首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Bacteria and archaea use distinct pathways for salvaging exogenous cobinamide (Cbi), a precursor of adenosylcobalamin (coenzyme B(12)). The bacterial pathway depends on a bifunctional enzyme with kinase and guanylyltransferase activities (CobP in aerobic adenosylcobalamin synthesizers) to convert adenosylcobinamide (AdoCbi) to AdoCbi-guanosine diphosphate (AdoCbi-GDP) via an AdoCbi-phosphate intermediate. Archaea lack CobP, and use a different strategy for the synthesis of AdoCbi-GDP. Archaea cleave off the aminopropanol group of AdoCbi using the CbiZ AdoCbi amidohydrolase to generate adenosylcobyric acid, which is converted to AdoCbi-phosphate by the CbiB synthetase, and to AdoCbi-GDP by the CobY guanylyltransferase. We report phylogenetic, in vivo and in vitro evidence that the genome of Rhodobacter sphaeroides encodes functional enzymes for Cbi salvaging systems of both bacterial and archaeal origins. Products of the reactions were identified by high-performance liquid chromatography, UV-visible spectroscopy and bioassay. The cbiZ genes of several bacteria and archaea restored Cbi salvaging in a strain of Salmonella enterica unable to salvage Cbi. Phylogenetic data led us to conclude that CbiZ is an enzyme of archaeal origin that was horizontally transferred to bacteria. Reasons why some bacteria may contain both types of Cbi salvaging systems are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Genetic and nutritional analyses of mutants of the extremely halophilic archaeon Halobacterium sp. strain NRC-1 showed that open reading frame (ORF) Vng1581C encodes a protein with nucleoside triphosphate:adenosylcobinamide-phosphate nucleotidyltransferase enzyme activity. This activity was previously associated with the cobY gene of the methanogenic archaeon Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum strain DeltaH, but no evidence was obtained to demonstrate the direct involvement of this protein in cobamide biosynthesis in archaea. Computer analysis of the Halobacterium sp. strain NRC-1 ORF Vng1581C gene and the cobY gene of M. thermoautotrophicum strain DeltaH showed the primary amino acid sequence of the proteins encoded by these two genes to be 35% identical and 48% similar. A strain of Halobacterium sp. strain NRC-1 carrying a null allele of the cobY gene was auxotrophic for cobinamide-GDP, a known intermediate of the late steps of cobamide biosynthesis. The auxotrophic requirement for cobinamide-GDP was corrected when a wild-type allele of cobY was introduced into the mutant strain, demonstrating that the lack of cobY function was solely responsible for the observed block in cobamide biosynthesis in this archaeon. The data also show that Halobacterium sp. strain NRC-1 possesses a high-affinity transport system for corrinoids and that this archaeon can synthesize cobamides de novo under aerobic growth conditions. To the best of our knowledge this is the first genetic and nutritional analysis of cobalamin biosynthetic mutants in archaea.  相似文献   

3.
Computer analysis of the archaeal genome databases failed to identify orthologues of all of the bacterial cobamide biosynthetic enzymes. Of particular interest was the lack of an orthologue of the bifunctional nucleoside triphosphate (NTP):5'-deoxyadenosylcobinamide kinase/GTP:adenosylcobinamide-phosphate guanylyltransferase enzyme (CobU in Salmonella enterica). This paper reports the identification of an archaeal gene encoding a new nucleotidyltransferase, which is proposed to be the nonorthologous replacement of the S. enterica cobU gene. The gene encoding this nucleotidyltransferase was identified using comparative genome analysis of the sequenced archaeal genomes. Orthologues of the gene encoding this activity are limited at present to members of the domain Archaea. The corresponding ORF open reading frame from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Delta H (MTH1152; referred to as cobY) was amplified and cloned, and the CobY protein was expressed and purified from Escherichia coli as a hexahistidine-tagged fusion protein. This enzyme had GTP:adenosylcobinamide-phosphate guanylyltransferase activity but did not have the NTP:AdoCbi kinase activity associated with the CobU enzyme of S. enterica. NTP:adenosylcobinamide kinase activity was not detected in M. thermoautotrophicum Delta H cell extract, suggesting that this organism may not have this activity. The cobY gene complemented a cobU mutant of S. enterica grown under anaerobic conditions where growth of the cell depended on de novo adenosylcobalamin biosynthesis. cobY, however, failed to restore adenosylcobalamin biosynthesis in cobU mutants grown under aerobic conditions where de novo synthesis of this coenzyme was blocked, and growth of the cell depended on the assimilation of exogenous cobinamide. These data strongly support the proposal that the relevant cobinamide intermediates during de novo adenosylcobalamin biosynthesis are adenosylcobinamide-phosphate and adenosylcobinamide-GDP, not adenosylcobinamide. Therefore, NTP:adenosylcobinamide kinase activity is not required for de novo cobamide biosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
The genome of Rhodobacter sphaeroides encodes the components of two distinct pathways for salvaging cobinamide (Cbi), a precursor of adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl, coenzyme B12). One pathway, conserved among bacteria, depends on a bifunctional kinase/guanylyltransferase (CobP) enzyme to convert adenosylcobinamide (AdoCbi) to AdoCbi-phosphate (AdoCbi-P), an intermediate in de novo AdoCbl biosynthesis. The other pathway, of archaeal origin, depends on an AdoCbi amidohydrolase (CbiZ) enzyme to generate adenosylcobyric acid (AdoCby), which is converted to AdoCbi-P by the AdoCbi-P synthetase (CobD) enzyme. Here we report that R. sphaeroides strain 2.4.1 synthesizes AdoCbl de novo and that it salvages Cbi using both of the predicted Cbi salvaging pathways. AdoCbl produced by R. sphaeroides was identified and quantified by high-performance liquid chromatography and bioassay. The deletion of cobB (encoding an essential enzyme of the de novo corrin ring biosynthetic pathway) resulted in a strain of R. sphaeroides that would not grow on acetate in the absence of exogenous corrinoids. The results from a nutritional analysis showed that the presence of either CbiZ or CobP was necessary and sufficient for Cbi salvaging, that CbiZ-dependent Cbi salvaging depended on the presence of CobD, and that CobP-dependent Cbi salvaging occurred in a cbiZ+ strain. Possible reasons why R. sphaeroides maintains two distinct pathways for Cbi salvaging are discussed.Cobamides, such as adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl, coenzyme B12), are a group of complex cobalt-containing cyclic tetrapyrrole cofactors whose biosynthesis by bacteria and archaea requires substantial genetic information (>25 genes) (reviewed in references 25, 47, and 56). Two pathways for the de novo synthesis of the corrin ring have been described on the basis of the timing of cobalt insertion into the ring. The late cobalt insertion or aerobic pathway has been well studied in Pseudomonas denitrificans (9), while the early cobalt insertion or anaerobic pathway has been best studied in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 (25). Many organisms, including those that synthesize AdoCbl de novo, salvage incomplete corrinoids (e.g., cobinamide [Cbi]) from their environments and use them as precursors for the synthesis of complete cobamide cofactors. Cbi is not an intermediate of the de novo AdoCbl biosynthesis pathway but can be converted into one by a process known as Cbi salvaging (Fig. (Fig.1)1) (24).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Abbreviated view of cobinamide salvaging pathways. Corrin ring-containing intermediates are in bold text. The letter A indicates the de novo corrin ring biosynthesis pathway. Abbreviations: Ado-, adenosyl-; AP, 1-amino-2-propanol; AP-P, 1-amino-2-propanol-phosphate; CobB, hydrogenobyrinic acid a,c-diamide synthase; CobD, adenosylcobinamide-phosphate synthetase; CobP, NTP:adenosylcobinamide kinase, GTP:adenosylcobinamide-phosphate guanylyltransferase; CobY, GTP:adenosylcobinamide-phosphate guanylyltransferase; CbiZ, adenosylcobinamide amidohydrolase. Functional groups are indicated as follows: Me, methyl; Ac, acetamide; and Pr, propionamide.The first step of Cbi salvaging is adenosylation of the molecule to adenosylcobinamide (AdoCbi) (24). The adenosyltransferases which catalyze this reaction are broadly distributed throughout the three domains of life (13, 14, 20, 32, 38). Two distinct pathways for converting AdoCbi into an intermediate of the de novo AdoCbl biosynthesis pathway have been described for prokaryotes. One, which is to date found only in bacteria, relies on a bifunctional nucleoside triphosphate (NTP):AdoCbi kinase (EC 2.7.7.62), GTP:AdoCbi-phosphate (AdoCbi-P) guanylyltransferase (EC 2.7.1.156) enzyme (called CobP in P. denitrificans and CobU in S. Typhimurium), which phosphorylates AdoCbi to AdoCbi-P and converts AdoCbi-P to AdoCbi-GDP (10, 41, 55).Previous work from our laboratory has shown that archaea lack the bifunctional NTP:AdoCbi kinase, GTP:AdoCbi-P guanylyltransferase enzyme and rely on a second pathway for Cbi salvaging (54, 62). In this pathway, AdoCbi is converted to adenosylcobyric acid (AdoCby) by an AdoCbi amidohydrolase (EC 3.5.1.90) known as CbiZ (58, 59, 62). The conversion of AdoCbi-P to AdoCbi-GDP for de novo AdoCbl biosynthesis in archaea is catalyzed by a monofunctional GTP:AdoCbi-P guanylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.62) called CobY (54, 60), which has not been found in any bacterium.We recently showed that a small percentage of bacterial genomes encode orthologs of both CobP-type and CbiZ-type Cbi salvaging enzymes, raising the question of why these organisms might contain two redundant Cbi salvaging systems (29). A phylogenetic analysis showed that CbiZ has its roots in the archaea and that the cbiZ gene was acquired by several bacterial lineages via horizontal gene transfer.We previously showed that the CbiZ and CobP enzymes from the photosynthetic alphaproteobacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides are functional in vitro and in vivo in a heterologous complementation system (29). However, the question of how the two Cbi salvaging systems might function in R. sphaeroides remained unresolved.In this paper, we show that R. sphaeroides 2.4.1 synthesizes substantial amounts of cobalamin (Cbl) and that it salvages incomplete corrinoids from its environment. We present in vivo genetic evidence that both the bacterial-type CobP-dependent and archaeal-type CbiZ-dependent Cbi salvaging pathways are functional in this organism. This work represents the first in vivo genetic analysis of coenzyme B12 synthesis and salvaging in R. sphaeroides.  相似文献   

5.
Here we report the initial biochemical characterization of the bifunctional alpha-ribazole-P (alpha-RP) phosphatase, adenosylcobinamide (AdoCbi) amidohydrolase CbiS enzyme from the hyperthermophilic methanogenic archaeon Methanopyrus kandleri AV19. The cbiS gene encodes a 39-kDa protein with two distinct segments, one of which is homologous to the AdoCbi amidohydrolase (CbiZ, EC 3.5.1.90) enzyme and the other of which is homologous to the recently discovered archaeal alpha-RP phosphatase (CobZ, EC 3.1.3.73) enzyme. CbiS function restored AdoCbi salvaging and alpha-RP phosphatase activity in strains of the bacterium Salmonella enterica where either step was blocked. The two halves of the cbiS genes retained their function in vivo when they were cloned separately. The CbiS enzyme was overproduced in Escherichia coli and was isolated to >95% homogeneity. High-performance liquid chromatography, UV-visible spectroscopy, and mass spectroscopy established alpha-ribazole and cobyric acid as the products of the phosphatase and amidohydrolase reactions, respectively. Reasons why the CbiZ and CobZ enzymes are fused in some archaea are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Salmonella typhimurium is able to synthesize cobalamin (B12) under anaerobic growth conditions. The previously described cobalamin biosynthetic mutations (phenotypic classes CobI, CobII, and CobIII) map in three operons located near the his locus (minute 41). A new class of mutant (CobIV) defective in B12 biosynthesis was isolated and characterized. These mutations map between the cysB and trp loci (minute 34) and define a new genetic locus, cobA. The anaerobic phenotype of cobA mutants suggests an early block in corrin ring formation; mutants failed to synthesize cobalamin de novo but did so when the corrin ring is provided as cobyric acid dicyanide or as cobinamide dicyanide. Under aerobic conditions, cobA mutants were unable to convert either cobyric acid dicyanide or cobinamide dicyanide to cobalamin but could use adenosylcobyric acid or adenosylcobinamide as a precursor; this suggests that the mutants are unable to adenosylate exogenous corrinoids. To explain the anaerobic CobI phenotype of a cobA mutant, we propose that the cobA gene product catalyzes adenosylation of an early intermediate in the de novo B12 pathway and also adenosylates exogenous corrinoids. Under anaerobic conditions, a substitute function, known to be encoded in the main Cob operons, is induced; this substitute function can adenosylate exogenous cobyric acid and cobinamide but not the early biosynthetic intermediate. The cobA gene of S. typhimurium appears to be functionally equivalent to the btuR gene of Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

7.
Cobinamide (Cbi) salvaging is impaired, but not abolished, in a Salmonella enterica strain lacking a functional cobU gene. CobU is a bifunctional enzyme (NTP:adenosylcobinamide [NTP:AdoCbi] kinase, GTP:adenosylcobinamide-phosphate [GTP:AdoCbi-P] guanylyltransferase) whose AdoCbi kinase activity is necessary for Cbi salvaging in this bacterium. Inactivation of the ycfN gene in a DeltacobU strain abrogated Cbi salvaging. Introduction of a plasmid carrying the ycfN(+) allele into a DeltacobU DeltaycfN strain substantially restored Cbi salvaging. Mass spectrometry data indicate that when YcfN-enriched cell extracts were incubated with AdoCbi and ATP, the product of the reaction was AdoCbi-P. Results from bioassays confirmed that YcfN converted AdoCbi to AdoCbi-P in an ATP-dependent manner. YcfN is a good example of enzymes that are used by the cell in multiple pathways to ensure the salvaging of valuable precursors.  相似文献   

8.
We report that cobC strains of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium are impaired in the ability to salvage cobyric acid (Cby), a de novo corrin ring biosynthetic intermediate, under aerobic growth conditions. In vivo and in vitro evidence support the conclusion that this new phenotype of cobC strains is due to the inability of serovar Typhimurium to dephosphorylate adenosylcobalamin-5'-phosphate (AdoCbl-5'-P), the product of the condensation of alpha-ribazole-5'-phosphate (alpha-RP) and adenosylcobinamide-GDP by the AdoCbl-5'-P synthase (CobS, EC 2.7.8.26) enzyme. Increased flux through the 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole and cobinamide (Cbi) activation branches of the nucleotide loop assembly pathway in cobC strains restored AdoCbl-5'-P synthesis from Cby in a cobC strain. The rate of the CobS-catalyzed reaction was at least 2 orders of magnitude higher with alpha-RP than with alpha-ribazole as substrate. On the basis of the data reported herein, we conclude that removal of the phosphoryl group from AdoCbl-5'-P is the last step in AdoCbl biosynthesis in serovar Typhimurium and that the reaction is catalyzed by the AdoCbl-5'-P phosphatase (CobC) enzyme. Explanations for the correction of the Cby salvaging phenotype are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The ability of Porphyromonas gingivalis to biosynthesize tetrapyrroles de novo has been investigated. Extracts of the bacterium do not possess activity for 5- aminolevulinic-acid dehydratase or porphobilinogen deaminase, two key enzymes involved in the synthesis of uroporphyrinogen III. Similarly, it was not possible to detect any genetic evidence for these early enzymes with the use of degenerate polymerase chain reaction. However, the bacterium does appear to harbor some of the enzymes for cobalamin biosynthesis since cobyric acid, a pathway intermediate, was converted into cobinamide. Furthermore, degenerate polymerase chain reaction with primers to cbiP, which encodes cobyric-acid synthase, produced a fragment with a high degree of identity to Salmonella typhimurium cbiP. Indeed, the recently released genome sequence data confirmed the presence of cbiP together with 14 other genes of the cobalamin pathway. A number of these genes were cloned and functionally characterized. Although P. gingivalis harbors all the genes necessary to convert precorrin-2 into cobalamin, it is missing the genes for the synthesis of precorrin-2. Either the organism has a novel pathway for the synthesis of precorrin-2, or more likely, it has lost this early part of the pathway. The remainder of the pathway may be being maintained to act as a salvage route for corrin synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
CobU is a bifunctional enzyme involved in adenosylcobalamin (coenzyme B(12)) biosynthesis in Salmonella typhimurium LT2. In this bacterium, CobU is the adenosylcobinamide kinase/adenosylcobinamide-phosphate guanylyltransferase needed to convert cobinamide to adenosylcobinamide-GDP during the late steps of adenosylcobalamin biosynthesis. The guanylyltransferase reaction has been proposed to proceed via a covalently modified CobU-GMP intermediate. Here we show that CobU requires a nucleoside upper ligand on cobinamide for substrate recognition, with the nucleoside base, but not the 2'-OH group of the ribose, being important for this recognition. During the kinase reaction, both the nucleotide base and the 2'-OH group of the ribose are important for gamma-phosphate donor recognition, and GTP is the only nucleotide competent for the complete nucleotidyltransferase reaction. Analysis of the ATP:adenosylcobinamide kinase reaction shows CobU becomes less active during this reaction due to the formation of a covalent CobU-AMP complex that holds CobU in an altered conformation. Characterization of the GTP:adenosylcobinamide-phosphate guanylyltransferase reaction shows the covalent CobU-GMP intermediate is on the reaction pathway for the generation of adenosylcobinamide-GDP. Identification of a modified histidine and analysis of cobU mutants indicate that histidine 46 is the site of guanylylation.  相似文献   

11.
The physiological function for thiaminase II, a thiamin-degrading enzyme, has eluded investigators for more than 50 years. Here, we demonstrate that this enzyme is involved in the regeneration of the thiamin pyrimidine rather than in thiamin degradation, and we identify a new pathway involved in the salvage of base-degraded forms of thiamin. This pathway is widely distributed among bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes. In this pathway, thiamin hydrolysis products such as N-formyl-4-amino-5-aminomethyl-2-methylpyrimidine (formylaminopyrimidine; 15) are transported into the cell using the ThiXYZ transport system, deformylated by the ylmB-encoded amidohydrolase and hydrolyzed to 4-amino-5-hydroxymethyl-2-methylpyrimidine (HMP; 6)-an intermediate on the de novo thiamin biosynthetic pathway. To our knowledge this is the first example of a thiamin salvage pathway involving thiamin analogs generated by degradation of one of the heterocyclic rings of the cofactor.  相似文献   

12.
We report results of studies of the conversion of adenosylcobyric acid (AdoCby) to adenosylcobinamide-phosphate, the last step of the de novo corrin ring biosynthetic branch of the adenosylcobalamin (coenzyme B12) pathway of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2. Previous reports have implicated the CbiB protein in this step of the pathway. Hydropathy analysis predicted that CbiB would be an integral membrane protein. We used a computer-generated topology model of the primary sequence of CbiB to guide the construction of CbiB-LacZ and CbiB-PhoA protein fusions, which were used to explore the general topology of CbiB in the cell membrane. A refined model of CbiB as an integral membrane protein is presented. In vivo analyses of the effect of single-amino-acid changes showed that periplasm- and cytosol-exposed residues are critical for CbiB function. Results of in vivo studies also show that ethanolamine-phosphate (EA-P) is a substrate of CbiB, but l-Thr-P is not, and that CbiB likely activates AdoCby by phosphorylation. The latter observation leads us to suggest that CbiB is a synthetase not a synthase enzyme. Results from mass spectrometry and bioassay experiments indicate that serovar Typhimurium synthesizes norcobalamin (cobalamin lacking the methyl group at C176) when EA-P is the substrate of CbiB.  相似文献   

13.
Cobamides are a group of compounds including vitamin B12 that can vary at the lower base position of the nucleotide loop. They are synthesized de novo by only a subset of prokaryotes, but some organisms encode partial biosynthesis pathways for converting one variant to another (remodeling) or completing biosynthesis from an intermediate (corrinoid salvaging). Here, we explore the cobamide specificity in Vibrio cholerae through examination of three natural variants representing major cobamide groups: commercially available cobalamin, and isolated pseudocobalamin and p-cresolylcobamide. We show that BtuB, the outer membrane corrinoid transporter, mediates the uptake of all three variants and the intermediate cobinamide. Our previous work suggested that V. cholerae could convert pseudocobalamin produced by cyanobacteria into cobalamin. In this work, cobamide specificity in V. cholerae is demonstrated by remodeling of pseudocobalamin and salvaging of cobinamide to produce cobalamin. Cobamide remodeling in V. cholerae is distinct from the canonical pathway requiring amidohydrolase CbiZ, and heterologous expression of V. cholerae CobS was sufficient for remodeling. Furthermore, function of V. cholerae cobamide-dependent methionine synthase MetH was robustly supported by cobalamin and p-cresolylcobamide, but not pseudocobalamin. Notably, the inability of V. cholerae to produce and utilize pseudocobalamin contrasts with enteric bacteria like Salmonella.  相似文献   

14.
Co-expression of the cobA gene from Propionibacterium freudenreichii and the cbiA, -C, -D, -E, -T, -F, -G, -H, -J, -K, -L, and -P genes from Salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium in Escherichia coli resulted in the production of cobyrinic acid a,c-diamide. A cbiD deletion mutant of this strain produced 1-desmethylcobyrinic acid a,c-diamide, indicating that CbiD is involved in C-1 methylation in the anaerobic pathway to cobalamin. Strains that did not have the cbiP gene also produced 1-desmethylcobyrinic acid a,c-diamide, and strains that had neither cbiP nor cbiA synthesized 1-desmethylcobyrinic acid even in the presence of cbiD, suggesting that CbiA and CbiP are necessary for CbiD activity.  相似文献   

15.
Open reading frame (ORF) Mm2058 of the methanogenic archaeon Methanosarcina mazei strain G?1 was shown in vivo and in vitro to encode the nonorthologous replacement of the alpha-ribazole-phosphate phosphatase (CobC; EC 3.1.3.73) enzyme of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2. Bioinformatics analysis of sequences available in databases tentatively identified ORF Mm2058, which was cloned under the control of an inducible promoter and was used to support growth of an S. enterica strain under conditions that demanded CobC-like activity. The Mm2058 protein was expressed with a decahistidine tag at its N terminus and was purified to homogeneity using nickel affinity chromatography. High-performance liquid chromatography followed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry showed that the Mm2058 protein had phosphatase activity that converted alpha-ribazole-5'-phosphate to alpha-ribazole, as reported for the bacterial CobC enzyme. On the basis of the data reported here, we refer to ORF Mm2058 as cobZ. We tested the prediction by Rodionov et al. (D. A. Rodionov, A. G. Vitreschak, A. A. Mironov, and M. S. Gelfand, J. Biol. Chem. 278:41148-41159, 2003) that ORF HSL01294 (also called Vng1577) encoded the nonorthologous replacement of the bacterial CobC enzyme in the extremely halophilic archaeon Halobacterium sp. strain NRC-1. A strain of the latter carrying an in-frame deletion of ORF Vng1577 was not a cobalamin auxotroph, suggesting that either there is redundancy of this function in Halobacterium or the gene was misannotated.  相似文献   

16.
Although methanogenic archaea use B(12) extensively as a methyl carrier for methanogenesis, little is known about B(12) metabolism in these prokaryotes or any other archaea. To improve our understanding of how B(12) metabolism differs between bacteria and archaea, the gene encoding the ATP:co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferase in Methanosarcina mazei strain G?1 (open reading frame MM3138, referred to as cobA(Mm) here) was cloned and used to restore coenzyme B(12) synthesis in a Salmonella enterica strain lacking the housekeeping CobA enzyme. cobA(Mm) protein was purified and its initial biochemical analysis performed. In vitro, the activity is enhanced 2.5-fold by the addition of Ca(2+) ions, but the activity was not enhanced by Mg(2+) and, unlike the S. enterica CobA enzyme, it was >50% inhibited by Mn(2+). The CobA(Mm) enzyme had a K(m)(ATP) of 3 microM and a K(m)(HOCbl) of 1 microM. Unlike the S. enterica enzyme, CobA(Mm) used cobalamin (Cbl) as a substrate better than cobinamide (Cbi; a Cbl precursor); the beta phosphate of ATP was required for binding to the enzyme. A striking difference between CobA(Se) and CobA(Mm) was the use of ADP as a substrate by CobA(Mm), suggesting an important role for the gamma phosphate of ATP in binding. The results from (31)P-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy experiments showed that triphosphate (PPP(i)) is the reaction by-product; no cleavage of PPP(i) was observed, and the enzyme was only slightly inhibited by pyrophosphate (PP(i)). The data suggested substantial variations in ATP binding and probably corrinoid binding between CobA(Se) and CobA(Mm) enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
The pyrimidine metabolism of Tritrichomonas foetus (KV 1) was studied using whole cells and cell homogenates. Pyrimidines and pyrimidine nucleosides were readily incorporated into nucleic acids. Orotate and aspartate were not incorporated into pyrimidine bases. Enzymes of the pyrimidine salvage pathway (i.e., thymidine and uridine phosphorylases and uridine kinase) were detected in trophozoite homogenates, but the activities of de novo pyrimidine synthesis enzymes (i.e., carbamoylphosphate synthase, aspartate transcarbamoylase, dihydroorotase and dihydroorotate dehydrogenase) were below the level of detection in these same homogenates. The evidence presented supports the proposal that T. foetus is incapable of synthesizing pyrimidines de novo but is capable of salvaging preformed pyrimidines and pyrimidine nucleosides from the growth medium and that enzymes of this parasite's pyrimidine salvage pathway are not organelle-associated.  相似文献   

18.
Changes in the pattern of pyrimidine nucleotide metabolism were investigated in Pinus radiata cotyledons cultured under shoot-forming (SF; +N(6)-benzyladenine) and non-shoot-forming (NSF, -N(6)-benzyladenine) conditions, as well as in cotyledons unresponsive (OLD) to N(6)-benzyladenine. This was carried out by following the metabolic fate of externally supplied (14)C-labeled orotic acid, intermediate of the de novo pathway, and (14)C-labeled uridine and uracil, substrates of the salvage pathway. Nucleic acid synthesis was also investigated by following the metabolic fate of (14)C-labeled thymidine during shoot bud formation and development. The de novo synthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides was operative under both SF and NSF conditions, and the activity of orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (OPRT), a key enzyme of the de novo pathway, was higher in SF tissue. Utilization of both uridine and uracil for nucleotide and nucleic acid synthesis clearly indicated that the salvage pathway of pyrimidine metabolism is also operative during shoot organogenesis. In general, uridine was a better substrate for the synthesis of salvage products than uracil, possibly due to the higher activity of uridine kinase (UK), compared to uracil phosphoribosyltransferase (UPRT). Incorporation of uridine into the nucleic acid fraction of OLD cotyledons was lower than that observed for their responsive (day 0) counterparts. Similarly, uracil utilization for nucleic acid synthesis was lower in NSF cotyledons, compared to that observed for SF tissue after 10 days in culture. This difference was ascribed to higher UPRT activity measured in the latter. Thus, there was an apparent difference in the utilization of nucleotides derived from uracil and uridine for nucleotide synthesis. The increased ability to produce pyrimidine nucleotides via the salvage pathway during shoot bud formation may be required in support of nucleic acid synthesis occurring during the process. Studies on thymidine metabolism confirmed this notion.  相似文献   

19.
Pyrimidine synthesis in Burkholderia cepacia ATCC 25416   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
K. LI AND T.P. WEST. 1995. Pyrimidine synthesis in the food spoilage agent Burkholderia cepacia ATCC 25416 was investigated. The five de novo pathway enzymes of pyrimidine biosynthesis were found to be active in B. cepacia ATCC 25416 and growth of this strain on uracil had an effect on the de novo enzyme activities. The in vitro regulation of aspartate transcarbamoylase activity in B. cepacia ATCC 25416 was studied and its activity was inhibited by PPi, ATP, GTP, CTP and UTP. The enzymes cytidine deaminase, uridine phosphorylase and cytosine deaminase were found to be active in the salvage of pyrimidines in ATCC 25416. Overall, de novo pyrimidine synthesis in B. cepacia ATCC 25416 was regulated at the level of enzyme activity and its pyrimidine salvage enzymes differed from those found in B. cepacia ATCC 17759.  相似文献   

20.
A gene encoding the L-aspartate oxidase homologue was identified via genome sequencing in the anaerobic hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus horikoshii OT-3. We succeeded in expressing the encoding gene in Escherichia coli and purified the product to homogeneity. Characterization of the protein revealed that it is the most thermostable L-aspartate oxidase detected so far. In addition to the oxidase activity, the enzyme catalyzed L-aspartate dehydrogenation in the presence of an artificial electron acceptor such as phenazine methosulfate, 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol, and ferricyanide. L-Aspartate oxidase is known to function as the first enzyme in the de novo NAD biosynthetic pathway in prokaryotes. By a similarity search in public databases, the genes that encode the homologue of all other enzymes involved in the pathway were identified in the P. horikoshii OT-3 genome. This suggests that P. horikoshii OT-3 may use the de novo NAD biosynthetic pathway under anaerobic conditions.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号