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1.
Galactose metabolism is essential in bloodstream form Trypanosoma brucei and is initiated by the enzyme UDP-Glc 4'-epimerase. Here, we show that the parasite epimerase is a homodimer that can interconvert UDP-Glc and UDP-Gal but not UDP-GlcNAc and UDP-GalNAc. The epimerase was localized to the glycosomes by immunofluorescence microscopy and subcellular fractionation, suggesting a novel compartmentalization of galactose metabolism in this organism. The epimerase is encoded by the TbGALE gene and procyclic form T. brucei single-allele knockouts, and conditional (tetracycline-inducible) null mutants were constructed. Under non-permissive conditions, conditional null mutant cultures ceased growth after 8 days and resumed growth after 15 days. The resumption of growth coincided with constitutive re-expression epimerase mRNA. These data show that galactose metabolism is essential for cell growth in procyclic form T. brucei. The epimerase is required for glycoprotein galactosylation. The major procyclic form glycoproteins, the procyclins., were analyzed in TbGALE single-allele knockouts and in the conditional null mutant after removal of tetracycline. The procyclins contain glycosylphosphatidylinositol membrane anchors with large poly-N-acetyl-lactosamine side chains. The single allele knockouts exhibited 30% reduction in procyclin galactose content. This example of haploid insufficiency suggests that epimerase levels are close to limiting in this life cycle stage. Similar analyses of the conditional null mutant 9 days after the removal of tetracycline showed that the procyclins were virtually galactose-free and greatly reduced in size. The parasites compensated, ultimately unsuccessfully, by expressing 10-fold more procyclin. The implications of these data with respect to the relative roles of procyclin polypeptide and carbohydrate are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
We studied the UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (galU) and UDP-galactose epimerase (galE) genes of Lactococcus lactis MG1363 to investigate their involvement in biosynthesis of UDP-glucose and UDP-galactose, which are precursors of glucose- and galactose-containing exopolysaccharides (EPS) in L. lactis. The lactococcal galU gene was identified by a PCR approach using degenerate primers and was found by Northern blot analysis to be transcribed in a monocistronic RNA. The L. lactis galU gene could complement an Escherichia coli galU mutant, and overexpression of this gene in L. lactis under control of the inducible nisA promoter resulted in a 20-fold increase in GalU activity. Remarkably, this resulted in approximately eightfold increases in the levels of both UDP-glucose and UDP-galactose. This indicated that the endogenous GalE activity is not limiting and that the GalU activity level in wild-type cells controls the biosynthesis of intracellular UDP-glucose and UDP-galactose. The increased GalU activity did not significantly increase NIZO B40 EPS production. Disruption of the galE gene resulted in poor growth, undetectable intracellular levels of UDP-galactose, and elimination of EPS production in strain NIZO B40 when cells were grown in media with glucose as the sole carbon source. Addition of galactose restored wild-type growth in the galE disruption mutant, while the level of EPS production was approximately one-half the wild-type level.  相似文献   

3.
There is definitive biochemical evidence for the presence of terminal α-galactosyl residues (α-gal) in the N-linked oligosaccharides and glycophosphatidylinositol anchors (GPI anchors) of the variant surface glycoprotein of Trypanosoma brucei bloodstream trypomastigotes. Indirect evidence also exists for α-gal in Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stage glycoproteins and glycolipids. The occurrence of α-gal in glycoproteins and glycolipids of T. brucei bloodstream trypomastigotes and P. falciparum late asexual blood stages was investigated by the binding of α-gal-specific Bandeirea simplicifolia B4 lectin 1 (BSB4), incorporation of [(3)H]galactose from UDP-[(3)H]galactose into glycoproteins and glycolipids in microsomes in vitro, and bioinformatic searches for galactosyl-transferase coding sequences. The findings confirm the presence of α-gal in a spectrum of T. brucei bloodstream trypomastigote glycoproteins and glycolipids and indicate its relative absence from P. falciparum asexual blood stage glycoconjugates.  相似文献   

4.
In both humans and Drosophila melanogaster, UDP-galactose 4'-epimerase (GALE) catalyzes two distinct reactions, interconverting UDP-galactose (UDP-gal) and UDP-glucose (UDP-glc) in the final step of the Leloir pathway of galactose metabolism, and also interconverting UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine (UDP-galNAc) and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine (UDP-glcNAc). All four of these UDP-sugars serve as vital substrates for glycosylation in metazoans. Partial loss of GALE in humans results in the spectrum disorder epimerase deficiency galactosemia; partial loss of GALE in Drosophila melanogaster also results in galactose-sensitivity, and complete loss in Drosophila is embryonic lethal. However, whether these outcomes in both humans and flies result from loss of one GALE activity, the other, or both has remained unknown. To address this question, we uncoupled the two activities in a Drosophila model, effectively replacing the endogenous dGALE with prokaryotic transgenes, one of which (Escherichia coli GALE) efficiently interconverts only UDP-gal/UDP-glc, and the other of which (Plesiomonas shigelloides wbgU) efficiently interconverts only UDP-galNAc/UDP-glcNAc. Our results demonstrate that both UDP-gal and UDP-galNAc activities of dGALE are required for Drosophila survival, although distinct roles for each activity can be seen in specific windows of developmental time or in response to a galactose challenge. By extension, these data also suggest that both activities might play distinct and essential roles in humans.  相似文献   

5.
Epimerase-deficiency galactosemia results from the impairment of UDP-galactose 4'-epimerase (GALE), the third enzyme in the Leloir pathway of galactose metabolism. Originally identified as a clinically benign "peripheral" condition with enzyme impairment restricted to circulating blood cells, GALE deficiency was later demonstrated also to exist in a rare but clinically severe "generalized" form, with enzyme impairment affecting a range of tissues. Isolated cases of clinically and/or biochemically intermediate cases of epimerase deficiency have also been reported. We report here studies of 10 patients who, in the neonatal period, received the diagnosis of hemolysate epimerase deficiency. We have characterized these patients with regard to three parameters: (1) GALE activity in transformed lymphoblasts, representing a "nonperipheral" tissue, (2) metabolic sensitivity of those lymphoblasts to galactose challenge in culture, and (3) evidence of normal versus abnormal galactose metabolism in the patients themselves. Our results demonstrate two important points. First, whereas some of the patients studied exhibited near-normal levels of GALE activity in lymphoblasts, consistent with a diagnosis of peripheral epimerase deficiency, many did not. We detected a spectrum of GALE activity levels ranging from 15%-64% of control levels, demonstrating that epimerase deficiency is not a binary condition; it is a continuum disorder. Second, lymphoblasts demonstrating the most severe reduction in GALE activity also demonstrated abnormal metabolite levels in the presence of external galactose and, in some cases, also in the absence of galactose. These abnormalities included elevated galactose-1P, elevated UDP-galactose, and deficient UDP-glucose. Moreover, some of the patients themselves also demonstrated metabolic abnormalities, both on and off galactose-restricted diet. Long-term follow-up studies of these and other patients will be required to elucidate the clinical significance of these biochemical abnormalities and the potential impact of dietary intervention on outcome.  相似文献   

6.
The control of glycosaminoglycan biosynthesis was investigated by studying the kinetic and regulatory properties of some enzymes involved in the formation of UDP-sugar precursors: UDP-N-acetylglucosamine 4'-epimerase, catalyzing the interconversion of hexosamine precursors and UDP-glucose dehydrogenase and UDP-glucose 4'-epimerase, utilizing UDP-glucose for the formation of uronic acid and galactose precursors. The study was carried out in tissues with different glycosaminoglycan production: bovine cornea, producing both chondroitin sulfate and keratan sulfate, and newborn-pig epiphysial-plate cartilage, producing mostly chondroitin sulfate. The biosynthesis of hexosamine precursors appeared to be regulated by the value of the NAD/NADH ratio. This control mechanism regulated also the activities of both UDP-glucose dehydrogenase and UDP-glucose 4'-epimerase and, therefore, it could correlate the biosynthesis of glycosaminoglycan precursors with the redox activity of the cell. At the level of UDP-glucose utilization two other control mechanisms were demonstrated: the different affinities of UDP-glucose dehydrogenase and UDP-glucose 4'-epimerase for UDP-glucose in tissues with different glycosaminoglycan production and the cellular concentration of UDP-xylose. This sugar-nucleotide inhibited UDP-glucose dehydrogenase, but did not affect the UDP-glucose 4'-epimerase activity; therefore, and increase of its cellular concentration may result in a decreased chondroitin sulfate synthesis and in an increased keratan sulfate formation.  相似文献   

7.
UDP-galactose:ceramide galactosyltransferase (CGalT, EC 2.4.1.45) and UDP-glucose:ceramide glucosyltransferase (CGlcT, EC 2.4.1.80) were determined in the glial cell lines G26-20, G26-24, C6, and C6TK-. The enzymatic assay for CGalT in cultured glial cells was complicated by a rapid conversion of UDP-galactose to UDP-glucose, due to the elevated UDP-galactose-4'-epimerase activity in certain glial cell clones. It seems that mechanisms regulating UDP-galactose-4'-epimerase activity and levels of UDP sugars in the glial cell lines differ from those in brain tissue. Compared with the maximum activity of CGalT in the myelinating rat brain, the enzyme activities in the oligodendroglioma clonal cell lines G26-20 and G26-24 were 16-30 times lower. On the other hand, CGalT levels in G26-20 and G26-24 cells were comparable to the values found in young rat brain before myelination starts. No CGalT activity could be detected in C6 or C6TK- cells by the method used in this study, whereas CGlcT activity was found in all glial cell lines tested and its levels were close to the values observed in the young rat brain.  相似文献   

8.
The contents of galactose, galactitol, galactose 1-phosphate, UDP-galactose and UDP-glucose in the brains of chicks fed a diet containing 40 % (w/w) D-galactose were determined at regular intervals during a 48 h period which terminated in convulsive activity and death of the animals. Although levels of galactose and galactitol were markedly elevated, UDP-galactose and UDP-glucose levels were not significantly increased. The level of galactose 1-phosphate rose to 1-3 μg/g of fresh tissue by 14 h but gradually diminished until, at 48 h, the content was 0-25 μg/g. The metabolic turnover of these compounds, as shown by labelling experiments with inorganic [32P]phosphate and [U-14C]galactose, indicated that galactose 1-phosphate and UDP-galactose were rapidly metabolized, yet relatively little galactose was utilized by the brain as a source of energy. These observations have prompted us to propose a mechanism for the turnover of galactose 1-phosphate that involves cyclical phosphorylation and dephosphorylation reactions in the brains of galactose-fed chicks. In support of this hypothesis, we have identified phosphatase activity which has a relatively low Km value for galactose 1-phosphate (0-06-0-07 mM) in virtually all subcellular fractions of homogenates of chick brain. Maximum activity of the phosphatase is several-fold greater than that recorded for galactokinase (EC 2.7.1.6) and galactose 1-phosphate uridyltransferase (EC 2.7.710) from chicken brain.  相似文献   

9.
UDP-galactose 4'-epimerase (GALE) catalyzes the final step in the Leloir pathway of galactose metabolism, interconverting UDP-galactose and UDP-glucose. Unlike its Escherichia coli counterpart, mammalian GALE also interconverts UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine. Considering the key roles played by all four of these UDP-sugars in glycosylation, human GALE therefore not only contributes to the Leloir pathway, but also functions as a gatekeeper overseeing the ratios of important substrate pools required for the synthesis of glycosylated macromolecules. Defects in human GALE result in the disorder epimerase-deficiency galactosemia. To explore the relationship among GALE activity, substrate specificity, metabolic balance, and galactose sensitivity in mammalian cells, we employed a previously described GALE-null line of Chinese hamster ovary cells, ldlD. Using a transfection protocol, we generated ldlD derivative cell lines that expressed different levels of wild-type human GALE or E. coli GALE and compared the phenotypes and metabolic profiles of these lines cultured in the presence versus absence of galactose. We found that GALE-null cells accumulated abnormally high levels of Gal-1-P and UDP-Gal and abnormally low levels of UDP-Glc and UDP-GlcNAc in the presence of galactose and that human GALE expression corrected each of these defects. Comparing the human GALE- and E. coli GALE-expressing cells, we found that although GALE activity toward both substrates was required to restore metabolic balance, UDP-GalNAc activity was not required for cell proliferation in the presence of otherwise cytostatic concentrations of galactose. Finally, we found that uridine supplementation, which essentially corrected UDP-Glc and, to a lesser extent UDP-GlcNAc depletion, enabled ldlD cells to proliferate in the presence of galactose despite the continued accumulation of Gal-1-P and UDP-Gal. These data offer important insights into the mechanism of galactose sensitivity in epimerase-impaired cells and suggest a potential novel therapy for patients with epimerase-deficiency galactosemia.  相似文献   

10.
Galactosemia: how does long-term treatment change the outcome?   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In galactosemic subjects, treatment prevents liver and kidney failure, brain damage and cataracts, but total exclusion of galactose from the diet does not ensure the absence of all pathology. Early and well-treated children show satisfactory general health and growth, make reasonable though suboptimal intellectual progress, are prone to speech defects, and commonly experience visual perceptual difficulties and some social maladjustment. Two different metabolites are potentially toxic: galactitol is responsible for the cataracts while galactose-1-phosphate causes the rest of the pathology. As both metabolites are present in the fetus and in postnatal life, pathological changes may develop at any time in life, even when treatment is strict. Owing to UDP-galactose 4'-epimerase, man can generate galactose from glucose from early embryonic life on. Therefore, transferase-deficient individuals can form galactose-1-phosphate in the absence of exogenous galactose, a process for which UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is essential. Biosynthesis of galactose from glucose in well-treated galactosemics constitutes a mechanism of self-intoxication, not only in utero but also in adult life. The prognosis for some treated galactosemics may depend on their own ability to limit this process. Galactosemic girls, whether well-treated or not, run a considerable risk of developing ovarian dysfunction. Hypergonadotropinism has been diagnosed from 2 years of age to the third decade. Prenatal ovarian failure is not excluded but the observed facts suggest that ovarian failure is acquired after ovarian differentiation and initiation of folliculogenesis, at an individual rate and possibly through continuous self-intoxication with galactose-1-phosphate. Up to now, mild hypergonadotropinism has been documented in only 2 galactosemic males, but the male cohort of galactosemics studied for gonadal dysfunction is yet small.  相似文献   

11.
The synthesis of non-cellulosic polysaccharides and glycoproteins in the plant cell Golgi apparatus requires UDP-galactose as substrate. The topology of these reactions is not known, although the orientation of a plant galactosyltransferase involved in the biosynthesis of galactomannans in fenugreek is consistent with a requirement for UDP-galactose in the lumen of the Golgi cisternae. Here we provide evidence that sealed, right-side-out Golgi vesicles isolated from pea stems transport UDP-galactose into their lumen and transfer galactose, likely to polysaccharides and other acceptors. In addition, we identified and cloned AtUTr1, a gene from Arabidopsis thaliana that encodes a multitransmembrane hydrophobic protein similar to nucleotide sugar transporters. Northern analysis showed that AtUTr1 is indeed expressed in Arabidopsis. AtUTr1 is able to complement the phenotype of MDCK ricin-resistant cells; a mammalian cell line deficient in transport of UDP-galactose into the Golgi. In vitro assays using a Golgi-enriched vesicle fraction obtained from Saccharomyces cerevisiae expressing AtUTr1-MycHis is able to transport UDP-galactose but also UDP-glucose. AtUTr1- MycHis does not transport GDP-mannose, GDP-fucose, CMP-sialic acid, UDP-glucuronic acid, or UDP-xylose when expressed in S. cerevisiae. AtUTr1 is the first transporter described that is able to transport UDP-galactose and UDP-glucose. Thus AtUTr1 may play an important role in the synthesis of glycoconjugates in Arabidopsis that contain galactose and glucose.  相似文献   

12.
In Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica, the core oligosaccharide backbone of the lipopolysaccharide is modified by phosphoryl groups. The negative charges provided by these residues are important in maintaining the barrier function of the outer membrane. In contrast, Klebsiella pneumoniae lacks phosphoryl groups in its core oligosaccharide but instead contains galacturonic acid residues that are proposed to serve a similar function in outer membrane stability. Gla(KP) is a UDP-galacturonic acid C4-epimerase that provides UDP-galacturonic acid for core synthesis, and the enzyme was biochemically characterized because of its potentially important role in outer membrane stability. High-performance anion-exchange chromatography was used to demonstrate the UDP-galacturonic acid C4-epimerase activity of Gla(KP), and capillary electrophoresis was used for activity assays. The reaction equilibrium favors UDP-galacturonic acid over UDP-glucuronic acid in a ratio of 1.4:1, with the K(m) for UDP-glucuronic acid of 13.0 microM. Gla(KP) exists as a dimer in its native form. NAD+/NADH is tightly bound by the enzyme and addition of supplementary NAD+ is not required for activity of the purified enzyme. Divalent cations have an unexpected inhibitory effect on enzyme activity. Gla(KP) was found to have a broad substrate specificity in vitro; it is capable of interconverting UDP-glucose/UDP-galactose and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine/UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine, albeit at much lower activity. The epimerase GalE interconverts UDP-glucose/UDP-galactose. Multicopy plasmid-encoded gla(KP) partially complemented a galE mutation in S. enterica and in K. pneumoniae; however, chromosomal gla(KP) could not substitute for galE in a K. pneumoniae galE mutant in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The enzyme UDP-galactose-4-epimerase (GAL10) catalyzes a key step in galactose metabolism converting UDP-galactose to UDP-glucose which then can get metabolized through glycolysis and TCA cycle thus allowing the cell to use galactose as a carbon and energy source. As in many fungi, a functional homolog of GAL10 exists in Candida albicans. The domainal organization of the homologs from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and C. albicans show high degree of homology having both mutarotase and an epimerase domain. The former is responsible for the conversion of beta-d-galactose to alpha-d-galactose and the latter for epimerization of UDP-galactose to UDP-glucose. Absence of C. albicans GAL10 (CaGAL10) affects cell-wall organization, oxidative stress response, biofilm formation and filamentation. Cagal10 mutant cells tend to flocculate extensively as compared to the wild-type cells. The excessive filamentation in this mutant is reflected in its irregular and wrinkled colony morphology. Cagal10 strain is more susceptible to oxidative stress when tested in presence of H2O2. While the S. cerevisiae GAL10 (ScGAL10), essential for survival in the presence of galactose, has not been reported to have defects in the absence of galactose, the C. albicans homolog shows these phenotypes during growth in the absence of galactose. Thus a functional CaGal10 is required not only for galactose metabolism but also for normal hyphal morphogenesis, colony morphology, maintenance of cell-wall integrity and for resistance to oxidative stress even in the absence of galactose.  相似文献   

14.
1. The galactose-elimination rate in perfused livers from starved rats was decreased in the presence of ethanol (2-28mM) to one-third of the control values. Orotate injections partly reversed the effect of ethanol, so that the galactose-elimination rate was about two-thirds of the control values. Orotate alone had no effect on the galactose-elimination rate. 2. Ethanol increased [galactose 1-phosphate] and [UDP-galactose], and decreased (UDP-glucose] and [UTP], both with and without orotate. Orotate increased [UTP], [UDP-galactose], both with and without ethanol. The increase of [galactose 1-phosphate] in the presence of ethanol was inhibited by orotate. Orotate alone had no appreciable effect on [galactose 1-phosphate]. 3. Both the effect of ethanol and that of orotate on the galactose-elimination rate can be accounted for by assuming inhibition of galactokinase by galactose 1-phosphate with Ki about 0.2mM, the inhibition being either non-competitive or uncompetitive. 4. The primary effect of ethanol seems to be inhibition of UDP-glucose epimerase (EC 5.1.3.2), followed by accumulation of UDP-galactose, trapping of UDP-glucose and increase of [galactose 1-phosphate]. Orotate decreased the effect of ethanol, probably by increasing [UDP-glucose].  相似文献   

15.
UDP-galactose and UDP-glucose are the immediate sources of monosaccharide residues in glycosphingolipid biosynthesis. The incorporation of [6-3H]D-galactose into these compounds was measured in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes, which take up and metabolize galactose rapidly. The UDP-glucose and UDP-galactose content of hepatocytes, determined enzymatically and by the HPLC-analysis of UDP-sugars, was 1.87 +/- 0.22 and 0.51 +/- 0.06 nmol/mg protein, respectively. Galactose concentrations in the medium of up to 7.5 microM did not influence the intracellular levels of UDP-glucose and UDP-galactose. Although the specific radioactivity of these precursor pools did not reach a constant plateau, conditions were defined that allow the calculation of rates of glycolipid synthesis from added labeled galactose. They include the replacement of glucose in the culture medium by sodium pyruvate and D-galactose.  相似文献   

16.
The protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei is coated by glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins. During GPI biosynthesis, inositol in phosphatidylinositol becomes acylated. Inositol is deacylated prior to attachment to variant surface glycoproteins in the bloodstream form, whereas it remains acylated in procyclins in the procyclic form. We have cloned a T. brucei GPI inositol deacylase (GPIdeAc2). In accordance with the acylation/deacylation profile, the level of GPIdeAc2 mRNA was 6-fold higher in the bloodstream form than in the procyclic form. Knockdown of GPIdeAc2 in the bloodstream form caused accumulation of an inositol-acylated GPI, a decreased VSG expression on the cell surface and slower growth, indicating that inositol-deacylation is essential for the growth of the bloodstream form. Overexpression of GPIdeAc2 in the procyclic form caused an accumulation of GPI biosynthetic intermediates lacking inositol-linked acyl chain and decreased cell surface procyclins because of release into the culture medium, indicating that overexpression of GPIdeAc2 is deleterious to the surface coat of the procyclic form. Therefore, the GPI inositol deacylase activity must be tightly regulated in trypanosome life cycle.  相似文献   

17.
Schizosaccharomyces pombe has eight hexose transporter genes, ght1 + to ght8 +. Here we report that ght2 +, which is highly expressed in the presence of glucose, is essential for UDP-galactose synthesis from extracellular galactose when cells grow on glucose. The galactosylation defect of a uge1Δ mutant defective in synthesis of UDP-galactose from glucose was suppressed in galactose-containing medium, but disruption of ght2 + in the uge1Δ mutant reversed suppression of the galactosylation defect. Expression of Saccharomyces cerevisiae GAL2 in uge1Δght2Δ cells suppressed the defective galactosylation phenotype in galactose-containing medium. These results indicate that galactose is transported from the medium to the cytosol in a Ght2-dependent manner, and is then converted into UDP-galactose.  相似文献   

18.
Gel electrophoresis, lectin affinity blotting, and endoglycosidase H digestion have been used to analyze the glycoprotein profiles of bloodstream and procyclic forms of Trypanosoma brucei brucei and T. b. gambiense. Proteins resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were stained with silver nitrate or electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose and probed with a horseradish peroxidase conjugate of either concanavalin A or wheat germ agglutinin. Silver staining showed, as expected, that the expression of the variant specific glycoprotein was restricted to the bloodstream forms. Twenty-three concanavalin A binding proteins were resolved in blots of bloodstream forms. Concanavalin A binding molecules corresponding in electrophoretic mobility to 21 of these 23 bloodstream form glycoproteins were detected in blots of procyclic forms. The two concanavalin A binding glycoproteins present only in bloodstream form extracts were variant specific glycoprotein and an 81-kDa protein designated glycoprotein 81b. One concanavalin A binding molecule of 84 kDa, glycoprotein 84p, was detected only in procyclic forms. The 19 major wheat germ agglutinin binding glycoproteins expressed by bloodstream forms were not detected in procyclic forms; only small proteins or protein fragments in procyclic form extracts bound wheat germ agglutinin. Incubating transferred proteins in endoglycosidase H eliminated subsequent binding of concanavalin A to most of the 22 common glycoproteins of bloodstream forms. Three major concanavalin A binding glycoproteins of bloodstream forms, variant specific glycoprotein, glycoprotein 81b, and a 110-kDa molecule (glycoprotein 110b), and other minor glycoproteins carried sugar chains that resisted endoglycosidase H digestion. In contrast, concanavalin A did not bind to any procyclic form glycoproteins, including a 110-kDa concanavalin A binding molecule (glycoprotein 110p) after endoglycosidase H treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
In muskmelon ( Cucumis melo L.), sink tissues receive stachyose, raffinose and sucrose through phloem translocation of carbohydrates that are formed as products of leaf photosynthesis. Melon fruits accumulate sucrose massively during the final stages of maturation. This sucrose is derived partially from the catabolism of raffinose saccharides. Rapid galactose metabolism is required, because liberation of free galactose is the first step in the metabolic utilization of the raffinose sugars. The current study demonstrates that the enzyme UDP-glucose-hexose-1-P uridylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.12), the central enzyme in the classical Lelior pathway, is not the central enzyme in galactose metabolism in muskmelon fruit. Rather, a broad substrate specificity UDP-galactose pyrophosphorylase (PPase) serves the same functional role. This enzyme accepts either UDP-galactose or UDP-glucose as a substrate and is different from a UDP-glucose PPase with more strict substrate specificity for UDP-glucose that is also present in melon tissue. UDP-galactose PPase was purified 113-fold from melon tissue and was shown to be a 54 kDa (size exclusion chromatography) to 68 kDa (SDS-PAGE) protein that is enzymatically active as a monomer. We also present evidence that the enzyme likely accepts UDP-galactose and UDP-glucose at the same catalytic site. Polyclonal antibodies prepared against this protein reacted with numerous other antigens in melon extracts, apparently as a result of the presence of common antigenic epitopes.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of exogenously applied galactose on the cell wall polysaccharide synthesis and UDP-sugar levels in oat ( Avena sativa L. cv. Victory I) coleoptile segments was studied to clarify the mechanism of inhibition of IAA-induced cell elongation by galactose, and the following results were obtained: (1) The inhibition of IAA-induced cell elongation by galactose became apparent after a 2 h-lag, while the lag was shortened to 1 h when galactose was added to the segments after more than 1 h of IAA application. (2) Galactose inhibited the [14C]-glucose incorporation into cellulosic and non-cellulosic fractions of the cell wall and the increase in net polysaccharide content in the fractions during long-term incubation. (3) The dominant sugar nucleotide in oat coleoptiles was UDP-glucose (2.1 nmol segment−1). Galactose application caused a remarkable decrease in the UDP-glucose level, accompanying a strong accumulation of galactose-1-phosphate and UDP-galactose. (4) Galactose-1-phosphate competitively inhibited the UTP: a- d -glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.9) activity of the crude enzyme preparation from oat coleoptiles. From these results we conclude that galactose inhibits the IAA-induced cell elongation by inhibiting the formation of UDP-glucose, which is a key intermediate of cell wall polysaccharide synthesis.  相似文献   

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