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1.
Studies on the mechanisms of ornithine decarboxylase in vitro inactivation   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Hydrocortisone-induced rat liver ornithine decarboxylase appears quite stable in the soluble fraction of the homogenate incubated at 37 degrees C. In contrast, the incubation of the whole homogenate causes a rapid loss of activity. The ornithine decarboxylase-inactivating capacity appears mainly bound to microsomes. Lysosomes seem to play a role only after the microsome-induced inactivation. Different reducing agents (dithiothreitol, NADPH, NADH, GSH) are effective both in preventing and in reversing ornithine decarboxylase inactivation. NADPH is peculiar in that it can reactivate the enzyme at very low concentrations. Oxidized glutathione potentiates the inactivating effect of microsomes. On the basis of present results it is suggested that ornithine decarboxylase may be reversibly inactivated through microsome-catalyzed formation of mixed or enzyme-enzyme disulfides and that NADPH plays a crucial role in ornithine decarboxylase reactivation, probably by cytosolic reductase(s).  相似文献   

2.
A human neuroblastoma cell line (Paju) grew in 10 mM difluoromethyl-ornithine, which at this concentration normally stops the growth of all mammalian cells. Ornithine decarboxylase from Paju was resistant to inhibition in vitro by difluoromethylornithine, and required 10 microM of the compound for 50% inhibition, whereas ornithine decarboxylase from SH-SY5Y cells (another human neuroblastoma) and from rat liver needed only 0.5 microM difluoromethylornithine. Paju ornithine decarboxylase also exhibited a long half-life (over eight hours) in vivo. The half-life of immunoreactive protein was significantly longer than that of the activity. The long half-life of ornithine decarboxylase in Paju cells leads to its accumulation to a specific activity of 2000 nmol/mg of protein per 30 min during rapid growth (the corresponding activity in SH-SY5Y cells was about 2.5). When partially purified ornithine decarboxylase from Paju cells was incubated with rat liver microsomes it was inactivated with a half-life of 75 min. This inactivation was accompanied by a fall in the amount of immunoreactive protein. In the same inactivating system partially purified SH-SY5Y ornithine decarboxylase had a half-life of 38 min and its half-life in vivo was 50 min. The corresponding values for rat liver ornithine decarboxylase were 45 min and 40 min, respectively. Rat liver microsomes also inactivated rat liver adenosylmethionine decarboxylase. These results suggest that Paju ornithine decarboxylase has an altered molecular conformation, rendering it resistant to (i) difluoromethylornithine and (ii) proteolytic degradation both in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
Antiserum against ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) was prepared in rabbits using purified ornithine decarboxylase from rat liver as the antigen. Immunoglobulins from the immune sera were covalently coupled to agarose by cyanogen bromide activation. With the aid of this immunoadsorbent against the enzyme it has been shown that following partial hepatectomy and growth hormone administration, the ornithine decarboxylase activity is elevated concomitantly with the increase in the immunoreactive enzyme protein. In addition, the rapid decay in ornithine decarboxylase activity in regenerating rat liver after cycloheximide injection is accompanied by a decrease in the immunoreactive protein. These results suggest that the activity of ornithine decarboxylase in rat liver is regulated through rapid changes in de novo synthesis and degradation of the enzyme protein.  相似文献   

4.
Comparisons were made of ornithine decarboxylase isolated from Morris hepatoma 7777, thioacetamide-treated rat liver and androgen-stimulated mouse kidney. The enzymes from each source were purified in parallel and their size, isoelectric point, interaction with a monoclonal antibody or a monospecific rabbit antiserum to ornithine decarboxylase, and rates of inactivation in vitro, were studied. Mouse kidney, which is a particularly rich source of ornithine decarboxylase after androgen induction, contained two distinct forms of the enzyme which differed slightly in isoelectric point, but not in Mr. Both forms had a rapid rate of turnover, and virtually all immunoreactive ornithine decarboxylase protein was lost within 4h after protein synthesis was inhibited. Only one form of ornithine decarboxylase was found in thioacetamide-treated rat liver and Morris hepatoma 7777. No differences between the rat liver and hepatoma ornithine decarboxylase protein were found, but the rat ornithine decarboxylase could be separated from the mouse kidney ornithine decarboxylase by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The rat protein was slightly smaller and had a slightly more acid isoelectric point. Studies of the inactivation of ornithine decarboxylase in vitro in a microsomal system [Zuretti & Gravela (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 742, 269-277] showed that the enzymes from rat liver and hepatoma 7777 and mouse kidney were inactivated at the same rate. This inactivation was not due to degradation of the enzyme protein, but was probably related to the formation of inactive forms owing to the absence of thiol-reducing agents. Treatment with 1,3-diaminopropane, which is known to cause an increase in the rate of degradation of ornithine decarboxylase in vivo [Seely & Pegg (1983) Biochem. J. 216, 701-717] did not stimulate inactivation by microsomal extracts, indicating that this system does not correspond to the rate-limiting step of enzyme breakdown in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
Cysteine-dependent inactivation of hepatic ornithine decarboxylase.   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
When rat liver homogenate or its postmitochondrial supernatant was incubated with L-cysteine, but not D-cysteine, ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) lost more than half of its catalytic activity within 30 min and, at a slower rate, its immunoreactivity. The inactivation correlated with production of H2S during the incubation. These changes did not occur in liver homogenates from vitamin B6-deficient rats. A heat-stable inactivating factor was found in both dialysed cytosol and washed microsomes obtained from the postmitochondrial supernatant incubated with cysteine. The microsomal inactivating factor was solubilized into Tris/HCl buffer, pH 7.4, containing dithiothreitol. Its absorption spectrum in the visible region resembled that of Fe2+ X dithiothreitol in Tris/HCl buffer. On the other hand FeSO4 inactivated partially purified ODC in a similar manner to the present inactivating factor. During the incubation of postmitochondrial supernatant with cysteine, there was a marked increase in the contents of Fe2+ loosely bound to cytosolic and microsomal macromolecules. Furthermore, the content of such reactive iron in the inactivating factor preparations was enough to account for their inactivating activity. These data suggested that H2S produced from cysteine by some vitamin B6-dependent enzyme(s) converted cytosolic and microsomal iron into a reactive loosely bound form that inactivated ODC.  相似文献   

6.
Repeated injections of 1,3-diaminopropane, a potent inhibitor of mammalian ornithine decarboxylase, induced protein-synthesis-dependent formation of macromolecular inhibitors or ;antienzymes' [Heller, Fong & Canellakis (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.73, 1858-1862] to ornithine decarboxylase in normal rat liver. Addition of the macromolecular inhibitors, produced in response to repeated injections of diaminopropane, to active ornithine decarboxylase in vitro resulted in a profound loss of the enzyme activity, which, however, could be partly recovered after passage of the enzyme-inhibitor mixture through a Sephadex G-75 columin in the presence of 0.4m-NaCl. This treatment also resulted in the appearance of free inhibitor. In contrast with the separation of the enzyme and inhibitory activity after combination in vitro, it was not possible to re-activate, by using identical conditions of molecular sieving, any inhibited ornithine decarboxylase from cytosol fractions obtained from animals injected with diaminopropane. However, the idea that injection of various diamines, also in vivo, induces acute formation of macromolecular inhibitors, which reversibly combine with the enzyme, was supported by the finding that the ornithine decarboxylase activity remaining after diaminopropane injection appeared to be more stable to increased ionic strength than the enzyme activity obtained from somatotropin-treated rats. Incubation of the inhibitory cytosol fractions with antiserum to ornithine decarboxylase did not completely abolish the inhibitory action of either the cytosolic inhibitor or the antibody. A single injection of diaminopropane produced an extremely rapid decay of liver ornithine decarboxylase activity (half-life about 12min), which was comparable with, or swifter than, that induced by cycloheximide. However, although after cycloheximide treatment the amount of immunotitrable ornithine decarboxylase decreased only slightly more slowly than the enzyme activity, diaminopropane injection did not decrease the amount of the immunoreactive protein, but, on the contrary, invariably caused a marked increase in the apparent amount of antigen, after some lag period. The diamine-induced increase in the amount of the immunoreactive enzyme protein could be totally prevented by a simultaneous injection of cycloheximide. These results are in accord with the hypothesis that various diamines may result in rapid formation of macromolecular inhibitors to ornithine decarboxylase in vivo, which, after combination with the enzyme, abolish the catalytic activity but at the same time prevent the intracellular degradation of the enzyme protein.  相似文献   

7.
Partially purified ornithine decarboxylase, isolated from the liver of thioacetamide-treated rats, is stable in the absence of added low-molecular-mass thiols or other reducing agents. However, under these conditions, the enzyme is rapidly inactivated upon incubation with L-ornithine or L-2-methylornithine. The inactivation process follows first-order kinetics, and saturation kinetics are observed. Rapid recovery of activity is observed after subsequent addition of dithiothreitol. As distinct from L-ornithine, D-ornithine, putrescine, spermidine, or spermine do not produce inactivation of ornithine decarboxylase. Very similar results are obtained with pure ornithine decarboxylase isolated from androgen-stimulated mouse kidney, stabilized with a rat liver extract.  相似文献   

8.
The subcellular localisation of ornithine decarboxylase and of its synthetic irreversible inhibitor, α-difluoromethylornithine, was investigated in control rat livers and in livers of animals in which the enzyme was induced by partial hepatectomy or by treatment with dexamethasone. Ornithine decarboxylase activity was distributed in normal rat liver between the nuclear (40%, mainly nucleolar) and the cytosolic (43%) fractions. Cytosolic liver ornithine decarboxylase was markedly induced after partial hepatectomy or treatment with dexamethasone, whereas the enzyme associated with the nuclear fraction was not induced by these procedures. The irreversible inhibitor was found only in the cytosol fraction and was totally absent from the nuclear fraction.  相似文献   

9.
Chronic administration of 1,3-diaminopropane, a compound inhibiting mammalian ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) in vivo, effectively prevented the large increases in the concentration of putrescine that normally occur during rat liver regeneration. Furthermore, repeated injections of diaminopropane depressed by more than 85% ornithine decarboxylase activity in rat kidney. Administration of diaminopropane 60 min before partial hepatectomy only marginally inhibited ornithine decarboxylase activity at 4 h after the operation. However, when the compound was given at the time of the operation (4 h before death), or any time thereafter, it virtually abolished the enhancement in ornithine decarboxylase activity in regenerating rat liver remnant. An injection of diaminopropane given 30 to 60 min after operation, but not earlier or later, depressed S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase activity (EC 4.1.1.50) 4 h after partial hepatectomy. Diaminopropane likewise inhibited ornithine decarboxylase activity during later periods of liver regeneration. In contrast to early regeneration, a total inhibition of the enzyme activity was only achieved when the injection was given not earlier than 2 to 3 h before the death of the animals. Diaminopropane also exerted an acute inhibitory effect on adenosylmethionine decarboxylase activity in 28-h regenerating liver whereas it invariably enhanced the activity of tyrosine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.5), used as a standard enzyme of short half-life. Treatment of the rats with diaminopropane entirely abolished the stimulation of spermidien synthesis in vivo from [14C]methionine 4 h after partial hepatectomy or after administration of porcine growth hormone. Both partial hepatectomy and the treatment with growth hormone produced a clear stimulation of hepatic RNA synthesis, the extent of which was not altered by injections of diaminopropane in doses sufficient to prevent any enhancement of ornithine decarboxylase activity and spermidine synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
Liver microsomes have a strong ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) inactivating capacity in vitro. The present results suggest that this may be involved in regulation of ODC activity in vivo: (1) the ODC inactivating capacity of microsomes appears susceptible to in vivo modulation: a single administration of thioacetamide, which induces ODC, also causes a significant increase in the inactivating capacity of the microsomes; (2) under conditions leading to increased microsome-bound ODC-inactivating capacity (e.g. liver from thioacetamide-treated rates versus regenerating liver) ODC displays a greater thermal lability and inactivability in vitro. A possible involvement of this microsomal activity in an autoregulatory pathway of ODC is suggested by the fact that it is induced by the administration of polyamines. However, inhibition of ODC activity by alpha-difluoromethylornithine does not prevent the increase of the microsomal activity caused by thioacetamide. Thus, polyamine biosynthesis does not appear to be an absolute requirement for induction of the microsomal ODC-inactivating capacity. The apparent half-life of ODC in vivo, as evaluated after cycloheximide administration, does not appear to correlate with the microsomal ODC-inactivating capacity content and the stability properties of ODC in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
Injections of 1,3-diaminopropane, a close structural analogue of putrescine (1,4-diaminobutane), into partially hepatectomized rats powerfully inhibited ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) activity in the regenerating liver in vivo. The compound did not have any effect on the enzyme activity in vitro (under assay conditions employed) but appeared to exert an inhibitory influence on the synthesis of ornithine decarboxylase itself.Repeated injections of diaminopropane into rats after partial hepatectomy, starting at the time of the operation and continued until 33 h postoperatively, markedly diminished the stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity in the regenerating liver remnant, and completely prevented the increases in hepatic spermidine concentration normally occurring in response to partial hepatectomy.Treatment of the rats with diaminopropane did not depress the activity of adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.50) in the regenerating liver. Nor did the compound have any effect, whatsoever, on the activity of spermidine synthase (EC 2.5.1.16) in vitro, thus obiviously proving that the increased accumulation of liver spermidine after partial hepatectomy primarily depends upon a stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity and a concomitant accumulation of putrescine. The results also showed that 1,3-diamino-propane could not replace putrescine in the synthesis of higher polyamines in rat liver. The inhibition of ornithine decarboxylase by diaminopropane thus appears to represent “gratuitous” repression of polyamine biosynthesis and might conceivably be used for studies devoted to the elucidation of the physiological functions of natural polyamines.  相似文献   

12.
Ornithine decarboxylase isolated from HTC cells was separated into two distinct charged states by salt-gradient elution from DEAE-Sepharose columns. This charge difference between the enzyme forms was maintained in partially purified preparations, but enzyme form II was observed to change to form I in a time-dependent polyamine-stimulated fashion in crude cell homogenates. The enzyme modification that produces this charge diversity between the alternative enzyme states was further investigated for its role in enzyme activity induction, protein stability and rapid turnover. Inhibition of new protein synthesis by cycloheximide resulted in a much more rapid loss of form I enzyme than of form II, suggesting that during normal enzyme turnover the latter enzyme state may be derived from the former. Culture conditions that favour the stabilization of this usually labile enzyme generally induced an increased proportion of the enzyme in the form II charge state. In particular, inhibitors of synthesis of spermidine and spermine induced the stabilization of cellular ornithine decarboxylase and promoted a marked accumulation in form II. Conversely, polyamines added to the cells in culture induced a very rapid loss in both forms of the enzyme, an effect that could not be attributed merely to an inhibition of new enzyme synthesis. It appears that the polyamines, but not putrescine, may be an essential part of the rapid ornithine decarboxylase inactivation process and that they may function in part by stimulating the conversion of the more stable enzyme form II into the less stable enzyme state, form I.  相似文献   

13.
The activities of ornithine decarboxylase and spermidine N1-acetyltransferase started to rise in normal rat liver 4 h after the intraperitoneal injection of methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) (MGBG; 80 mg/kg). Ornithine decarboxylase had its greatest activity 24 h after a single injection of MGBG and the acetyltransferase peaked 8 h after the injection. Measurement of the apparent half-life of ornithine decarboxylase after MGBG treatment revealed a clear decrease in the decay rate of the enzyme in both normal and regenerating rat liver. MGBG slowed the decay of the transferase also in normal rat liver, as well as inhibiting its activity in vitro. The stabilization by MGBG of these two short-lived proteins involved in metabolism of polyamines should lead to their accumulation in liver, thus explaining their increased activities. In the case of ornithine decarboxylase, studies with a specific antibody against mouse kidney ornithine decarboxylase showed that the rise in ornithine decarboxylase activity after MGBG application was not due to the appearance of an immunologically different isozyme.  相似文献   

14.
Chronic administration of 1,3-diaminopropane, a compound inhibiting mammalian ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) in vivo, effectively prevented the large increases in the concentration of putrescine that normally occur during rat liver regeneration. Furthermore, repeated injections of diaminopropane depressed by more than 85% ornithine decarboxylase activtivity in rat kidney.Adminsitration of diaminopropane 60 min before partial hepatectomy only marginally inhibited orthine decarboxylase activity at 4 h after the operation. However, when the compound was given at the time of the operation (4 h before death), or any time thereafter, it virtually abolished the enhancement in ornithine decarboxylase activity in regenerating rat liver remnant.An injection of diaminopropane given 30 to 60 min after operation, but not earlier or later, depressed S-adenosyl-l-methionine decarboxylase activity (EC 4.1.1.50) 4 h after partial hepatectomy.Diaminopropane likewise inhibited ornithine decarboxylase activity during later periods of liver regeneration. In contrast to early regeneration, a total inhibition of the enzyme activity was only achieved when the injection was given not earlier than 2 to 3 h before the death of the animals.Diaminopropane also exerted an acute inhibitory effect on adenosylmethionine decarboxylase activity in 28-h regenerating liver whereas it invariably enhanced the activity of tyrosine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.5), used as a standard enzyme of short half-life.Treatment of the rats with diaminopropane entirely abolished the stimulation of spermidien synthesis in vivo from [14C] methionine 4 h after hepatectomy or after administration of porcine growth hormone.Both partial hepatectomy and the treatment with growth hormone produced a clear stimulation of hepatic RNA synthesis, the extent of which was not altered by injections of diaminopropane in doses sufficient to prevent any enhancement of ornitine decarboxylase activity and spemedicine synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
The authors studied the anabolic effect of peptide morphogen of the hydra undecapeptide on normal and regenerating rat liver. Ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) activity served as a marker. Intraperitoneal injection of the peptide into intact animals stimulated ornithine decarboxylase activity in a dose-dependent manner. In partially hepatectomized rats the peptide stimulated ornithine decarboxylase activity in the dose of 20 micrograms/kg body weight while greater doses inhibited the enzyme activity.  相似文献   

16.
Inactivation of rat liver ornithine decarboxylase by incubation with [5-14C]-α-difluoromethylornithine resulted in the covalent binding of radio-activity to the enzyme. The extent of binding correlated with the degree of inactivation and with the amount of enzyme present. The labeled protein eluted as a single peak which coincided exactly with the active enzyme when chromatographed on Sephadex G-200 and ran as a single band on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate at a position corresponding to a M.W. of about 55,000. The stoichiometric binding of [5-14C]-α-difluoromethylornithine therefore provides a convenient method for quantitating ornithine decarboxylase protein and for determining the purity of preparations of the enzyme. Assuming that 1 molecule of the drug is needed to inactivate each sub-unit, it was calculated that after stimulation with thioacetamide ornithine decarboxylase represents about 0.00014% of the liver soluble protein.  相似文献   

17.
A radioimmunoassay for ornithine decarboxylase was used to study the regulation of this enzyme in rat liver. The antiserum used reacts with ornithine decarboxylase from mouse, human or rat cells. Rat liver ornithine decarboxylase enzyme activity and enzyme protein (as determined by radioimmunoassay) were measured in thioacetamide-treated rats at various times after administration of 1,3-diaminopropane. Enzyme activity declined rapidly after 1,3-diaminopropane treatment as did the amount of enzyme protein, although the disappearance of enzyme activity slightly preceded the loss of immunoreactive protein. The loss of enzyme protein after cycloheximide treatment also occurred rapidly, but was significantly slower than that seen with 1,3-diaminopropane. When 1,3-diaminopropane and cycloheximide were injected simultaneously, the rate of disappearance of enzyme activity and enzyme protein was the same as that seen with cycloheximide alone. These results show that the rapid loss in enzyme activity after 1,3-diaminopropane treatment is primarily due to a loss in enzyme protein and that protein synthesis is needed in order for 1,3-diaminopropane to exert its full effect. A macromolecular inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase that has been termed antizyme is induced in response to 1,3-diaminopropane, but our results indicate that the loss of enzyme activity is not due to the accumulation of inactive ornithine decarboxylase-antizyme complexes. It is possible that the antizyme enhances the degradation of the enzyme protein. Control experiments demonstrated that the antiserum used would have detected any inactive antizyme-ornithine decarboxylase complexes present in liver since addition of antizyme to ornithine decarboxylase in vitro did not affect the amount of ornithine decarboxylase detected in our radioimmunoassay. Anti-(ornithine decarboxylase) antibodies may be useful in the purification of antizyme since the antizyme-ornithine decarboxylase complex can be immunoprecipitated, and antizyme released from the precipitate with 0.3 M-NaCl.  相似文献   

18.
In liver cells recovering from reversible ischemia the increase in RNA synthesis by isolated nuclei is preceded by activation of ornithine decarboxylase, leading in turn to an increase in putrescine concentration. Treatment of the animals with 1,3-diaminopropane and putrescine prevents ornithine decarboxylase activation but does not hinder the enhancement of RNA synthesis in post-ischemic liver nuclei; therefore, ornithine decarboxylase activation does not seem to be a necessary prerequisite for the increase in RNA synthesis. Hypophysectomy does not prevent the post-ischemic increases of ornithine decarboxylase and RNA synthesis; but pre-treatment of the animals with cycloheximide—which has a dual effect on the activity of ornithine decarboxylase—abolishes the post-ischemic enhancement of RNA synthesis. In contrast with regenerating liver, changes in ornithine decarboxylase activity and putrescine concentrations in reversible ischemia are not associated to changes in S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase activity and in spermine and spermidine concentrations that seem to be characteristic of tissues where increases in RNA synthesis are followed by DNA synthesis and cell multiplication.  相似文献   

19.
Incubation of rat ovarian cell suspension with human choriogonadotropin (hCG) caused a marked enhancement of ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) activity after a lag period of several hours. Even though ovarian ornithine decarboxylase could be induced in minimum essential medium by the hormone alone, supplementation of the medium with various sera greatly enhanced the stimulation of the enzyme activity. All the sera tested (human, fetal calf and horse) were able to stimulate ornithine decarboxylase activity even in the absence of hCG. Maximum stimulation of the enzyme activity by hCG and/or serum occurred in ovarian cell suspensions prepared from 30 to 33-day-old rats. There was a close correlation between the stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity and the accumulation fo cyclic AMP in response to the administration of the hormone (in the presence or absence of serum). However, while various sera alone markedly enhanced ovarian ornithine decarboxylase activity in vitro they, if anything, only marginally stimulated the accumulation of cyclic AMP and the secretion of progesterone in ovarian cells in the absence of gonadotropin. A similar dissociation of the stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase activity from the production of cyclic AMP and progesterone was likewise found when the ovarian cells were incubated in an enriched medium (M199) supplemented with albumin and lactalbumin hydrolysate in the absence of the hormone. Under these culture conditions ornithine decarboxylase activity was strikingly enhanced, greatly exceeding the stimulation obtained with various sera, while the accumulation of cyclic AMP and the secretion of progesterone remained virtually unchanged. Specific inhibition (up to 90%) of gonadotropin-induced ornithine decarboxylase activity by difluoromethyl ornithine or 1,3-diamino-2-propanol had little effect on the ability of the ovarian cells to respond to the hormone with increasing production of cyclic AMP and progesterone. While showing that rat ovarian ornithine decarboxylase can be induced in vitro by choriogonadotropin or various sera, our results indicate that the activation of the enzyme involves at least two different mechanisms: (i) One (in response to gonadotropin) involving a prior stimulation of cyclic AMP production, and (ii) another (in response to serum) that is not associated with increases in the accumulation of the cyclic nucleotide.  相似文献   

20.
The activity of ornithine decarboxylase was investigated in cartilage from chick embryos, rabbits, rats and human foetuses. The enzyme activity in these cartilages was of the same order as the detected in other body tissues. Ornithine decarboxylase activity in chick-embryo cartilage and liver was the same when compared on the basis of total soluble tissue protein. The cartilage enzyme exhibited a pH optimum of 6.5 and a Km for ornithine of 0.16mM. Ornithine decarboxylase activity in chick-embryo pelvic leaflets was maintained at the value in vivo for up to 22h when the isolated tissue was incubated in a modified Waymouth's medium (MB 752/1) at 37 degrees C. After addition of cycloheximide to the incubation medium, ornithine decarboxylase activity declined, with a half-life of 40 min. The concentrations of the polyamines spermidine and spermine in chick-embryo pelvic cartilage and rabbit costal cartilage were of the same order as the concentrations detected in other tissues.  相似文献   

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