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1.
Activities and properties of the ammonium assimilation enzymes NADP+-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), glutamate synthase (GOGAT) and glutamine synthetase (GS) were determined in batch and continuous cultures of Candida albicans. NADP+-dependent GDH activity showed allosteric kinetics, with an S0.5 for 2-oxoglutarate of 7.5 mM and an apparent Km for ammonium of 5.0 mM. GOGAT activity was affected by the buffer used for extraction and assay, but in phosphate buffer, kinetics were hyperbolic, yielding Km values for glutamine of 750 microM and for 2-oxoglutarate of 65 microM. The enzymes GOGAT and NADP+-dependent GDH were also assayed in batch cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and three other pathogenic Candida spp.: Candida tropicalis, Candida pseudotropicalis and Candida parapsilosis. Evidence is presented that GS/GOGAT is a major pathway for ammonium assimilation in Candida albicans and that this pathway is also significant in other Candida species.  相似文献   

2.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and glutamine synthetase (GS)-glutamine 2-oxoglutarate-aminotransferase (GOGAT) represent the two main pathways of ammonium assimilation in Corynebacterium glutamicum. In this study, the ammonium assimilating fluxes in vivo in the wild-type ATCC 13032 strain and its GDH mutant were quantitated in continuous cultures. To do this, the incorporation of 15N label from [15N]ammonium in glutamate and glutamine was monitored with a time resolution of about 10 min with in vivo 15N nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) used in combination with a recently developed high-cell-density membrane-cyclone NMR bioreactor system. The data were used to tune a standard differential equation model of ammonium assimilation that comprised ammonia transmembrane diffusion, GDH, GS, GOGAT, and glutamine amidotransferases, as well as the anabolic incorporation of glutamate and glutamine into biomass. The results provided a detailed picture of the fluxes involved in ammonium assimilation in the two different C. glutamicum strains in vivo. In both strains, transmembrane equilibration of 100 mM [15N]ammonium took less than 2 min. In the wild type, an unexpectedly high fraction of 28% of the NH4+ was assimilated via the GS reaction in glutamine, while 72% were assimilated by the reversible GDH reaction via glutamate. GOGAT was inactive. The analysis identified glutamine as an important nitrogen donor in amidotransferase reactions. The experimentally determined amount of 28% of nitrogen assimilated via glutamine is close to a theoretical 21% calculated from the high peptidoglycan content of C. glutamicum. In the GDH mutant, glutamate was exclusively synthesized over the GS/GOGAT pathway. Its level was threefold reduced compared to the wild type.  相似文献   

3.
1H/15N and 13C NMR were used to investigate metabolism in Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) cells. Labelled substrates ([2-15N]glutamine, [5-15N]glutamine, [2-15N]glutamate, 15NH4Cl, [2-15N]alanine, and [1-13C]glucose) were added to batch cultures and the concentration of labelled excreted metabolites (alanine, NH4+, glutamine, glycerol, and lactate) were quantified. Cultures with excess glucose and glutamine produce alanine as the main metabolic by-product while no ammonium ions are released. 1H/15N NMR data showed that both the amide and amine-nitrogen of glutamine was incorporated into alanine in these cultures. The amide-nitrogen of glutamine was not transferred to the amine-position in glutamate (for further transamination to alanine) via free NH4+ but directly via an azaserine inhibitable amido-transfer reaction. In glutamine-free media 15NH4+ was consumed and incorporated into alanine. 15NH4+ was also incorporated into the amide-position of glutamine synthesised by the cells. These data suggest that the nitrogen assimilation system, glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase (NADH-GOGAT), is active in glutamine-deprived cells. In cultures devoid of glucose, ammonium is the main metabolic by-product while no alanine is formed. The ammonium ions stem both from the amide and amine-nitrogen of glutamine, most likely via glutaminase and glutamate dehydrogenase. 13C NMR revealed that the [1-13C] label from glucose appeared in glycerol, alanine, lactate, and in extracellular glutamine. Labelling data also showed that intermediates of the tricarboxylic acid cycle were recycled to glycolysis and that carbon sources, other than glucose-derived acetylCoA, entered the cycle. Furthermore, Sf9 cell cultures excreted significant amounts glycerol (1.9-3.2 mM) and ethanol (6 mM), thus highlighting the importance of sinks for reducing equivalents in maintaining the cytosolic redox balance.  相似文献   

4.
L-[amide-13N]glutamine in Neurospora crassa is metabolized to [13N]glutamate by glutamate synthase and to [13N]ammonium by the glutamine transaminase-omega-amidase pathway. The [13N]ammonium released is assimilated by glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase, confirming the operation of a glutamine cycle. Most of the nitrogen is retained during cycling between glutamate and glutamine.  相似文献   

5.
To obtain information on the route(s) of ammonium assimilation in Streptomyces venezuelae, cell suspensions transferred to fresh medium lacking nitrogen were pulsed with [15N2]ammonium sulphate. Cells and extracellular fluids were examined by nuclear magnetic resonance and amino acid analysis to assess changes in amino acid pools and the disposition of [15N]ammonium. Following addition of [15N]ammonium, glutamate--glutamine pools of low cell density replacement cultures expanded rapidly and became progressively labelled with 15N, whereas the alanine pool size increased much more slowly and became labelled with 15N to a much lesser extent. These results are consistent with the assimilation of ammonium via glutamate dehydrogenase or glutamine synthetase--glutamate synthase rather than alanine dehydrogenase. Under anaerobic conditions, S. venezuelae assimilates ammonium into alanine rather than glutamate--glutamine. Alanine dehydrogenase may thus function as a vehicle to regenerate NAD+ to maintain substrate-level phosphorylation during periods of anaerobiosis.  相似文献   

6.
The pathways of assimilation of ammonium by pure cultures of symbiont-free Anthoceros punctatus L. and the reconstituted Anthoceros-Nostoc symbiotic association were determined from time-course (5–300 s) and inhibitor experiments using 13NH 4 + . The major product of assimilation after all incubation times was glutamine, whether the tissues were cultured with excess ammonium or no combined nitrogen. The 13N in glutamine was predominantly in the amide-nitrogen position. Formation of glutamine and glutamate by Anthoceros-Nostoc was strongly inhibited by either 1mM methionine sulfoximine (MSX) or 1 mM exogenous ammonium. These data are consistent with the assimilation of 13NH 4 + and formation of glutamate by the glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2)-glutamate synthase (EC 1.4.7.1) pathway in dinitrogen-grown Anthoceros-Nostoc. However, in symbiont-free Anthoceros, grown with 2.5 mM ammonium, formation of glutamine, but not glutamate, was decreased by either MSX or exogenous ammonium. These results indicate that during short incubation times ammonium is assimilated in nitrogenreplete Anthoceros by the activities of both glutamine synthetase and glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2). In-vitro activities of glutamine synthetase were similar in nitrogen-replete Anthoceros and Anthoceros-Nostoc, indicating that the differences in the routes of glutamate formation were not based upon regulation of synthesis of the initial enzyme of the glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthase pathway. When symbiont-free Anthoceros was cultured for 2 d in the absence of combined nitrogen, total 13NH 4 + assimilation, and glutamine and glutamate formation in the presence of inhibitors, were similar to dinitrogen-grown Anthoceros-Nostoc. The routes of immediate (within 2 min) glutamate formation and ammonium assimilation in Anthoceros were apparently determined by the intracellular levels of ammonium; at low levels the glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthase pathway was predominant, while at high levels independent activities of both glutamine synthetase and glutamate dehydrogenase were expressed.  相似文献   

7.
When incubated at pH 4–5, Chlorella freshly isolated from symbiosis with Hydra viridissima PALLAS 1766 (green hydra) release large amounts of photosynthetically fixed carbon in the form of maltose, and assimilation of inorganic N is inhibited. Physiological responses to N starvation of the cultured 3N813A strain of maltose-releasing Chlorella differed from those caused by 48 h of maltose release induced by low pH. N starvation increased rates of ammonium assimilation at pH 7.0 in light or darkness, and ammonium assimilation in darkness stimulated cell respiration. In contrast, cells pretreated at pH 5.0 to induce maltose release were unable to take up ammonium at pH 7.0 unless supplied with an external carbon source such as bicarbonate, acetate, or succinate, and rates of uptake were similar to control cells. Freshly isolated symbionts displayed a similar dependency. Rates of ammonium uptake by cells pretreated at pH 5.0 were reduced in darkness and did not stimulate cell respiration. N-starved cells supplied with ammonium also showed a large short-term increase in glutamine pools at the expense of glutamate, as might be expected if large amounts of ammonium were rapidly assimilated via glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase, whereas after long-term maltose release cells showed only a small increase in glutamine when supplied with ammonium. Furthermore, maltose release caused a fall in pool sizes of a number of amino acids, including glutamine and glutamate, and also caused a decrease in pool sizes of 2-oxoglutarate and phospho-enol-pyruvate, which are required for ammonium assimilation into amino acids. Cells stimulated to synthesize and release maltose may be unable to assimilate ammonium and synthesize amino acids because of diversion of fixed carbon from N metabolism. We estimate that 40–50% affixed C is required for maximal maltose synthesis, whereas up to 30% fixed C is required for ammonium assimilation. These results are discussed in the context of host regulation of symbiotic algal growth.  相似文献   

8.
15N kinetic labelling studies were done on liquid cultures of wild-type Aspergillus nidulans. The labelling pattern of major amino acids under 'steady state' conditions suggests that glutamate and glutamine-amide are the early products of ammonia assimilation in A. nidulans. In the presence of phosphinothricin, an inhibitor or glutamine synthetase, 15N labelling of glutamate, alanine and aspartate was maintained whereas the labelling of glutamine was low. This pattern of labelling is consistent with ammonia assimilation into glutamate via the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway. In the presence of azaserine, an inhibitor of glutamate synthase, glutamate was initially more highly labelled than any other amino acid, whereas its concentration declined. Isotope also accumulated in glutamine. Observations with these two inhibitors suggest that ammonia assimilation can occur concurrently via the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase and the glutamate dehydrogenase pathways in low-ammonia-grown A. nidulans. From a simple model it was estimated that about half of the glutamate was synthesized via the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway; the other half was formed from glutamine via the glutamate synthase pathway. The transfer coefficients of nine other amino acids were also determined.  相似文献   

9.
The specific activities of glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate synthase (GOGAT) were 4.2- and 2.2-fold higher, respectively, in cells of Azospirillum brasilense grown with N2 than with 43 mM NH4+ as the source of nitrogen. Conversely, the specific activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) was 2.7-fold higher in 43 mM NH4+-grown cells than in N2-grown cells. These results indicate that NH4+ could be assimilated and that glutamate could be formed by either the GS-GOGAT or GDH pathway or both, depending on the cellular concentration of NH4+. The routes of in vivo synthesis of glutamate were identified by using 13N as a metabolic tracer. The products of assimilation of 13NH4+ were, in order of decreasing radioactivity, glutamine, glutamate, and alanine. The formation of [13N]glutamine and [13N]glutamate by NH4+-grown cells was inhibited in the additional presence of methionine sulfoximine (an inhibitor of GS) and diazooxonorleucine (an inhibitor of GOGAT). Incorporation of 13N into glutamine, glutamate, and alanine decreased in parallel in the presence of carrier NH4+. These results imply that the GS-GOGAT pathway is the primary route of NH4+ assimilation by A. brasilense grown with excess or limiting nitrogen and that GDH has, at best, a minor role in the synthesis of glutamate.  相似文献   

10.
The initial product of fixation of [13N]N2 by pure cultures of the reconstituted symbiotic association between Anthoceros punctatus L. and Nostoc sp. strain ac 7801 was ammonium; it accounted for 75% of the total radioactivity recovered in methanolic extracts after 0.5 min and 14% after 10 min of incubation. Glutamine and glutamate were the primary organic products synthesized from [13N]N2 after incubation times of 0.5–10 min. The kinetics of labeling of these two amino acids were characteristic of a precursor (glutamine) and product (glutamate) relationship. Results of inhibition experiments with methionine sulfoximine (MSX) and diazo-oxonorleucine were also consistent with the assimilation of N2-derived NH 4 + by Anthoceros-Nostoc through the sequential activities of glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) and glutamate synthase (EC 1.4.7.1), with little or no assimilation by glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.3.1.3). Isolated symbiotic Nostoc assimilated exogenous 13NH 4 + into glutamine and glutamate and their formation was inhibited by MSX, indicating operation of the glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthase (GS-GOGAT) pathway: However, relative to free-living cultures, isolated symbiotic Nostoc assimilated 80% less exogenous ammonium into glutamine and glutamate, implying that symbiotic Nostoc could assimilate only a fraction of N2-derived NH 4 + . This implication was tested by using Anthoceros associations reconstituted with wild-type or MSX-resistant strains of Nostoc incubated with [13N]N2 in the presence of MSX. The results of these experiments indicated that, in situ, symbiotic Nostoc assimilated about 10% of the N2-derived NH 4 + and that NH 4 + was made available to Anthoceros tissue where it was apparently assimilated by the GS-GOGAT pathway. Since less than 1% of the fixed N2 was lost to the suspension medium, it appears that transfer of NH 4 + from symbiont to host tissue was very efficient in this extracellular symbiotic association.Abbreviations DON 6-diazo-5-oxo-l-norleucine - GDH glutamate dehydrogenase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - GS glutamine synthetase - MSX l-methionine-dl-sulfoximine  相似文献   

11.
Two pathways of ammonium assimilation are known in bacteria, one mediated by glutamate dehydrogenase, the other by glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase. The activities of these three enzymes were measured in crude extracts from four Rhizobium meliloti wild-type strains, 2011, M15S, 444 and 12. All the strains had active glutamine synthetase and NADP-linked glutamate synthase. Assimilatory glutamate dehydrogenase activity was present in strains 2011, M15S, 444, but not in strain 12. Three glutamate synthase deficient mutants were isolated from strain 2011. They were unable to use 1 mM ammonium as a sole nitrogen source. However, increased ammonium concentration allowed these mutants to assimilate ammonium via glutamate dehydrogenase. It was found that the sole mode of ammonium assimilation in strain 12 is the glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthase route; whereas the two pathways are functional in strain 2011.Abbreviations GS glutamine synthetase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - GDH glutamate dehydrogenase  相似文献   

12.
Ammonium assimilation was studied in a nitrogenfixing Arthrobacter strain grown in both batch and ammonium-limited continuous cultures. Arthrobacter sp. fluorescens grown in nitrogen-free medium or at low ammonium levels assimilated NH 4 + via the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase pathway. When ammonium was in excess it was assimilated via the alanine dehydrogenase pathway. Very low levels of glutamate dehydrogenase were found, irrespective of growth conditions.Abbreviations GS glutamine synthetase - GOGAT glutamine oxoglutarate aminotransferase - GDH glutamate dehydrogenase - ADH alanine dehydrogenase - GOT glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase - GPT glutamate pyruvate transaminase  相似文献   

13.
Evidence from in vitro and in vivo studies showed that in Rhizobium phaseoli ammonium is assimilated by the glutamine synthetase (GS)-glutamate synthase NADPH pathway. No glutamate dehydrogenase activity was detected. R. phaseoli has two GS enzymes, as do other rhizobia. The two GS activities are regulated on the basis of the requirement for low (GSI) or high (GSII) ammonium assimilation. When the 2-oxoglutarate/glutamine ratio decreases, GSI is adenylylated. When GSI is inactivated, GSII is induced. However, induction of GSII activity varied depending on the rate of change of this ratio. GSII was inactivated after the addition of high ammonium concentrations, when the 2-oxoglutarate/glutamine ratio decreased rapidly. Ammonium inactivation resulted in alteration of the catalytic and physical properties of GSII. GSII inactivation was not relieved by shifting of the cultures to glutamate. After GSII inactivation, ammonium was excreted into the medium. Glutamate synthase activity was inhibited by some organic acids and repressed when cells were grown with glutamate as the nitrogen source.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Glutamine was the major product accumulated following transfer of nitrogen-limited cultures of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Pisolithus tinctorius to an ammonium medium. Experiments in which mycelium was transferred to [15N]H 4 + showed glutamine amide was the most heavily labelled product. Assimilation of ammonium into glutamate was markedly inhibited by azaserine. The kinetics of 15N-labelling and the effects of azaserine and methionine sulphoximine on the distribution of 15N-labelled products are entirely consistent with the operation of the glutamate synthase cycle. No evidence was found for ammonium assimilation via glutamate dehydrogenase. The labelling pattern observed in mycelium treated with aminooxyacetate suggests that transamination reactions are an important source of glutamate for the synthesis of glutamine.  相似文献   

15.
Nitrate assimilation has been studied in four species of yeasts; Candida nitratophila, Candida utilis, Hansenula anomala and Rhodotorula glutinis. Ammonium-grown cultures of these organisms did not assimilate nitrate but acquired the capacity to do so after a 3 h period of nitrogenstarvation. Ammonium inhibited nitrate assimilation completely in nitrate-grown cultures of R. glutinis. With Candida spp. ammonium and nitrate were assimilated simultaneously but each was assimilated at a lower rate than when either was supplied alone. Nitrogen-starved cultures of C. nitratophila contained enough nitrate reductase activity to sustain high rates of nitrate assimilation. Results indicate that the high levels of nitrate reductase in nitrate-grown cultures of C. nitratophila do not limit nitrate assimilation. Nitrate assimilation appears to be limited by nitrate uptake and/or the supply of reducing equivalents for nitrate reduction in these cultures.  相似文献   

16.
Ammonia assimilation by rhizobium cultures and bacteroids.   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
The enzymes involved in the assimilation of ammonia by free-living cultures of Rhizobium spp. are glutamine synthetase (EC. 6.o.I.2), glutamate synthase (L-glutamine:2-oxoglutarate amino transferase) and glutamate dehydrogenase (ED I.4.I.4). Under conditions of ammonia or nitrate limitation in a chemostat the assimilation of ammonia by cultures of R. leguminosarum, R. trifolii and R. japonicum proceeded via glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase. Under glucose limitation and with an excess of inorganic nitrogen, ammonia was assimilated via glutamate dehydrogenase, neither glutamine synthetase nor glutamate synthase activities being detected in extracts. The coenzyme specificity of glutamate synthase varied according to species, being linked to NADP for the fast-growing R. leguminosarum, R. melitoti, R. phaseoli and R. trifolii but to NAD for the slow-growing R. japonicum and R. lupini. Glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase and glutamate dehydrogenase activities were assayed in sonicated bacteroid preparations and in the nodule supernatants of Glycine max, Vicia faba, Pisum sativum, Lupinus luteus, Medicago sativa, Phaseolus coccineus and P. vulgaris nodules. All bacteroid preparations, except those from M. sativa and P. coccineus, contained glutamate synthase but substantial activities were found only in Glycine max and Lupinus luteus. The glutamine synthetase activities of bacteroids were low, although high activities were found in all the nodule supernatants. Glutamate dehydrogenase activity was present in all bacteroid samples examined. There was no evidence for the operation of the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase system in ammonia assimilation in root nodules, suggesting that ammonia produced by nitrogen fixation in the bacteroid is assimilated by enzymes of the plant system.  相似文献   

17.
The metabolism of [1-13C]glucose in the vegetative mycelium of the ectomycorrhizal ascomycete Tuber borchii was studied in order to characterize the biochemical pathways for the assimilation of glucose and amino acid biosynthesis. The pathways were characterized using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in conjunction with [1-13C]glucose labeling. The enzymes of mannitol cycle and ammonium assimilation were also evaluated. The majority of the 13C label was incorporated into mannitol and this polyol was formed via a direct route from absorbed glucose. Amino acid biosynthesis was also an important sink of assimilated carbon and 13C was mainly incorporated into alanine and glutamate. From this intramolecular 13C enrichment, it is concluded that pyruvate, arising from [1-13C]glucose catabolism, was used by alanine aminotransferase, pyruvate dehydrogenase and pyruvate carboxylase before entering the Krebs cycle. The transfer of 13C-labeled mycelium on [12C]glucose showed that mannitol, alanine, and glutamate carbon were used to synthesize glutamine and arginine that likely play a storage role.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract Growth in medium containing 500 mM galactose is known to promote the adhesion of Candida albicans to buccal epithelial cells or to acrylic in vitro. Of 5 other Candida species tested, only C. tropicalis (one strain) showed substantially increased adhesion to buccal cells (but not to acrylic) after growth under these conditions. A second strain of C. tropicalis as well as C. stellatoidea, C. parapsilosis, C. pseudotropicalis, C. guilliermondii and Saccharomyces cerevisiae showed little or no increased adhesion to either surface. However, after growth in medium containing 50 mM glucose, C. tropicalis and C. parapsilosis were significantly more adherent to acrylic than glucose-grown yeasts of the other species, including C. albicans . These results are discussed in relation to the colonization and infection potential of the pathogenic Candida species.  相似文献   

19.
In unicellular algae, ammonium can be assimilated into glutamate through the action of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) or into glutamine through the sequential activities of glutamine synthetase and glutamate 2-oxoglutarate amidotransferase (GS-GOGAT pathway). We have shown that the first radio-labeled product of assimilation of 13NH4+ (t1/2= 10 min) was glutamine in the marine diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana (Hustedt). When GS-GOGAT was inhibited with methionine sulfoximine, the incorporation of radioactivity into both glutamine and glutamate was blocked, implying that the radio-labeled glutamate is formed from glutamine. Glutamine was also the first labeled product when the intracellular concentration of ammonium was elevated by preincubation with unlabeled ammonium. The results indicate that the GS-GOGAT pathway is the primary pathway for the assimilation of nitrogen in T. pseudonana.  相似文献   

20.
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH E.C. 1.4.1.2.4), glutamine synthetase (GS E.C. 6.3.1.2) and glutamate synthase (glutamine oxoglutarate amino transferase, GOGAT E.C. 2.6.1.53) activities, protein and organic nitrogen contents and growth of roots and shoots of maize seedlings raised in dark at 25±2°C in half strength Hoagland’s solution containing different ammonium salts as source of nitrogen, were determined to assess the contribution of alternate pathways in ammonium assimilation. Ammonium nitrate or in some cases ammonium chloride appeared to be the best source for both root and shoot growth and for increase in protein, total nitrogen and the enzymes of ammonium assimilation. In roots, NH4-nitrogen appeared to be assimilated by both GDH as well as GS-GOGAT pathways specially in the dark grown seedlings, while in shoots it was primarily by GS-GOGAT pathway.  相似文献   

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