首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 93 毫秒
1.
Tryptophan was found to be degraded in Saccharomyces cerevisiae mainly to tryptophol. Upon chromatography on DEAE-cellulose two aminotransferases were identified: Aromatic aminotransferase I was constitutively synthesized and was active in vitro with tryptophan, phenylalanine or tyrosine as amino donors and pyruvate, phenylpyruvate or 2-oxoglutarate as amino acceptors. The enzyme was six times less active with and had a twenty times lower affinity for tryptophan (K m=6 mM) than phenylalanine or tyrosine. It was postulated thus that aromatic aminotransferase I is involved in vivo in the last step of tyrosine and phenylalanine biosynthesis. Aromatic aminotransferase II was inducible with tryptophan but also with the other two aromatic amino acids either alone or in combinations. With tryptophan as amino donor the enzyme was most active with phenylpyruvate and not active with 2-oxoglutarate as amino acceptor; its affinity for tryptophan was similar as for the other aromatic amino acids (K m=0.2–0.4 mM). Aromatic aminotransferase II was postulated to be involved in vivo mainly in the degradation of tryptophan, but may play also a role in the degradation of the other aromatic amino acids.A mutant strain defective in the aromatic aminotransferase II (aat2) was isolated and its influence on tryptophan accumulation and pool was studied. In combination with mutations trp2 fbr, aro7 and cdr1-1, mutation aat2 led to a threefold increase of the tryptophan pool as compared to a strain with an intact aromatic aminotransferase II.  相似文献   

2.
In the biosynthetic pathway of aromatic amino acids of Brevibacterium flavum, ratios of each biosynthetic flow at the chorismate branch point were calculated from the reaction velocities of anthranilate synthetase for tryptophan and chorismate mutase for phenylalanine and tyrosine at steady state concentrations of chorismate. When these aromatic amino acids were absent, the ratio was 61, showing an extremely preferential synthesis of tryptophan. The presence of tryptophan at 0.01 mM decreased the ratio to 0.07, showing a diversion of the preferential synthesis to phenylalanine and tyrosine. Complete recovery by glutamate of the ability to synthesize the Millon-positive substance in dialyzed cell extracts confirmed that tyrosine was synthesized via pretyrosine in this organism. Partially purified prephenate aminotransferase, the first enzyme in the tyrosine-specific branch, had a pH optimum of 8.0 and Km’s of 0.45 and 22 mM for prephenate and glutamate, respectively, and its activity was increased 15-fold by pyridoxal-5-phosphate. Neither its activity nor its synthesis was affected at all by the presence of the end product tyrosine or other aromatic amino acids. The ratio of each biosynthetic flow for tyrosine and phenylalanine at the prephenate branch point was calculated from the kinetic equations of prephenate aminotransferase and prephenate dehydratase, the first enzyme in the phenylalanine-specific branch. It showed that tyrosine was synthesized in preference to phenylalanine when phenylalanine and tyrosine were absent. Furthermore, this preferential synthesis was diverted to a balanced synthesis of phenylalanine and tyrosine through activation of prephenate dehydratase by the tyrosine thus synthesized. The feedback inhibition of prephenate dehydratase by phenylalanine was proposed to play a role in maintaining a balanced synthesis when supply of prephenate was decreased by feedback inhibition of 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate (DAHP*) synthetase, the common key enzyme. Overproduction of the end products in various regulatory mutants was also explained by these results.  相似文献   

3.
The incorporation of [3H]phenylalanine, [3H]tyrosine, and [3H]tryptophan into protein and amino acyl–tRNA was studied in cell-free preparations from rat brain. Tyrosine and tryptophan inhibited the incorporation of phenylalanine into protein, and tyrosine inhibited the incorporation of phenylalanine and tryptophan into amino acyl–tRNAs. In most cases, homogentisate, phenylpyruvate, and phenyllactate inhibited the incorporation of phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan into protein and amino acyl–tRNAs, and the incorporation of phenylalanine into polyphenylalanine. All other protein amino acids, and phenylacetate, salicylate, and benzoate were wholly ineffectual. The results suggest that the formation of amino acyl–tRNAs may have been the step which was affected most by the inhibitors. The incorporation data at different concentrations of the aromatic amino acids were fitted to the simple Michaelis equation. Homogentisate and phenylpyruvate generally tended to reduce both Km and V in the incorporation of aromatic amino acids into protein and amino acyl-tRNAs, even if V decreased more than Km.  相似文献   

4.
《Phytochemistry》1995,39(4):737-749
The shikimate pathway produces the three proteinogenic aromatic amino acids, phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan, which are, in addition to several intermediates of the shikimate pathway, intermediates in the biosynthesis of numerous aromatic natural products in higher plants. While there is only little difference in the sequence of the chemical reactions of the pathway in bacteria, fungi and plants, considerable differences exist in the organization and regulation of the shikimate pathway in plants, fungi and bacteria. The recent isolation and characterization of cDNAs and genes coding for enzymes of the shikimate pathway in higher plants have confirmed that plastids are the major, if not only site of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis in plants. Furthermore, the observed differential spatial and temporal expression of genes coding for isozymes of the pathway indicates a complex regulation that we are only beginning to understand.  相似文献   

5.
The three aromatic amino acids phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan are synthesized in the plastids of higher plants. There is, however, biochemical evidence that a cytosolic isoform exists of the enzyme catalysing the first step of that branch of the pathway which is specific for the synthesis of phenylalanine and tyrosine, i.e. chorismate mutase (CM). We now report on the isolation of a cDNA clone encoding a cytosolic CM isozyme from Arabidopsis thaliana that was identified by complementing a CM-deficient Escherichia coli strain. The deduced amino acid sequence of this isozyme was 50% identical to that of a previously isolated plastidic CM, and 41% identical to that of yeast CM. The organ-specific expression patterns of the two CM genes were rather similar, but only the gene encoding the plastidic isozyme was elicitor- and pathogen-inducible. The plastidic CM expressed in E. coli was activated by tryptophan and inhibited by phenylalanine and tyrosine, whereas the cytosolic isozyme was insensitive. The existence of a cytosolic CM isozyme implies that either a cytosolic pathway (partial or complete) for the biosynthesis of phenylalanine and tyrosine exists, or that prephenate, originating from chorismate in the cytosol, is utilized for the synthesis of metabolites other than these two aromatic amino acids.  相似文献   

6.
The control of the synthesis of certain key enzymes of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis was studied. Tyrosine represses the first enzyme of the 3-deoxy-d-arabino heptulosonic acid 7-phosphate pathway, DAHP synthetase, as well as shikimate kinase and chorismate mutase about fivefold in cultures grown under conditions limiting the synthesis of the aromatic amino acids. A mixture of tyrosine and phenylalanine represses twofold further. Tryptophan does not appear to be involved in the control of these enzymes. The specific activity of at least one early enzyme, dehydroquinase, remains essentially constant under a variety of nutritional supplementations. Two enzymes in the terminal branches are repressed by the amino acids they help to synthesize: prephenate dehydrogenase can be repressed fourfold by tyrosine, and anthranilate synthetase can be repressed over 200-fold by tryptophan. There is no evidence that phenylalanine represses prephenate dehydratase. Regulatory mutants have been isolated in which various enzymes of the pathway are no longer repressible. One class is derepressed for several of the prechorismate enzymes, as well as chorismate mutase and prephenate dehydrogenase. In another mutant, several enzymes of tryptophan biosynthesis are no longer repressible. Thus, the rate of synthesis of enzymes at every stage of the pathway is under control of various aromatic amino acids. Tyrosine and phenylalanine control the synthesis of enzymes involved in the synthesis of the three aromatic amino acids. Each terminal branch is under the control of its end product.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Incorporation of 14C-phenylalanine by T. neapolitanus was inhibited competitively by relatively low concentrations of glycine, serine, alanine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, tryptophan, tyrosine, histidine, threonine, and methionine (Group I amino acids), but not greatly depressed by aspartate, glutamate, lysine, arginine, cysteine (Group II amino acids) and proline at similar concentrations. Group I acids competed with each other for incorporation but were little affected by Group II acids. Similarly Group I acids little depressed the incorporation of Group II acids, among which, however, some mutual inhibition occurred. Incorporation of proline was depressed by both Group I and II acids. Two main permeation mechanisms are proposed, one transporting Group I acids, the other Group II acids, but some overlapping of function probably occurs. Proline may be transported by a third permease, which is subject to inhibition by both Group I and II acids. T. concretivorus also has a common transport mechanism for some amino acids. Less interaction between amino acids was found using two heterotrophic pseudomonads.Exogenous phenylalanine inhibited both the biosynthesis and the uptake of tyrosine and tryptophan by T. neapolitanus. High phenylalanine concentrations depressed the assimilation of 14C-labelled tyrosine and tryptophan less than low ones, suggesting that the bacteria developed a requirement for external tyrosine and tryptophan when exposed to highly inhibitory concentrations of phenylalanine.  相似文献   

8.
In Brevibacterium flavum, prephenate dehydratase in the phenylalanine specific biosynthetic pathway was strongly inhibited by phenylalanine and activated by tyrosine. Furthermore. the inhibition by phenylalanine was completely reversed by tyrosine. Inhibition by tyrosine of prephenate dehydrogenase in the tyrosine specific pathway was very weak. Overall regulation mechanism of the aromatic amino acid biosynthesis in B. flavum was proposed on the bases of these results and the previous findings on 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate-7- phosphate synthetase(DAHP synthetase*) of the common pathway and on anthranilate synthetase of the tryptophan specific pathway. Two types of m-fluorophenylalanine(mFP) resistant mutants which accumulated phenylalanine alone or both phenylalanine and tyrosine, respectively, were derived. The accumulation in the former mutants was inhibited by tyrosine, but that in the latter was affected neither by tyrosine nor by phenylalanine. DAHP synthetase of the latter mutants had been desensitized from the synergistic feedback inhibition by tyrosine and phenylalanine, while prephenate dehydratase of the former mutants had been desensitized in the feedback inhibition by phenylalanine. Tyrosine auxotroph accumulated phenylalanine under tyrosine limitation and its accumulation was inhibited by the excessive addition of tyrosine. Phenylalanine auxotroph accumulated tyrosine under phenylalanine limitation and its accumulation was inhibited by the excessive addition of phenylalanine. These results in vivo strongly supported the proposed regulation mechanism in which synthesis of phenylalanine in preference to tyrosine was assumed.  相似文献   

9.
10.
11.
12.
Summary In extension of previous studies on the regulation of the aromatic amino acid pathway in blue-green and green algae the control of two branch-point enzymes, namely chorismate mutase and anthranilate synthetase has been studied. The activity of chorismate mutase in these organisms is effectively inhibited by l-tyrosine or l-phenylalanine. l-tryptophan, in contrast, proved to be a positive effector of the enzyme: in the absence of phenylalanine or tyrosine tryptophan slightly stimulated chorismate mutase activity; this stimulation was even brought about in the presence of excess phenylalanine or tyrosine, irrespective if the enzyme had been preincubated with these inhibitors or not. Tryptophan thus proved to completely revert the feedback inhibition of this enzyme by phenylalanine or tyrosine. Substrate saturation curves of chorismate mutase activity are hyperbolic in the presence of tryptophan and sigmoid in the presence of phenylalanine or tyrosine. In contrast to the enzymes of the green algae investigated, chorismate mutase activity of Anacystis nidulans, a member of the class of the blue-green algae was not affected by any of the aromatic amino acids.The activity of anthranilate synthetase, the second enzyme of the chorismic acid branch-point of the pathway was consistently inhibited by l-tryptophan in all the organisms tested. The results described here bear significance on the regulation of a multi-branched pathway the first enzyme of which is inhibited just by one endproduct.  相似文献   

13.
The regulatory effect of amino acids on the production of thaxtomin A, a phytotoxin produced by Streptomyces scabies, was investigated. Tryptophan had an important inhibitory effect on the toxin biosynthesis in all five strains of S. scabies tested. Two other aromatic amino acids (tyrosine and phenylalanine) also inhibited thaxtomin A biosynthesis, while aliphatic amino acids did not cause an important decline in thaxtomin A production. Methylation of tryptophan prevented or reduced the inhibitory effect on thaxtomin A biosynthesis. In spite of the inhibitory action of tryptophan and phenylalanine on thaxtomin A production, incorporation of these radiolabeled molecules into thaxtomin A confirmed that they are metabolic precursors for the biosynthesis of the phytotoxin.  相似文献   

14.
Shikimate, anthranilate, indole, l -tryptophan, phenylpyruvate, l -p henylalanine, p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate or l -tyrosine were added to suspension-cultured Nicotiana tabacum (tabacco) and Daucus carota (carrot) tissues and incubated for 24 hours. Uptake of each compound was substantial as measured by its decrease in the medium. The levels of free tryptophan, phenylalanine and tyrosine were determined in the tissues after the 24 hours incubation. Shikimate did not change the aromatic animo acid levels in carrot tissue, but did increase all three in tobacco (3-fold or more), indicating a less stringent feedback control in tobacco. Anthranilate and indole increased the tissue tryptophan levels in both species by at least 17-fold, showing that the flow from anthranilate and indole to tryptophan was apparently unhindered by enzymatic control mechanisms. When tryptophan levels were elevated in both carrot and tobaccotissues by anthranilate, indole or tryptophan addition, there was also an increase in free phyenylalanine and tyrosine. This might be due to the reversal of phenylalanine and tyrosine feedback inhibition of chorismate mutase by the high tryptophan in the tissue. Chorismate mutase activity in tobacco crude extracts could be inhibited by 66–90% by 1 mM phenylalanine and /or tyrosine. Tryptophan at 1 mM stimulated the enzyme activity by 1/3 and completely reversed the phenylalanine and/or tyrosine inhibition of enzyme activity. Chorsimate mutase activity amino acids under a variety of conditions. Phenylpyruvate increased the phenylalanine levels and p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate increased the tyrosine levels in carrot and tobacco tissues indicating that there was no feedback control of the last step in phenylalanine and tyrosine biosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
A quantitative analysis of the impact of feedback inhibition on aromatic amino acid biosynthesis was performed in chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Introduction of a tyrosine-insensitive allele of ARO4 (encoding 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase) caused a three-fold increase of intracellular phenylalanine and tyrosine concentrations. These amino acids were not detected extracellularly. However, an over 100-fold increase of the extracellular levels of phenylacetate, phenylethanol and their para-hydroxyl analogues was observed. The total increase of the flux through the aromatic pathway was estimated to be over four-fold. Individual overexpression of either the wild-type or feedback insensitive allele of ARO7 (encoding chorismate mutase had no significant impact. However when they were combined with the Tyr-insensitive ARO4 allele in combination with the Tyr-insensitive ARO4 allele, extracellular concentrations of aromatic compounds were increased by over 200-fold relative to the reference strain, corresponding to a 4.5-fold increase of the flux through the aromatic amino acid biosynthesis pathway. Elimination of allosteric control on these two key reactions in aromatic amino acid metabolism significantly affected intracellular concentrations of several non-aromatic amino acids. This broader impact of amino acid biosynthesis presents a challenge in rational optimization of the production of specific amino acids and derived flavour compounds.  相似文献   

16.
Detrimental effects of hyperaccumulation of the aromatic amino acid phenylalanine (Phe) in animals, known as phenylketonuria, are mitigated by excretion of Phe derivatives; however, how plants endure Phe accumulating conditions in the absence of an excretion system is currently unknown. To achieve Phe hyperaccumulation in a plant system, we simultaneously decreased in petunia flowers expression of all three Phe ammonia lyase (PAL) isoforms that catalyze the non‐oxidative deamination of Phe to trans‐cinnamic acid, the committed step for the major pathway of Phe metabolism. A total decrease in PAL activity by 81–94% led to an 18‐fold expansion of the internal Phe pool. Phe accumulation had multifaceted intercompartmental effects on aromatic amino acid metabolism. It resulted in a decrease in the overall flux through the shikimate pathway, and a redirection of carbon flux toward the shikimate‐derived aromatic amino acids tyrosine and tryptophan. Accumulation of Phe did not lead to an increase in flux toward phenylacetaldehyde, for which Phe is a direct precursor. Metabolic flux analysis revealed this to be due to the presence of a distinct metabolically inactive pool of Phe, likely localized in the vacuole. We have identified a vacuolar cationic amino acid transporter (PhCAT2) that contributes to sequestering excess of Phe in the vacuole. In vitro assays confirmed PhCAT2 can transport Phe, and decreased PhCAT2 expression in PAL‐RNAi transgenic plants resulted in 1.6‐fold increase in phenylacetaldehyde emission. These results demonstrate mechanisms by which plants maintain intercompartmental aromatic amino acid homeostasis, and provide critical insight for future phenylpropanoid metabolic engineering strategies.  相似文献   

17.
A cell line of Eschscholtzia californica selected for meta-fluorotyrosine (MFT) tolerance was found to have 10-fold increased levels of phenylalanine and tyrosine compared to the parent line, while most other amino acids were only increased 2-fold. Tracer experiments with shikimic acid in the presence of MFT showed that the biosynthesis of the aromatic amino acids was not impaired in the tolerant line. Feeding experiments with phenylalanine, tyrosine, or shikimic acid also revealed a reduced turnover of the pools of the aromatic amino acids in the variant. Thus undisturbed de novo biosynthesis of the aromatic amino acids and dilution of toxic effects of MFT by the enlarged pool sizes seemed to be the main reason for the acquired tolerance. Despite the enlarged availability of the precursor tyrosine, formation of the benzophenanthridine alkaloids was enhanced neither in the growth nor in the production medium.  相似文献   

18.
Effect of glyphosate on carrot and tobacco cells   总被引:7,自引:7,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The growth of suspension-cultured carrot (Daucus carota L.) and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Xanthi) cells was inhibited by glyphosate (N-[phosphonomethyl]glycine). This inhibition was reversed by adding combinations of phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan or casein hydrolysate. Casein hydrolysate and phenylalanine + tyrosine + tryptophan were the most effective treatments. Reversal of glyphosate-induced inhibition occurred only if the aromatic amino acids were added during the first 8 days of glyphosate incubation. Glyphosate uptake was not reduced when the aromatic amino acids or casein hydrolysate were added.  相似文献   

19.
The aromatic amino acids L-phenylalanine and L-tyrosine and their plant-derived natural products are essential in human and plant metabolism and physiology. Here we identified Petunia hybrida and Arabidopsis thaliana genes encoding prephenate aminotransferases (PPA-ATs), thus completing the identification of the genes involved in phenylalanine and tyrosine biosyntheses. Biochemical and genetic characterization of enzymes showed that PPA-AT directs carbon flux from prephenate toward arogenate, making the arogenate pathway predominant in plant phenylalanine biosynthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Transketolase is a key enzyme of the nonoxidative pentose phosphate pathway. The effect of its overexpression on aromatic amino acid production was investigated in Corynebacterium glutamicum, a typical amino-acid-producing organism. For this purpose, the transketolase gene of the organism was cloned on the basis of its ability to complement a C. glutamicum transketolase mutant with pleiotropically shikimic-acid-requiring, ribose- and gluconic-acid-negative phenotype. The gene was shown by deletion mapping and complementation analysis to be located in a 3.2-kb XhoI-SalI fragment of the genome. Amplification of␣the gene by use of low-, middle-, and high-copy-number vectors in a C. glutamicum strain resulted in overexpression of transketolase activities as well as a␣protein of approximately 83kDa in proportion to the copy numbers. Introduction of the plasmids into a tryptophan and lysine co-producer resulted in copy-dependent increases in tryptophan production along with concomitant decreases in lysine production. Furthermore, the presence of the gene in high copy numbers enabled tyrosine, phenylalanine and tryptophan producers to accumulate 5%–20% more aromatic amino acids. These results indicate that overexpressed transketolase activity operates to redirect the glycolytic intermediates toward the nonoxidative pentose phosphate pathway in vivo, thereby increasing the intracellular level of erythrose 4-phosphate, a precursor of aromatic biosynthesis, in the aromatic-amino-acid-producing C. glutamicum strains. Received: 27 July 1998 / Received last revision: 12 October 1998 / Accepted: 24 October 1998  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号