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1.
N Papadakis  G G Hammes 《Biochemistry》1977,16(9):1890-1896
One sulfhydryl group per polypeptide chain of the pyruvate dehydrogenase component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex from Escherichia coli was selectively labeled with N-[P-(2-benzoxazoyl)phenyl]-maleimide (NBM), 4-dimethylamino-4-magnitude of-maleimidostilbene (NSM), and N-(4-dimethylamino-3,5-dinitrophenyl)maleimide (DDPM) in 0.05 M potassium phosphate (pH 7). Modification of the sulfhydryl group did not alter the enzymatic activity or the binding of 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) or thiochrome diphosphate to the enzyme. The fluorescence of the NBM or NSM coupled to the sulfhydryl group on the enzyme was quenched by binding to the enzyme of the substrate pyruvate the coenzyme thiamine diphosphate, the coenzyme analogue thiochrome diphosphate, the regulatory ligands acetyl-CoA, GTP, and phosphoenolpyruvate, and the acetyl-CoA analogue, ANS. Fluorescence energy transfer measurements were carried out for the enzyme-bound donor-acceptor pairs NBM-ANS, NBM-thiochrome diphosphate ANS-DDPM, and thiochrome diphosphate-DDM. The results indicate that the modified sulfhydryl group is more than 40 A from the active site and approximately 49 A from the acetyl-CoA regulatory site. Thus, a conformational change must accompany the binding of ligands to the regulatory and catalytic sites. Anisotropy depolarization measurements with ANS bound on the isolated pyruvate dehydrogenase in 0.05 M potassium phosphate (pH 7.0) suggest that under these conditions the enzyme is dimeric.  相似文献   

2.
ADP and ATP with a spin-label linked to the terminal phosphate are activators of glutamate dehydrogenase and bind to the same site as the activator ADP. There is hardly any interaction with the coenzyme site. Glutamate dehydrogenase can be modified with a ketone spin-label at a site in the active centre[Andree and Zantema, (1978) Biochemistry, 17, 778--783]. The spin-labelled activators interact with ketone spin-labelled glutamate dehydrogenase in the same way as with native glutamate dehydrogenase relative to the activator site, but show a stronger binding to the coenzyme site. Upon binding to the coenzyme site a spin-spin interaction between the ketone spin-label and the spin-labelled activators is observed. Nuclear magnetic resonance studies of the linewidth of 2-oxoglutarate and NADP+ bound to their functional sites on glutamate dehydrogenase without and with spin-labels result in distances between the ligand nuclei and the spin-labels. The results show that NADP+ binds in an open conformation consistent with the conformation in other dehydrogenases. The activator ADP binds in the neighbourhood of the active centre, but with very little or no overlap with the coenzyme site.  相似文献   

3.
2′,3′-O-(2,4,6-Trinitrophenyl) adenosine 5′-triphosphate (TNP-ATP) is a fluorescent analogue of ATP. MgTNP-ATP was found to be an allosteric activator of pyruvate carboxylase that exhibits competition with acetyl CoA in activating the enzyme. There is no evidence that MgTNP-ATP binds to the MgATP substrate binding site of the enzyme. At concentrations above saturating, MgATP activates bicarbonate-dependent ATP cleavage, but inhibits the overall reaction. The fluorescence of MgTNP-ATP increases by about 2.5-fold upon binding to the enzyme and decreases on addition of saturating acetyl CoA. However, not all the MgTNP-ATP is displaced by acetyl CoA, or with a combination of saturating concentrations of MgATP and acetyl CoA. The kinetics of the binding of MgTNP-ATP to pyruvate carboxylase have been measured and shown to be triphasic, with the two fastest phases having pseudo first-order rate constants that are dependent on the concentration of MgTNP-ATP. The kinetics of displacement from the enzyme by acetyl CoA have been measured and also shown to be triphasic. A model of the binding process is proposed that links the kinetics of MgTNP-ATP binding to the allosteric activation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Coenzyme A (CoA) and its thioester derivative acetyl-Coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) participate in over 100 different reactions in intermediary metabolism of microorganisms. Earlier results indicated that overexpression of upstream rate-limiting enzyme pantothenate kinase with simultaneous supplementation of precursor pantothenic acid to the culture media increased intracellular CoA levels significantly ( approximately 10-fold). The acetyl-CoA levels also increased ( approximately 5-fold) but not as much as that of CoA, showing that the carbon flux from the pyruvate node is rate-limiting upon an increase in CoA levels. In this study, pyruvate dehydrogenase was overexpressed under elevated CoA levels to increase carbon flux from pyruvate to acetyl-CoA. This coexpression did not increase intracellular acetyl-CoA levels but increased the accumulation of extracellular acetate. The production of isoamyl acetate, an industrially useful compound derived from acetyl-CoA, was used as a model reporter system to signify the beneficial effects of this metabolic engineering strategy. In addition, a strain was created in which the acetate production pathway was inactivated to relieve competition at the acetyl-CoA node and to efficiently channel the enhanced carbon flux to the ester production pathway. The synergistic effect of cofactor CoA manipulation and pyruvate dehydrogenase overexpression in the acetate pathway deletion mutant led to a 5-fold increase in isoamyl acetate production. Under normal growth conditions the acetate pathway deletion mutant strains accumulate intracellular pyruvate, leading to excretion of pyruvate. However, upon enhancing the carbon flux from pyruvate to acetyl-CoA, the excretion of pyruvate was significantly reduced.  相似文献   

5.
1. AMP is an activator of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of the Ehrlich--Lettré ascites tumour, increasing its V up to 2-fold, with Ka of 40 microM at pH 7.4. This activation appears to be an allosteric effect on the decarboxylase subunit of the complex. 2. The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex has a Km for pyruvate within the range 17--36 microM depending on the pH, the optimum pH being approx. 7.4, with a V of approx. 0.1 unit/g of cells. The rate-limiting step is dependent on the transformation of the enzyme--substrate complex. The Km for CoA is 15 microM. The Km for NAD+ is 0.7 mM for both the complex and the lipoamide dehydrogenase. The complex is inhibited by acetyl-CoA competitively with CoA; the Ki is 60 microM. The lipoamide dehydrogenase is inhibited by NADH and NADPH competitively with NAD+, with Ki values of 80 and 90 microM respectively. In the reverse reaction the Km values for NADH and NADPH are essentially equal to their Ki values for the forward reaction, the V for the latter being 0.09 of that of the former. Hence the reaction rate of the complex in vivo is likely to be markedly affected by feedback isosteric inhibition by reduced nicotinamide nucleotides and possibly acetyl-CoA.  相似文献   

6.
Kim AR  Rylett RJ  Shilton BH 《Biochemistry》2006,45(49):14621-14631
Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) catalyzes the synthesis of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine from choline and acetyl-CoA, and its presence is a defining feature of cholinergic neurons. We report the structure of human ChAT to a resolution of 2.2 A along with structures for binary complexes of ChAT with choline, CoA, and a nonhydrolyzable acetyl-CoA analogue, S-(2-oxopropyl)-CoA. The ChAT-choline complex shows which features of choline are important for binding and explains how modifications of the choline trimethylammonium group can be tolerated by the enzyme. A detailed model of the ternary Michaelis complex fully supports the direct transfer of the acetyl group from acetyl-CoA to choline through a mechanism similar to that seen in the serine hydrolases for the formation of an acyl-enzyme intermediate. Domain movements accompany CoA binding, and a surface loop, which is disordered in the unliganded enzyme, becomes localized and binds directly to the phosphates of CoA, stabilizing the complex. Interactions between this surface loop and CoA may function to lower the KM for CoA and could be important for phosphorylation-dependent regulation of ChAT activity.  相似文献   

7.
The purified carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from Clostridium thermoaceticum is the only protein required to catalyze an exchange reaction between carbon monoxide and the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA. This exchange requires that the CO dehydrogenase bind the methyl, the carbonyl, and the CoA groups of acetyl-CoA, then equilibrate the carbonyl with CO in the solution and re-form acetyl-CoA. CoA is not necessary for the exchange and, in fact, inhibits the reaction. These studies support the view that CO dehydrogenase is the condensing enzyme that forms acetyl-CoA from its component parts. Carbon dioxide also exchanges with the C-1 of acetyl-CoA, but at a much lower rate than does CO. At 50 degrees C and pH 5.3, the optimal pH, the turnover number is 70 mol of CO exchanged per min/mol of enzyme. Low potential electron carriers are stimulatory. The Km app for stimulation by ferredoxin is 50-fold less than the value for flavodoxin. Neither ATP or Pi stimulate the exchange. The EPR spectrum of the CO-reacted enzyme is markedly changed by binding of CoA or acetyl-CoA. Arginine residues of the CO dehydrogenase appear to be involved in the active site, possibly by binding acetyl-CoA. Mersalyl acid, methyl iodide, 5,5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate), and sodium dithionite inhibit the exchange reaction. A scheme is presented to account for the role of CO dehydrogenase in the exchange reaction and in the synthesis of acetate.  相似文献   

8.
1. A method was devised for preparing pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase free of thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP), permitting studies of the binding of [35S]TPP to pyruvate dehydrogenase and pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate. The Kd of TPP for pyruvate dehydrogenase was in the range 6.2-8.2 muM, whereas that for pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate was approximately 15 muM; both forms of the complex contained about the same total number of binding sites (500 pmol/unit of enzyme). EDTA completely inhibited binding of TPP; sodium pyrophosphate, adenylyl imidodiphosphate and GTP, which are inhibitors (competitive with TPP) of the overall pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction, did not appreciably affect TPP binding. 2. Initial-velocity patterns of the overall pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction obtained with varying TPP, CoA and NAD+ concentrations at a fixed pyruvate concentration were consistent with a sequential three-site Ping Pong mechanism; in the presence of oxaloacetate and citrate synthase to remove acetyl-CoA (an inhibitor of the overall reaction) the values of Km for NAD+ and CoA were 53+/- 5 muM and 1.9+/-0.2 muM respectively. Initial-velocity patterns observed with varying TPP concentrations at various fixed concentrations of pyruvate were indicative of either a compulsory order of addition of substrates to form a ternary complex (pyruvate-Enz-TPP) or a random-sequence mechanism in which interconversion of ternary intermediates is rate-limiting; values of Km for pyruvate and TPP were 25+/-4 muM and 50+/-10 nM respectively. The Kia-TPP (the dissociation constant for Enz-TPP complex calculated from kinetic plots) was close to the value of Kd-TPP (determined by direct binding studies). 3. Inhibition of the overall pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction by pyrophosphate was mixed non-competitive versus pyruvate and competitive versus TPP; however, pyrophosphate did not alter the calculated value for Kia-TPP, consistent with the lack of effect of pyrophosphate on the Kd for TPP. 4. Pyruvate dehydrogenase catalysed a TPP-dependent production of 14CO2 from [1-14C]pyruvate in the absence of NAD+ and CoA at approximately 0.35% of the overall reaction rate; this was substantially inhibited by phosphorylation of the enzyme both in the presence and absence of acetaldehyde (which stimulates the rate of 14CO2 production two- or three-fold). 5. Pyruvate dehydrogenase catalysed a partial back-reaction in the presence of TPP, acetyl-CoA and NADH. The Km for TPP was 4.1+/-0.5 muM. The partial back-reaction was stimulated by acetaldehyde, inhibited by pyrophosphate and abolished by phosphorylation. 6. Formation of enzyme-bound [14C]acetylhydrolipoate from [3-14C]pyruvate but not from [1-14C]acetyl-CoA was inhibited by phosphorylation. Phosphorylation also substantially inhibited the transfer of [14C]acetyl groups from enzyme-bound [14C]acetylhydrolipoate to TPP in the presence of NADH. 7...  相似文献   

9.
The glycyl radical enzyme pyruvate formate-lyase (PFL) synthesizes acetyl-CoA and formate from pyruvate and CoA. With the crystal structure of the non-radical form of PFL in complex with its two substrates, we have trapped the moment prior to pyruvate cleavage. The structure reveals how the active site aligns the scissile bond of pyruvate for radical attack, prevents non-radical side reactions of the pyruvate, and confines radical migration. The structure shows CoA in a syn conformation awaiting pyruvate cleavage. By changing to an anti conformation, without affecting the adenine binding mode of CoA, the thiol of CoA could pick up the acetyl group resulting from pyruvate cleavage.  相似文献   

10.
The accessibility of sulfhydryl groups at the pyruvate dehydrogenase component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex from Escherichia coli was reinvestigated. Hydrophobic interactions appear to control the reactivity of an essential cysteine residue at the active site with thiol reagents. This explains why the essential cysteine residue reacts only with thiol reagents of minor polarity, like p-hydroxymercuribenzoate or phenylmercuric nitrate, but not with Ellman's reagent or jodoacetamide. The pyruvate dehydrogenase component was modified with a nitroxide derivative of p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. The ESR spectrum of the spin-labelled enzyme changed dramatically upon addition of the cofactors thiamine diphosphate and Mg2+. Obviously spin-spin interaction occurs under these conditions caused by a transition of an inactive to an active state of the enzyme. The same conformational change is observed when the allosteric activator AMP instead of the cofactors was bound to the enzyme. The implications of these results for the allosteric regulation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetic mechanisms of the 2-oxoglutarate and pyruvate dehydrogenease complexes from pig heart mitochondria were studied at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees. A three-site ping-pong mechanism for the actin of both complexes was proposed on the basis of the parallel lines obtained when 1/v was plotted against 2-oxoglutarate or pyruvate concentration for various levels of CoA and a level of NAD+ near its Michaelis constant value. Rate equations were derived from the proposed mechanism. Michaelis constants for the reactants of the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex reaction are: 2-oxoglutarate, 0.220 mM; CoA, 0.025 mM; NAD+, 0.050 mM. Those of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex are: pyruvate, 0.015 mM; CoA, 0.021 mM; NAD+, 0.079 mM. Product inhibition studies showed that succinyl-CoA or acetyl-CoA was competitive with respect to CoA, and NADH was competitive with respect to NAD+ in both overall reactions, and that succinyl-CoA or acetyl-CoA and NADH were uncompetitive with respect to 2-oxoglutarate or pyruvate, respectively. However, noncompetitive (rather than uncompetitive) inhibition patterns were observed for succinyl-CoA or acetyl-CoA versus NAD+ and for NADH versus CoA. These results are consistent with the proposed mechanisms.  相似文献   

12.
In vitro, the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is sensitive to product inhibition by NADH and acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA). Based upon Km and Ki relationships, it was suggested that NADH can play a primary role in control of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity in vivo (JA Miernyk, DD Randall [1987] Plant Physiol 83:306-310). We have now extended the in vitro studies of product inhibition by assaying pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity in situ, using purified intact mitochondria from green pea (Pisum sativum) seedlings. In situ activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is inhibited when mitochondria are incubated with malonate. In some instances, isolated mitochondria show an apparent lack of coupling during pyruvate oxidation. The inhibition by malonate, and the apparent lack of coupling, can both be explained by an accumulation of acetyl-CoA. Inhibition could be alleviated by addition of oxalacetate, high levels of malate, or l-carnitine. The CoA pool in nonrespiring mitochondria was approximately 150 micromolar, but doubled during pyruvate oxidation, when 60 to 95% of the total was in the form of acetyl-CoA. Our results indicate that in situ activity of the mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase complex can be controlled in part by acetyl-CoA product inhibition.  相似文献   

13.
The activation of pyruvate dehydrogenasea kinase activity by CoA esters has been further characterized. Half-maximal activation of kinase activity was achieved with about 1.0 microM acetyl-CoA after a 20-s preincubation in the presence of NADH. More than 80% of the acetyl-CoA was consumed during this period in acetylating sites in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex as a result of the transacetylation reaction proceeding to equilibrium. At 1.0 microM acetyl-CoA, this resulted in more than a 4-fold higher level of CoA than residual acetyl-CoA. Activation of kinase activity could result either from acetylation of specific sites in the complex or tight binding of acetyl-CoA. Removal of CoA enhanced both acetylation and activation, suggesting acetylation mediates activation. For allosteric binding of acetyl-CoA to elicit activation, an activation constant, Ka, less than 50 nM would be required. To further distinguish between those mechanisms, the effects of other CoA esters as well as the reactivity of most of the effective CoA esters were characterized. Several short-chain CoA esters enhanced kinase activity including (in decreasing order of effectiveness) malonyl-CoA, acetoacetyl-CoA, propionyl-CoA, and methylmalonyl-CoA. Butyryl-CoA inhibited kinase activity as did high concentrations of long-chain acyl-CoAs. Inhibition by long-chain acyl-CoAs may result, in part, from detergent-like properties of those esters. Malonyl-CoA, propionyl-CoA, butyryl-CoA, and methylmalonyl-CoA, obtained with radiolabeled acyl groups, were shown to acylate sites in the complex. Propionyl-CoA and butyryl-CoA were tested, in competition with acetyl-CoA or pyruvate, as alternative substrates for acylation of sites in the complex and as competitive effectors of kinase activity. Propionyl-CoA alone rapidly acylated sites in the complex at low concentrations, and low concentrations of propionyl-CoA were effective in activating kinase activity although only a relatively small activation was observed. When an equivalent level (20 microM) of acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA was used, marked activation of kinase activity due to a dominant effect of acetyl-CoA was associated with acetylation of a major portion of sites in the complex and with a small portion undergoing acylation with propionyl-CoA. Those results were rapidly achieved in a manner independent of the order of addition of the two CoA esters. That indicates that tight slowly reversible binding of acetyl-CoA is not involved in kinase activation. High levels of propionyl-CoA greatly reduced acetylation by acetyl-CoA and nearly prevented activation of kinase activity by acetyl-CoA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Klyuyeva A  Tuganova A  Popov KM 《Biochemistry》2008,47(32):8358-8366
Mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 2 (PDHK2) phosphorylates the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex (PDC) and thereby controls the rate of oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate. The activity of PDHK2 is regulated by a variety of metabolites such as pyruvate, NAD (+), NADH, CoA, and acetyl-CoA. The inhibitory effect of pyruvate occurs through the unique binding site, which is specific for pyruvate and its synthetic analogue dichloroacetate (DCA). The effects of NAD (+), NADH, CoA, and acetyl-CoA are mediated by the binding site that recognizes the inner lipoyl-bearing domain (L2) of the dihydrolipoyl transacetylase (E2). Both allosteric sites are separated from the active site of PDHK2 by more than 20 A. Here we show that mutations of three amino acid residues located in the vicinity of the active site of PDHK2 (R250, T302, and Y320) make the kinase resistant to the inhibitory effect of DCA, thereby uncoupling the active site from the allosteric site. In addition, we provide evidence that substitutions of R250 and T302 can partially or completely uncouple the L2-binding site. Based on the available structural data, R250, T302, and Y320 stabilize the "open" and "closed" conformations of the built-in lid that controls the access of a nucleotide into the nucleotide-binding cavity. This strongly suggests that the mobility of ATP lid is central to the allosteric regulation of PDHK2 activity serving as a conformational switch required for communication between the active site and allosteric sites in the kinase molecule.  相似文献   

15.
1. Pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is inactivated by phosphorylation (MgATP2-) of an alpha-chain of the decarboxylase component. Three serine residues may be phosphorylated, one of which (site 1) is the major inactivating site. 2. The relative rates of phosphorylation are site 1 greater than 2 greater than site 3. 3. The kinetics of the inactivating phosphorylation were investigated by measuring inactivation of the complex with MgATP2-. The apparent Km for the Mg complex of ATP was 25.5 microM; ADP was a competitive inhibitor (Ki 69.8 microM) and sodium pyruvate an uncompetitive inhibitor (Ki 2.8 microM). Inactivation was accelerated by increasing concentration ratios of NADH/NAD+ and of acetyl-CoA/CoA. 4. The kinetics of additional phosphorylations (predominantly site 2 under these conditions) were investigated by measurement of 32P incorporation into non-radioactive pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate containing 3-6% of active complex, and assumed from parrallel experiments with 32P labelling to contain 91% of protein-bound phosphate in site 1 and 9% in site 2. 5. The apparent Km for the Mg complex of ATP was 10.1 microM; ADP was a competitive inhibitor (Ki 31.5 microM) and sodium pyruvate an uncompetitive inhibitor (Ki 1.1 mM). 6. Incorporation was accelerated by increasing concentration ratios of NADH/NAD+ and of acetyl-CoA/CoA, although it was less marked at the highest ratios.  相似文献   

16.
Pantothenate kinase (PanK) is a key regulatory enzyme in the coenzyme A (CoA) biosynthetic pathway and catalyzes the phosphorylation of pantothenic acid to form phosphopantothenate. CoA is a feedback inhibitor of PanK activity by competitive binding to the ATP site. The structures of the Escherichia coli enzyme, in complex with a nonhydrolyzable analogue of ATP, 5'-adenylimido-diphosphate (AMPPNP), or with CoA, were determined at 2.6 and 2.5 A, respectively. Both structures show that two dimers occupy an asymmetric unit; each subunit has a alpha/beta mononucleotide-binding fold with an extensive antiparallel coiled coil formed by two long helices along the dimerization interface. The two ligands, AMPPNP and CoA, associate with PanK in very different ways, but their phosphate binding sites overlap, explaining the kinetic competition between CoA and ATP. Residues Asp(127), His(177), and Arg(243) are proposed to be involved in catalysis, based on modeling of the pentacoordinate transition state. The more potent inhibition by CoA, compared with the CoA thioesters, is explained by a tight interaction of the CoA thiol group with the side chains of aromatic residues, which is predicted to discriminate against the CoA thioesters. The PanK structure provides the framework for a more detailed understanding of the mechanism of catalysis and feedback regulation of PanK.  相似文献   

17.
In this paper, physicochemical evidence is given for the association between the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (EC 1.2.4.1) and citrate synthase (EC 4.1.3.7) with two gel chromatographic techniques with poly(ethylene glycol) co-precipitation and with ultracentrifugation. Experiments with active enzyme gel chromatography indicate that citrate synthase also associates with pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in its functioning state. Citrate synthase binds to the isolated transacetylase core of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, but in the binding to the whole pyruvate dehydrogenase complex the two other components of the complex are also involved. One pyruvate dehydrogenase complex can bind 10-11 citrate synthase dimers, and the dissociation constant is about 5.7-6.0 microM as determined by two independent methods. The association between the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and citrate synthase raises the possibility of the dynamic compartmentation of acetyl-CoA in the mitochondria which results in the direction of acetyl-CoA from pyruvate towards citrate.  相似文献   

18.
The steady-state kinetic mechanism of the reaction catalyzed by octopine dehydrogenase [N2-(1-carboxyethyl)-L-arginine:NAD+ oxidoreductase] was investigated at pH 6.9 and 9.2 by studies of substrate inhibition, analogue inhibition, and product inhibition. In the direction of octopine synthesis, the inhibition patterns in the presence of delta- guanidinovalerate and propionate show that NADH binds to the enzyme first followed by L-arginine and pyruvate which bind randomly. In the direction of octopine oxidation, the substrate patterns show that NAD binds to the enzyme before octopine in a rapid equilibrium fashion, and the product inhibition patterns show that the products L-arginine and pyruvate are released in a random fashion. Double, synergistic, substrate inhibition by L-arginine and pyruvate was shown to be due to binding (hypothetically of the imine) to the free enzyme and the enzyme-NAD complex. Furthermore, an alternate minor pathway was demonstrated which includes an enzyme-NADH-octopine complex and an enzyme-octopine complex.  相似文献   

19.
Rat heart mitochondria have been incubated with concentrations of pyruvate from 50 to 500 μm as substrate in the presence or absence of an optimal concentration of palmitoylcarnitine and with respiration limited by phosphate acceptor. The rate of pyruvate utilization has been determined and compared with the amount of active (dephosphorylated) pyruvate dehydrogenase measured in samples of mitochondria taken throughout the experiments and assayed under Vmax conditions. At a given pyruvate concentration, differences in pyruvate utilization as a proportion of the content of active pyruvate dehydrogenase are attributed to differences in feed-back inhibition and interpreted in terms of the ratios of mitochondrial NAD+NADH and CoA/acetyl-CoA. Under most conditions, differences in inhibition can be attributed to differences in the CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio. Feed-back inhibition is very pronounced in the presence of palmitoylcarnitine. These parameters are also examined in the presence of dichloroacetate, used to raise the steady-state levels of active pyruvate dehydrogenase in the absence of changing the pyruvate concentration, and in the presence of various ratios of carnitine/acetylcarnitine, which predominantly change the mitochondrial CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio. The latter experiment provides evidence that a decrease in mitochondrial NAD+NADH ratio from 3.5 to 2.2 essentially balances an increase in CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio from 0.67 to 12 in modulating enzyme interconversion, whereas the change in CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio is preponderant in effecting feed-back inhibition. Increasing the free Ca2+ concentration of incubation media from 10?7 to 10?6m using CaCl2-ethylene glycol bis(β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N′-tetraacetic acid buffers is shown to increase the steady-state level of active pyruvate dehydrogenase in intact mitochondria, in the absence of added ionophores. Moreover, this activation is reversible. Effects of Ca2+ ions are dependent upon the poise of the enzyme interconversion system and were only seen in these experiments in the presence of palmitoylcarnitine.  相似文献   

20.
The presence of palmitoyl-L-carnitine and acetoacetate (separately) decreased flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase in isolated mitochondria from rat hind-limb muscle. The effect of acetoacetate was dependent on the presence of 2-oxoglutarate and Ca2+. Palmitoylcarnitine, but not acetoacetate, also decreased the mitochondrial content of active dephospho-pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDHA). This effect was large only in the presence of EGTA. Addition of Ca2+-EGTA buffers stabilizing pCa values of 6.48 or lower gave near-maximal values of PDHA content, irrespective of the presence of fatty acids or ketones when mitochondria were incubated under the same conditions used for the flux studies, i.e. at low concentrations of pyruvate. There was, however, a minor decrement in PDHA content in response to palmitoylcarnitine oxidation when the substrate was L-glutamate plus L-malate. Measurement of NAD+, NADH, CoA and acetyl-CoA in mitochondrial extracts in general showed decreases in [NAD+]/[NADH] and [CoA]/[acetyl-CoA] ratios in response to the oxidation of palmitoylcarnitine and acetoacetate, providing a mechanism for both decreased PDHA content and feedback inhibition of the enzyme in the PDHA form. However, only changes in [CoA]/[acetyl-CoA] ratio appear to underlie the decreased PDHA content on addition of palmitoylcarnitine when mitochondria are incubated with L-glutamate plus L-malate (and no pyruvate) as substrate. The effect of palmitoylcarnitine oxidation on flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase and on PDHA content is less marked in skeletal-muscle mitochondria than in cardiac-muscle mitochondria. This may reflect the less active oxidation of palmitoylcarnitine by skeletal-muscle mitochondria, as judged by State-3 rates of O2 uptake. In addition, Ca2+ concentration is of even greater significance in pyruvate dehydrogenase interconversion in skeletal-muscle mitochondria than in cardiac-muscle mitochondria.  相似文献   

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