydroxypyruvate reductase (HPR) and glyoxylate reductase activities were detected in Cyanophora. NADH-HPR was markedly inhibited by hydroxypyruvate above 0.5 millimolar. Variable substrate inhibition was observed with glyoxylate in homogenates from different algal cultures. It is proposed that Cyanophora has multiple forms of HPR and glyoxylate reductase, but no enzyme clearly resembling leaf peroxisomal HPR was identified in these homogenates. Moreover, no serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase activity was detected. These results collectively indicate the possibility that the glycolate metabolism in Cyanophora deviates from that in leaves.  相似文献   

5.
SYNOPSIS. We demonstrated previously microbodies in Euglena gracilis grown in the dark on 2-carbon substrates. We have now established in Euglena the particulate nature of enzymes known in other organisms to be localized in microbodies (glyoxysomes and leaf peroxisomes). On a linear sucrose gradient the glyoxylate cycle enzymes band together at a nigner equilibrium density (1.20 g/cm3) than mitochondrial marker enzymes (1.17 g/cm3), establishing the existence in Euglena of glyoxysomes similar to those of higher plants. Glyoxylate (hydroxypyruvate) reductase and, under certain conditions, also glycolate dehydrogenase co-band with the glyoxylate cycle enzymes, suggesting that Euglena glyoxysomes, like those of higher plants, may contain peroxisomal-type enzymes. Catalase, an enzyme characteristic of microbodies from a variety of sources, was not detected in Euglena.  相似文献   

6.
Methylobacterium sp. MB200 capable of producing glyoxylate from methanol was obtained by enrichment culture using a medium containing methanol as the sole carbon source. A hpr gene that encodes a hydroxypyruvate reductase (HPR) was cloned from this strain and was ligated into the vector pLAFR3 to obtain the recombinant plasmid pLAFRh, which was transferred into M. sp. MB200 to generate an recombinant strain MB201. Homologous expression of hpr under the control of the lacZ promoter led to the enhanced glyoxylate accumulation in cultures of Methylobacterium sp MB201. The yield of glyoxylate reached 14.38 mg/mL, representing nearly a twofold increase when compared with the wild-type strain.  相似文献   

7.
When Rhodopseudomonas gelatinosa was grown on acetate aerobically in the dark both enzymes of the glyoxylate bypass, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, could be detected. However, under anaerobic conditions in the light only isocitrate lyase, but not malate synthase, could be found.The reactions, which bypass the malate synthase reaction are those catalyzed by alanine glyoxylate aminotransferase and the enzymes of the serine pathway.Other Rhodospirillaceae were tested for isocitrate lyase and malate synthase activity after growth with acetate; they could be divided into three groups: I. organisms possessing both enzymes; 2. organisms containing malate synthase only; 3. R. gelatinosa containing only isocitrate lyase when grown anaerobically in the light.  相似文献   

8.
1. Two enzymes that catalyse the reduction of glyoxylate to glycollate have been separated and purified from a species of Pseudomonas. Their molecular weights were estimated as 180000. 2. Reduced nicotinamide nucleotides act as the hydrogen donators for the enzymes. The NADH-linked enzyme is entirely specific for its coenzyme but the NADPH-linked reductase shows some affinity towards NADH. 3. Both enzymes convert hydroxypyruvate into glycerate. 4. The glyoxylate reductases show maximal activity at pH6·0–6·8, are inhibited by keto acids and are strongly dependent on free thiol groups for activity. 5. The Michaelis constants for glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate were found to be of a high order. 6. The reversibility of the reaction has been demonstrated for both glyoxylate reductases and the equilibrium constants were determined. 7. The reduction of glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate is not stimulated by anions.  相似文献   

9.
Two sulfate-reducing bacteria, which also reduce arsenate, were isolated; both organisms oxidized lactate incompletely to acetate. When using lactate as the electron donor, one of these organisms, Desulfomicrobium strain Ben-RB, rapidly reduced (doubling time = 8 h) 5.1 mM arsenate at the same time it reduced sulfate (9.6 mM). Sulfate reduction was not inhibited by the presence of arsenate. Arsenate could act as the terminal electron acceptor in minimal medium (doubling time = 9 h) in the absence of sulfate. Arsenate was reduced by a membrane-bound enzyme that is either a c-type cytochrome or is associated with such a cytochrome; benzyl-viologen-dependent arsenate reductase activity was greater in cells grown with arsenate/sulfate than in cells grown with sulfate only. The second organism, Desulfovibrio strain Ben-RA, also grew (doubling time = 8 h) while reducing arsenate (3.1 mM) and sulfate (8.3 mM) concomitantly. No evidence was found, however, that this organism is able to grow using arsenate as the terminal electron acceptor. Instead, it appears that arsenate reduction by the Desulfovibrio strain Ben-RA is catalyzed by an arsenate reductase that is encoded by a chromosomally-borne gene shown to be homologous to the arsC gene of the Escherichia coli plasmid, R773 ars system. Received: 18 March 1999 / Accepted: 27 September 1999  相似文献   

10.
Hydroxypyruvate and glyoxylate reductase activities were measured in extracts from the unicellular green algae, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, Chlorella vulgaris, Chlorella miniata, and Dunaliella tertiolecta. Only trace levels of these activities were detectable in the blue-green algae, Anabaena variabilis and Synechococcus leopoliensis. A NADH-dependent hydroxypyruvate reductase was purified 130-fold from Chlamydomonas to a specific activity of 18 mumol NADH oxidized X min-1 X mg protein-1. The pH optimum was 5.0 to 7.0 in the presence of phosphate and the Km(hydroxypyruvate) was 0.05 mM. Substrate inhibition by hydroxypyruvate could be partially relieved by phosphate. The molecular weight, estimated by gel filtration, was 96,000. NADH-dependent glyoxylate reductase activity copurified with the hydroxypyruvate reductase. The Km(glyoxylate) was 10 mM, and the pH optimum was 4.5 to 8.5. A specific NADPH:glyoxylate reductase was also partially purified which did not reduce hydroxypyruvate or pyruvate. The NADPH:glyoxylate reductase had a Km(glyoxylate) of 0.1 mM and a pH optimum of 5.0 to 9.5. These reductases were compared with the pyruvate reductase of Chlamydomonas which also catalyzes the reduction of both hydroxypyruvate and glyoxylate.  相似文献   

11.
Oxalate synthesis in human hepatocytes is not well defined despite the clinical significance of its overproduction in diseases such as the primary hyperoxalurias. To further define these steps, the metabolism to oxalate of the oxalate precursors glycolate and glyoxylate and the possible pathways involved were examined in HepG2 cells. These cells were found to contain oxalate, glyoxylate, and glycolate as intracellular metabolites and to excrete oxalate and glycolate into the medium. Glycolate was taken up more effectively by cells than glyoxylate, but glyoxylate was more efficiently converted to oxalate. Oxalate was formed from exogenous glycolate only when cells were exposed to high concentrations. Peroxisomes in HepG2 cells, in contrast to those in human hepatocytes, were not involved in glycolate metabolism. Incubations with purified lactate dehydrogenase suggested that this enzyme was responsible for the metabolism of glycolate to oxalate in HepG2 cells. The formation of 14C-labeled glycine from 14C-labeled glycolate was observed only when cell membranes were permeabilized with Triton X-100. These results imply that peroxisome permeability to glycolate is restricted in these cells. Mitochondria, which produce glyoxylate from hydroxyproline metabolism, contained both alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase (AGT)2 and glyoxylate reductase activities, which can convert glyoxylate to glycine and glycolate, respectively. Expression of AGT2 mRNA in HepG2 cells was confirmed by RT-PCR. These results indicate that HepG2 cells will be useful in clarifying the nonperoxisomal metabolism associated with oxalate synthesis in human hepatocytes. liver; peroxisomes; hepatocytes; hyperoxaluria; alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase; glyoxylate reductase  相似文献   

12.
Euglena gracilis induced glyoxylate cycle enzymes when ethanol was fed as a sole carbon source. We purified, cloned and characterized a bifunctional glyoxylate cycle enzyme from E. gracilis (EgGCE). This enzyme consists of an N-terminal malate synthase (MS) domain fused to a C-terminal isocitrate lyase (ICL) domain in a single polypeptide chain. This domain order is inverted compared to the bifunctional glyoxylate cycle enzyme in Caenorhabditis elegans, an N-terminal ICL domain fused to a C-terminal MS domain. Purified EgGCE catalyzed the sequential ICL and MS reactions. ICL activity of purified EgGCE increased in the existence of acetyl-CoA at a concentration of micro-molar order. We discussed the physiological roles of the bifunctional glyoxylate cycle enzyme in these organisms as well as its molecular evolution.  相似文献   

13.
Glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate are metabolites involved in the pathway of carbon in photorespiration. The chief glyoxylate-reducing enzyme in leaves is now known to be a cytosolic glyoxylate reductase that uses NADPH as the preferred cofactor but can also use NADH. Glyoxylate reductase has been isolated from spinach leaves, purified to homogeneity, and characterized kinetically and structurally. Chloroplasts contain lower levels of glyoxylate reductase activity supported by both NADPH and NADH, but it is not yet known whether a single chloroplastic enzyme catalyzes glyoxylate reduction with both cofactors. The major hydroxypyruvate reductase activity of leaves has long been known to be a highly active enzyme located in peroxisomes; it uses NADH as the preferred cofactor. To a lesser extent, NADPH can also be used by the peroxisomal enzyme. A second hydroxypyruvate reductase enzyme is located in the cytosol; it preferentially uses NADPH but can also use NADH as cofactor. In a barley mutant deficient in peroxisomal hydroxypyruvate reductase, the NADPH-preferring cytosolic form of the enzyme permits sufficient rates of hydroxypyruvate reduction to support continued substrate flow through the terminal stages of the photosynthetic carbon oxidation (glycolate/glycerate) pathway. The properties and metabolic significance of the cytosolic and organelle-localized glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate reductase enzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract The effect og glyoxylate on nitrogenase activity (C2H2 reduction) and photosynthesis (H14CO3 fixation and O2 evolution) was in vestigated in the three heterocystous cyanobacteria Anabaena cylindrica, A. variabiltis and N. muscorum. Glyoxylate had virtually no effect on the rate of dark respiration and was unable to sustain photoheterotrophic growth, though some slight stimulation (= 30%) of photorophic growth was noted. A considerable stimulation of both nitrogenase and photosynthetic activities was observed in presence of glyoxylate. In the light the stimulation increased with time up to about 15-25 h after adding optimal concentrations of 4–6 mM glyoxylate. Placing glyoxylate treated samples in the dark or adding DCMU (30 μM) in the light, showed that glyoxylate initially supported significantly higher nitrogenase activity than did samples in absence of glyoxylate. However, after a prolonged incubation in the dark or in presence of DCMU glyoxylate is unable to relieve the adverse effects of such conditions. The stimulation of the nitrogenase activity was even more pronounced when the glyoxylate was added to cells preincubated in the dark (“carbon starved”) than for cells kept constantly in light. The results suggest that glyoxylate, or a metabolite, may act as an inhibitor of cyanobacterial photorespiration and this hypothesis is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
  1. The effect of -hydroxy sulfonates and sulfite, inhibitors ofglycolate oxidase, on the photochemical reactions of spinachchloroplasts was studied. The photo reduction of ferricyanideand NADP was not affected by the poisons, whereas the photophosphorylationand 14CO2 fixation were inhibited.
  2. Glyoxylate was photoreducedby the chloroplasts in the presenceof PPNR and glyoxylate reductase,and this reduction was acceleratedby the addition of NADP.ATP formation accompanied with thereduction of glyoxylate bythe illuminated chloroplasts wasobserved. It is supposed thatglyoxylate oxidizes the photoreducedNADPH2 or PPNR and thusthe photophosphorylation is stimulated.
1A part of this paper was presented at the annual meeting ofAgricultural Society of Japan, in August, 1964. 2Present address: Radiation Center of Osaka Prefecture, Sakai,Osaka.  相似文献   

16.
In previous work, we have demonstrated that oleate induces a massive proliferation of microbodies (peroxisomes) in Aspergillus nidulans. Although at a lower level, proliferation of peroxisomes also occurrs in cells growing under conditions that induce penicillin biosynthesis. Here, microbodies in oleate-grown A. nidulans cells were characterized by using several antibodies that recognize peroxisomal enzymes and peroxins in a broad spectrum of eukaryotic organisms such as yeast, and plant, and mammalian cells. Peroxisomes were immunolabeled by anti-SKL and anti-thiolase antibodies, which suggests that A. nidulans conserves both PTS1 and PTS2 import mechanisms. Isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, the two key enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle, were also localized in these organelles. In contrast to reports of Neurospora crassa, our results demonstrate that A. nidulans contains only one type of microbody (peroxisomes) that carry out the glyoxylate cycle and contain 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase and proteins with the C-terminal SKL tripeptide. Received: 4 March 1998 / Accepted: 2 July 1998  相似文献   

17.
A new type of oxalate-utilizing Paracoccus sp. was isolated from Amorphophallus rhizoplane. Basic physiological tests and 16S rDNA sequencing was performed to identify the strain. Optimum growth was observed at 37 °C and pH 8.0 in minimal oxalate (0.5% disodium oxalate) with doubling time of 7 h. Its closest phylogenetic neighbours, as deduced by 16S rDNA-based analysis, were Paracoccus alcaliphilus KCT002, P. alcaliphilus JCM 7364 (TK1015) and P. seriniphilus MBT-A4 with 99.85, 98.35 and 97.31% sequence similarity respectively. Oxalate was metabolized via the serine pathway, as evidenced by the presence of oxalyl-coA reductase, l-serine glyoxylate aminotransferase and hydroxypyruvate reductase.  相似文献   

18.
Glyoxysomes isolated from castor bean (Ricinus communis L., var Hale) endosperm had NADH:ferricyanide reductase and NADH:cytochrome c reductase activities averaging 720 and 140 nanomole electrons/per minute per milligram glyoxysomal protein, respectively. These redox activities were greater than could be attributed to contamination of the glyoxysomal fractions in which 1.4% of the protein was mitochondrial and 5% endoplasmic reticulum. The NADH:ferricyanide reductase activity in the glyoxysomes was greater than the palmitoyl-coenzyme A (CoA) oxidation activity which generated NADH at a rate of 340 nanomole electrons per minute per milligram glyoxysomal protein. Palmitoyl-CoA oxidation could be coupled to ferricyanide or cytochrome c reduction. Complete oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA, yielding 14 nanomole electrons/per nanomole palmitoyl-CoA, was demonstrated with the acceptors, NAL, cytochrome c, and ferricyanide. Malate was also oxidized by glyoxysomes, if acetyl-CoA, ferricyanide, or cytochrome c was present. Glyoxysomal NADH:ferricyanide reductase activity has the capacity to support the combined rates of NADH generation by β-oxidation and the glyoxylate cycle.  相似文献   

19.
The use of LaPr 88/29 mutant of barley (Hordeum vulgare), which lacks NADH-preferring hydroxypyruvate reductase (HPR-1), allowed for an unequivocal demonstration of at least two related NADPH-preferring reductases in this species: HPR-2, reactive with both hydroxypyruvate and glyoxylate, and the glyoxylate specific reductase (GR-1). Antibodies against spinach HPR-1 recognized barley HPR-1 and partially reacted with barley HPR-2, but not GR-1, as demonstrated by Western immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation of proteins from crude leaf extracts. The mutant was deficient in HPR-1 protein. In partially purified preparations, the activities of HPR-1, HPR-2, and GR-1 could be differentiated by substrate kinetics and/or inhibition studies. Apparent Km values of HPR-2 for hydroxypyruvate and glyoxylate were 0.7 and 1.1 millimolar, respectively, while the Km of GR-1 for glyoxylate was 0.07 millimolar. The Km values of HPR-1, measured in wild type, for hydroxypyruvate and glyoxylate were 0.12 and 20 millimolar, respectively. Tartronate and P-hydroxypyruvate acted as selective uncompetitive inhibitors of HPR-2 (Ki values of 0.3 and 0.4 millimolar, respectively), while acetohydroxamate selectively inhibited GR-1 activity. Nonspecific contributions of HPR-1 reactions in assays of HPR-2 and GR-1 activities were quantified by a direct comparison of rates in preparations from wild-type and LaPr 88/29 plants. The data are evaluated with respect to previous reports on plant HPR and GR activities and with respect to optimal assay procedures for individual HPR-1, HPR-2, and GR-1 rates in leaf preparations.  相似文献   

20.
The syntrophically glycolate-fermenting bacterium in the methanogenic binary coculture FlGlyM was isolated in pure culture (strain FlGlyR) with glyoxylate as sole substrate. This strain disproportionated 12 glyoxylate to 7 glycolate, 10 CO2, and 3 hydrogen. Glyoxylate was oxidized via the malyl-CoA pathway. All enzymes of this pathway, i.e. malyl-CoA lyase/malate: CoA ligase, malic enzyme, and pyruvate synthase, were demonstrated in cell-free extracts. Glycolate dehydrogenase, hydrogenase, and ATPase, as well as menaquinones as potential electron carriers, were present in the membranes. Everted membrane vesicles catalyzed hydrogen-dependent glyoxylate reduction to glycolate [86–207 nmol min-1 (mg protein)-1] coupled to ATP synthesis from ADP and Pi [38–82 nmol min-1 (mg protein)-1]. ATP synthesis was abolished entirely by protonophores or ATPase inhibitors (up to 98 and 94% inhibition, respectively) indicating the involvement of proton-motive force in an electron transport phosphorylation driven by a new glyoxylate respiration with hydrogen as electron donor. Measured reaction rates in vesicle preparations revealed a stoichiometry of ATP formation of 0.2–0.5 ATP per glyoxylate reduced.Abbreviations BES 2-Bromoethanesulfonate - CCCP Carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - DCCD N,N-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - DCPIP 2,6-Dichlorophenolindophenol - DTE Dithioerythritol - TCS 3,5,4,5-Tetrachlorosalicylanilide - SF 6847 3,5-Di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxybenzylidenemalonitrile  相似文献   

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