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1.
The content of urea and activity of arginase in the brain and liver have been determined in squirrels falling into hibernation and in rats with an artificial decrease of the body temperature. It is shown that the intensity of urea synthesis under hypothermia (20, 10 degrees C) in the studied organs of animals falling into hibernation remains at high level in contrast to animals without such adaptation.  相似文献   

2.
Arginase activity in red blood cells (RBC) of various mammalian species including man was determined. In nonprimate species, the activity generally fell below the level of detectability of the assay: less than 1.0 mumol urea/g hemoglobin per hr. Activities in higher nonhuman primates were equal to or of the same order of magnitude as those in man (approximately 950 mumol/g hemoglobin per hr). RBC arginase deficiency with normal liver arginase activity has been shown to segregate as an autosomal codominant trait in Macaca fascicularis established and bred in captivity. This study confirms the presence of this polymorphism in wild populations trapped in several geographic areas and demonstrates the absence of immunologically cross-reactive material in the RBC of RBC arginase-deficient animals. These data when taken together suggest that the expression of arginase in RBC is the result of a regulatory alteration, has evolved under positive selective pressure, and is not an example of the vestigial persistence of an arcane function. The expression of arginase in the RBC results in a marked drop in the arginine content of these cells.  相似文献   

3.
Metabolite Alterations in the Genetically Spastic Mouse   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract: The concentration of soluble amino acids in the brains of homozygous spastic mice was measured. It was found that brain arginine levels were reduced by 3% and urea concentration was 50% higher in affected mice. The activity of the brain and liver enzymes for arginine synthesis were similar in spastics and in controls. However, in spastic mice the activity of brain arginase is elevated. This increased arginase activity accounts for the decreased arginine concentration in the mutant mice.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract— The distribution of argininosuccinate synthetase, argininosuccinase and arginase, and the synthesis of urea in cerebullum. cerebral cortex and brain stem have been studied. Cerebral cortex had high levels of argininosuccinate synthetase and argininosuccinase. and a high ability to synthesize urea from aspartic acid and citrulline. Of the three regions, cerebullum had the highest arginase activity. The activities of the enzymes transamidinase and ornithine aminotransferase in the metabolism of arginine and ornithine in pathways other than urea formation have been studied in the three regions of the rat brain. The activity of creatine phosphokinase in all regions was the same: carbamylphosphatase activity was highest in cerebullum. Cerebral cortex had a high activity of aspartic acid transcarba-mylase. The brain stem, among the three regions, had the lowest activities of glutamine synthetase and glutaminase. The activities of these enzymes in the different regions are discussed in relation to urea production and the utilization of the urea cycle intermediates.
Intraperitoneal injection of high amounts of citrulline brought about a rise in the glutamine synthetase activity of cerebellum and brain stem and a rise in ornithine aminotransferase in cerebral cortex and liver. These results are discussed in relation to the mechanism of action of citrulline in alleviating the toxicity in hyperammonaemic states.  相似文献   

5.
Urea comprises 7·7 per cent of the total nitrogen excretion of Nezara viridula. The bug is capable of oxidizing uric acid to allantoin, which is also excreted, but the uricolytic pathway is not active beyond this point. Of the enzymes of the ornithine cycle, arginase and ornithine transcarbamalase are active, but there is no evidence for the arginine synthetase system. Carbamyl phosphate synthetase has a low activity detectable only by the use of radioactive substrates. Confirmation of the operation of only part of the ornithine cycle is seen in the incorporation of bicarbonate carbon into citrulline, but not into arginine or urea, by homogenates of bug tissue. It is concluded that urea in the excreta is derived from excess arginine in the diet by the action of the enzyme arginase. Free arginine is present in the cell sap of the bean pods on which the bugs feed in amounts sufficient to account for the urea excreted.  相似文献   

6.
The activity of arginase converting arginine into ornithine and urea is of particular interest among many factors regulating NO production in the cells. It is known that by competing with NO-synthase for common substrate, arginase can affect the NO synthesis. In the present work, the properties of arginase from the frog Rana temporaria L. urinary bladder epithelial cells possessing the NO-synthase activity were characterized, and possible contribution of arginase to regulation of NO production by epithelial cells was studied. It has been shown that the enzyme had the temperature optimum in the range of 55-60 degrees C, K(m) for arginine 23 mM, and V(max) about 10 nmol urea/mg protein/min, and its activity was effictively inhibited by (S)-(2-boronoethyl)-L-cysteine (BEC), an inhibitor of arginase, at concentrations from 10(-6) to 10(-4) M. The comparison of arginase activity in various frog tissues revealed the following pattern: liver > kidney > brain > urinary bladder (epithelium) > heart > testis. The arginase activity in the isolated urinary bladder epithelial cells was 3 times higher than that in the intact urinary bladder. To evaluate the role of arginase in the regulation of NO production, epithelial cells were cultivated in the media L-15 or 199 containing different amounts of arginine; the concentration of NO2-, the stable NO metabolite, was determined in the culture fluid after 18-20 h of cells incubation. The vast majority of the produced nitrites are associated with the NOS activity, as L-NAME, the NOS-inhibitor, decreased their accumulation by 77.1% in the L-15 medium and by 80% in 199 medium. BEC (10(-4) M) increased the nitrite production by 18.0 % +/- 2.7 in the L-15 medium and by 24.2 +/- 3.5 in the 199 medium (p < 0.05). The obtained data indicate a relatively high arginase activity in the frog urinary bladder epithelium and its involvement in regulation of NO production by epithelial cells.  相似文献   

7.
Methylxanthines are widely consumed because of their stimulating effect primarily on the central nervous system. Their diuretic and respiratory stimulant action is used in clinical medicine. L-Arginine metabolism in the brain is very important for normal brain function. In addition to brain protein synthesis, arginine is a substrate for the production of urea, creatine, nitric oxide, agmatine, glutamic acid, ornithine, proline and polyamines. As known, many of these compounds are very important in brain function. There is no information relating to effects of caffeine on arginine metabolism in the brain, however, there is a lot of new information about arginine metabolism and caffeine action on the central nervous system. So, we have hypothesized the existence of a relationship that may be of interest in understanding mechanisms of caffeine effects on the central nervous system that may have utility in the clinical applications.In our experiment protocol we used male Wistar rats weighing about 200 g. Caffeine was added to the drinking water in gradually increasing amounts, from 2 g/l over the first 3 days, to 4 g/l over the last 7 days. A control group was given drinking water without caffeine. The level of lipid peroxidation, arginase and diamine oxidase (DAO) activity in the brain was measured. The results of our study show that arginase and diamine oxidase were decreased in animals treated with caffeine. The level of lipid peroxidation (MDA) was decreased also.The inhibitory effect of caffeine on arginase activity indicates that caffeine provides more arginine for consumption in other metabolic pathways. Considering the central stimulant effects of caffeine and the decreased lipid peroxidation level, it can be assumed that moderate short-term consumption of caffeine may be beneficial for brain function.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of different levels of diet protein on adult Bufo arenarum liver arginase activity and protein content, plasma urea and urinary profile of nitrogen waste products was estimated. Animals kept under environmental constant conditions were submitted to a nutritional standardization period being fed beef meat daily during four days. Then animals were distributed in three groups: Group 0 (control), that was sampled at the end of the standardization period; Group 1, that was starved for 18 days and Group 2, that was fed daily for 18 days and then sampled. With respect to controls, liver arginase specific activity was significantly lower in starving toads (Group 1); liver protein content was elevated in fasted animals (Group 1) and plasma urea concentration increased in the intensive feeding group (Group 2). Urinary nitrogen end products in animals from both control and experimental groups showed no changes either in their absolute values or in their partition percentage rates.  相似文献   

9.
This paper describes the identification of a human liver-derived inhibitory protein (LIP), which has recently been purified, as cytoplasmic liver arginase. Arginase activity was purified to homogeneity parallel to lymphocyte proliferation inhibitory activity. The reaction products were identified by thin-layer chromatography to be ornithine and urea from arginine. The enzyme activity could be increased by the addition of manganese ions, and the inhibitory effect on cell proliferation could be reversed by additional arginine. An antiserum against LIP cross-reacted with cytoplasmic calf liver arginase.  相似文献   

10.
The yeast "H" of the genus Candida guilliermondii can grow on hydrocarbons as the only source for carbon. Urea can serve as a nitrogen source for this yeast which lacks detectable urease activity. During urea metabolism ammonia has never been accumulated in the culture medium. However, transferring the yeast from complete urea-medium into an urea containing phophate-buffer, the degradation of urea continues and ammonia is accumulated as well as CO2 evolved. In cell-free extracts of the yeast urea amidolyase activity was detected in the presence of ATP, biotin and specific cations. Obviously, the synthesis of urea amidolyase is induced by urea and arginine and repressed by the catabolite ammonia. Similarly the synthesis of arginase is regulated by arginine and ammonia. The analytical data of the arginase action differ significantly in relation to the carbon source of the culture medium. Both the level of arginase and ornithine carbamyl-transferase change in a characteristic way during the batch-culture. From the lower level of arginase in relation to ornithine carbamyltransferase it can be concluded that especially in alkane-metabolizing yeast the arginine catabolism is not very intensive.  相似文献   

11.
The autolysis intensity and proteolysis activity at pH 4,5, 7,4, 8,5 and lysosomal and nonlysosomal peptide hydrolase activity have been studied in brain and liver tissues of rats. L-arginine has been found to increase the peptide hydrolase activity in neutral and alkaline media in case of autolysis and proteolysis estimation according to the amino nitrogen increase. When the peptide hydrolase activity is estimated according to the increase of folin-positive components its decrease under the action of arginine in neutral and alkaline media has been revealed. Arginine doesn't change the lysosomal peptide hydrolase activity. In both tissues under the influence of arginine the nonlysosomal peptide hydrolase activity defined by amino nitrogen increases, estimated by the folin-positive components--decreases. Arginine shows the specific influence on the nonlysosomal peptide hydrolase activity. The L-arginine analogues (D-arginine, guanidine) and products of the arginase reaction (ornithine and urea) don't exert such an effect on the nonlysosomal proteolysis.  相似文献   

12.
Arginase activity in the liver, brain, and testis of rats was examined during the different phases of life span. When expressed as specific activity (micromoles of L-arginine hydrolyzed per minute per gram of whole homogenate protein), the enzyme activity in the brain and testis decreased markedly during the early stage of life and stayed low during the remainder of the life span. On the other hand, the arginase in the liver showed a great dependency on the developmental phase of the animal, showing two distinct peaks: one during the early phase (20 days after birth) and the other at a later time (3 months of age). This pattern of change in the hepatic arginase activity closely coincided with the pattern of the rate of urea synthesis determined with liver slices and expressed in terms of micromoles of urea formed per hour per gram of tissue slice. In contrast to the above observations, however, curves obtained by plotting the total liver arginase or urea synthetic activity vs the developmental stage of rats showed no measurable discontinuity. Further studies revealed that the observed pattern of specific activity of hepatic arginase was, in part, due to the change in the relative concentration of arginase protein in the liver.  相似文献   

13.
The urea cycle enzyme arginase (EC 3.5.3.1) hydrolyzes l-arginine to l-ornithine and urea. Mammalian arginases require manganese, have a highly alkaline pH optimum and are resistant to reducing agents. The gastric human pathogen, Helicobacter pylori, also has a complete urea cycle and contains the rocF gene encoding arginase (RocF), which is involved in the pathogenesis of H. pylori infection. Its arginase is specifically involved in acid resistance and inhibits host nitric oxide production. The rocF gene was found to confer arginase activity to Escherichia coli; disruption of plasmid-borne rocF abolished arginase activity. A translationally fused His(6)-RocF was purified from E. coli under nondenaturing conditions and had catalytic activity. Remarkably, the purified enzyme had an acidic pH optimum of 6.1. Both purified arginase and arginase-containing H. pylori extracts exhibited optimal catalytic activity with cobalt as a metal cofactor; manganese and nickel were significantly less efficient in catalyzing the hydrolysis of arginine. Viable H. pylori or E. coli containing rocF had significantly more arginase activity when grown with cobalt in the culture medium than when grown with manganese or no divalent metal. His(6)-RocF arginase activity was inhibited by low concentrations of reducing agents. Antibodies raised to purified His(6)-RocF reacted with both H. pylori and E. coli extracts containing arginase, but not with extracts from rocF mutants of H. pylori or E. coli lacking the rocF gene. The results indicate that H. pylori RocF is necessary and sufficient for arginase activity and has unparalleled features among the arginase superfamily, which may reflect the unique gastric ecological niche of this organism.  相似文献   

14.
Liver ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury is associated with profound arginine depletion due to arginase release from injured hepatocytes. The purpose of this study was to determine whether arginase inhibition with N(omega)-hydroxy-nor-l-arginine (nor-NOHA) would increase circulating arginine levels and decrease hepatic damage during liver I/R injury. The effects of nor-NOHA were initially tested in normal animals to determine in vivo toxicity. In the second series of experiments, orthotopic syngeneic liver transplantation (OLT) was performed after 18 h of cold ischemia time in Lewis rats. Animals were given nor-NOHA (100 mg/kg) or saline before and after graft reperfusion. In normal animals treated with nor-NOHA, there were no histopathological changes to organs, liver enzymes, serum creatinine, or body weight. In the OLT model, animals treated with saline exhibited markedly elevated serum transaminases and circulating arginase protein levels. Nor-NOHA administration blunted the increase in serum arginase activity by 80% and preserved serum arginine levels at 3 h after OLT. Nor-NOHA treatment reduced post-OLT serum liver enzyme release by 50%. Liver histology (degree of necrosis) in nor-NOHA-treated animals was markedly improved compared with the saline-treated group. Furthermore, use of the arginase inhibitor nor-NOHA did not influence polyamine synthesis owing to the decrease in ornithine levels. Arginase blockade represents a potentially novel strategy to combat hepatic I/R injury associated with liver transplantation.  相似文献   

15.
Recent studies indicate that urea excretion is responsive to protein intake and that turbot, Psetta maxima, appear to differ from other species by their urea excretion pattern and levels. This study was undertaken to evaluate the influence of dietary nitrogen and arginine on ureagenesis and excretion in turbot. Juvenile turbot (29 g) were fed semi-purified diets containing graded levels of nitrogen (0-8% dry matter) and arginine (0-3% dry matter) for 6 weeks. Growth data showed that turbot have high dietary nitrogen (123 mg/kg metabolic body weight/day) and very low dietary arginine (9.3 mg/kg metabolic body weight/day) requirements for maintenance. Requirements for unit body protein accretion were 0.31 g and 0.15 g for nitrogen and arginine respectively. Post-prandial plasma urea levels and urea excretion rates showed that urea production was significantly (P<0.05) influenced by dietary arginine levels. While hepatic arginase (EC 3.5.3.1) activity increased significantly (P<0.05) with increasing dietary arginine levels, activities of other enzymes of the ornithine urea cycle were very low. Our data strongly suggest that the ornithine urea cycle is not active in the turbot liver and that dietary arginine degradation is a major pathway of ureagenesis in turbot.  相似文献   

16.
Changes in the time course of the urinary excretion of creatinine, creatine and urea, and the activities of kidney transamidinase and liver urea-cycle enzymes were investigated in rats fasted and fed on a 10% casein diet and 10% casein diets supplemented with 10% glycine and/or 1.4% arginine.

The urinary total-creatinine of the fasted rats increased extremely during fasting for 7 days, while that of the animals given the 10% casein diet supplemented with glycine and arginine rose exceedingly on the 3rd day and thereafter no significant change was observed. Most of the increase of total-creatinine could be accounted for by the increase of creatine. The activity of kidney transamidinase in the fasted rats decreased in the 3rd day and thereafter kept nearly constant. The transamidinase activity of rats fed on the 10% casein diet after giving a protein-free diet for 5 days increased in the 3rd day. An inverse relation was observed between the urinary creatine and the transamidinase activity. The urinary urea increased in the rats fasted or fed on the 10% casein diets with the supplement of glycine and/or arginine. In fasting, the activities of liver urea-cycle enzymes, except arginase, had a tendency of increasing with the lapse of time. The arginase activity remained more or less constant. The reason of the extreme increase of urinary creatine during starvation was discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction among arsenic, zinc, and arginine was studied in chicks using two fully crossed, three-way, two-by-two-by-two experiments. Arsenic at levels of 0 and 2 μg/g zinc at levels of 2.5 (zinc-deficient) and 25 (zinc-adequate) μg/g, and arginine at levels of 0 and 16 mg/g were supplemented to the diet. After 28 d in both experiments, growth was depressed in chicks fed diets either supplemented with arginine or deficient in zinc. Arsenic deprivation depressed growth of chicks fed diets containing the basal level of arginine and 25 μg supplemental Zn/g. Arsenic deprivation had little or no effect on growth of zinc-deprived chicks fed diets containing the basal level of arginine, or in zinc-deprived or zinc-adequate chicks fed supplemental arginine. Zinc-deficiency elevated urea in plasma and arginase activity in kidney. Those elevations, however, were more marked in arsenic-supplemented than in arsenic-deprived chicks. Also, plasma urea and kidney arginase activity were markedly elevated in chicks fed supplemental arginine; the elevations were more marked in zinc-deficient chicks. These findings support the concept that arsenic has a physiological role, associated with zinc, that can influence arginine metabolism in the chick.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of lysine administration on arginine and ornithine liver levels were studied in normal and urease-treated rats. L-Arginine injections produced a rise in liver arginine with a parallel increase in liver ornithine. Pretreatment with L-lysine resulted in an elevation in liver arginine. Administration of lysine to urease treated rats induced a significant increase in liver arginine content with a parallel drop in ornithine/arginine ratio. A similar decrease in ornithine/arginine ratio due to lysine administration was observed in animals, in which arginine and ornithine levels had been raised by loading with arginine. The mechanism of the lysine effect is most likely by inhibition of liver arginase activity in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of liver left lobe resection (LR, 15–20% of the organ weight) on hepatic urea formation was investigated in 84 albino rats. The objects used for analysis of urea content included: operated left lobe (LLL), non-operated middle (MLL) lobe of the liver, blood (aorta, v. hepatica, v. porta), and choledochal bile. Arginase activity was examined in liver homogenate. On the day 3 and day 7 after resection reduced arginase activity was detected. LR caused a decrease in urea content in v. hepatica, but increased urea content in the arterial blood and v. porta. The increase in bile urea on day 7 was then changed for its decrease observed on day 14 of the postoperative period. The urea content in the liver on day 3 after LR was below the norm, while on days 7 and 14 it became normal. Results of this study suggest impaired urea formation by hepatocytes of the operated liver and activation of extrahepatic mechanisms of urea formation from arginine.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Arginase is a manganese-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of L-arginine to L-ornithine and urea. In ureotelic animals arginase is the final enzyme of the urea cycle, but in many species it has a wider role controlling the use of arginine for other metabolic purposes, including the production of creatine, polyamines, proline and nitric oxide. Arginase activity is regulated by various small molecules, including the product L-ornithine. The aim of these structural studies was to test aspects of the catalytic mechanism and to investigate the structural basis of arginase inhibition. RESULTS: We report here the crystal structures of arginase from Bacillus caldovelox at pH 5.6 and pH 8.5, and of binary complexes of the enzyme with L-arginine, L-ornithine and L-lysine at pH 8.5. The arginase monomer comprises a single compact alpha/beta domain that further associates into a hexameric quaternary structure. The binary complexes reveal a common mode of ligand binding, which places the substrate adjacent to the dimanganese centre. We also observe a conformational change that impacts on the active site and is coupled with the occupancy of an external site by guanidine or arginine. CONCLUSIONS: The structures reported here clarify aspects of the active site and indicate key features of the catalytic mechanism, including substrate coordination to one of the manganese ions and an orientational role for a neighboring histidine residue. Stereospecificity for L-amino acids is found to depend on their precise recognition at the active-site rim. Identification of a second arginine-binding site, remote from the active site, and associated conformational changes lead us to propose a regulatory role for this site in substrate hydrolysis.  相似文献   

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