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1.
Nil and Nilpy hamster cells exposed to temperatures of 44 degrees C to induce the heat-shock proteins survive such exposure for 2 h or more when incubated in Eagle's Minimum Essential Medium with 10% undialyzed fetal calf serum. If D-glucose and L-glutamine are withdrawn from the medium during heat treatment, nearly all the cells are killed by as little as 20 min at 44 degrees C. Several alpha-keto acids, pyruvate, alpha-ketobutyrate, oxaloacetate, and alpha-ketoglutarate, protect cells from the lethal action of the heat treatment in the absence of D-glucose and L-glutamine. L-Glucose and D-glutamine are without effect. Efforts to reverse lethal effects have not been successful.  相似文献   

2.
Cultures of central-nervous-system neurons at low densities require for their survival exogenous pyruvate, alpha-oxoglutarate or oxaloacetate, even in the presence of high glucose concentrations. Most other alpha-oxo acids support cell survival only in the presence of alpha-amino acids which transaminate to alpha-oxoglutarate, oxaloacetate or pyruvate. The alpha-oxo acids therefore operate as acceptors of amino groups from appropriate donors to generate tricarboxylic acid-cycle-relevant substrates, and these alpha-oxo acids provide for neuronal support only insofar as they make it possible for exogenously supplied alpha-amino acid precursors to generate intracellularly one of the three critical metabolites. To examine more closely the relationship between transamination activity and neuronal survival, we measured 14CO2 production from [14C]glutamate in the presence of appropriate alpha-oxo acid partners by using 8-day-embryonic chick forebrain, dorsal-root-ganglion and ciliary-ganglion neurons. Neuronal survival was measured concurrently in monolayer neuronal cultures maintained with the corresponding amino acid/oxo acid pairs. Forebrain and ganglionic cell suspensions both produced 14CO2 from [14C]glutamate, which accurately correlated with 24 h neuronal survival. Concentrations of glutamate or alpha-oxo acid which provide for maximal neuronal survival also produced maximal amounts of 14CO2. The same ability to generate CO2 from glutamate (in the presence of the appropriate alpha-oxo acids) can ensure neuronal survival in 24 h cultures and therefore must meet energy or other metabolic needs of those neurons which glucose itself is unable to satisfy.  相似文献   

3.
Pyruvate, alpha-ketoglutarate, and branched-chain alpha-keto acids which were transaminated products of valine, leucine, and isoleucine inhibited glycine decarboxylation by rat liver mitochondria. However, glycine synthesis (the reverse reaction of glycine decarboxylation) was stimulated by those alpha-keto acids with the concomitant decarboxylation of alpha-keto acid added in the absence of NADH. Both the decarboxylation and the synthesis of glycine by mitochondrial extract were affected similarly by alpha-ketoglutarate and branched-chain alpha-keto acids in the absence of pyridine nucleotide, but not by pyruvate. This failure of pyruvate to have an effect was due to the lack of pyruvate oxidation activity in the mitochondrial extract employed. It indicated that those alpha-keto acids exerted their effects by providing reducing equivalents to the glycine cleavage system, possibly through lipoamide dehydrogenase, a component shared by the glycine cleavage system and alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complexes. On the decarboxylation of pyruvate, alpha-ketoglutarate, and branched-chain alpha-keto acids in intact mitochondria, those alpha-keto acids inhibited one another. In similar experiments with mitochondrial extract, decarboxylations of alpha-ketoglutarate and branched-chain alpha-keto acid were inhibited by branched-chain alpha-keto acid and alpha-ketoglutarate, respectively, but not by pyruvate. NADH was unlikely to account for the inhibition. We suggest that the lipoamide dehydrogenase component is an indistinguishable constituent among alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complexes and the glycine cleavage system in mitochondria in nature, and that lipoamide dehydrogenase-mediated transfer of reducing equivalents might regulate alpha-keto acid oxidation as well as glycine oxidation.  相似文献   

4.
Human liver BCKADH complex was purified. On SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the purified enzyme complex gave three major bands having molecular weights of 51,000, 46,000, and 36,000, and one minor band with a molecular weight of 55,000. The minor band corresponded in molecular weight to lipoamide oxidoreductase which was purified separately. The purified BCKADH represented only approximately 20% of the maximum activity when assayed without addition of exogenous lipoamide oxidoreductase, indicating that lipoamide oxidoreductase component was readily dissociable from the complex. The BCKADH effectively oxidized all of KIV, KIC, and KMV, yielding apparent Km values in the range of 14-17 microM for those alpha-keto acids. Vmax values obtained were 0.86, 0.61, and 0.51 mumole NADH produced/min/mg of protein for KIV, KIC, and KMV, respectively, in the presence of excess amount of lipoamide oxidoreductase. This ratio of Vmax values was practically identical to those of specific activities obtained with respective branched-chain alpha-keto acids at each purification step. The enzyme complex also oxidized pyruvate and alpha-ketoglutarate to a lesser extent. Kinetic experiments gave Km values of 0.98 and 2.9 mM for pyruvate and alpha-ketoglutarate, respectively, with Vmax of 0.43 and 0.08 mumole NADH produced/min/mg of protein. NAD and CoASH were absolutely required for the reaction. Km values for NAD and CoASH were estimated to be 47 and 25 microM, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
Corticotropin and hydrocortisone were studied for their effect on dehydrogenase activity of microbial E. coli cells in the medium with the tricarboxylic acid cycle substrates, glucose and beta-oxybutyric acid. Corticotropin, as distinct from hydrocortisone, is shown to increase the dehydrogenase activity of microbial cells when pyruvate, isocitrate, oxaloacetate, alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, furmarate, glucose and beta-oxybutyrate are used as substrates. Hydrocortisone induced a rise of the dehydrogenase activity of microbial cells only in the medium with isocitrate, alpha-ketoglutarate and fumarate, however to a less extent than corticotropin; it lowered this activity in the medium with pyruvate and glucose and did not change it with oxaloacetate, succinate and beta-oxybutyrate. The corticotropin effect is supposed to be extra-adrenal because microbial cells are also subjected to its action.  相似文献   

6.
The oxidation of 14C-labelled branched-chain alpha-keto acids corresponding to the branched-chain amino acids valine, isoleucine and leucine has been studied in isolated mitochondria from heart, liver and skeletal muscle. 1. Heart and liver mitochondria have similar capacities to oxidize these alpha-keto acids based on protein content. Skeletal muscle mitochondria also show significant activity. 2. Half maximum rates are obtained with approximately 0.1 mM of the alpha-keto acids under optimal conditions. Added NAD and CoA had no effect on the oxidation rate, showing that endogenous mitochondrial NAD and CoA are required for the oxidation. 3. Addition of carnitine esters of fatty acids (C6--C16), succinate, pyruvate, or alpha-ketoglutarate inhibited the oxidation of the branched chain alpha-keto acids, especially in a high-energy state (no ADP added). In heart mitochondria the addition of AD (low-energy state) decreased the inhibitory effects of acylcarnitines of medium chain length or of pyruvate, and abolished the inhibitory effect of succinate. It is suggested that the oxidation rate is regulated mainly by the redox state of the mitochondria under the conditions used. 4. The results are discussed in relation to the regulation of branched-chain amino acid metabolism in the body.  相似文献   

7.
The support of Xenopus laevis spermatogenesis in vitro by different energy-yielding substrates has been investigated. Isolated spermatogenic cells maintained their levels of adenosine-triphosphate for 24 h in serum-free medium containing only amino acids as energy substrates. DL-Aminocarnitine, an inhibitor of carnitine palmitoyltransferase, reduced cell viability 87% during a 15-h culture in the same medium, indicating that beta oxidation of endogenous fatty acids is a significant source of energy when exogenous substrates are unavailable. Isolated spermatocytes developed into spermatids for 7 days in medium supplemented with either pyruvate, oxaloacetate, or lactate, with maximal survival and development at 0.5 mM pyruvate, 2.0 mM oxaloacetate, and 4.0 mM lactate. Few spermatocytes survived more than 3 days in serum-free medium supplemented with only glucose and amino acids as energy substrates. In contrast, glucose-supplemented medium supported spermatocyte differentiation for 14 days in testis fragment culture and 7 days in spermatocyte-Sertoli cell cocultures due to the excretion of lactate and pyruvate by Xenopus Sertoli cells during culture in glucose-supplemented medium. Glucose also enhanced spermatocyte development in medium containing dialyzed, heat-inactivated fetal calf serum. Spermatogenic cells oxidized glucose to CO2 with C1 oxidized 6- to 7-fold more than C6, suggesting that glucose may be metabolized in the hexose monophosphate shunt. The results are discussed in comparison to energy metabolism in mammalian testes and spermatogenic cells.  相似文献   

8.
Oxidative decarboxylation and transamination of 1-14C-branched chain amino and alpha-keto acids were examined in mitochondria isolated from rat heart. Transamination was inhibited by aminooxyacetate, but not by L-cycloserine. At equimolar concentrations of alpha-ketoiso[1-14C]valerate (KIV) and isoleucine, transamination was increased by disrupting the mitochondria with detergent which suggests transport may be one factor affecting the rate of transamination. Next, the subcellular distribution of the aminotransferase(s) was determined. Branched chain aminotransferase activity was measured using two concentrations of isoleucine as amino donor and [1-14C]KIV as amino acceptor. The data show that branched chain aminotransferase activity is located exclusively in the mitochondria in rat heart. Metabolism of extramitochondrial branched chain alpha-keto acids was examined using 20 microM [1-14C]KIV and alpha-ketoiso[1-14C]caproate (KIC). There was rapid uptake and oxidation of labeled branched chain alpha-keto acid, and, regardless of the experimental condition, greater than 90% of the labeled keto acid substrate was metabolized during the 20-min incubation. When a branched chain amino acid (200 microM) or glutamate (5 mM) was present, 30-40% of the labeled keto acid was transaminated while the remainder was oxidized. Provision of an alternate amino acceptor in the form of alpha-keto-glutarate (0.5 mM) decreased transamination of the labeled KIV or KIC and increased oxidation. Metabolism of intramitochondrially generated branched chain alpha-keto acids was studied using [1-14C]leucine and [1-14C]valine. Essentially all of the labeled branched chain alpha-keto acid produced by transamination of [1-14C]leucine or [1-14C]valine with a low concentration of unlabeled branched chain alpha-keto acid (20 microM) was oxidized. Further addition of alpha-ketoglutarate resulted in a significant increase in the rate of labeled leucine or valine transamination, but again most of the labeled keto acid product was oxidized. Thus, catabolism of branched chain amino acids will be favored by a high concentration of mitochondrial alpha-ketoglutarate and low intramitochondrial glutamate.  相似文献   

9.
The alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli utilizes pyruvate as a poor substrate, with an activity of 0.082 units/mg of protein compared with 22 units/mg of protein for alpha-ketoglutarate. Pyruvate fully reduces the FAD in the complex and both alpha-keto[5-14C]glutarate and [2-14C]pyruvate fully [14C] acylate the lipoyl groups with approximately 10 nmol of 14C/mg of protein, corresponding to 24 lipoyl groups. NADH-dependent succinylation by [4-14C]succinyl-CoA also labels the enzyme with approximately 10 nmol of 14C/mg of protein. Therefore, pyruvate is a true substrate. However, the pyruvate and alpha-ketoglutarate activities exhibit different thiamin pyrophosphate dependencies. Moreover, 3-fluoropyruvate inhibits the pyruvate activity of the complex without affecting the alpha-ketoglutarate activity, and 2-oxo-3-fluoroglutarate inhibits the alpha-ketoglutarate activity without affecting the pyruvate activity. 3-Fluoro[1,2-14C]pyruvate labels about 10% of the E1 components (alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenases). The dihydrolipoyl transsuccinylase-dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase subcomplex (E2E3) is activated as a pyruvate dehydrogenase complex by addition of E. coli pyruvate dehydrogenase, the E1 component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. All evidence indicates that the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex purified from E. coli is a hybrid complex containing pyruvate dehydrogenase (approximately 10%) and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (approximately 90%) as its E1 components.  相似文献   

10.
A novel beta-transaminase gene was cloned from Mesorhizobium sp. strain LUK. By using N-terminal sequence and an internal protein sequence, a digoxigenin-labeled probe was made for nonradioactive hybridization, and a 2.5-kb gene fragment was obtained by colony hybridization of a cosmid library. Through Southern blotting and sequence analysis of the selected cosmid clone, the structural gene of the enzyme (1,335 bp) was identified, which encodes a protein of 47,244 Da with a theoretical pI of 6.2. The deduced amino acid sequence of the beta-transaminase showed the highest sequence similarity with glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminomutase of transaminase subgroup II. The beta-transaminase showed higher activities toward d-beta-aminocarboxylic acids such as 3-aminobutyric acid, 3-amino-5-methylhexanoic acid, and 3-amino-3-phenylpropionic acid. The beta-transaminase has an unusually broad specificity for amino acceptors such as pyruvate and alpha-ketoglutarate/oxaloacetate. The enantioselectivity of the enzyme suggested that the recognition mode of beta-aminocarboxylic acids in the active site is reversed relative to that of alpha-amino acids. After comparison of its primary structure with transaminase subgroup II enzymes, it was proposed that R43 interacts with the carboxylate group of the beta-aminocarboxylic acids and the carboxylate group on the side chain of dicarboxylic alpha-keto acids such as alpha-ketoglutarate and oxaloacetate. R404 is another conserved residue, which interacts with the alpha-carboxylate group of the alpha-amino acids and alpha-keto acids. The beta-transaminase was used for the asymmetric synthesis of enantiomerically pure beta-aminocarboxylic acids. (3S)-Amino-3-phenylpropionic acid was produced from the ketocarboxylic acid ester substrate by coupled reaction with a lipase using 3-aminobutyric acid as amino donor.  相似文献   

11.
The authors studied the effect of native ACTH on dehydrogenase activity of isolated strips of rat diaphragm and suspension of E. coli cells, serotype O III:B4, grown on beef extract agar in a medium with different dehydrogenation substrates. ACTH activated dehydrogenase of rat diaphragm in a medium containing pyruvate, alpha-ketoglutarate, malate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, D-aspartic acid and did not alter it in a medium containing succinate. In contradistinction to rat diaphragm, ACTH activated dehydrogenase of E. coli cells whatever the substrates used (oxaloacetate, isocitrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, fumarate, malate, pyruvate, lactate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, glucose, D-aspartic acid. Synacthen (ACTH1-24) exerted a similar effect. It is suggested that the effects of ACTH are mediated via its influence on adenylate cyclase in the absence of receptors.  相似文献   

12.
The search for neuronotrophic factors addressing CNS neurons requires CNS neuronal cell cultures to quantitate putative effects on neuronal survival. Investigation of neurons dissociated from several embryonic CNS tissues have shown that their short-term survival requires supplementation of the culture medium with either pyruvate or the enzyme catalase. Pyruvate can be replaced with -ketoglutarate or oxaloacetate, or with amino acids capable to transaminate to these three metabolites in the presence of exogenous -ketoacid acceptors. Experiments were designed to evaluate the ability of cultured CNS neurons to utilized glucose as their primary source. We show that: (1) catalase requires the availability of glucose in the medium in order to exert its neuronal maintenance effect, (2) in the absence of catalase, the cells are unable to metabolize glucose through the tricarboxylic acid cycle, (3) catalase restores the neuronal ability to utilize glucose for oxydative metabolism, and renders redundant the use of other sources such as glutamate conversion to -ketoglutarate, (4) graded concentrations of glucose in the medium affect in parallel these metabolic activities and the viability of the cultured neurons, and (5) anti-oxidant agents other than catalase mimic the catalase effects. We conclude that dissociated embryonic CNS neurons suffer from a block in glucose utilization which results from an imbalance between free radical attack and cellular defenses to it and speculate on a more general involvement of peroxidation damage in the trophic requirements for neuronal survival.Special Issue dedicated to Prof. Holger Hydén.  相似文献   

13.
Utilization of glucose by adult brain as its metabolic substrate does not mean that glutamate cannot be synthesized from glucose and subsequently oxidatively degraded. Between 10 and 20% of total pyruvate metabolism in brain occurs as formation of oxaloacetate (OAA), a tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediate, from pyruvate plus CO(2). This anaplerotic ('pool-filling') process occurs in astrocytes, which in contrast to neurons express pyruvate carboxylase (PC) activity. Equivalent amounts of pyruvate are converted to acetylcoenzyme A and condensed with oxaloacetate to form citrate (Cit), which is metabolized to alpha-ketoglutarate (generating oxidatively-derived energy), glutamate and glutamine and transferred to neurons in the glutamate-glutamine cycle and used as precursor for transmitter glutamate. Since the blood-brain barrier is poorly permeable to glutamate and its metabolites, net synthesis of glutamate must be followed by degradation of equivalent amounts of glutamate, a cataplerotic ('pool-emptying') process, in which glutamate is converted in the TCA cycle to malate or oxaloacetate (generating additional energy), which exit the cycle to form one molecule pyruvate. To obtain an estimate of the rate of astrocytic oxidation of glutamate the rate of oxygen consumption was measured in primary cultures of mouse astrocytes metabolizing glutamate in the absence of other metabolic substrates. The observed rate is compatible with complete oxidative degradation of glutamate.  相似文献   

14.
Branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase (BCKADH) was solubilized as an enzyme complex from rat liver mitochondria by sonic treatment. Dehydrogenase (E1) and dihydrolipoyltransacylase (E2) components of the complex were purified in an associated form and resolved into individual components in the presence of 1 M NaCl, while lipoamide dehydrogenase (E3) component was dissociated from the complex during purification. Analysis by gel electrophoresis in dodecyl sulfate revealed the E1 comprised two different subunits with apparent molecular weights of 36,000 and 45,500, presumably in an equal molar ratio, while E2 consisted of a single subunit with an apparent molecular weight of 51,000. The BCKADH complex was reconstituted by combining E1, E2, and E3, and the formation of the complex was confirmed by analysis by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The reconstituted enzyme complex oxidized not only alpha-ketoisovalerate (KIV), alpha-ketoisocaproate (KIC), and alpha-keto-beta-methylvalerate (KMV), but also pyruvate and alpha-ketoglutarate. Apparent Km values were 10-12 microM for the branched-chain alpha-keto acids, 2.2 mM for pyruvate, and 2.5 mM for alpha-ketoglutarate.  相似文献   

15.
A single-gene nuclear mutant has been isolated in Saccharomyces cerevisiae which cannot grow on minimal medium supplemented with ethanol, acetate, pyruvate, aspartate, or oxaloacetate as sole carbon sources. It will grow on complete medium with these carbon sources, and on minimal medium with dextrose as carbon source. The only supplement which will permit growth on minimal medium with ethanol or pyruvate is aspartate, so the mutant is an aspartate auxotroph when grown on these nonfermentable substrates. It exhibits enhanced levels of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.49) when grown on dextrose. The mutant can survive as an alcohol dehydrogenase-negative, indicating that the defect is not in the Krebs Cycle or in electron transport. When grown on pyruvate, it produces two to three times as much free alanine and half as much aspartate plus asparagine as the wild type. Two different assays show that the mutant phenotype is due to a deficiency of pyruvate carboxylase (EC 6.4.1.1), an important anaplerotic enzyme. Inferences that can be drawn from the characteristics of this mutant include (a) the glyoxylate cycle is probably located entirely outside the mitochondria, (b) the inner mitochondrial membrane appears to be impermeable to oxaloacetate, and (c) a succinate-malate exchange across the inner mitochondrial membrane connects the glyoxylate and Krebs cycles when yeast is grown on minimal medium with ethanol as a sole carbon source.  相似文献   

16.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase from chicken liver mitochondria and rat liver cytosol catalyzes the phosphorylation of alpha-substituted carboxylic acids such as glycolate, thioglycolate, and DL-beta-chlorolactate in reactions with absolute requirements for divalent cation activators. 31P NMR analysis of the reaction products indicates that phosphorylation occurs at the alpha-position to generate the corresponding O- or S-bridged phosphate monoesters. In addition, the enzymes catalyze the bicarbonate-dependent phosphorylation of hydroxylamine. The chicken liver enzyme also catalyze the bicarbonate-dependent phosphorylation of hydroxylamine. The chicken liver enzyme also catalyzes the bicarbonate-dependent phosphorylation of fluoride ion. The kappa cat values for these substrates are 20-1000-fold slower than the kappa cat for oxaloacetate. Pyruvate and beta-hydroxypyruvate are not phosphorylated, since the enzyme does not catalyze the enolization of these compounds. Oxalate, a structural analogue of the enolate of pyruvate, is a competitive inhibitor of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (Ki of 5 microM) in the direction of phosphoenolpyruvate formation. Oxalate is also an inhibitor of the chicken liver enzyme in the direction of oxaloacetate formation and in the decarboxylation of oxaloacetate. The chicken liver enzyme is inhibited by beta-sulfopyruvate, an isoelectronic analogue of oxaloacetate. The extensive homologies between the reactions catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and pyruvate kinase suggest that the divalent cation activators in these reactions may have similar functions. The substrate specificity indicates that phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase decarboxylates oxaloacetate to form the enolate of pyruvate which is then phosphorylated by MgGTP on the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Temporal inhibition of protein synthesis with cycloheximide prevents subsequent insulin, but not serum-stimulated DNA synthesis in G1-arrested chick embryo fibroblasts (CEF). The inhibition is measured by the incorporation of 3H-thymidine into acid insoluble material and confirmed by chemical estimate of the DNA content of inhibited and uninhibited cells. Cycloheximide treatment is without effect if the cell cultures are maintained at 4 degrees C while exposed to the drug. Several alpha-keto acids (pyruvate, oxaloacetate, alpha-ketobutyrate) at 0.5-1 mM concentrations restore DNA synthesis in previously inhibited cells when combined with insulin. L-alanine (D-alanine is inert) is even more effective than the keto acids in stimulating DNA synthesis after cycloheximide treatment. Glucose transport was unaffected by cycloheximide treatment while lactate levels in medium from inhibited, insulin-stimulated CEF were reduced 70% compared to uninhibited counterparts. We speculate that cycloheximide treatment may lead to the decay of a glycolytic enzyme which compromises the ability of inhibited cells to synthesize pyruvate from glucose, and thus induces an exogenous requirement for alpha-keto acid or L-alanine. A serum component(s) with a molecular weight of about 100 permitted insulin-stimulated DNA synthesis in inhibited cells.  相似文献   

18.
This investigation presents disturbances of the mitochondrial metabolism by arsenite, a hydrophilic dithiol reagent known as an inhibitor of mitochondrial alpha-keto acid dehydrogenases. Arsenite at concentrations of 0.1-1.0 mM was shown to induce a considerable oxidation of intramitochondrial NADPH, NADH, and glutathione without decreasing the mitochondrial membrane potential. The oxidation of NAD(P)H required the presence of phosphate and was sensitive to ruthenium red, but occurred without the addition of calcium salts. Mitochondrial reactions producing alpha-ketoglutarate from glutamate and isocitrate were modulated by arsenite through various mechanisms: (i) both glutamate transaminations, with oxaloacetate and with pyruvate, were inhibited by accumulating alpha-ketoglutarate; however, at low concentrations of alpha-ketoglutarate the aspartate aminotransferase reaction was stimulated due to the increase of NAD+ content; (ii) the oxidation of isocitrate was stimulated at its low concentration only, due to the oxidation of NADPH and NADH; this oxidation was prevented by concentrations of citrate or isocitrate greater than 1 mM; (iii) the conversion of isocitrate to citrate was suppressed, presumably as a result of the decrease of Mg2+ concentration in mitochondria. Thus the depletion of mitochondrial vicinal thiol groups in hydrophilic domains disturbs the mitochondrial metabolism not only by the inhibition of alpha-keto acid dehydrogenases but also by the oxidation of NAD(P)H and, possibly, by the change in the ion concentrations.  相似文献   

19.
Lipoic acid-dependent pathways of alpha-keto acid oxidation by mitochondria were investigated in pea (Pisum sativum), rice (Oryza sativa), and Arabidopsis. Proteins containing covalently bound lipoic acid were identified on isoelectric focusing/sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separations of mitochondrial proteins by the use of antibodies raised to this cofactor. All these proteins were identified by tandem mass spectrometry. Lipoic acid-containing acyltransferases from pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex were identified from all three species. In addition, acyltransferases from the branched-chain dehydrogenase complex were identified in both Arabidopsis and rice mitochondria. The substrate-dependent reduction of NAD(+) was analyzed by spectrophotometry using specific alpha-keto acids. Pyruvate- and alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent reactions were measured in all three species. Activity of the branched-chain dehydrogenase complex was only measurable in Arabidopsis mitochondria using substrates that represented the alpha-keto acids derived by deamination of branched-chain amino acids (Val [valine], leucine, and isoleucine). The rate of branched-chain amino acid- and alpha-keto acid-dependent oxygen consumption by intact Arabidopsis mitochondria was highest with Val and the Val-derived alpha-keto acid, alpha-ketoisovaleric acid. Sequencing of peptides derived from trypsination of Arabidopsis mitochondrial proteins revealed the presence of many of the enzymes required for the oxidation of all three branched-chain amino acids. The potential role of branched-chain amino acid catabolism as an oxidative phosphorylation energy source or as a detoxification pathway during plant stress is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Five synthetic, conformationally restricted alpha-ketoglutarate analogues were tested as substrates of a variety of dehydrogenases and aminotransferases. The compounds were found not to be detectable substrates of glutamate dehydrogenase, L-leucine dehydrogenase, L-phenylalanine dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, glutamine transaminase K, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex. However, two thermostable aminotransferases were identified that catalyze transamination between several L-amino acids (e.g., phenylalanine, glutamate) and the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues of interest. Transamination between L-glutamate (or L-phenylalanine) and the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues was found to be 0.13 to 1.08 micromol/h/mg at 45 degrees C. The products resulting from transamination between L-phenylalanine and the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues were separated by reverse-phase HPLC, and the newly formed amino acid analogues were analyzed by LC-MS in an ion selective mode. In each case, the ions obtained were consistent with the expected product and a representative example is provided. The possibility existed that although the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues are not substrates of the dehydrogenases and most of the aminotransferases investigated, they might be good inhibitors. Weak inhibition of aminotransferases and glutamate dehydrogenase was found with some of the alpha-ketoglutarate analogues. The newly available thermostable aminotransferases may have general utility in the synthesis of bulky L-amino acids from the corresponding alpha-keto acids.  相似文献   

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