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1.
The kynureninase-type enzymes of three fungi and one bacterium were isolated and examined kinetically for their ability to catalyze the hydrolysis of L-kynurenine and L-3-hydroxykynurenine. The phycomycete Rhizopus stolonifer was found to contain a single, constitutive enzyme with Km for L-3-hydroxykynurenine and L-kynurenine of 6.67 times 10-minus 6 and 2.5 times 10-minus 4 M, respectively. The ascomycetes Aspergillus niger and Penicillium roqueforti each contain an enzyme, induced by L-tryptophan, with similar Km for L-3-hydroxykynurenine and L-kynurenine ranging from 5.9 times 10-minus 5 to 14.3 times 10-minus 5 M, as well as a constitutive enzyme with Km for the two substrates of similar to 4 times 10-minus 6 M and 10-minus 4 M. The bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens has a single, inducible enzyme with Km for L-3-hydroxykynurenine and L-kynurenine of 5 times 10-minus 4 and 7 times 10-minus 5 M. In addition, significant differences in maximal velocities (Vmax) were observed in two cases. The Vmax of the inducible activity from P. fluorescens was 4.5 times greater for L-kynurenine than L-3-hydroxykynurenine, whereas the Vmax of the constitutive activity from R. stolonifer was 2.5 times greater for L-3-hydroxykynurenine. It is concluded (i) that the constitutive activities are hydroxykynureninases involved in the biosynthesis of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide from L-tryptophan, (ii) that the inducible activities are kynureninases involved in the catabolism of L-tryptophan to anthranilate, and (iii) that R. stolonifer and P. fluorescens, respectively, carry the most specific examples of each type of enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated L-kynurenine distribution and metabolism in rats with experimental chronic renal failure of various severity, induced by unilateral nephrectomy and partial removal of contralateral kidney cortex. In animals with renal insufficiency the plasma concentration and the content of L-tryptophan in homogenates of kidney, liver, lung, intestine and spleen were significantly decreased. These changes were accompanied by increase activity of liver tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase, the rate-limiting enzyme of kynurenine pathway in rats, while indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase activity was unchanged. Conversely, the plasma concentration and tissue content of L-kynurenine, 3-hydroxykynurenine, and anthranilic, kynurenic, xanthurenic and quinolinic acids in the kidney, liver, lung, intestine, spleen and muscles were increased. The accumulation of L-kynurenine and the products of its degradation was proportional to the severity of renal failure and correlated with the concentration of renal insufficiency marker, creatinine. Kynurenine aminotransferase, kynureninase and 3-hydroxyanthranilate-3,4-dioxygenase activity was diminished or unchanged, while the activity of kynurenine 3-hydroxylase was significantly increased. We conclude that chronic renal failure is associated with the accumulation of L-kynurenine metabolites, which may be involved in the pathogenesis of certain uremic syndromes.  相似文献   

3.
1. Kynurenine-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (isoenzyme 1) was purified to homogeneity from the liver, brain and small intestine of rats by the same procedure. The three enzyme preparations had nearly identical pH optima, substrate specificities and molecular weights. Isoenzyme 1 was active with 2-oxoglutarate but not with pyruvate as amino acceptor, and utilized a wide range of amino acids as amino donors. Amino acids were effective in the following order to activity: L-aspartate greater than L-tyrosine greater than L-phenylalanine greater than L-tryptophan greater than 5-hydroxy-L-tryptophan greater than L-kynurenine. The molecular weight was approximately 88 000 as determined by sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation. The pH optimum was between 8.0 and 8.5. On the basis of substrate specificity, substrate inhibition, subcellular distribution and polyacrylamide-disc-gel electrophoresis, it is suggested that liver, brain and small intestinal kynurenine-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (isoenzyme 1) is identical with mitochondrial tyrosine-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase and also with mitochondrial aspartate-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase. 2. An additional kynurenine-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (isoenzyme 2) was purified from the liver. This enzyme was specific for 2-oxoglutarate and L-kynurenine. Sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation gave a molecular weight of approximately 100 000. The pH optimum was between 6.0 and 6.5. This enzyme was not detected in the brain or small intestine.  相似文献   

4.
The inducible kynureninase from Neurospora crassa is inactivated by incubation with L-alanine or L-ornithine. The inactivated enzyme is resolved to the apoenzyme by dialysis. Reactivation of the apoenzyme is achieved by incubation with pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate plus pyruvate, as well as with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The kynurenine hydrolysis proceeds linearly in the presence of added pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, or pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate plus pyruvate. These findings indicate that the fungal inducible kynureninase can act as an amino-transferase to control the enzyme activity, and that the control mechanism is similar to that reported for the bacterial kynureninase (Moriguchi, M. & Soda, K. (1973) Biochemistry 12, 2974-2980). The ratio of kynureninase activity to aminotransferase activity was determined with bacterial and fungal enzymes. All the inducible kynureninases from various fungal species examined are also controlled by the transamination. In contrast, the pig liver kynureninase and the fungal constitutive enzymes are little or not at all affected by preincubation with amino acids. Thus, the present regulatory mechanism does not operate in these constitutive-type enzymes. The rate of hydrolysis of L-3-hydroxykynurenine by the pig liver enzyme decreases with increase in the incubation time; the enzyme is inhibited by 3-hydroxyanthranilate produced from L-3-hydroxykynurenine. The inhibition is found in all the constitutive-type enzymes, suggesting that 3-hydroxyanthranilate plays a regulatory role in NAD biosynthesis from tryptophan.  相似文献   

5.
Tryptophan contents of liver, serum and kidney were determined in normal and vitamin-B-6-deficient rats after tryptophan injection. Tryptophan contents of normal and B-6-deficient liver were different, but not those in serum and kidney. Both kynurenine and 3-hydroxykynurenine accumulated in B-6-deficient liver more than in the normal. The 3-hydroxykynurenine contents after tryptophan injection (30 mg/100 g body wt.) increased to 1380 nmol/g of liver at 1-1.5 h, a value sufficient to produce xanthurenate, in view of the Km value of kynurenine aminotransferase. The enzymes metabolizing kynurenine were assayed at various times after tryptophan injection. The activity of kynureninase holoenzyme in B-6-deficient liver was much decreased, but the activity of total enzyme was not changed. It appeared that a high dose of tryptophan in B-6-deficient rats could cause a greater deficiency of pyridoxal 5-phosphate. Tryptophan metabolism in B-6-deficient rat liver after tryptophan administration is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Purification and properties of pig liver kynureninase.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Kynureninase [L-kynurenine hydrolase, EC 3.7.1.3] was purified from pig liver by a procedure including DEAE-cellulose chromatography, hydroxyapatite chromatography, ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE-Bio Gel chromatography, Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration, kynurenine-Sepharose affinity chromatography, and Sephadex G-200 gel filtration. The enzyme was found to be homogeneous by the criterion of disc-gel electrophoresis. The enzyme has a molecular weight of about 100,000 and exhibits absorption maxima at 280 and 420 nm. The optimum pH and the isoelectric point of the enzyme are 8.5 and 5.0, respectively. The Michaelis constants were determined to be as follows: L-kynurenine, 7.7 X 10(-4) M; L-3-hydroxykynurenine, 1.3 X 10(-5) M; and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, 1.8 X 10(-6) M. L-3-Hydroxykynurenine is hydrolyzed more rapidly than L-kynurenine; the liver enzyme can be regarded as a 3-hydroxy-kynureninase.  相似文献   

7.
A radiometric kynurenine monooxygenase assay   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Kynurenine 3-monooxygenase is a flavin-dependent monooxygenase that catalyzes the oxidation of L-kynurenine to 3-hydroxy-L-kynurenine in the kynurenine pathway of tryptophan metabolism. The enzyme requires NADH or NADPH as a cofactor. A discontinuous assay that utilizes L-[3H]kynurenine as substrate is described. The assay offers high precision and a wide range of accessible substrate and cofactor concentrations. The assay was used to measure kinetic isotope effects and the stereospecificity of oxidation of the cofactor. Hydride is transferred from the A-side (pro-R) of NADH and NADPH since primary deuterium isotope effects were observed for both cofactors when they were deuterated on the A-side but not on the B-side. The large isotope effect on Vmax/Km for NADH is sensitive to the concentration of kynurenine, which indicates that NADH can bind before kynurenine.  相似文献   

8.
Recombinant human kynureninase (L-kynurenine hydrolase, EC 3.7.1.3) was purified to homogeneity (60-fold) from Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) cells infected with baculovirus containing the kynureninase gene. The purification protocol comprised ammonium sulfate precipitation and several chromatographic steps, including DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B, hydroxyapatite, strong anionic and cationic separations. The purity of the enzyme was determined by SDS/PAGE, and the molecular mass verified by MALDI-TOF MS. The monomeric molecular mass of 52.4 kDa determined was > 99.99% of the predicted molecular mass. A UV absorption spectrum of the holoenzyme resulted in a peak at 432 nm. The optimum pH was 8.25 and the enzyme displayed a strong dependence on the ionic strength of the buffer for optimum activity. This cloned enzyme was highly specific for 3-hydroxykynurenine (Km = 3.0 microm +/- 0.10) and was inhibited by L-kynurenine (Ki = 20 microm), d-kynurenine (Ki = 12 microm) and a synthetic substrate analogue D,L-3,7-dihydroxydesaminokynurenine (Ki = 100 nm). The activity/concentration profile for kynureninase from this source was sigmoidal in all instances. There appeared to be partial inhibition by substrate, and excess pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was found to be inhibitory.  相似文献   

9.
A rapid and sensitive assay for kynurenine 3-hydroxylase (KH) has been developed. This radiometric assay is based on the enzymatic synthesis of tritiated water from L-[3,5-3H]kynurenine during the hydroxylation reaction. Radiolabeled water is quantified following selective adsorption of the isotopic substrate and its metabolite with activated charcoal. The assay is suitable for detecting 0.1 pmol enzyme activity per minute per milligram protein in tissues displaying low levels of the enzyme. The amount of water produced in the reaction, as calculated from the tritium released, was stoichiometric with the 3-hydroxykynurenine product detected by HPLC. Rat liver KH was characterized by cofactor specificity and kinetic parameters. NADPH was preferred over NADH as coreductant in the reaction. Tetrahydrobiopterin was not a cofactor. The tissue distribution of KH activity in the rat suggested that the majority of active enzyme is located in liver and kidney. Detectable amounts were found in several other tissues, including brain which had low but significant levels of activity in every region assayed.  相似文献   

10.
The production of the neuroinhibitory and neuroprotective metabolite kynurenic acid (KYNA) was investigated in rat brain by examining its biosynthetic enzyme, kynurenine aminotransferase (KAT). By using physiological (low micromolar) concentrations of the substrate L-kynurenine (KYN) and by determining the irreversible conversion of [3H]KYN to [3H]KYNA as a measure of KAT activity, a novel, simple, and sensitive assay was developed which permitted the detailed characterization of the enzyme. Only a single protein, which under routine assay conditions showed approximately equal activity with 2-oxoglutarate and pyruvate as the aminoacceptor, was found in rat brain. The enzyme was distributed heterogeneously between the nine brain regions studied, with the KAT-rich olfactory bulb displaying approximately five times higher activity than the cerebellum, the area with lowest KAT activity. In subcellular fractionation studies, the majority of KAT was recovered in mitochondria. In contrast to many known aminotransferases, partially purified KAT was shown to be highly substrate-specific. Thus, of the amino acids tested, only alpha-aminoadipate and tryptophan displayed moderate competition with KYN. Notably, 3-hydroxykynurenine, reportedly a very good substrate of KAT, competed rather poorly with KYN as well. Aminooxyacetic acid, a nonspecific transaminase inhibitor, blocked KAT activity with an apparent Ki of 5 microM. Kinetic analyses with partially purified rat brain KAT revealed a Km of 17 microM for KYN with 1 mM 2-oxoglutarate, but a much higher Km (910 microM) with 1 mM pyruvate. Km values for 2-oxoglutarate and pyruvate were 150 and 160 microM, respectively. The cellular localization of KAT was examined in striatal homogenates obtained from rats 7 days after an intrastriatal injection of quinolinate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Aromatic-amino-acid-glyoxylate aminotransferase was highly purified from the mitochondrial fraction of livers from monkey and glucagon-injected rats. The two enzyme preparations showed physical and enzymic properties different from a kynurenine aminotransferase previously described. The two enzymes had nearly identical molecular weights (approximate 80 000), isoelectric points (pH 8.0) and pH optima (pH 8.0 - 8.5). However, a difference in substrate specificity was observed between the two enzymes. Both enzymes utilized glyoxylate, pyruvate, hydroxypyruvate and 2-oxo-4-methyl-thiobutyrate as effective amino acceptors. 2-Oxoglutarate was active for rat enzyme but not for monkey enzyme. With glyoxylate, amino donors were effective in the following order of activity; phenylalanine greater than histidine greater than tyrosine greater than tryptophan greater than 5-hydroxytrypotphan greater than kynurenine for the rat enzyme, and phenylalanine greater than kynurenine greater than histidine greater than tryptophan greater than 5-hydroxy-tryptophan for the monkey enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
M C Tobes  M Mason 《Life sciences》1978,22(9):793-802
A nearly homogeneous preparation of α-aminoadipate (kynurenine) aminotransferase exhibited substantial activity with 3,5-diiodo-L-tyrosine, a major substrate for halogenated tyrosine aminotransferase. The new activity was found, according to heat inactivation and several inhibition studies, not to be attributable to contamination. Many of the properties previously reported for the two enzymes are identical or very similar. This paper lists these similarities and reports our observations of additional similarities of these activities in the supernatant and mitochondrial fractions of both rat kidney and liver. The properties of the purified enzyme and the noted similarities suggest that α-aminoadipate aminotransferase, kynurenine aminotransferase, and halogenated tyrosine aminotransferase activities are associated with the same protein. These activities are discussed in terms of a possible role in thyroid hormone metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
The mitochondrial outer membrane enzyme kynurenine 3-hydroxylase (K3H) is an NADPH-dependent flavin mono-oxygenase involved in the tryptophan pathway, where it catalyzes the hydroxylation of kynurenine. K3H was transiently expressed in COS-1 cells as a glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion protein, and the pure recombinant protein (rec-K3H) was obtained with a specific activity of about 2000 nmol.min-1.mg-1. Rec-K3H was shown to have an optimum pH at 7.5, to use NADPH more efficiently than NADH, and to contain one molecule of non-covalently bound FAD per molecule of enzyme. The mechanism of the rec-K3H-catalyzed reaction was investigated by overall initial-rate measurements, and a random mechanism in which combination of the enzyme with one substrate does not influence its affinity for the other is proposed. Further kinetic studies revealed that K3H activity was inhibited by both pyridoxal phosphate and Cl-, and that NADPH-catalyzed oxidation occurred even in the absence of kynurenine if 3-hydroxykynurenine was present, suggesting an uncoupling effect of 3-hydroxykynurenine with peroxide formation. This observation could be of clinical interest, as peroxide formation could explain the neurotoxicity of 3-hydroxykynurenine in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
Kynurenine pyruvate transaminase and its inhibitor in rat intestine   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
T Noguchi  J Nakamura  R Kido 《Life sciences》1973,13(7):1001-1010
Kynurenine pyruvate transaminase was found to be present in rat small intestine, partially purified and characterized. The enzyme catalysed the conversion of L-kynurenine to kynurenic acid. Transamination rates of 3-hydroxy-DL-kynurenine and 5-hydroxy-DL-kynurenine by the enzyme were 1/2.9 and 1/2.6 that of L-kynurenine. The enzyme showed higher preference for pyruvate than 2-oxoglutarate as aminoacceptor. The pH optimum of the reaction was 8.0 to 8.5. Purification of the enzyme lowered markedly apparent Km for L-kynurenine but not for pyruvate. It was shown that the inhibitor of kynurenine pyruvate transaminase was present in the intestine, on the basis of the inhibition produced by heating a portion of each purification step enzyme preparation in 50% ethanol, centrifuging, concentrating it, and adding it to an incubate of the unheated preparation. The possible interrelationship of enzyme and inhibitor was discussed and comparisons with kynurenine transaminase in liver, kidney and brains were noted.  相似文献   

15.
Kynurenine-3-monooxygenase (KM), the third enzyme in the kynurenine (KYN) pathway from tryptophan to quinolinic acid (QA), is a monooxygenase requiring oxygen, NADPH and FAD for the catalytic oxidation of L-kynurenine to 3-hydroxykynurenine and water. KM is innately low in the brain and similar in activity to indoleamine oxidase, the rate-limiting pathway enzyme. Accumulation in the CNS of QA, a known excitotoxin, is proposed to cause convulsions in several pathologies. Thus, we theorized that hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) induced convulsions arise from increased QA via oxygen K, effects on this pathway [Brown OR, Draczynska-Lusiak. Oxygen activation and inactivation of quinolinate-producing and iron-requiring 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid oxidase: a role in hyperbaric oxygen-induced convulsions? Redox Report 1995; 1: 383-385]. To complement prior studies on the effects of oxygen on pathway enzymes, in this paper we report the effects of oxygen on KM. Brain and liver KM enzyme are not known to be identical, and some systemically-produced KYN pathway intermediates can permeate the brain and might stimulate the brain pathway. Thus, KM from both brain and liver was assayed at various oxygen substrate concentrations to evaluate, in vitro, the potential effects of increases in oxygen, as would occur in mammals breathing therapeutic and convulsive HBO. In crude tissue extracts, KM was not activated during incubation in HBO up to 6 atm. The effects of oxygen as substrate on brain and liver KM activity was nearly identical: activity was nil at zero oxygen with an apparent oxygen Km of 20-22 microM. Maximum KM activity occurred at about 1000 microM oxygen and decreased slightly to plateau from 2000 to 8000 microM oxygen. This compares to approximately 30-40 microM oxygen typically reported for brain tissue of humans or rats breathing air, and an unknown but surely much lower value (perhaps below 1 microM) intracellularly at the site of KM. Thus HBO, as used therapeutically and at convulsive pressures, likely stimulates flux through the KM-catalyzed step of the KYN pathway in liver and in brain and could increase brain QA, by Km effects on brain KM, or via increased KM pathway intermediates produced systemically (in liver) and transported into the brain.  相似文献   

16.
Summary 3-Hydroxykynureninase was purified from rat liver. The Michaelis constants for L-kynurenine and L-3-hydroxykynurenine were determined to be 2.33 × 10–4 m and 6.85 × 10–5 m, respectively, at pH 8.41 and 37°. With L-kynurenine as substrate, the enzyme was competitively inhibited by L-alanine, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, and several other compounds which contained structural features of either amino acid or aryl portions of the substrate. The effect of pH on the initial velocity, maximal velocity, and Michaelis constant, using L-kynurenine as substrate, was studied. Maximal velocity was strongly pH-dependent, with a maximum at pH 8.4. The Michaelis constant decreased from 11.4 × 10–4 m at pH 7.1 to 1.30 × 10–4 m at pH 9.0. Logarithmic plots of these data showed pKa's for functional groups ionizing in the enzyme-substrate complex and free enzyme active center of 7.6 and 8.5, respectively. Possible groups responsible for these ionizations were discussed.Supported in part by a Faculty Creative Endeavor Grant from Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, Michigan.  相似文献   

17.
Kynureninase-type (L-kynurenine hydrolase, EC 3.7.1.3) activity has been found to be present in the livers of fish, amphibia, reptiles, and birds. In addition to past information concerning this enzyme activity in mammalian liver, it is now clear that all the major classes of vertebrates carry a highly specialized kynureninase-type enzyme, which we have termed a hydroxykynureninase. To compare the reactivities of these enzymes with L-kynurenine and L-3-hydroxykynurenine, ratios of tau values (Km/V) were used. Based on this comparison, the bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens carries the most efficient kynureninase, whereas the amphibian Xenopus laevis has the most efficient hydroxykynureniase. In these two cases, the ratio of tau values differs by a factor of 38 000. It is hypothesized that the tryptophan-to-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide biosynthetic pathway evolved from a catabolic system of enzymes, and that the differences observed in the kynureninase-type enzymes between lower and higher organisms reflect the specialization of the function of these enzymes from a strictly catabolic role to an anabolic one during the course of evolution.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract: To study the regulation of the synthesis of quinolinic and kynurenic acids in vivo, we evaluated (a) the metabolism of administered kynurenine by measuring the content of its main metabolites 3-hydroxykynurenine, anthranilic acid, and 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid in blood and brain of mice; (b) the effects of ( m -nitrobenzoyl)alanine, a selective inhibitor of kynurenine hydroxylase and of ( o -methoxybenzoyl)alanine, a selective inhibitor of kynureninase, on this metabolism; and (c) the effects of ( o -methoxybenzoyl)alanine on liver kynureninase and 3-hydroxykynureninase activity. The conclusions drawn from these experiments are (a) the disposition of administered kynurenine preferentially occurs through hydroxylation in brain and through hydrolysis in peripheral tissues; (b) ( m -nitrobenzoyl)alanine, the inhibitor of kynurenine hydroxylase, causes the expected changes in brain kynurenine metabolism, such as a decrease of 3-hydroxykynurenine, and an increase of kynurenic acid; and (c) ( o -methoxybenzoyl)alanine, the kynureninase inhibitor, increases brain concentration of the cytotoxic compound 3-hydroxykynurenine, and unexpectedly does not reduce brain concentration of 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, the direct precursor of quinolinic acid. Taken together, the experiments suggest that the systemic administration of a kynurenine hydroxylase inhibitor is a rational approach to increase the brain content of kynurenate and to decrease that of cytotoxic kynurenine metabolites, such as 3-hydroxykynurenine and quinolinic acid.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

Kynurenine-3-monooxygenase (KM), the third enzyme in the kynurenine (KYN) pathway from tryptophan to quinolinic acid (QA), is a monooxygenase requiring oxygen, NADPH and FAD for the catalytic oxidation of L-kynurenine to 3-hydroxykynurenine and water. KM is innately low in the brain and similar in activity to indoleamine oxidase, the rate-limiting pathway enzyme. Accumulation in the CNS of QA, a known excitotoxin, is proposed to cause convulsions in several pathologies. Thus, we theorized that hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) induced convulsions arise from increased QA via oxygen Km effects on this pathway [Brown OR, Draczynska-Lusiak. Oxygen activation and inactivation of quinolinate-producing and iron-requiring 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid oxidase: a role in hyperbaric oxygen-induced convulsions? Redox Report 1995; 1: 383–385]. To complement prior studies on the effects of oxygen on pathway enzymes, in this paper we report the effects of oxygen on KM. Brain and liver KM enzyme are not known to be identical, and some systemically-produced KYN pathway intermediates can permeate the brain and might stimulate the brain pathway. Thus, KM from both brain and liver was assayed at various oxygen substrate concentrations to evaluate, in vitro, the potential effects of increases in oxygen, as would occur in mammals breathing therapeutic and convulsive HBO. In crude tissue extracts, KM was not activated during incubation in HBO up to 6 atm. The effects of oxygen as substrate on brain and liver KM activity was nearly identical: activity was nil at zero oxygen with an apparent oxygen Km of 20–22 µM. Maximum KM activity occurred at about 1000 µM oxygen and decreased slightly to plateau from 2000 to 8000 µM oxygen. This compares to approximately 30–40 µM oxygen typically reported for brain tissue of humans or rats breathing air, and an unknown but surely much lower value (perhaps below 1 µM) intracellularly at the site of KM. Thus HBO, as used therapeutically and at convulsive pressures, likely stimulates flux through the KM-catalyzed step of the KYN pathway in liver and in brain and could increase brain QA, by Km effects on brain KM, or via increased KM pathway intermediates produced systemically (in liver) and transported into the brain.  相似文献   

20.
Presence of Kynurenine Hydroxylase in Developing Rat Brain   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Abstract: Kynurenine-3-hydroxylase, an enzyme that is part of the degradative pathway for tryptophan, was present in the cerebral cortex of neonatal rats and exhibited a Km , for L-kynurenine close to that of the liver enzyme. This enzyme was enriched in mitochondrial fractions isolated from cerebral cortices of neonatal rats by Ficoll-sucrose gradient centrifugation, with some activity also present in synaptosomal fractions probably due to the mitochondrial content of synaptosomes since cytochrome c oxidase, another mitochondrial enzyme, had a similar distribution in the gradient. Kynurenine hydroxylase as well as monoamine oxidase, another mitochondrial enzyme, had increased specific activities in synaptosomal fractions isolated from 14-day-old rats compared to fractions from 8-day-old rats. Hypothyroidism, induced on the day of birth, resulted in increased activities of kynurenine hydroxylase and monoamine oxidase in synaptosomal fractions isolated from 14-day-old rats.  相似文献   

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