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1.
Using analytical subcellular fractionation techniques, 12% of the total L-alanine aminotransferase activity and 26% of the total L-aspartate aminotransferase activity was localized in enterocyte mitochondria. Alanine and aspartate were products from the oxidation of glutamine and glutamate by enterocyte mitochondria. At low concentrations, malate stimulated aspartate synthesis but was inhibitory at higher concentrations. The malate inhibition of aspartate synthesis, which increased in the presence of pyruvate, was accompanied by an increase in alanine synthesis. With glutamine as substrate in the presence of pyruvate and malate, alanine synthesis was increased by 127% on addition of purified L-alanine aminotransferase, in spite of large amounts of glutamate generated. It was concluded that when pyruvate is available the important route for glutamine or glutamate oxidation by transamination was via L-alanine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase and not via L-aspartate:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase. Results suggested that mitochondria may account for 50% of alanine production from glutamine in the enterocyte despite the relatively low activity of L-alanine aminotransferase therein.  相似文献   

2.
Glutamine transport into rat brain synaptic and non-synaptic mitochondria has been monitored by the uptake of [3H]glutamine and by mitochondrial swelling. The concentration of glutamate in brain mitochondria is calculated to be high, 5–10 mM, indicating that phosphate activated glutaminase localized inside the mitochondria is likely to be dormant and the glutamine taken up not hydrolyzed. The uptake of [3H]glutamine is largely stereospecific. It is inhibited by glutamate, asparagine, aspartate, 2-oxoglutarate and succinate. Glutamate inhibits this uptake into synaptic and non-synaptic mitochondria by 95 and 85%, respectively. The inhibition by glutamate, asparagine, aspartate and succinate can be explained by binding to an inhibitory site whereas the inhibition by 2-oxoglutarate is counteracted by aminooxyacetic acid, which indicates that it is dependent on transamination. The glutamine-induced swelling, a measure of a very low affinity uptake, is inhibited by glutamate at a glutamine concentration of 100 mM, but this inhibition is abolished when the glutamine concentration is raised to 200 mM. This suggests that the very low affinity glutamine uptake is competitively inhibited by glutamate. Furthermore, glutamine-induced swelling is inhibited by 2-oxoglutarate, succinate and malate, similarly to that of the [3H]glutamine uptake. The properties of the mitochondrial glutamine transport are not identical with those of a recently purified renal glutamine carrier.  相似文献   

3.
Rhodopseudomonas acidophila strain 7050 can satisfy all its nitrogen and carbon requirements from l-alanine. Addition of 100 M methionine sulfoximine to alanine grown cultures had no effect on growth rate indicating that deamination of alanine via alanine dehydrogenase and re-assimilation of the released NH 4 + by glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase was an insignificant route of nitrogen transfer in this bacterium. Determination of aminotransferase activities in cell-free extracts failed to demonstrate the presence of direct routes from alanine to either aspartate or glutamate. The only active aminotransferase involving l-alanine was the alanine-glyoxylate enzyme (114–167 nmol·min–1·mg–1 protein) which produced glycine as end-product. The amino group of glycine was further transaminated to yield aspartate via a glycineoxaloacetate aminotransferase (117–136 nmol·min–1 ·mg–1 protein). No activity was observed when 2-oxoglutarate was substituted for oxaloacetate. The formation of glutamate from aspartate was catalysed by aspartate-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (85–107 nmol·min–1·mg–1 protein). Determinations of free intracellular amino acid pools in alanine and alanine+100 M methionine sulfoximine grown cells showed the predominance of glutamate, glycine and aspartate, providing further evidence that in alanine grown cultures R. acidophila satisfies its nitrogen requirements for balanced growth by transamination.Abbreviations ADH alanine dehydrogenase - GDH glutamate dehydrogenase - GS glutamine synthetase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - MSO methionine sulfoximine - GOT glutamate-oxaloacetate aminotransferase - GPT glutamate-pyruvate amino-transferase - AGAT alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase - GOAT glycine-oxaloacetate aminotransferase - GOTAT glycine-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase - AOAT alanine-oxaloacetate aminotransferase  相似文献   

4.
Brain levels of y-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate, activities of glutamate decarboxylase GABA-transaminase plus succinic semiaidehyde dehydrogenase and blood levels of glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate were determined in normal, thiamine-deprived, oxythiamine-treated and pyrithiamine-treated rats. Brain GABA levels were significantly reduced in thiamine-deprived and pyrithiamine-treated rats, but the activities of the enzymes of the GABA shunt pathway were not affected. Brain levels of glutamate were decreased and of 2-oxoglutarate increased in all three types of deficiency. This was associated with similar decreases in glutamate and increases in 2-oxoglutarate in the blood in all three deficient groups. Intraventricular injections of 2-[U-14C] oxoglutarate into the brain in these four groups of rats resulted in some significant differences in distribution of 14C in various TCA-pathway intermediates and satellite compounds in the brain. Increases in 14C-label were observed for glutamine and 2-oxoglutarate in all three deficient groups as compared to controls. The 14C content of succinate, fumarate and aspartate was decreased in the thiamine deprived and PTh-treated groups and [14C]glutamate was decreased in all three deficient groups. The 14C content of GABA was not significantly affected.  相似文献   

5.
Pathways of glutamine metabolism in resting and proliferating rat thymocytes were evaluated by in vitro incubations of freshly prepared or 60-h cultured cells for 1-2 h with [U14C]glutamine. Complete recovery of glutamine carbons utilized in products allowed quantification of the pathways of glutamine metabolism under the experimental conditions. Partial oxidation of glutamine via 2-oxoglutarate in a truncated citric acid cycle to CO2 and oxaloacetate, which then was converted to aspartate, accounted for 76 and 69%, respectively, of the glutamine metabolized beyond the stage of glutamate by resting and proliferating thymocytes. Complete oxidation to CO2 in the citric acid cycle via 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and isocitrate dehydrogenase accounted for 25 and 7%, respectively. In proliferating cells a substantial amount of glutamine carbons was also recovered in pyruvate, alanine, and especially lactate. The main route of glutamine and glutamate entrance into the citric acid cycle via 2-oxoglutarate in both cells is transamination by aspartate aminotransferase rather than oxidative deamination by glutamate dehydrogenase. In the presence of glucose as second substrate, glutamine utilization and aspartate formation markedly decreased, but complete oxidation of glutamine carbons to CO2 increased to 37 and 23%, respectively, in resting and proliferating cells. The dipeptide, glycyl-L-glutamine, which is more stable than free glutamine, can substitute for glutamine in thymocyte cultures at higher concentrations.  相似文献   

6.
Ammonia, the primary product of nitrogen fixation is rapidly incorporated into a number of amino acids such as glutamate and aspartate. A novel enzyme system glutamine: 2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase oxidoreductase, which probably has an important role in ammonia assimilation has been detected, in the present studies, in the rhizobial fraction of soybean root nodules and in Rhizobium japonicum grown in culture. The role of this latter enzyme and other enzymes such as glutamate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase in ammonia assimilation by soybean nodules is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Some aspects of tricarboxylic acid-cycle activity during differentiation and aging in Dictyostelium discoideum were examined. The concentrations of glutamate, aspartate, alanine, citrate, 2-oxoglutarate, succinate, fumarate, malate, oxaloacetate, pyruvate and acetyl-CoA were determined at four stages over the course of differentiation. The rate of O2 utilization was also determined over differentiation. In addition, experiments are described in which the specific radioactivities of citrate, 2-oxoglutarate, succinate, fumarate and malate were determined during a 30 min labelling of cells from the preculmination stage of development with [14C]glutamate, [14C]aspartate or [14C]alanine. A similar experiment was also performed with cells from the aggregation stage of development using [14C]glutamate.  相似文献   

8.
The levels and specific radioactivities (SA) of glucose, lactate, pyruvate, α-oxoglutarate and seven amino acids in the brain of toads adapted to fresh water or to an hyperosmotic environment were analysed at various times (5 min–4 h) after an injection of [U-14C]glucose into the bloodstream. The concentrations and SA of glucose, lactate and five amino acids in blood plasma also were measured. In addition, the SA of glutamine, glutamate, aspartate and GABA in brain were determined 30 min after an injection of [1,5-14C]citrate into the cisterna magna. The flow of labelled carbon atoms from glucose to amino acids and related metabolites in the toad brain was qualitatively similar to that in the mammalian brain, but quantitatively less than one-tenth of the rate in the brain of rats. Hyperosmotic adaptation induced a large increase in the levels of glucose and amino acids in the brain without affecting the rate of glucose utilization. The SA of several amino acids relative to the SA of glucose were initially lower in hyperosmotically-adapted toads than in toads adapted to fresh water, presumably because of a greater dilution of isotope by the larger amino acid pools in the hyperosmotically-adapted toads. The rates of synthesis of alanine and glutamine from pyruvate and glutamate, respectively, appeared to increase with hyperosmotic adaptation, but the rate of GABA synthesis from glutamate was unaltered. The SA of α-oxoglutarate and glutamate were similar at all time periods in both groups of toads, an indication that these compounds were interconverted much more rapidly than the rate at which α-oxoglutarate was formed from isocitrate. The SA of lactate in comparison to that of glucose varied but was always considerably lower, even at 4 h after the [14C]glucose injection. After[U-14C]glucose, glutamine had a SA lower than that of glutamate, whereas after the injection of [14C]citrate, glutamine was formed with a SA much higher than that of glutamate. Hence, glutamate in the toad brain exhibited metabolic compartmentation similar to that in rat brain.  相似文献   

9.
Experiments were conducted with aged nuclear-free homogenate of sheep liver and aged mitochondria in an attempt to measure both the extent of oxidation of propionate and the distribution of label from [2-14C]propionate in the products. With nuclear-free homogenate, propionate was 44% oxidized with the accumulation of succinate, fumarate, malate and some citrate. Recovery of 14C in these intermediates and respiratory carbon dioxide was only 33%, but additional label was detected in endogenous glutamate and aspartate. With washed mitochondria 30% oxidation of metabolized propionate occurred, and proportionately more citrate and malate accumulated. Recovery of 14C in dicarboxylic acids, citrate, α-oxoglutarate, glutamate, aspartate and respiratory carbon dioxide was 91%. The specific activities of the products and the distribution of label in the carbon atoms of the dicarboxylic acids were consistent with the operation solely of the methylmalonate pathway together with limited oxidation of the succinate formed by the tricarboxylic acid cycle via pyruvate. In a final experiment with mitochondria the label consumed from [2-14C]propionate was entirely recovered in the intermediates of the tricarboxylic acid cycle, glutamate, aspartate, methylmalonate and respiratory carbon dioxide.  相似文献   

10.
1. Pyruvate strongly inhibited aspartate production by mitochondria isolated from Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells, and rat kidney and liver respiring in the presence of glutamine or glutamate; the production of (14)CO(2) from l-[U-(14)C]glutamine was not inhibited though that from l-[U-(14)C]glutamate was inhibited by more than 50%. 2. Inhibition of aspartate production during glutamine oxidation by intact Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells in the presence of glucose was not accompanied by inhibition of CO(2) production. 3. The addition of amino-oxyacetate, which almost completely suppressed aspartate production, did not inhibit the respiration of the mitochondria in the presence of glutamine, though the respiration in the presence of glutamate was inhibited. 4. Glutamate stimulated the respiration of kidney mitochondria in the presence of glutamine, but the production of aspartate was the same as that in the presence of glutamate alone. 5. The results suggest that the oxidation of glutamate produced by the activity of mitochondrial glutaminase can proceed almost completely through the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway if the transamination pathway is inhibited. This indicates that the oxidation of glutamate is not limited by a high [NADPH]/[NADP(+)] ratio. 6. It is suggested that under physiological conditions the transamination pathway is a less favourable route for the oxidation of glutamate (produced by hydrolysis of glutamine) in Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells, and perhaps also kidney, than the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway, as the production of acetyl-CoA strongly inhibits the first mechanism. The predominance of the transamination pathway in the oxidation of glutamate by isolated mitochondria can be explained by a restricted permeability of the inner mitochondrial membrane to glutamate and by a more favourable location of glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase compared with that of glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

11.
Human diploid fibroblasts metabolize up to 13% of the glutamine in tissue culture medium to lactate. Four μCi of glutamine-U-14C were added to media containing 5 mM or 65 μM glucose or medium containing no added glucose, but supplemented with purine and pyrimidine nucleosides (HGTU). Aliquots of the media were taken at daily intervals and were assayed for glucose, lactate, pyruvate, malate, citrate, aspartate, glutamine, and glutamate. The label incorporation into these compounds was determined, except for glutamine and glucose. The distribution of label from glutamine-U14C in 5 mM glucose medium by day 4 was lactate (10.2%), glutamate (15.2%), citrate (1.9%), pyruvate (2.0%), malate (1.1%), and aspartate (< 0.1%). The accumulation of label in lactate and glutamate occurred continuously during the growth cycle. Malate, citrate, and aspartate accumulation occurred primarily in confluent cultures. The label in aspartate was seen only in stationary phase cells or when the glucose concentration was decreased to 65 μM or less; net aspartate accumulation was increased twofold in low glucose media. These data demonstrate an actively functioning pathway for the conversion of 4-carbon TCA-cycle intermediates to 3-carbon glycolytic intermediates in human diploid fibroblasts.  相似文献   

12.
A Tn5 insertional prototrophic mutant of Paracoccus denitrificans (UBM219) was generated which grew on high (>1 mM) but not low (<0.5 mM) ammonium as sole nitrogen source. It did not utilize nitrate and most amino acids except glutamate and aspartate. UBM219 showed more than 10-fold lower levels of ammonium (methylammonium) transport, aspartate and alanine aminotransferase, but more than 10-fold higher activities of glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamate synthase. This pleiotropy indicates a mutation in a regulatory gene affecting nitrogen metabolism in general. — Ammonia assimilation pathways and regulation in Paracoccus resemble the patterns in enterobacteria with the exception, that alanine is generated by amino transfer from glutamate to pyruvate.Non-standard abbreviations GS glutamine synthetase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - GluDH glutamate dehydrogenase - GPT glutamate/pyruvate aminotransferase - GOT glutamate/oxaloacetate aminotransferase  相似文献   

13.
1. Glutamate oxidation in brain and liver mitochondrial systems proceeds mainly through transamination with oxaloacetate followed by oxidation of the α-oxoglutarate formed. Both in the presence and absence of dinitrophenol in liver mitochondria this pathway accounted for almost 80% of the uptake of glutamate. In brain preparations the transamination pathway accounted for about 90% of the glutamate uptake. 2. The oxidation of [1-14C]- and [5-14C]-glutamate in brain preparations is compatible with utilization through the tricarboxylic acid cycle, either after the formation of α-oxoglutarate or after decarboxylation to form γ-aminobutyrate. There is no indication of γ-decarboxylation of glutamate. 3. The high respiratory control ratio obtained with glutamate as substrate in brain mitochondrial preparations is due to the low respiration rate in the absence of ADP: this results from the low rate of formation of oxaloacetate under these conditions. When oxaloacetate is made available by the addition of malate or of NAD+, the respiration rate is increased to the level obtained with other substrates. 4. When the transamination pathway of glutamate oxidation was blocked with malonate, the uptake of glutamate was inhibited in the presence of ADP or ADP plus dinitrophenol by about 70 and 80% respectively in brain mitochondrial systems, whereas the inhibition was only about 50% in dinitrophenol-stimulated liver preparations. In unstimulated liver mitochondria in the presence of malonate there was a sixfold increase in the oxidation of glutamate by the glutamate-dehydrogenase pathway. Thus the operating activity of glutamate dehydrogenase is much less than the `free' (non-latent) activity. 5. The following explanation is put forward for the control of glutamate metabolism in liver and brain mitochondrial preparations. The oxidation of glutamate by either pathway yields α-oxoglutarate, which is further metabolized. Since aspartate aminotransferase is present in great excess compared with the respiration rate, the oxaloacetate formed is continuously removed by the transamination reaction. Thus α-oxoglutarate is formed independently of glutamate dehydrogenation, and the question is how the dehydrogenation of glutamate is influenced by the continuous formation of α-oxoglutarate. The results indicate that a competition takes place between the α-oxoglutarate-dehydrogenase complex and glutamate dehydrogenase, probably for NAD+, resulting in preferential oxidation of α-oxoglutarate.  相似文献   

14.
Rhodopseudomonas acidophila strain 7050 achieved balanced growth when provided with either asparagine or glutamine as nitrogen source. Under these growth conditions R. acidophila synthesized a mixed amidase which exhibited similar activity (223–422 nmol/min·mg protein) against either nitrogen source. Determination of the free intracellular amino acid pools show that deamidation of asparagine and glutamine resulted in elevated levels of both aspartate and glutamate. Cell-free extracts of R. acidophila showed significant aminotransferase activity, particulary glutamine-oxaloacetate aminotransferase (89.7–209.3 nmol/min·mg protein), glycine oxaloacetate aminotransferase (135–227 nmol/min ·mg protein), alanine glyoxylate aminotransferase (66.3–163.2 nmol/min·mg protein) and serineglyoxylate aminotransferase (57.1–68.4 nmol/min ·mg protein). Short term labelling experiments using 14C-glyoxylate show that glycine plays an important role in amino nitrogen transfer in R. acidophila and that the enzymes for the metabolism of glyoxylate via glycine, serine and hydroxypyruvate were present in cell-free extracts. These data confirm that R. acidophila can satisfy all its' nitrogen requirements by transamination.Abbreviations GDH glutamate dehydrogenase - GS glutamine synthetase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - MSO methionine sulfoximine - GOT glutamate—oxaloacetate aminotransferase - GPT glutamate-pyruvate aminotransferase - AGAT alanineglyoxylate aminotransferase - GOAT glycine-oxaloacetate aminotransferase - GOGAT glycine-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase - AOAT alanine-oxaloacetate aminotransferase - SGAT serineglyoxylate aminotransferase - INH isonicotinylhydrazide  相似文献   

15.
In vivo tracer studies with 14C have been performed to help determine pathways of incorporation of newly assimilated nitrogen into N2-fixing cells of Anabaena cylindrica. After photosynthesis in Ar:O2:14CO2 for 30 min, the addition of N2 or NH 4 + resulted in increased rates of 14CO2-incorporation both in the light and dark, and in increased incorporation of 14C into amino acids at the expense of sucrose and sugar phosphates. Evidence of enhanced sucrose catabolism and increased pyruvate kinase activity was obtained on adding nitrogen, and, of the 14C-labelling entering the tricarboxylic acid cycle, more appeared in citrate and 2-oxoglutarate than in malate and oxaloacetate. The kinetics of 14C-incorporation into various amino acids suggest that in the light and dark the most important route of primary ammonia assimilation involves glutamine synthetase and that glutamate, aspartate, glycine and probably alanine are formed secondarily from glutamine.  相似文献   

16.
B. Dahlbender  D. Strack 《Planta》1986,169(3):382-392
The relationships between the metabolism of malate, nitrogen assimilation and biosynthesis of amino acids in response to different nitrogen sources (nitrate and ammonium) have been examined in cotyledons of radish (Raphanus sativus L.). Measurements of the activities of some key enzymes and pulse-chase experiments with [14C]malate indicate the operation of an anaplerotic pathway for malate, which is involved in the synthesis of glutamine during increased ammonia assimilation. It is most likely that the tricarboxylicacid cycle is supplied with carbon through entry of malate, formed via the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-carboxylation pathway, when 2-oxoglutarate leaves the cycle to serve as precursor for an increased synthesis of glutamine via glutamate. This might occur predominantly in the cytosol via the activity of the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase (GS/GOGAT) cycle, the NADH-dependent GOGAT being the rate-limiting activity.Abbreviations DTT dithiothreitol - EDTA ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid - GDH glutamate dehydrogenase - GOGAT glutamate synthase (glutamine: 2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase) - GOT aspartate aminotransferase (glutamate: oxaloacetate transaminase) - GS glutamine synthetase - HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography - MCF extraction medium of methanol: chloroform: 7M formic acid, 12:5:3, by vol. - MDH malate dehydrogenase - MSO L-methionine, sulfoximine - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - TLC thin-layer chromatography  相似文献   

17.
Glucose and Synaptosomal Glutamate Metabolism: Studies with [15N]Glutamate   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The metabolism of [15N]glutamate was studied with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in rat brain synaptosomes incubated with and without glucose. [15N]Glutamate was taken up rapidly by the preparation, reaching a steady-state level in less than 5 min. 15N was incorporated predominantly into aspartate and, to a much lesser extent, into gamma-aminobutyrate. The amount of [15N]ammonia formed was very small, and the enrichment of 15N in alanine and glutamine was below the level of detection. Omission of glucose substantially increased the rate and amount of [15N]aspartate generated. It is proposed that in synaptosomes (a) the predominant route of glutamate nitrogen disposal is through the aspartate aminotransferase reaction; (b) the aspartate aminotransferase pathway generates 2-oxoglutarate, which then serves as the metabolic fuel needed to produce ATP; (c) utilization of glutamate via transamination to aspartate is greatly accelerated when flux through the tricarboxylic acid cycle is diminished by the omission of glucose; (d) the metabolism of glutamate via glutamate dehydrogenase in intact synaptosomes is slow, most likely reflecting restriction of enzyme activity by some unknown factor(s), which suggests that the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction may not be near equilibrium in neurons; and (e) the activities of alanine aminotransferase and glutamine synthetase in synaptosomes are very low.  相似文献   

18.
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was used to evaluate the metabolism of [15N]glutamine in isolated rat brain synaptosomes. In the presence of 0.5 mM glutamine, synaptosomes accumulated this amino acid to a level of 25-35 nmol/mg protein at an initial rate greater than 9 nmol/min/mg of protein. The metabolism of [15N]glutamine generated 15N-labelled glutamate, aspartate, and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). An efflux of both [15N]glutamate and [15N]aspartate from synaptosomes to the medium was observed. Enrichment of 15N in alanine could not be detected because of a limited pool size. Elimination of glucose from the incubation medium substantially increased the rate and amount of [15N]aspartate formed. It is concluded that: (1) With 0.5 mM external glutamine, the glutaminase reaction, and not glutamine transport, determines the rate of metabolism of this amino acid. (2) The primary route of glutamine catabolism involves aspartate aminotransferase which generates 2-oxoglutarate, a substrate for the tricarboxylic acid cycle. This reaction is greatly accelerated by the omission of glucose. (3) Glutamine has preferred access to a population of synaptosomes or to a synaptosomal compartment that generates GABA. (4) Synaptosomes maintain a constant internal level of glutamate plus aspartate of about 70-80 nmol/mg protein. As these amino acids are produced from glutamine in excess of this value, they are released into the medium. Hence synaptosomal glutamine and glutamate metabolism are tightly regulated in an interrelated manner.  相似文献   

19.
1. Transient and steady-state changes caused by acetate utilization were studied in perfused rat heart. The transient period occupied 6min and steady-state changes were followed in a further 6min of perfusion. 2. In control perfusions glucose oxidation accounted for 75% of oxygen utilization; the remaining 25% was assumed to represent oxidation of glyceride fatty acids. With acetate in the steady state, acetate oxidation accounted for 80% of oxygen utilization, which increased by 20%; glucose oxidation was almost totally suppressed. The rate of tricarboxylate-cycle turnover increased by 67% with acetate perfusion. The net yield of ATP in the steady state was not altered by acetate. 3. Acetate oxidation increased muscle concentrations of acetyl-CoA, citrate, isocitrate, 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, alanine, AMP and glucose 6-phosphate, and lowered those of CoA and aspartate; the concentrations of pyruvate, ATP and ADP showed no detectable change. The times for maximum changes were 1min, acetyl-CoA, CoA, alanine and AMP; 6min, citrate, isocitrate, glutamate and aspartate; 2-4min, 2-oxoglutarate. Malate concentration fell in the first minute and rose to a value somewhat greater than in the control by 6min. There was a transient and rapid rise in glucose 6-phosphate concentration in the first minute superimposed on the slower rise over 6min. 4. Acetate perfusion decreased the output of lactate, the muscle concentration of lactate and the [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio in perfusion medium and muscle in the first minute; these returned to control values by 6min. 5. During the first minute acetate decreased oxygen consumption and lowered the net yield of ATP by 30% without any significant change in muscle ATP or ADP concentrations. 6. The specific radioactivities of cycle metabolites were measured during and after a 1min pulse of [1-(14)C]acetate delivered in the first and twelfth minutes of acetate perfusion. A model based on the known flow rates and concentrations of cycle metabolites was analysed by computer simulation. The model, which assumed single pools of cycle metabolites, fitted the data well with the inclusion of an isotope-exchange reaction between isocitrate and 2-oxoglutarate+bicarbonate. The exchange was verified by perfusions with [(14)C]bicarbonate. There was no evidence for isotope exchange between citrate and acetyl-CoA or between 2-oxoglutarate and malate. There was rapid isotope equilibration between 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate, but relatively poor isotope equilibration between malate and aspartate. 7. It is concluded that the citrate synthase reaction is displaced from equilibrium in rat heart, that isocitrate dehydrogenase and aconitate hydratase may approximate to equilibrium, that alanine aminotransferase is close to equilibrium, but that aspartate transamination is slow for reasons that have yet to be investigated. 8. The slow rise in citrate concentration as compared with the rapid rise in that of acetyl-CoA is attributed to the slow generation of oxaloacetate by aspartate aminotransferase. 9. It is proposed that the tricarboxylate cycle may operate as two spans: acetyl-CoA-->2-oxoglutarate, controlled by citrate synthase, and 2-oxoglutarate-->oxaloacetate, controlled by 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase; a scheme for cycle control during acetate oxidation is outlined. The initiating factors are considered to be changes in acetyl-CoA, CoA and AMP concentrations brought about by acetyl-CoA synthetase. 10. Evidence is presented for a transient inhibition of phosphofructokinase during the first minute of acetate perfusion that was not due to a rise in whole-tissue citrate concentration. The probable importance of metabolite compartmentation is stressed.  相似文献   

20.
Evoked release of glutamate and aspartate from cultured cerebellar granule cells was studied after preincubation of the cells in tissue culture medium with glucose (6.5 mM), glutamine (1.0 mM),d[3H] aspartate and in some cases aminooxyacetate (5.0 mM) or phenylsuccinate (5.0 mM). The release of endogenous amino acids and ofd-[3H] aspartate was measured under physiological and depolarizing (56 mM KCl) conditions both in the presence and absence of calcium (1.0 mM), glutamine (1.0 mM), aminooxyacetate (5.0 mM) and phenylsuccinate (5.0 mM). The cellular content of glutamate and aspartate was also determined. Of the endogenous amino acids only glutamate was released in a transmitter fashion and newly synthesized glutamate was released preferentially to exogenously suppliedd-[3H] aspartate, a marker for exogenous glutamate. Evoked release of endogenous glutamate was reduced or completely abolished by respectively, aminooxyacetate and phenylsuccinate. In contrast, the release ofd-[3H] aspartate was increased reflecting an unaffected release of exogenous glutamate and an increased psuedospecific radioactivity of the glutamate transmitter pool. Since aminooxyacetate and phenylsuccinate inhibit respectively aspartate aminotransferase and mitochondrial keto-dicarboxylic acid transport it is concluded that replenishment of the glutamate transmitter pool from glutamine, formed in the mitochondrial compartment by the action of glutaminase requires the simultaneous operation of mitochondrial keto-dicarboxylic acid transport and aspartate aminotransferase which is localized both intra- and extra-mitochondrially. The purpose of the latter enzyme apparently is to catalyze both intra- and extra-mitochondrial transamination of -ketoglutarate which is formed intramitochondrially from the glutamate carbon skeleton and transferred across the mitochondrial membrane to the cytosol where transmitter glutamate is formed. This cytoplasmic origin of transmitter glutamate is in aggreement with the finding thatd-[3H] aspartate readily labels the transmitter pool even when synthesis of endogenous transmitter is impaired in the presence of AOAA or phenylsuccinate.Special issue dedicated to Dr Elling Kvamme  相似文献   

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