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1.
DL-alpha-Monofluoromethylputrescine (compound R.M.I. 71864) is an enzyme-activated irreversible inhibitor of the biosynthetic enzyme ornithine decarboxylase from Escherichia coli. This compound, however, has much less effect in vitro on ornithine decarboxylase obtained from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. These findings are in contrast with those previously found with the substrate analogue DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine (compound R.M.I. 71782). The K1 of the DL-alpha-monofluoromethylputrescine for the E. coli ornithine decarboxylase is 110 microM, and the half-life (t1/2) calculated for an infinite concentration of inhibitor is 2.1 min. When DL-alpha-monofluoromethylputrescine is used in combination with DL-alpha-difluoromethylarginine (R.M.I. 71897), an irreversible inhibitor of arginine decarboxylase, in vivo in E. coli, both decarboxylase activities are inhibited (greater than 95%) but putrescine levels are only decreased to about one-third of control values and spermidine levels are slightly increased.  相似文献   

2.
The polyamine content of Escherichia coli is inversely related to the osmolality of the growth medium. The experiments described here demonstrate that a similar phenomenon occurs in mammalian cells. When grown in media of low NaCl concentration, HeLa cells and human fibroblasts were found to contain high levels of putrescine, spermidine, and spermine. The putrescine content of HeLa cells was a function of the osmolality of the medium, as shown by growing cells in media containing mannitol or additional glucose. External osmolality per se had no effect on the contents of spermidine and spermine. For all media, the total cellular polyamine content could be correlated with the activity of ornithine decarboxylase, the first enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis. Different levels of enzyme activity appear to result solely from variations in the rate of enzyme degradation. A sudden increase in a NaCl concentration produced rapid loss of ornithine decarboxylase activity and a gradual loss of putrescine and spermidine. A sudden decrease in NaCl concentration led to rapid and substantial increases in ornithine decarboxylase activity and putrescine.  相似文献   

3.
K M Yao  W F Fong    S F Ng 《The Biochemical journal》1984,222(3):679-684
The putrescine-biosynthesis pathway in Tetrahymena thermophila was delineated by studying crude extracts prepared from exponentially growing cultures. A pyridoxal phosphate-stimulated ornithine decarboxylase activity competitively inhibited by putrescine was detected. CO2 was also liberated from L-arginine, but analyses by t.l.c. and enzyme studies suggested that the activity was not due to arginine decarboxylase, nor could enzyme activities converting agmatine into putrescine be detected. We conclude that the decarboxylation of L-ornithine is probably the only major route for putrescine biosynthesis in this organism during exponential growth.  相似文献   

4.
Mouse ornithine decarboxylase (ODCase) cDNA was expressed at a high level in an Escherichia coli mutant deficient in polyamine biosynthesis. The expression of mouse ornithine decarboxylase relieved the dependence of the mutant on an exogenous source of polyamines, presumably by providing putrescine, the product of the enzyme. The effect on the enzymatic activity of deletions that removed carboxy-terminal amino acids of the protein was determined.  相似文献   

5.
Bacterial growth was measurably slowed by a combination of drugs which inhibit polyamine-biosynthetic enzymes. Addition of DL-alpha-monofluoromethylornithine, which was shown to inactivate irreversibly ornithine decarboxylase extracted from Escherichia coli (Ki = 0.36 mM) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Ki = 0.30 mM), DL-alpha-difluoromethylarginine and dicyclohexylammonium sulphate to cultures of E. coli or P. aeruginosa resulted in a 40 and 70% increase in generation times (decreased growth rates) respectively, which was completely reversed by the addition of 0.1 mM-putrescine plus 0.1 mM-spermidine to the medium. Decreased intracellular polyamine concentrations correlated with increased generation times; putrescine concentration was decreased by 70% in E. coli and 80% in P. aeruginosa, while spermidine concentration was decreased by 50% in E. coli and 95% in P. aeruginosa. Subsequent investigation of the inactivation of the ornithine decarboxylase by monofluoromethylornithine indicated that it was active-site directed, as the normal substrate ornithine slowed the rate of inhibition. Specific interference with polyamine biosynthesis may be a viable approach to control of some bacterial infections.  相似文献   

6.
The cell cycle of Escherichia coli is characterised by synchronous oscillations in the levels of ATP and putrescine. Oscillations in the pool of putrescine are determined by ATP content which exerts a strong stimulating effect on the activity of ornithine decarboxylase, the key enzyme of polyamine synthesis. The results allow one to consider the system of polyamine synthesis as a point in the regulatory interaction (coupling) between the constructive and energetic types of E. coli metabolism.  相似文献   

7.
Polyamines are known to play an essential role in cell growth and differentiation. In animals, putrescine is mainly synthesized from ornithine by ornithine decarboxylase (ODC). In higher plants and in bacteria putrescine can also be synthesized from arginine by arginine decarboxylase (ADC). In this paper we report the presence of significant levels of ADC activity in crude extracts of Trypanosoma cruzi, RA strain epimastigotes. ADC activity was detected during a very narrow time range, corresponding to the early logarithmic growth phase. This activity was inhibited by DL-alpha-difluoromethylarginine, a specific irreversible inhibitor of ADC and activated by DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine, a specific irreversible inhibitor of ODC. The reaction showed an absolute requirement for pyridoxal phosphate, dithiothreitol and Mg++. The enzyme half life was about 10 hrs., showed maximum activity at pH 7.9 and a Km for arginine of 5 mM. ADC activity was stimulated by fetal-calf-serum and inhibited by spermine, probably through a negative feed-back regulation on the levels of the enzyme. ODC activity was not detected. These results confirm our previous reports on the capability of T. cruzi, RA strain epimastigotes to synthesize putrescine from arginine via agmatine by ADC and point out differences on polyamine metabolism between the parasite and the mammalian host cell.  相似文献   

8.
Quiescent, contact inhibited H-35 rat hepatoma cell cultures maintained in minimal essential medium contain a very low level of ornithine decarboxylase activity. However, 2 h after the addition of 10% fetal calf serum to the culture medium, the enzyme activity increases by approx. 100-fold. This increase can be completely inhibited by the simultaneous addition of 10(-2) M putrescine. The presence of putrescine elicits the appearance of an intracellular inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase. This inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase has a molecular weight of 26500, is sensitive to the action of chymotrypsin and is noncompetitive with respect to ornithine. The intracellular appearance of this inhibitor is sensitive to cycloheximide but is only partially inhibited by actinomycin D.  相似文献   

9.
The activity of ornithine decarboxylase (ornithine carboxylyase E.C. 4.1.1.17) was studied during meiotic maturation induced in vitro by progesterone in follicle cell-free oocytes. Enzyme activity increased 4–6 fold during maturation, preceding germinal vesicle breakdown. The increase in ornithine decarboxylase activity was inhibited by cholera toxin, an agent that blocks meiotic maturation and increases cAMP levels within the cell. It was also prevented by cycloheximide but not by actinomycin D. Treatment of oocytes with D,L-α-difluoromethyl-ornithine, an irreversible inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase and of putrescine synthesis, effectively abolished enzyme activity without preventing germinal vesicle breakdown. These observations show that the progesterone-induced increase in ornithine decarboxylase activity is not required for completion of meiotic division of the oocyte.  相似文献   

10.
The biosynthetic pathways for putrescine (Put) in Vibrio parahaemolyticus were delineated by measuring activities of the enzymes which would be involved in its biosynthesis. Experiments with labeled arginine and ornithine revealed that both of these amino acids were converted into Put by intact cells. The activities of three enzymes, arginine decarboxylase (ADC), ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), and agmatine ureohydrolase (AUH), were detected in cell extracts. ADC and ODC of V. parahaemolyticus were similar in the following properties to the corresponding enzymes of Escherichia coli: 1) both decarboxylases showed a pH optimum at 8.25 and required pyridoxal phosphate and dithiothreitol for full activity; 2) while ODC was considerably activated by GTP, ADC was only slightly; 3) both decarboxylases were inhibited by polyamines; 4) ADC was inhibited by difluoromethylarginine, a potent inhibitor of bacterial ADC. However, in contrast to the corresponding enzymes of E. coli, the V. parahaemolyticus ADC showed no requirement for Mg2+, and the AUH was active over a wide pH range of 8.5-9.5 with a maximum at pH 9.0. Furthermore, in all 6 strains tested, the activity of ADC was obviously high compared with that of ODC, and AUH was present with a relatively high activity. Cultivation of these strains at a suboptimal NaCl concentration (0.5%) resulted in a pronounced increase in both ADC and AUH activities. These observations suggest that the important pathway for Put biosynthesis in V. parahaemolyticus is the decarboxylation of arginine by ADC and the subsequent hydrolysis of its product, agmatine, by AUH.  相似文献   

11.
A purified preparation of arginine decarboxylase fromCucumis sativus seedlings displayed ornithine decarboxylase activity as well. The two decarboxylase activities associated with the single protein responded differentially to agmatine, putrescine andPi. While agmatine was inhibitory (50 %) to arginine decarboxylase activity, ornithine decarboxylase activity was stimulated by about 3-fold by the guanido arnine. Agmatine-stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity was only observed at higher concentrations of the amine. Inorganic phosphate enhanced arginine decarboxylase activity (2-fold) but ornithine decarboxylase activity was largely uninfluenced. Although both arginine and ornithine decarboxylase activities were inhibited by putrescine, ornithine decarboxylase activity was profoundly curtailed even at 1 mM concentration of the diamine. The enzyme-activated irreversible inhibitor for mammalian ornithine decarboxylase,viz. α-difluoromethyl ornithine, dramatically enhanced arginine decarboxylase activity (3–4 fold), whereas ornithine decarboxylase activity was partially (50%) inhibited by this inhibitor. At substrate level concentrations, the decarboxylation of arginine was not influenced by ornithine andvice-versa. Preliminary evidence for the existence of a specific inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase activity in the crude extracts of the plant is presented. The above results suggest that these two amino acids could be decarboxylated at two different catalytic sites on a single protein.  相似文献   

12.
Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), the key enzyme of polyamine biosynthesis was highly purified from the thermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus. The enzyme preparation showed a single band on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, a pH optimum of 7.5 and a temperature optimum at 60°C. The native enzyme which is phosphorylated could, upon treatment with alkaline phosphatase, lose all activity. The inactive form could be reversibly activated by nucleotides in the order of NTP>NDP>NMP. When physiological polyamines were added to the purified enzyme in vitro, spermine or spermidine activated ODC by 140 or 40%, respectively, while putrescine caused a small inhibition. The basic amino acids lysine and arginine were competitive inhibitors of ODC, while histidine did not affect the enzyme activity. Among the phosphoamino acids tested, phosphoserine was the most effective activator of purified ODC. Polyamines added at high concentration to the medium resulted in a delay or in a complete inhibition of the growth of T. thermophilus, and in a decrease of the specific activity of ornithine decarboxylase. The decrease of ODC activity resulted from the appearance of a non-competitive inhibitor of ODC, the antizyme (Az). The T. thermophilus antizyme was purified by an ODC-Sepharose affinity column chromatography, as well as by immunoprecipitation using antibodies raised against the E. coli antizyme. The antizyme of E. coli inhibited the ODC of T. thermophilus, and vice versa. The fragment of amino acids 56-292 of the E. coli antizyme, produced as a fusion protein of glutathione S-transferase, did not inhibit the ODC of E. coli or T. thermophilus.  相似文献   

13.
Quiescent, contact inhibited H-35 rat hepatoma cell cultures maintained in minimal essential medium contain a very low level of ornithine decarboxylase activity. However, 2 h after the addition of 10% fetal aclf serum to the culture medium, the enzyme activity increases by approx. 100-fold. This increase can be completely inhibited by the simultaneous additionof 10?2 M putrescine. The presence of putrescine elicits the appearance of an intracellular inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase. This inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase has a molecular weight of 26500, is sensitive to the action of chymotrypsin and its noncompetitive with respect to ornithine. The intracellular appearance of this inhibitor is sensitive to cycloheximide but is only partially inhibited by actinomycin D.  相似文献   

14.
Translational regulation of mammalian ornithine decarboxylase by polyamines   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
Ornithine decarboxylase, which catalyses the formation of putrescine, is the first and rate-limiting enzyme in the biosynthesis of polyamines in mammalian cells. The enzyme is highly regulated, as indicated by rapid changes in its mRNA and protein during cell growth. Here we report that ornithine decarboxylase is regulated at the translational level by polyamines in difluoromethylornithine-resistant mouse myeloma cells that overproduce the enzyme due to amplification of an ornithine decarboxylase gene. When such cells are exposed to putrescine or other polyamines, there is a rapid and specific decrease in the rate of synthesis of ornithine decarboxylase, assayed by pulse-labeling. Neither the cellular content of ornithine decarboxylase mRNA nor the half-life of ornithine decarboxylase protein is affected. Our results indicate that polyamines negatively regulate the translation of ornithine decarboxylase mRNA, thereby controlling their own synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Both the polyamine content and the route of acquisition of polyamines by Rickettsia prowazekii, an obligate intracellular parasitic bacterium, were determined. The rickettsiae grew normally in an ornithine decarboxylase mutant of the Chinese hamster ovary (C55.7) cell line whether or not putrescine, which this host cell required in order to grow, was present. The rickettsiae contained approximately 6 mM putrescine, 5 mM spermidine, and 3 mM spermine when cultured in the presence or absence of putrescine. Neither the transport of putrescine and spermidine by the rickettsiae nor a measurable rickettsial ornithine decarboxylase activity could be demonstrated. However, we demonstrated the de novo synthesis of polyamines from arginine by the rickettsiae. Arginine decarboxylase activity (29 pmol of 14CO2 released per h per 10(8) rickettsiae) was measured in the rickettsiae growing within their host cell. A markedly lower level of this enzymatic activity was observed in cell extracts of R. prowazekii and could be completely inhibited with 1 mM difluoromethylarginine, an irreversible inhibitor of the enzyme. R. prowazekii failed to grow in C55.7 cells that had been cultured in the presence of 1 mM difluoromethylarginine. After rickettsiae were grown in C55.7 in the presence of labeled arginine, the specific activities of arginine in the host cell cytoplasm and polyamines in the rickettsiae were measured; these measurements indicated that 100% of the total polyamine content of R. prowazekii was derived from arginine.  相似文献   

16.
It was known from previous work that specific inhibition of neither ornithine decarboxylase activity nor polyamine oxidase activity produces spermidine depletion by more than 20% in non-growing organs, which are in a steady state with regard to polyamine metabolism. Combined treatment with inactivators of both ornithine decarboxylase and polyamine oxidase for a prolonged time caused, however, a gradual decrease of spermidine levels in liver, kidney and brain of mice by 50% and more. The method is in accordance with the previously suggested role of polyamine interconversion. Inhibition of polyamine oxidase prevents the reutilization for de novo polyamine biosynthesis of putrescine and spermidine, which are formed by oxidative splitting of N1-acetylspermine and N1-acetylspermidine, respectively, and the ornithine decarboxylase inhibitor prevents the compensatory increase of putrescine from ornithine. The findings are further evidence for the physiological significance of polyamine reutilization.  相似文献   

17.
N-Methyl-, N-ethyl-, N-propyl-, N-butyl-, N,N-dimethyl- and N,N'-dimethylputrescines were assayed as inhibitors of ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) from rat liver and from Escherichia coli. They were found to be poor inhibitors, with the exception of N-propylputrescine and N,N-dimethylputrescine, which were inhibitory at 25 mM. A homologous series of 1-alkylputrescines ranging from 1-methylputrescine (1,4-diaminopentane) to 1-heptylputrescine (1,4-diaminoundecane) was assayed for effect on the activity of ornithine decarboxylase from the same sources. 1-Methylputrescine (5 mM) inhibited the mammalian enzyme, while the higher homologues showed significantly less inhibitory activity. When assayed on the bacterial enzyme, 1-methylputrescine (5 mM) was not inhibitory, while the higher homologues showed inhibitory effects. At higher concentrations, 1-methylputrescine and 1-heptylputrescine were the best inhibitors of these series of rat liver ornithine decarboxylase. When 1-methylputrescine, 2-methylputrescine, 1,2-dimethylputrescine, 1,3-dimethylputrescine and 1,4-dimethylputrescine were assayed as inhibitors of the decarboxylase, 2-methylputrescine was found to be the best inhibitor of the rat liver enzyme, while 1,3-dimethylputrescine was the best inhibitor of the bacterial enzyme. 1,4-Dimethylputrescine (2,5-diaminohexane) did not inhibit the enzyme from either source. Both, 2-methylputrescine and 1-methylputrescine, as well as the 1,2- and 1,3-dimethylputrescines were competitive inhibitors of the enzyme, and a Ki of 1 mM was obtained for 2-methylputrescine when the rat liver decarboxylase was used. N-Methyl, 1-methyl and 2-methylputrescines were found to inhibit in vivo the activity of rat liver ornithine decarboxylase which had been previously induced by thioacetamide treatment. 2-Methylputrescine (50 mumol/100 g body weight) was found to be the best in vivo inhibitor (93% inhibition), while putrescine under similar conditions inhibited 56% of the enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

18.
Ornithine decarboxylase from the African trypanosome is an important target for antitrypanosomal chemotherapy. Despite this, the enzyme had not been previously purified or extensively characterized as it is a very low level protein. In this paper we describe the purification of Trypanosoma brucei brucei ornithine decarboxylase from bloodstream form trypomastigotes by 107,000-fold to a specific activity of 2.7 x 10(6) nmol CO2/h/mg of protein in the parasite. T. brucei ornithine decarboxylase had a native molecular weight of 90,000 and a subunit molecular weight of 45,000. The isoelectric point of the protein was 5.0. The Km for ornithine was 280 microM and the Ki for the irreversible inhibitor alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) was 220 microM with a half-time of inactivation at saturating DFMO concentration of 2.7 min. T. brucei ornithine decarboxylase appears similar to mouse ornithine decarboxylase, further supporting our previous suggestion that the selective toxicity of DFMO to the parasite is not due to catalytic differences between the two proteins. Although a small quantity of T. brucei ornithine decarboxylase was purified from T. brucei, extensive structural and kinetic studies will require a more ample source of the enzyme. We therefore expressed our previously cloned T. brucei ornithine decarboxylase gene in Escherichia coli using a vector that contains an inducible lambda promoter. T. brucei ornithine decarboxylase activity was induced in E. coli to levels that were 50 to 200 fold of that present in the long-slender bloodstream form of T. brucei. Ornithine decarboxylase activity in the crude E. coli lysate was 1500-6000 nmol of CO2/h/mg of protein and represented 0.05-0.2% of the total cell protein. The recombinant T. brucei ornithine decarboxylase was purified to apparent homogeneity from the transformed E. coli. The purified recombinant enzyme had kinetic and physical properties essentially identical to those of the native enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
The polyamine content of Escherichia coli is inversely related to the osmolality of the growth medium. The experiments described here demonstrate that a similar phenomenon occurs in mammalian cells. When grown in media of low NaCl concentration, HeLa cells and human fibroblasts were found to contain high levels of putrescine, spermidine, and spermine. The putrescine content of HeLa cells was a function of the osmolality of the medium, as shown by growing cells in media containing mannitol or additional glucose. External osmolality per se had no effect on the contents of spermidine and spermine. For all media, the total cellular polyamine content could be correlated with the activity of ornithine decarboxylase, the first enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis. Different levels of enzyme activity appear to result solely from variations in the rate of enzyme degradation.A sudden increase in NaCl concentration produced rapid loss of ornithine decarboxylase activity and a gradual loss of putrescine and spermidine. A sudden decrease in NaCl concentration led to rapid and substantial increases in ornithine decarboxylase activity and putrescine.  相似文献   

20.
Variant S49 mouse lymphoma cells with increased ornithine decarboxylase activity were obtained by selecting for resistance to alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO), a specific inhibitor of the enzyme. Ornithine decarboxylase was identified as a specifically immunoprecipitable polypeptide that was made at an increased rate in the variant cells. Ornithine decarboxylase was also identified on a two-dimensional gel as a metabolically labeled polypeptide of Mr approximately 55,000 which was synthesized at an increased rate in two independently selected variants. Synthesis of this polypeptide was further augmented by treatment of cells with inhibitors of ornithine decarboxylase activity. The charge of the polypeptide was altered by treatment of either cells or cellular extracts with DFMO, a suicide substrate which binds covalently to the enzyme. This charge alteration and the inactivation of ornithine decarboxylase showed the same dependence on DFMO concentration and both effects were prevented by addition of either ornithine or putrescine. Pulse-chase experiments showed that the half-life of the ornithine decarboxylase polypeptide in these variant cells was 45 min. We conclude that ornithine decarboxylase is made at an increased rate in the resistant variants and that the polypeptide turns over rapidly.  相似文献   

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