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1.
1. Transient and steady-state changes caused by acetate utilization were studied in perfused rat heart. The transient period occupied 6min and steady-state changes were followed in a further 6min of perfusion. 2. In control perfusions glucose oxidation accounted for 75% of oxygen utilization; the remaining 25% was assumed to represent oxidation of glyceride fatty acids. With acetate in the steady state, acetate oxidation accounted for 80% of oxygen utilization, which increased by 20%; glucose oxidation was almost totally suppressed. The rate of tricarboxylate-cycle turnover increased by 67% with acetate perfusion. The net yield of ATP in the steady state was not altered by acetate. 3. Acetate oxidation increased muscle concentrations of acetyl-CoA, citrate, isocitrate, 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, alanine, AMP and glucose 6-phosphate, and lowered those of CoA and aspartate; the concentrations of pyruvate, ATP and ADP showed no detectable change. The times for maximum changes were 1min, acetyl-CoA, CoA, alanine and AMP; 6min, citrate, isocitrate, glutamate and aspartate; 2-4min, 2-oxoglutarate. Malate concentration fell in the first minute and rose to a value somewhat greater than in the control by 6min. There was a transient and rapid rise in glucose 6-phosphate concentration in the first minute superimposed on the slower rise over 6min. 4. Acetate perfusion decreased the output of lactate, the muscle concentration of lactate and the [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio in perfusion medium and muscle in the first minute; these returned to control values by 6min. 5. During the first minute acetate decreased oxygen consumption and lowered the net yield of ATP by 30% without any significant change in muscle ATP or ADP concentrations. 6. The specific radioactivities of cycle metabolites were measured during and after a 1min pulse of [1-(14)C]acetate delivered in the first and twelfth minutes of acetate perfusion. A model based on the known flow rates and concentrations of cycle metabolites was analysed by computer simulation. The model, which assumed single pools of cycle metabolites, fitted the data well with the inclusion of an isotope-exchange reaction between isocitrate and 2-oxoglutarate+bicarbonate. The exchange was verified by perfusions with [(14)C]bicarbonate. There was no evidence for isotope exchange between citrate and acetyl-CoA or between 2-oxoglutarate and malate. There was rapid isotope equilibration between 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate, but relatively poor isotope equilibration between malate and aspartate. 7. It is concluded that the citrate synthase reaction is displaced from equilibrium in rat heart, that isocitrate dehydrogenase and aconitate hydratase may approximate to equilibrium, that alanine aminotransferase is close to equilibrium, but that aspartate transamination is slow for reasons that have yet to be investigated. 8. The slow rise in citrate concentration as compared with the rapid rise in that of acetyl-CoA is attributed to the slow generation of oxaloacetate by aspartate aminotransferase. 9. It is proposed that the tricarboxylate cycle may operate as two spans: acetyl-CoA-->2-oxoglutarate, controlled by citrate synthase, and 2-oxoglutarate-->oxaloacetate, controlled by 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase; a scheme for cycle control during acetate oxidation is outlined. The initiating factors are considered to be changes in acetyl-CoA, CoA and AMP concentrations brought about by acetyl-CoA synthetase. 10. Evidence is presented for a transient inhibition of phosphofructokinase during the first minute of acetate perfusion that was not due to a rise in whole-tissue citrate concentration. The probable importance of metabolite compartmentation is stressed.  相似文献   

2.
1. Blowfly (Phormia regina) flight-muscle mitochondria were allowed to oxidize pyruvate under a variety of experimental conditions, and determinations of the citrate, isocitrate, 2-oxoglutarate and malate contents of both the mitochondria and the incubation medium were made. For each intermediate a substantial portion of the total was present within the mitochondria. 2. Activation of respiration by either ADP or uncoupling agent resulted in a decreased content of citrate and isocitrate and an increased content of 2-oxoglutarate and malate when the substrate was pyruvate, APT and HCO3 minus. Such a decrease in citrate content was obscured when the substrate was pyruvate and proline owing to a large rise in the total content of tricarboxylate-cycle intermediates in the presence of proline and ADP. 3. An experiment involving oligomycin and uncoupling agent demonstrated that the ATP/ADP ratio is the main determinant of flux through the tricarboxylate cycle, with the redox state of nicotinamide nucleotide being of lesser importance. 4. Addition of ADP and Ca-2+ to activate the oxidation of both glycerol 3-phosphate and pyruvate, simulating conditions on initiation of flight, gave a decrease in citrate and isocitrate and an increase in 2-oxoglutarate and malate content. 5. There was a good correlation between these results with isolated flight-muscle mitochondria and the changes found in fly thoraces after 30s and 2 mihorax. 6. It is concluded that NAD-isocitrate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.41) controls the rate of pyruvate oxidation in both resting fly flight muscle in vivo and isolated mitochondria in state 4 (nomenclature of Change & Williams, 1955).  相似文献   

3.
The only exogenous substrates oxidized by mitochondria isolated from the flight muscle of the Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica) are proline, pyruvate and glycerol 3-phosphate. The highest rate of oxygen consumption is obtained with proline. The oxidation of proline leads to the production of more NH3 than alanine, indicating a functioning glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2). Studies of mitochondrial extracts confirm the presence of a very active glutamate dehydrogenase, and this enzyme is found to be activated by ADP and inhibited by ATP. These extracts also show high alanine aminotransferase activity (EC 2.6.1.2) and a uniquely active "malic'' enzyme (EC 1.1.1.39). The "malic'' enzyme is activated by succinate and inhibited by ATP and by pyruvate. It is suggested that the input of tricarboxylate-cycle intermediate from proline oxidation is balanced by the formation of pyruvate from malate, and the complete oxidation of the majority of the pyruvate. Studies of the steady-state concentrations of mitochondrial CoASH and CoA thioesters during proline oxidation show a high succinyl (3-carboxypropionyl)-CoA content which falls on activating respiration with ADP. There is a concomitant rise in CoASH. However, the reverse transition, from state-3 to state-4 respiration, causes only very slight changes in acylation. The reasons for this are discussed. Studies of the mitochondrial content of glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, malate, pyruvate, citrate and isocitrate during the same phases of proline oxidation give results consistent with control at the level of glutamate dehydrogenase and isocitrate dehydrogenase during proline oxidation, with the possibility of further control at "malic'' enzyme. During the oxidation of pyruvate all of the tricarboxylate-cycle intermediates and NAD(P)H follow the pattern of changes described in the blowfly (Johnson & Hansford, 1975; Hansford, 1974) and isocitrate dehydrogenase is identified as the primary site of control.?2OAuthor  相似文献   

4.
(1) A ;cycling' method involving citrate synthase (EC 4.1.3.7) and malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) was modified by the inclusion of succinyl-CoA synthetase (EC 6.2.1.5) and hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1) to permit the determination of very small amounts of succinyl-CoA in addition to CoA and acetyl-CoA. (2) Application of this technique to blowfly (Phormia regina) flight-muscle extracts reveals no change in acetyl-CoA concentration, a slight fall in CoA concentration and a rise in succinyl-CoA concentration during flight. (3) Extraction of isolated mitochondria during controlled (state 4) pyruvate oxidation reveals essentially only acetyl-CoA. Activation of respiration by ADP (state 3) or uncoupling agents leads to a fall in acetyl-CoA and a rise in CoA and succinyl-CoA content. (4) The presence of glycerol phosphate in addition to pyruvate results in a lower acetyl-CoA content in state 4. (5) It is contended that these results are consistent with a primary control of one of the reactions of the tricarboxylate cycle, rather than of pyruvate dehydrogenase, during the state 4 oxidation of pyruvate by isolated mitochondria, and that the modulation of citrate synthase activity by the ratio of acetyl-CoA/succinyl-CoA is unimportant under these conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Spermine activated citrate synthase from porcine heart by decreasing the Km value for the substrate oxaloacetate without affecting the maximal velocity. Spermine markedly increased the maximal velocity of the saturation function with respect to acetyl-CoA as the substrate under conditions of intracellular concentrations of oxaloacetate, but the enzyme was not activated by spermine under conditions of higher concentrations of oxaloacetate. The concentration of spermine required for 50% activation of the enzyme was about 50 microM. Spermidine showed only a little activation, while putrescine caused no activation. Spermine, which contributes to an activation of Ca2(+)-sensitive dehydrogenases of the citric acid cycle by enhancing Ca2+ uptake into mitochondria, can activate citrate synthase directly, and is responsible for the stimulation of oxidative metabolism in mitochondria.  相似文献   

6.
In isolated hepatocytes from normal fed rats, the subcellular distribution of malate, citrate, 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, aspartate, oxaloacetate, acetyl-CoA and CoASH has been determined by a modified digitonin method. Incubation with various substrates (lactate, pyruvate, alanine, oleate, oleate plus lactate, ethanol and aspartate) markedly changed the total cellular amounts of metabolites, but their distribution between the cytosolic and mitochondrial compartments was kept fairly constant. In the presence of lactate, pyruvate or alanine, about 90% of cellular aspartate, malate and oxaloacetate, and 50% of citrate was located in the cytosol. The changes in acetyl-CoA in the cytosol were opposite to those in the mitochondrial space, the sum of both remaining nearly constant. The mitochondrial acetyl-CoA/CoASH ratio ranged from 0.3-0.9 and was positively correlated with the rate of ketone body formation. The mitochondrial/cytosolic (m/c) concentration gradients for malate, citrate, 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, aspartate, oxaloacetate, acetyl-CoA and CoASH averaged from hepatocytes under different substrate conditions were determined to be 1.0, 8.8, 1.6, 2.2, 0.5, 0.7, 13 and 40, respectively. From the distribution of citrate, a pH difference of 0.3 across the inner mitochondrial membrane was calculated, yet lower values resulted from the m/c gradients of 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate and malate. The mass action ratios for citrate synthase and mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase have been calculated from the metabolite concentrations measured in the mitochondrial pellet fraction. A comparison with the respective equilibrium constants indicates that in intact hepatocytes, neither enzyme maintains its reactants at equilibrium. On the assumption that mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase and 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase operate near equilibrium, the concentration of free oxaloacetate appears to be 0.3-2 micron, depending on the substrate used. Plotting the calculated free mitochondrial oxaloacetate concentration against the citrate concentration measured in the mitochondrial pellet yielded a hyperbolic saturation curve, from which an apparent Km of citrate synthase for oxaloacetate in the intact cells of 2 micron can be derived, which is comparable to the value determined with purified rat liver citrate synthase. The results are discussed with respect to the supply of substrates and effectors of anion carriers and of key enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and fatty acid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Deviations from Michealis-Menten kinetics in the pig-heart citrate synthase (citrate-oxaloacetate-lyase(pro-3S-CH2-COO-leads to acetyl-CoA), EC 4.1.3.7) system have been characterized and analyzed in view of the kinetic theory described in the preceding paper. The enzymic condensation reaction between acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate is subject to substrate-inhibition by acetyl-CoA. This can be attributed to the formation of a productive enzyme-acetyl-CoA complex with a dissociation constant of 110 uM. The binding of acetyl-CoA to the enzyme decreases the on-velocity constant for oxaloacetate-binding from 4000 min-1- micrometer-1 to 1700 min-1-micrometer-1. The affinity of citrate synthase for oxaloacetate increase at least 20-fold on the binding of acetyl-CoA. The latter cooperativity effect can be attributed to a more than 45-fold decrease of the off-velocity constant for oxaloacetate-binding.  相似文献   

8.
1. The activities of citrate synthase, NAD+-linked and NADP+-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase were measured in muscles from a large number of animals, in order to provide some indication of the importance of the citric acid cycle in these muscles. According to the differences in enzyme activities, the muscles can be divided into three classes. First, in a number of both vertebrate and invertebrate muscles, the activities of all three enzymes are very low. It is suggested that either the muscles use energy at a very low rate or they rely largely on anaerobic glycolysis for higher rates of energy formation. Second, most insect flight muscles contain high activities of citrate synthase and NAD+-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase, but the activities of the NADP+-linked enzyme are very low. The high activities indicate the dependence of insect flight on energy generated via the citric acid cycle. The flight muscles of the beetles investigated contain high activities of both isocitrate dehydrogenases. Third, other muscles of both vertebrates and invertebrates contain high activities of citrate synthase and NADP+-liniked isocitrate dehydrogenase. Many, if not all, of these muscles are capable of sustained periods of mechanical activity (e.g. heart muscle, pectoral muscles of some birds). Consequently, to support this activity fuel must be supplied continually to the muscle via the circulatory system which, in most animals, also transports oxygen so that energy can be generated by complete oxidation of the fuel. It is suggested that the low activities of NAD+-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase in these muscles may be involved in oxidation of isocitrate in the cycle when the muscles are at rest. 2. A comparison of the maximal activities of the enzymes with the maximal flux through the cycle suggests that, in insect flight muscle, NAD+-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase catalyses a non-equilibrium reaction and citrate synthease catalyses a near-equilibrium reaction. In other muscles, the enzyme-activity data suggest that both citrate synthase and the isocitrate dehydrogenase reactions are near-equilibrium.  相似文献   

9.
A mathematical model was used to study the role of various allosteric regulatory mechanisms in the oxidation of glucose and fatty acids by muscle energy metabolism. A large number of such mechanisms were shown to be involved in simultaneous oxidation of both substrates: glycolysis is regulated by the ATP/ADP ratio at the phosphofructokinase (PFK) step; the control over pyruvate dehydrogenase is exercised by the NADHm/NADm+ and CoAsAc/CoAsH ratios as well as by the level of pyruvate; the Krebs cycle is regulated by oxaloacetate and citrate concentrations in the citrate synthase reaction and by the ATP/ADP and NADHm/NADm+ ratios in the isocitrate dehydrogenase reaction. The inhibition of PFK and pyruvate dehydrogenase by excess of CoAsAcyl as well as the inhibition of PFK by citrate are additional equivalent regulatory mechanisms. When glucose alone is oxidized, the levels of citrate, CoAsAcyl, NADHm and CoAsAc decrease drastically within the whole range of physiological ATPase loads; the only regulating factors that remain efficient are the ATP/ADP ratio in glycolysis, the level of pyruvate at the pyruvate dehydrogenase step, the ATP/ADP ratio and the levels of CoAsAc, oxaloacetate and isocitrate in the Krebs cycle.  相似文献   

10.
Succinic acid methyl esters are potent insulin secretagogues in rat pancreatic islets, but they do not stimulate insulin release in mouse islets. Unlike rat and human islets, mouse islets lack malic enzyme and, therefore, are unable to form pyruvate from succinate-derived malate for net synthesis of acetyl-CoA. Dimethyl-[2,3-(14)C]succinate is metabolized in the citric acid cycle in mouse islets to the same extent as in rat islets, indicating that endogenous acetyl-CoA condenses with oxaloacetate derived from succinate. However, without malic enzyme, the net synthesis from succinate of the citric acid cycle intermediates citrate, isocitrate, and alpha-ketoglutarate cannot occur. Glucose and other nutrients that augment alpha-ketoglutarate formation are secretagogues in mouse islets with potencies similar to those in rat islets. All cycle intermediates can be net-synthesized from alpha-ketoglutarate. Rotenone, an inhibitor of site I of the electron transport chain, inhibits methyl succinate-induced insulin release in rat islets even though succinate oxidation forms ATP at sites II and III of the respiratory chain. Thus generating ATP, NADH, and anaplerosis of succinyl-CoA plus the four-carbon dicarboxylic acids of the cycle and its metabolism in the citric acid cycle is insufficient for a fuel to be insulinotropic; it must additionally promote anaplerosis of alpha-ketoglutarate or two intermediates interconvertible with alpha-ketoglutarate, citrate, and isocitrate.  相似文献   

11.
Rat lung mitochondrial preparations were incubated in the presence of pyruvate and malate. The principal metabolic products measured were citrate and CO2. Citrate formation from pyruvate was found to be dependent on the presence of malate. Significant citrate was formed in the presence of isocitrate and the rate of citrate formation was increased by the addition of pyruvate. Small amounts of citrate were formed by lung mitochondrial preparations in the presence of 2-oxoglutarate and succinate only after the addition of pyruvate. The level of acetyl-CoA was significantly greater in the presence of pyruvate than in the presence of pyruvate plus malate. The addition of malate to lung mitochondrial preparations increased 14CO2 production from [U-14C]- and [1-14C] pyruvate but decreased its production from [2-14C]- and [3-14C]-pyruvate. However, malate increased the incorporation of [2-14C] pyruvate into malate and citrate. A low level of pyruvate-dependent H14CO8-incorporation into acid-stable products was observed, principally citrate and malate, but this rate did not exceed 5% of the rate of net citrate formation in the presence of malate and pyruvate. The capacity of rat lung mitochondria to form oxaloacetate from pyruvate alone in vitro is very limited, and would appear to cast doubt on a major role of pyruvate carboxylase in citrate formation. It is concluded that the rate of citrate formation from pyruvate is limited by the availability of intramitochondrial oxaloacetate and the rate of citrate efflux across the mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

12.
1. A method is described for extracting separately mitochondrial and extramitochondrial enzymes from fat-cells prepared by collagenase digestion from rat epididymal fat-pads. The following distribution of enzymes has been observed (with the total activities of the enzymes as units/mg of fat-cell DNA at 25 degrees C given in parenthesis). Exclusively mitochondrial enzymes: glutamate dehydrogenase (1.8), NAD-isocitrate dehydrogenase (0.5), citrate synthase (5.2), pyruvate carboxylase (3.0); exclusively extramitochondrial enzymes: glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (5.8), 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (5.2), NADP-malate dehydrogenase (11.0), ATP-citrate lyase (5.1); enzymes present in both mitochondrial and extramitochondrial compartments: NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase (3.7), NAD-malate dehydrogenase (330), aconitate hydratase (1.1), carnitine acetyltransferase (0.4), acetyl-CoA synthetase (1.0), aspartate aminotransferase (1.7), alanine aminotransferase (6.1). The mean DNA content of eight preparations of fat-cells was 109mug/g dry weight of cells. 2. Mitochondria showing respiratory control ratios of 3-6 with pyruvate, about 3 with succinate and P/O ratios of approaching 3 and 2 respectively have been isolated from fat-cells. From studies of rates of oxygen uptake and of swelling in iso-osmotic solutions of ammonium salts, it is concluded that fat-cell mitochondria are permeable to the monocarboxylic acids, pyruvate and acetate; that in the presence of phosphate they are permeable to malate and succinate and to a lesser extent oxaloacetate but not fumarate; and that in the presence of both malate and phosphate they are permeable to citrate, isocitrate and 2-oxoglutarate. In addition, isolated fat-cell mitochondria have been found to oxidize acetyl l-carnitine and, slowly, l-glycerol 3-phosphate. 3. It is concluded that the major means of transport of acetyl units into the cytoplasm for fatty acid synthesis is as citrate. Extensive transport as glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate and isocitrate, as acetate and as acetyl l-carnitine appears to be ruled out by the low activities of mitochondrial aconitate hydratase, mitochondrial acetyl-CoA hydrolyase and carnitine acetyltransferase respectively. Pathways whereby oxaloacetate generated in the cytoplasm during fatty acid synthesis by ATP-citrate lyase may be returned to mitochondria for further citrate synthesis are discussed. 4. It is also concluded that fat-cells contain pathways that will allow the excess of reducing power formed in the cytoplasm when adipose tissue is incubated in glucose and insulin to be transferred to mitochondria as l-glycerol 3-phosphate or malate. When adipose tissue is incubated in pyruvate alone, reducing power for fatty acid, l-glycerol 3-phosphate and lactate formation may be transferred to the cytoplasm as citrate and malate.  相似文献   

13.
Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Marburg) was grown on hydrogen plus sulfate as sole energy source and acetate plus CO2 as the sole carbon sources. The incorporation of U-14C acetate into alanine, aspartate, glutamate, and ribose was studied. The labelling data show that alanine is synthesized from one acetate (C-2 + C-3) and one CO2 (C-1), aspartate from one acetate (C-2 + C-3) and two CO2 (C-1 + C-4), glutamate from two acetate (C-1–C-4) and one CO2 (C-5), and ribose from 1.8 acetate and 1.4 CO2. These findings indicate that in Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Marburg) pyruvate is formed via reductive carboxylation of acetyl-CoA, oxaloacetate via carboxylation of pyruvate or phosphoenol pyruvate, and -ketoglutarate from oxaloacetate plus acetyl-CoA via citrate and isocitrate. Since C-5 of glutamate is derived from CO2, citrate must have been formed via a (R)-citrate synthase rather than a(S)-citrate synthase. The synthesis of ribose from 1.8 mol of acetate and 1.4 mol of CO2 excludes the operation of the Calvin cycle in this chemolithotrophically growing bacterium.  相似文献   

14.
Pyruvate dehydrogenase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase are important enzymes in the regulation of muscle pyruvate metabolism and their in vitro measured activities have been studied in muscle from rested and exercised rats. In addition, the muscle concentration of metabolic intermediates associated with pyruvate metabolism has been measured after exercise. Phosphoenolpyruvate concentration was decreased to less than half the value found in rested muscle but pyruvate concentration did not change. This suggests an increase in the in vivo rate of conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate. Concentrations of malate and aspartate increased two- to threefold which suggests that oxaloacetate concentration was also increased. An increase in oxaloacetate availability would increase acetyl CoA metabolism and therefore would increase pyruvate dehydrogenase activity in vivo. The basal activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase measured in vitro increased approximately twofold after 2 hr of exercise and returned to control values 5 min after the cessation of exercise. Total pyruvate dehydrogenase activity (activated to the maximal extent) was not changed by exercise. Muscle PEPCK activity was also increased during exercise suggesting an increased rate of conversion of oxaloacetate to pyruvate to provide net oxidation of oxaloacetate and other citric acid cycle intermediates. Results of this study demonstrate that the rates of formation and metabolism of pyruvate are increased during exercise.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The effect of impeller speed on citric acid production and selected enzyme activities of the TCA cycle was studied. The highest yield of citric acid (28 g/l) was obtained in culture agitated at lower speed (300 rpm). The activity of citrate synthase decreased with the increase of speed of agitation, while the activity of aconitase and isocitrate dehydrogenase increased with the increase in agitation speed.  相似文献   

16.
1. The content of citrate in ;freeze-clamped' livers from starved and alloxan-diabetic rats was measured by using the specific citrate assay method of Gruber & Moellering (1966). 2. The content of citrate fell progressively during a period of 48hr. starvation to reach a plateau value that is 50% of the value for livers from fed rats. Some possible explanations for the conflicting reports of changes in hepatic citrate content during starvation are discussed. 3. The hepatic contents of ATP, pyruvate, lactate, glycogen and the hexose phosphates were decreased during starvation, whereas those of acetyl-CoA and AMP were increased. 4. Acute alloxan-diabetes produced similar changes in the contents of these metabolic intermediates. 5. The effects of starvation and diabetes on the citrate and acetyl-CoA contents are discussed in relation to control of gluconeogenesis, fatty acid synthesis and the activity of citrate synthase.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: The activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, and choline acetyltransferase in rat brain synaptosomes increased during on-togenesis by 3 and 14 times, respectively. Activity of ATP-citrate lyase decreased by 26% during the same period. Pyruvate consumption by synapto-somes from 1-day-old animals was 40% lower than that found in older rats; however, citrate efflux from intrasynaptosomal mitochondria in immature synaptosomes was over twice as high as that in mature ones. The rates of production of synaptoplasmic acetyl-CoA, ATP-citrate lyase were 1.03, 1.40, and 0.49 nmol/min/mg protein in 1-, 10-day-old, and adult rats, respectively. 3-Bromopyruvate (0.5 m M ) inhibited pyruvate consumption by 70% and caused a complete block of citrate utilization by citrate lyase in every age group. Parameters of citrate metabolism in cerebellar synaptosomes were the same as those in cerebral ones. These data indicate that production of acetyl-CoA. from citrate in synaptoplasm may be regulated either by adaptative, age-dependent changes in permeability and carrier capacity of the mitochondrial membrane or by the inhibition of synthesis of intramitochondrial acetyl-CoA. ATP-citrate lyase activity is not a rate-limiting factor in this process. Metabolic fluxes of pyruvate to cytoplasmic citrate and acetyl-CoA. are presumably the same in both cholinergic and noncholinergic nerve endings. The significance of citrate release from intrasynaptosomal mitochondria as a regulatory step in acetylcholine synthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of clofibrate [ethyl 2-(4-chlorophenoxy)-2-methylpropionate] administered subcutaneously to rats (600 mg/kg per day for 7 days) on the hepatic concentrations of the citric acid cycle intermediates and malonyl-CoA was studied. The concentration of isocitrate increased by 40%, whereas that of oxaloacetate, succinyl-CoA and malate tended to decrease. No significant changes were found in the concentrations of 2-oxoglutarate, fumarate, succinate and citrate. A significant decrease in hepatic malonyl-CoA content was found. This reduction of malonyl-CoA may be the reason for the reported increase in hepatic fatty acid oxidation during clofibrate treatment.  相似文献   

19.
1. The effects of glyoxylate on partially purified preparations of aconitate hydratase, isocitrate dehydrogenase and oxoglutarate dehydrogenase were compared with those of oxalomalate and hydroxyoxoglutarate (obtained by condensation of glyoxylate with oxaloacetate and pyruvate respectively). 2. Glyoxylate (1mm) did not affect aconitate hydratase and isocitrate dehydrogenase, whereas oxalomalate (1mm) inhibited the enzyme activities completely. 3. Glyoxylate (0.025mm) inhibited oxoglutarate dehydrogenase irreversibly, whereas the same concentrations of oxalomalate and hydroxyoxoglutarate were ineffective. This inhibitory effect was prevented if oxoglutarate, pyruvate or oxaloacetate was mixed with the enzyme before the glyoxylate. 4. Incubation of oxoglutarate dehydrogenase with radioactive glyoxylate produced radioactive carbon dioxide; radioactivity was also recovered in the portion of the enzyme identified with thiamin pyrophosphate. 5. The behaviour of glyoxylate in producing multiple inhibitions of the citric acid cycle, either by direct interaction with oxoglutarate dehydrogenase, or by means of its condensation compounds which inhibit aconitate hydratase and isocitrate dehydrogenase, is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Ignicoccus hospitalis is an autotrophic hyperthermophilic archaeon that serves as a host for another parasitic/symbiotic archaeon, Nanoarchaeum equitans. In this study, the biosynthetic pathways of I. hospitalis were investigated by in vitro enzymatic analyses, in vivo (13)C-labeling experiments, and genomic analyses. Our results suggest the operation of a so far unknown pathway of autotrophic CO(2) fixation that starts from acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA). The cyclic regeneration of acetyl-CoA, the primary CO(2) acceptor molecule, has not been clarified yet. In essence, acetyl-CoA is converted into pyruvate via reductive carboxylation by pyruvate-ferredoxin oxidoreductase. Pyruvate-water dikinase converts pyruvate into phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), which is carboxylated to oxaloacetate by PEP carboxylase. An incomplete citric acid cycle is operating: citrate is synthesized from oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA by a (re)-specific citrate synthase, whereas a 2-oxoglutarate-oxidizing enzyme is lacking. Further investigations revealed that several special biosynthetic pathways that have recently been described for various archaea are operating. Isoleucine is synthesized via the uncommon citramalate pathway and lysine via the alpha-aminoadipate pathway. Gluconeogenesis is achieved via a reverse Embden-Meyerhof pathway using a novel type of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate aldolase. Pentosephosphates are formed from hexosephosphates via the suggested ribulose-monophosphate pathway, whereby formaldehyde is released from C-1 of hexose. The organism may not contain any sugar-metabolizing pathway. This comprehensive analysis of the central carbon metabolism of I. hospitalis revealed further evidence for the unexpected and unexplored diversity of metabolic pathways within the (hyperthermophilic) archaea.  相似文献   

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