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1.
Lipoic acid is a coenzyme that is essential for the activity of enzyme complexes such as those of pyruvate dehydrogenase and glycine decarboxylase. We report here the isolation and characterization of LIP1 cDNA for lipoic acid synthase of Arabidopsis. The Arabidopsis LIP1 cDNA was isolated using an expressed sequence tag homologous to the lipoic acid synthase of Escherichia coli. This cDNA was shown to code for Arabidopsis lipoic acid synthase by its ability to complement a lipA mutant of E. coli defective in lipoic acid synthase. DNA-sequence analysis of the LIP1 cDNA revealed an open reading frame predicting a protein of 374 amino acids. Comparisons of the deduced amino acid sequence with those of E. coli and yeast lipoic acid synthase homologs showed a high degree of sequence similarity and the presence of a leader sequence presumably required for import into the mitochondria. Southern-hybridization analysis suggested that LIP1 is a single-copy gene in Arabidopsis. Western analysis with an antibody against lipoic acid synthase demonstrated that this enzyme is located in the mitochondrial compartment in Arabidopsis cells as a 43-kD polypeptide.  相似文献   

2.
A method has been developed for the gas chromatographic analysis of lipoic acid in biological samples. The lipoic acid is released from the samples by acid hydrolysis in the presence of the internal standards 1,2-dithiolane-3-butyric acid and/or 1,2-dithiolane-3-caproic acid. After hydrolysis, the lipoic acid and the internal standards are extracted from the hydrolysate and converted into the S,S-dibenzylmethyl esters. Gas chromatographic analysis of this mixture completely separates each of the homolog derivatives from the lipoic acid derivative and allows for the quantitation of the lipoic acid in the sample. Samples containing more than ~50 ng of lipoic acid can be easily assayed. Results are presented that show that the lipoic acid content of Escherichia coli depends on the carbon source used for its growth.  相似文献   

3.
A mutant strain of Escherichia coli K12 requiring lipoic acid, W1485 lip 2 (ATCC 25645), was used to develop a turbidimetric assay for lipoic acid and a polarographic assay based on the oxidation of pyruvate by suspensions of lipoic acid-deficient organisms. The turbidimetric assay was more sensitive with a working range equivalent to 0.2–2.0 ng of dl-α-lipoic acid compared with 5–50 ng for the polarographic method. The mutant responded equally to racemic mixtures of α-lipoic acid, β-lipoic acid and dihydrolipoic acid but gave little response to lipoamide, and other derivatives without prior hydrolysis; 8-methyllipoic acid was a competitive inhibitor of the response to lipoic acid. A high specificity of the mutant for the natural stereoisomer was indicated by the fact that (+)-α-lipoic acid had twice the activity of the racemic mixture. Escherichia coli K12 contained less than 0.05 ng of free (+)-α-lipoic acid per mg dry weight but, depending on the growth substrate, the equivalent of between 13 and 47 ng of (+)-α-lipoic acid per mg dry weight after acid extraction. There was a strong correlation between the lipoic acid content and the sum of the specific activities for the pyruvate and α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complexes. Experiments with washed suspensions of Escherichia coli showed only small increases in lipoic acid content (18%) when incubated with pyruvate, cysteine and methionine. When supplied with exogenous lipoic acid the mutant, W1485 lip 2, accumulated very little more than was demanded by its metabolism. The lipoic acid contents of several organisms were measured and correlated with their metabolism.  相似文献   

4.
Although a complete pathway of lipoic acid metabolism has been established in Escherichia coli, lipoic acid metabolism in other bacteria is more complex and incompletely understood. Listeria monocytogenes has been shown to utilize two lipoate-protein ligases for lipoic acid scavenging, whereas only one of the ligases can function in utilization of host-derived lipoic acid-modified peptides. We report that lipoic acid scavenging requires not only ligation of lipoic acid but also a lipoyl relay pathway in which an amidotransferase transfers lipoyl groups to the enzyme complexes that require the cofactor for activity. In addition, we provide evidence for a new lipoamidase activity that could allow utilization of lipoyl peptides by lipoate-protein ligase. These data support a model of an expanded, three-enzyme pathway for lipoic acid scavenging that seems widespread in the Firmicutes phylum of bacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Several microorganisms were examined for the content of lipoic acid by using a strain of Streptococcus faecalis deficient in this coenzyme. In comparison to this, the specific activity levels were determined for the pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase and the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, which both catalyse the cleavage of pyruvate and coenzyme A to acetyl coenzyme A, CO2 and two reducing equivalents. Anabaena cylindrica, Chlorobium, Clostridium pasteurianum and kluyveri, where only the pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase can be demonstrated, were found to contain minute levels of lipoic acid. Thus lipoic acid does not appear to be a cofactor of the decarboxylation catalysed by the pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase. On the other hand, the amount of lipoic acid is at least ten times higher in Ankistrodesmus, Chlamydomonas, Anacystis, Micrococcus, Azotobacter and Escherichia coli which have the dehydrogenase complex.  相似文献   

6.
The catalytic roles of the two reductively acetylatable lipoic acid residues on each lipoate acetyltransferase chain of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli were investigated. Both lipoyl groups are reductively acetylated from pyruvate at the same apparent rate and both can transfer their acetyl groups to CoASH, part-reactions of the overall complex reaction. The complex was treated with N-ethylmaleimide in the presence of pyruvate and the absence of CoASH, conditions that lead to the modification and inactivation of the S-acetyldihydrolipoic acid residues. Modification was found to proceed appreciably faster than the accompanying loss of enzymic activity. The kinetics of the modification were fitted best by supposing that the two lipoyl groups react with the maleimide at different rates, one being modified at approximately 3.5 times the rate of the other. The loss of complex activity took place at a rate approximately equal to that calculated for the modification of the more slowly reacting lipoic acid residue. The simplest interpretation of this result is that only this residue is essential in the overall catalytic mechanism, but an alternative explanation in which one lipoic acid residue can take over the function of another was not ruled out. The kinetics of inactivation could not be reconciled with an obligatory serial interaction between the two lipoic acid residues. Similar experiments with the fluorescent N-[p-(benzimidazol-2-yl)phenyl]maleimide supported these conclusions, although the modification was found to be less specific than with N-ethylmaleimide. The more rapidly modified lipoic acid residue may be involved in the system of intramolecular transacetylation reactions that couple active sites in the lipoate acetyltransferase component.  相似文献   

7.
Oxidative phosphorylation, active transport of proline, aerobic- and ATP-driven proton translocation and transhydrogenation of NADP+ by NADH, occurred in lipoic acid-deficient cells or vesicles of a lipoic acid auxotroph of E. coli, W1485 lip 2. Addition of lipoic acid had little effect on these processes. Tributyltin chloride, which has been proposed to inhibit oxidative phosphorylation by reaction with lipoic acid (Cain et al., Biochem. J. (1977) 166, 593), was an effective inhibitor of aerobic and ATP-dependent proton translocation and transhydrogenation in lipoic acid-deficient vesicles from this organism. Our results do not support the proposal of Partis et al. (FEBS Lett. (1977) 75, 47) that lipoic acid is involved in the energy transducing processes associated with the membrane of E. coli.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The synthesis of a surface protein has been studied in Paramecium through double-labeling experiments using [14C]- and [3H]leucine-labeled bacteria as the source of radioactive amino acid. Over a 4–5 h incubation period, the turnover rate was found to be higher than that of overall cell protein. In addition, the initial label is apparently utilized during the chase period, being incorporated into protein via a puromycin insensitive pathway.  相似文献   

10.
A lipoic acid auxotroph of Escherichia coli K-12, strain W1485lip2 (ATCC25645), produced pyruvic acid aerobically from glucose under the lipoic acid-deficient conditions, while the prototrophic parent strain, W1485 (ATCC12435), produced 2-oxoglutaric acid as the main product. The mechanism of the pyruvic acid production by strain W1485lip2 was found to be the impaired oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvic acid caused by the decrease in the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex under the conditions of lipoic acid deficiency. Under the optimum culture conditions using the pH-controlled jar fermentor, 25.5?g/l pyruvic acid was obtained from 50?g/l glucose after the culture for 32–40?h at pH?6.0. The relationship between the pyruvic acid productivity and the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity in jar-fermentor culture was discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Gentamicin is an aminoglycosidic antibiotic widely used in the treatment of many gram-negative bacterial infections. The present study was designed to investigate the extent of nephrotoxicity and the degree of protection afforded by lipoic acid under E. coli infected conditions and to note its effect on the antimicrobial activity of gentamicin. The study was carried out with adult male albino rats of Wistar strain. Group I animals served as controls. Group II animals were injected intraperitoneally for 2 successive days with 0.2 ml inoculum containing 1010 colony forming units of E. coli. Group III animals were injected E. coli as those in group II, in addition gentamicin 100 mg kg–1 was administered intraperitoneally for 10 successive days. Group IV animals received intraperitoneal injections of E. coli as above plus gentamicin and also received lipoic acid (25 mg kg–1) for 10 days by oral gavage. Rats subjected to E. coli administration showed a decline in the thiol content of the cell accompanied by high malondialdehyde levels along with lowered activities of catalase, superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase with an added effect observed when gentamicin was administered along with it. The extent of nephrotoxicity induced by gentamicin was clearly evident with the decline in the activities of lactate dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase and N-acetyl--D-glucosaminidase in the rat renal tissues. A significant decrease was also observed in the activities of the transmembrane enzymes upon gentamicin administration. Treatment with lipoic acid decreased lipid peroxidation thereby maintaining the antioxidant status of the cell. The activities of the renal and transmembrane enzymes were also restored on lipoic acid treatment. The study has highlighted the beneficial effects of lipoic acid against experimental aminoglycoside toxicity in rats rendered bacteremic.  相似文献   

12.
Lipoic acid is a sulfur-containing cofactor required for the function of several multienzyme complexes involved in the oxidative decarboxylation of α-keto acids and glycine. Mechanistic details of lipoic acid metabolism are unclear in eukaryotes, despite two well defined pathways for synthesis and covalent attachment of lipoic acid in prokaryotes. We report here the involvement of four genes in the synthesis and attachment of lipoic acid in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. LIP2 and LIP5 are required for lipoylation of all three mitochondrial target proteins: Lat1 and Kgd2, the respective E2 subunits of pyruvate dehydrogenase and α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, and Gcv3, the H protein of the glycine cleavage enzyme. LIP3, which encodes a lipoate-protein ligase homolog, is necessary for lipoylation of Lat1 and Kgd2, and the enzymatic activity of Lip3 is essential for this function. Finally, GCV3, encoding the H protein target of lipoylation, is itself absolutely required for lipoylation of Lat1 and Kgd2. We show that lipoylated Gcv3, and not glycine cleavage activity per se, is responsible for this function. Demonstration that a target of lipoylation is required for lipoylation is a novel result. Through analysis of the role of these genes in protein lipoylation, we conclude that only one pathway for de novo synthesis and attachment of lipoic acid exists in yeast. We propose a model for protein lipoylation in which Lip2, Lip3, Lip5, and Gcv3 function in a complex, which may be regulated by the availability of acetyl-CoA, and which in turn may regulate mitochondrial gene expression.Several oxidative decarboxylation reactions are carried out in prokaryotes and eukaryotes by multienzyme complexes. The function of these complexes requires the action of a sulfur-containing cofactor, lipoic acid (6,8-thioctic acid) (1, 2). Lipoic acid is covalently attached via an amide linkage to a specific lysine residue on the surface of the conserved lipoyl domain of the E2 subunits of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH),3 α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (α-KDH), the branched chain α-keto acid dehydrogenase complexes, and the H protein of the glycine cleavage (GC) enzyme (3). The lipoyl moiety serves as a swinging arm that shuttles reaction intermediates between active sites within the complexes (1). Despite the well characterized function of lipoic acid as a prosthetic group, the mechanisms of its synthesis and attachment to proteins are the subject of ongoing investigations (47).These reactions are best understood in Escherichia coli, which has two well defined pathways for lipoic acid synthesis and attachment: a de novo pathway and a salvage pathway (8). Octanoic acid, synthesized on the acyl carrier protein (ACP) (9), is the substrate for the de novo pathway. Lipoyl synthase (LipA) catalyzes the addition of two sulfur atoms to form lipoic acid from octanoic acid either before or after transfer to the target protein (10) by lipoyl(octanoyl)-ACP:protein transferase (LipB) (11, 12). The preferred order of these two reactions is attachment of octanoic acid by LipB, followed by addition of sulfur by LipA (13). By contrast, in the salvage pathway, lipoate-protein ligase (LplA) attaches free lipoic acid to proteins in a two-step reaction. Lipoic acid, which can be scavenged from the medium, is first activated to lipoyl-AMP and then the lipoyl group is transferred to the proteins (14).Lipoic acid synthesis and attachment to target proteins are less well understood in eukaryotes. Homologs of the E. coli enzymes have been found in fungi, plants, protists, and mammals, but many mechanistic details are unclear (1517). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the mitochondrial type II fatty acid biosynthetic pathway (FAS II) synthesizes octanoyl-ACP, which is the substrate for de novo lipoic acid synthesis (18). Lip2 and Lip5, the respective yeast homologs of E. coli LipB and LipA, were shown to be required for respiratory growth on glycerol medium, PDH activity (19), and lipoic acid synthesis (20), indicating functional roles in de novo lipoic acid synthesis and attachment. However, there has been no previous report of an LplA-like lipoate-protein ligase homolog in yeast. Furthermore, lip2 and lip5 mutant strains cannot grow on medium containing lipoic acid (19, 20), suggesting that yeast either cannot use exogenously supplied lipoic acid or there is no yeast equivalent of the E. coli LplA-driven salvage pathway.Here we report the involvement of two additional enzymes in protein lipoylation in yeast mitochondria. The first, Lip3, is a lipoate-protein ligase homolog and is required with Lip2 and Lip5 for lipoylation of the E2 subunits of PDH (Lat1) and α-KDH (Kgd2). The second enzyme, Gcv3, the H protein of the GC enzyme, is absolutely required for lipoylation of all proteins in yeast.  相似文献   

13.
Two genes, lipA and lipB, involved in lipoic acid biosynthesis or metabolism were characterized by DNA sequence analysis. The translational initiation site of the lipA gene was established, and the lipB gene product was identified as a 25-kDa protein. Overproduction of LipA resulted in the formation of inclusion bodies, from which the protein was readily purified. Cells grown under strictly anaerobic conditions required the lipA and lipB gene products for the synthesis of a functional glycine cleavage system. Mutants carrying a null mutation in the lipB gene retained a partial ability to synthesize lipoic acid and produced low levels of pyruvate dehydrogenase and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase activities. The lipA gene product failed to convert protein-bound octanoic acid moieties to lipoic acid moieties in vivo; however, the growth of both lipA and lipB mutants was supported by either 6-thiooctanoic acid or 8-thiooctanoic acid in place of lipoic acid. These data suggest that LipA is required for the insertion of the first sulfur into the octanoic acid backbone. LipB functions downstream of LipA, but its role in lipoic acid metabolism remains unclear.  相似文献   

14.
Using an auxotrophic mutant of Escherichia coli and the technique of quenching of atebrin fluorescence by membrane particles it has been shown that lipoic acid is not required for either respiration or ATP-driven proton tranlocation.  相似文献   

15.
The LipB octanoyltransferase catalyzes the first step of lipoic acid synthesis in Escherichia coli, transfer of the octanoyl moiety from octanoyl-acyl carrier protein to the lipoyl domains of the E2 subunits of the 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases of aerobic metabolism. Strains containing null mutations in lipB are auxotrophic for either lipoic acid or octanoic acid. We report the isolation of two spontaneously arising mutant strains that allow growth of lipB strains on glucose minimal medium; we determined that suppression was caused by single missense mutations within the coding sequence of the gene (lplA) that encodes lipoate-protein ligase. The LplA proteins encoded by the mutant genes have reduced Km values for free octanoic acid and thus are able to scavenge cytosolic octanoic acid for octanoylation of lipoyl domains.Escherichia coli has three lipoic acid-dependent enzyme systems: pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH), 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase (OGDH), and the glycine cleavage system (GCV) (8). PDH catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA), the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle substrate and fatty acid building block. OGDH functions in the TCA cycle, where it catalyzes the decarboxylation of 2-oxoglutarate to succinyl-CoA, the precursor of several amino acids. GCV is involved in the breakdown of glycine into ammonia and C1 units. Whereas GCV is expressed only in the presence of glycine, PDH and OGDH are required for aerobic growth. (During anaerobic growth, acetyl-CoA is synthesized by other enzymes and an OGDH-independent branched form of the TCA cycle forms succinyl-CoA from succinate.) The three enzyme systems contain subunits (the E2 subunits of PDH and OGDH and the H protein of GCV) which contain at least one lipoyl domain, a conserved structure of ca. 80 residues (8). Lipoic acid is attached in an amide bond to a specific lysine residue of these domains, where it functions as a classical “swinging arm,” carrying reaction intermediates between the active sites of the lipoate-dependent systems (27).Lipoic acid [R-5-(1,2-dithiolan-3-yl)pentanoic acid, also called 6,8-dithiooctanoic acid and thioctic acid] is composed of an eight-carbon fatty acid backbone to which two sulfur atoms are attached at carbons 6 and 8 (Fig. (Fig.1).1). In the oxidized state, the sulfur atoms are in a disulfide linkage forming a five-membered ring with three backbone carbons. The disulfide bond is reduced upon binding of the intermediates (an acetyl moiety in the case of PDH, a succinyl moiety in the case of OGDH, and an aminomethyl moiety in the case of GCV). Following release of the intermediates to form the products of the enzyme complexes, the reduced lipoyl moiety must be reoxidized before entering another catalytic cycle. Oxidation is catalyzed by lipoamide dehydrogenase, a subunit component of the three lipoic acid-dependent enzyme systems (8). E. coli strains defective in lipoic acid biosynthesis are unable to grow on aerobic glucose minimal media unless the media are supplemented with acetate and succinate to bypass the need for the two lipoic acid-dependent dehydrogenases (15, 32).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Lipoic acid metabolism in E. coli. (A) LplA lipoate ligase reaction, in which lipoate reacts with ATP to form the activated intermediate, lipoyl-adenylate (lipoyl-AMP), which remains firmly bound within the active site. The lipoyl-adenylate mixed anhydride bond is then attacked by the ɛ-amino group of the target lysine residue of the acceptor lipoyl domain to form lipoylated protein. LplA also utilizes octanoic acid. (B) Lipoic acid synthesis in E. coli. LipB transfers an octanoyl moiety from the fatty acid biosynthetic intermediate, octanoyl-ACP, to the lipoyl domain of a lipoate-accepting protein (in this case the E2 subunit of a 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase). The octanoylated domain is the substrate of LipA, an S-adenosylmethionine radical enzyme that replaces one hydrogen atom on each of octanoate carbons 6 and 8 with sulfur atoms. For a review, see reference 8.Studies in our laboratory and others have elucidated the lipoic acid synthesis pathway of E. coli (Fig. (Fig.1).1). The LipB octanoyl-[acyl carrier protein {ACP}]:protein N-octanoyltransferase (20, 33, 34) transfers the octanoyl moiety from octanoyl-ACP, a fatty acid biosynthetic intermediate, to lipoyl domains. This reaction proceeds through an acyl enzyme intermediate in which the octanoyl moiety is in thioester linkage to a conserved cysteine residue in the enzyme active site (22, 33). The thioester bond is then attacked by the ɛ-amino group of the target lipoyl domain lysine residue to give the amide-linked lipoate moiety. The product of this catalysis, an octanoyl domain, is the substrate of the LipA lipoate synthase, an S-adenosylmethionine radical enzyme which inserts sulfur atoms at carbons 6 and 8. In addition to the LipB-LipA pathway of lipoic acid synthesis, E. coli also contains an enzyme that scavenges lipoic acid from the growth medium, the LplA lipoate-protein ligase. LplA uses ATP to activate lipoic acid to lipoyl-adenylate, the mixed anhydride of which is attacked by the lipoyl domain lysine reside to give the lipoylated domain (Fig. (Fig.1).1). LplA is also active with octanoic acid and efficiently attaches exogenous octanoate to lipoyl domains both in vivo and in vitro (11, 25, 26, 34). lplA null mutants have no phenotype in strains having an intact lipoic acid synthesis pathway (26).The subject of this report is the behavior of lipB null mutants, which (as expected from the above discussion) are lipoic acid auxotrophs (26, 32). Growth of lipB strains can also be supported by supplementation of the medium with octanoate (34). Upon plating of lipB null mutants on plates of minimal glucose medium, colonies arise that no longer require lipoic acid (26). These are suppressor mutations because the block in lipoic acid synthesis remains. Suppression in the strains studied in this work maps to the lplA gene. The LplA proteins encoded by these suppressor mutants contain point mutations that greatly decrease the Michaelis constant for free octanoic acid and allow efficient scavenging of cytosolic octanoate.  相似文献   

16.
The growth pattern of the murein-sacculus which determines the shape of the Escherichia coli cell was studied by the use of high-resolution autoradiography with the electron microscope. The murein was pulse labelled with 3H-labelled diaminopimelic acid as a specific murein precursor and sacculi were prepared immediately. The radioactivity of the nascent murein appeared on the auto- radiographs at a well-defined growth zone in the central area of the sacculus. This was true regardless of the size of the cells. Pulse chase experimenta show rapid mixing of labelled murein with pre-existing murein and its even distribution over the whole surface of the sacculus.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Washed cells of a newly-developed double auxotroph for lipoic acid and thiamine, Enterobacter aerogenes LT-94, produced about 30 g/l of pyruvic acid from 5% glucose, and subsequently converted the acid to tryptophan in a yield of 16.7 g/l by the reverse reaction of tryptophanase, which had been induced under derepressed conditions. These yields were higher than those of the parent strain, L-12, showing only lipoic acid auxotrophy.  相似文献   

19.
In the induction process of synchronous rounding in Tetrahymena cells, synthetic activities and stabilities of DNA, RNA and protein were examined by pulse or chase experiments using 14C-thymidine, 14C-uridine, 14C-phenylalanine or 14C-amino acid mixture.  相似文献   

20.
Cultured Chinese hamster cells incorporated radioactivity from glucosamine-1-14C into surface sialic acid and into trypsin-removable material distinct from the surface sialoglycans. Cells prelabeled with glucosamine-1-14C and then transferred to medium containing unlabeled glucosamine progressively lost counts to the medium for many hours. Such chase experiments suggested a more rapid turnover of trypsinremovable material than of surface-bound sialic acid. Further studies of the regeneration of surface sialic acid showed that the actinomycin D-resistant portion of the process involved emergence of an intracellular precursor onto the cell surface. An earlier portion of the process was inhibited by actinomycin D, and at least three steps were inhibited by puromycin or cycloheximide.  相似文献   

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