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1.
The reaction catalyzed by calf liver uridine diphosphate glucose synthase (pyrophosphorylase) (EC 2.7.7.9; UTP + glucose 1-phosphate = UDP-glucose + PPi) is an example of an enzymic reaction in which a nucleoside triphosphate other than ATP is the immediate source of metabolic energy. Kinetic properties of the enzyme, acting in the direction of UCP-glucose formation were investigated in vitro. The reaction was inhibited by UDP-glucose (0.072), Pi (11), UDP (1.6), UDP-xylose (0.87), UDP-glucuronate (1.3), and UDP-galacturonate (0.95). The numbers in parentheses indicate the concentration (mM) required for half-maximal inhibition under the conditions used. Other compounds tested, including ATP, ADP, and AMP, had no effect. Over a range of concentrations of UTP (0.04-0.8 MM) and UDP-glucose (0.05-0.03 mM), the reaction rate was more dependent on the concentration ratio [UDP-glucose]/[UTP] than on the absolute concentration of either compound. Comparison of the kinetic properties in vitro with estimates of metabolite levels in vivo suggests that (1) the enzyme operates in a range far from its maximal rate, and (2) the concentrations of glucose 1-phosphate and Pi and the ratio [UDP-glucose]/[UTP] may be the most important determinants of UDP-glucose synthase activity.  相似文献   

2.
A new sensitive method is described for glucose 1-phosphate analysis. The key reaction is the pyrophosphorolysis of UDP-glucose catalyzed by uridine 5′-diphosphoglucose pyrophosphorylase. The reaction product, [14C]UDP-glucose, is separated from [14C]UTP by adsorbing [14C]UTP selectively onto polyethyleneimine cellulose or by separating both labeled compounds on one-dimensional polyethyleneimine thin-layer chromatograms. The sensitivity of the method for glucose 1-phosphate analysis is 5 pmol. The method has been successfully employed to monitor the level of glucose 1-phosphate in early germination of wheat embryos.  相似文献   

3.
UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase synthesizes UDP-glucose from UTP and glucose 1-phosphate and exists in almost all species. Most bacteria possess a GalU-type UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, whereas many cyanobacteria species do not. In certain cyanobacteria, UDP-glucose is used as a substrate for synthesis of exopolysaccharide cellulose in spite of the absence of GalU-type UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. Therefore, there should be an uncharacterized UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in cyanobacteria. Here, we show that all cyanobacteria possess a non-GalU-type bacterial UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, i.e., CugP, a novel family in the nucleotide triphosphate transferase superfamily. The expressed recombinant Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 CugP had pyrophosphorylase activity that was highly specific for UTP and glucose 1-phosphate. The fact that the CugP gene cannot be deleted completely in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 suggests its central role as the substrate supplier for galactolipid synthesis. Galactolipids are major constituents of the photosynthetic thylakoid membrane and important for photosynthetic activity. Based on phylogenetic analysis, this CugP-type UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase may have recently been horizontally transferred to certain noncyanobacteria.  相似文献   

4.
Genetic transformation using Agrobacterium rhizogenes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (EC 2.7.7.9) has been highly purified from the plant fraction of soybean ( Glycine max L. Merr. cv Williams) nodules. The purified enzyme gave a single polypeptide band following sodium docecyl sulphate polyacryla-mide gel electrophoresis, but was resolved into three bands of activity in non-denaturing gels. The enzyme appeared to be a monomer of molecular weight between 30 and 40 kDa. UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase had optimum activity at pH 8.5 and displayed typical hyperbolic kinetics. The enzyme had a requirement for divalent metal ions, and was highly specific for the substrates pyrophosphate and UDP-glucose in the pyrophosphorolysis direction, and glucose-1-phosphate and UTP in the direction of UDP-glucose synthesis. The Km values were 0.19 m M and 0.07 m M for pyrophosphate and UDP-glucose, respectively, and 0.23 m M and 0.11 m M for glucose-1-phosphate and UTP. The maximum velocity in the pyrophosphorolysis direction was almost double that for the reverse reaction. UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase did not appear to be subject to a high degree of fine control, and activity in vivo may be regulated mainly by the availability of the substrates.  相似文献   

5.
A procedure for the preparation of crystalline UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is described. K(s) values for UDP-glucose and UTP were determined as 7 and 20 muM respectively, the latter being confirmed by three methods. By assuming an octameric structure, 1 mol of enzyme subunit bound 1 mol of substrate. The metal-ion activator, Mg2+, did not affect the equilibrium between nucleotide and enzyme. A substrate analogue, alphabeta-methylene-UTP, was synthesized and had the same K(s) value as UTP. In its presence, the K(s) for glucose 1-phosphate decreased by two orders of magnitude, thus confirming a compulsory binding order and excluding an uridylated enzyme intermediate. The results are discussed with respect to their implications in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase from potato tuber was purified 243-fold to a nearly homogeneous state with a recovery of 30%. The purified enzyme utilized UDP-glucose, but not ADP-glucose, as the substrate, and was not activated by 3-phosphoglyceric acid. Product inhibition studies revealed the sequential binding of UDP-glucose and MgPPi and the sequential release of glucose-1-phosphate and MgUTP, in this order. Analyses of the effects of Mg2+ on the enzyme activity suggest that the MgPPi and MgUTP complexes are the actual substrates for the enzyme reaction, and that free UTP acts as an inhibitor. The enzyme exists probably as the monomer of an approximately 50-kDa polypeptide with a blocked amino terminus. For structural comparison, 29 peptides isolated from a tryptic digest of the S-carboxymethylated enzyme were sequenced. The results show that the potato tuber enzyme is homologous to UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase from slime mold, but not to ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase from Escherichia coli, and provide structural evidence that UDP-glucose and ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase are two different protein entities.  相似文献   

7.
The concentration of cytoplasmic free pyrophosphate was calculated in freeze-clamped livers of rats from the measured concentration of reactants and K(eq.) of the UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase reaction (UDP-alpha-d-glucose 1-phosphate uridylyltransferase, EC 2.7.7.9). The K(eq.) of the UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase reaction was redetermined at 38 degrees C, pH7.0, I=0.25mol/l and free [Mg(2+)]=1mm, and was 4.55 in the direction of glucose 1-phosphate formation. The activity of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in rat liver was between 46 and 58mumol of glucose 1-phosphate formed/min per g fresh wt. in the four dietary conditions studied. A fluorimetric assay with enzymic cycling was developed for the measurement of glucose 1-phosphate in HClO(4) extracts of rat liver. The calculated free cytoplasmic PP(i) concentration in nmol/g fresh wt. of liver was 2.3+/-0.3 in starved, 3.8+/-0.4 in fed, 4.9+/-0.6 in meal-fed and 5.2+/-0.4 in sucrose-re-fed animals. These values agree well with recently determined direct measurements of total PP(i) in rat liver and suggest that there is not a large amount of bound or metabolically inert PP(i) in rat liver. The cytoplasmic [ATP]/[AMP][PP(i)] ratio is 10(3) times the cytoplasmic [ATP]/[ADP][P(i)] ratio and varies differently with dietary state. The reaction PP(i)+H(2)O-->2P(i) catalysed by inorganic pyrophosphatase (EC 3.6.1.1) does not attain near-equilibrium in vivo. PP(i) should be considered as one of the group of small inorganic ions which is metabolically active and capable of exerting a controlling function in a number of important metabolic reactions.  相似文献   

8.
We report the functional characterization of the galF gene of strain VW187 ( Escherichia coli O7:K1), which encodes a polypeptide displaying structural features common to bacterial UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylases, including the E. coli GalU protein. These enzymes catalyse a reversible reaction converting UTP and glucose-1-phosphate into UDP-glucose and PPi. We show that, although the GalF protein is expressed in vivo , GalF-expressing plasmids cannot complement the phenotype of a galU mutant and extracts from this mutant which only produces GalF are enzymatically inactive. In contrast, the presence of GalU and GalF proteins in the same cell-free extract caused a significant reduction in the rate of pyrophosphorolysis (conversion of UDP-glucose into glucose-1-phosphate) but no significant effect on the kinetics of synthesis of UDP-glucose. The presence of GalF also increased the thermal stability of the enzyme in vitro. The effect of GalF in the biochemical properties of the UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase required the co-synthesis of GalF and GalU, suggesting that they could interact as components of the oligomeric enzyme. The physical interaction of GalU and GalF was demonstrated in vivo by the co-expression of both proteins as fusion products using a yeast two-hybrid system. Furthermore, using a pair of galF  +/ galU + and galF/galU  + isogenic strains, we demonstrated that the presence of GalF is associated with an increased concentration of intracellular UDP-glucose as well as with an enhancement of the thermal stability of the UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in vivo . We propose that GalF is a non-catalytic subunit of the UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase modulating the enzyme activity to increase the formation of UDP-glucose, and this function is important for bacterial adaptation to conditions of stress.  相似文献   

9.
We describe a method for the detection and quantification of nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK). NDPK catalyzes the transfer of the gamma-phosphate of cytidine 5'-triphosphate on uridine 5'-diphosphate (UDP) to produce uridine 5'-triphosphate (UTP). The method uses a nonradioactive coupled enzyme assay in which UTP produced by NDPK is utilized by UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. This latter enzyme synthesizes UDP-glucose and inorganic phosphate in the presence of glucose 1-phosphate. UDP-glucose is detected at 260 nm after separation of the reaction mixture by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) on a strong anion-exchange column. The assay is reliable, specific, and linear with respect to time and enzyme amount. Using 15 min incubation time, the method allows detection of NDPK activity below 10 pmol/min. It can be used to analyze kinetic behavior and to quantify NDPK from a wide variety of animal, microbial, and plant sources. It also provides an alternative to radiometric assays and an improvement on pyruvate kinase-linked spectrophotometric assays, which can be hampered by pigments present in crude extracts. Furthermore, we show that the HPLC method developed here can be directly used to assay enzymes for which UDP-glucose is a product.  相似文献   

10.
Comparative time-course studies of glycogen synthesis from glucose 6-phosphate, glucose 1-phosphate and UDP-glucose show that glucose 1-phosphate forms glycogen at an initial rate faster than that obtained with glucose 6-phosphate and UDP-glucose. After 5min. the rates from glucose monophosphates are considerably slower. 2,4-Dinitrophenol decreases glycogen synthesis from both glucose monophosphates, whereas arsenate and EDTA increase glycogen synthesis from glucose 1-phosphate and inhibit the reaction from glucose 6-phosphate, galactose and galactose 1-phosphate. Mitochondria-free pigeon liver cytoplasmic fraction forms less glycogen from glucose monophosphates than does the whole homogenate. 2-Deoxyglucose 6-phosphate inhibits glycogen synthesis from glucose monophosphates. Glycogen formation from UDP-glucose is relatively unaffected by dinitrophenol, by arsenate, by EDTA, by 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate and by the removal of mitochondria from the whole homogenate.  相似文献   

11.
The dense glycocalyx surrounding the protozoan parasite Leishmania is an essential virulence factor. It protects the parasite from hostile environments in the sandfly vector and mammalian host and supports steps of development and invasion. Therefore, new therapeutic concepts concentrate on disturbing glycocalyx biosynthesis. Deletion of genes involved in the metabolism of galactose and mannose have been shown to drastically reduce Leishmania virulence. Here we report the identification of Leishmania major UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (UGP). UGP catalyzes the formation of UDP-glucose from glucose 1-phosphate and UTP. This activation step enables glucose to enter metabolic pathways and is crucial for the activation of galactose. UDP-galactose is made from UDP-glucose by nucleotide-donor transfer to galactose 1-phosphate or by epimerization of the glucose moiety. Isolated in a complementation cloning approach, the activity of L. major UGP was proven in vitro. Moreover, purified protein was used to investigate enzyme kinetics, quaternary organization, and binding of ligands. Whereas sequestration by oligomerization is a known regulatory mechanism for eukaryotic UGPs, the recombinant as well as native L. major UGP migrated as monomer in size exclusion chromatography and in accord with this showed simple Michaelis-Menten kinetics toward all substrates. In saturation transfer difference (STD)-NMR studies, we clearly demonstrated that the molecular geometry at position 4 of glucose is responsible for substrate specificity. Furthermore, the gamma-phosphate group of UTP is essential for binding and for induction of the open conformation, which then allows entry of glucose 1-phosphate. Our data provide the first direct proof for the ordered bi-bi mechanism suggested in earlier studies.  相似文献   

12.
UDP glucose is an important intermediate in numerous metabolic pathways (1). It is therefore not surprising that the enzyme which catalyses its formation, UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is ubiquitous (see (2) for references). The reaction catalysed by UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is:
glucose-1-P + UTP ? UDP glucose + PPi
and the enzyme has been assayed either in the direction of pyrophosphorolysis of the nucleoside diphosphate sugar or in the direction of UDP-glucose formation.Spectrophotometric assays of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in the direction of pyrophosphorolysis are often nonspecific by virtue of the nature of the coupling enzymes (3), whereas similar assays in the direction of UDPG formation may lack the expected stoichiometry of reaction (3,4). Radioisotopic techniques for the assay of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (5,6) are to be preferred to spectrophotometric assays both for their increased sensitivity and specificity. However, these methods depend upon the specific isolation of the radioactive UDP glucose formed, either by a somewhat tedious adsorption to and elution from charcoal (5) or a hazardous precipitation using mercuric acetate. For routine assay of a large number of samples it would be advantageous to replace these techniques with one involving a safer, more rapid method of radioactive UDP-glucose isolation. The radiochemical assay described in this note utilises the binding of UDP glucose to commercially available, anion-exchange filter-paper discs for this purpose. Although the technique was designed to assay UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in cell extracts of the cellular slime mould, Dictyostelium discoideum, it should be applicable to most sources of the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
The Leishmania parasite glycocalyx is rich in galactose-containing glycoconjugates that are synthesized by specific glycosyltransferases that use UDP-galactose as a glycosyl donor. UDP-galactose biosynthesis is thought to be predominantly a de novo process involving epimerization of the abundant nucleotide sugar UDP-glucose by the UDP-glucose 4-epimerase, although galactose salvage from the environment has been demonstrated for Leishmania major. Here, we present the characterization of an L. major UDP-sugar pyrophosphorylase able to reversibly activate galactose 1-phosphate into UDP-galactose thus proving the existence of the Isselbacher salvage pathway in this parasite. The ordered bisubstrate mechanism and high affinity of the enzyme for UTP seem to favor the synthesis of nucleotide sugar rather than their pyrophosphorolysis. Although L. major UDP-sugar pyrophosphorylase preferentially activates galactose 1-phosphate and glucose 1-phosphate, the enzyme is able to act on a variety of hexose 1-phosphates as well as pentose 1-phosphates but not hexosamine 1-phosphates and hence presents a broad in vitro specificity. The newly identified enzyme exhibits a low but significant homology with UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylases and conserved in particular is the pyrophosphorylase consensus sequence and residues involved in nucleotide and phosphate binding. Saturation transfer difference NMR spectroscopy experiments confirm the importance of these moieties for substrate binding. The described leishmanial enzyme is closely related to plant UDP-sugar pyrophosphorylases and presents a similar substrate specificity suggesting their common origin.  相似文献   

14.
A procedure for the determination of picomole amounts of uracil nucleotides is described. The key reaction is the condensation of UTP and [14C]glucose 1-phosphate catalyzed by uridine 5′-diphosphoglucose pyrophosphorylase yielding UDP-[14C]glucose. The product is determined by selective adsorption onto charcoal in the presence of 0.8 m Trizma Base. UDP is measured as UTP after its conversion in an incubation with excess ATP and nucleoside diphosphate kinase. Similarly, UMP is analyzed after it is converted to UDP by nucleoside monophosphate kinase. The uracil nucleotide content of germinated wheat embryos had been determined with this method.  相似文献   

15.
Y Kazuta  Y Omura  M Tagaya  K Nakano  T Fukui 《Biochemistry》1991,30(35):8541-8545
Uridine di- and triphosphopyridoxals were used to probe the substrate-binding site in potato tuber UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (EC 2.7.7.9). The enzyme was rapidly inactivated in time- and dose-dependent manners when incubated with either reagent followed by reduction with sodium borohydride. The inactivations were almost completely retarded by UDP-Glc and UTP but only slightly by alpha-D-glucose 1-phosphate. The complete inactivation corresponded to the incorporation of about 0.9-1.0 mol of either reagent per mole of enzyme monomer. Both reagents appear to bind specifically to the UDP-Glc-(UTP)-binding site. Structural studies of the labeled enzymes revealed that the two reagents modified the identical set of five lysyl residues (Lys-263, Lys-329, Lys-367, Lys-409, and Lys-410), in which Lys-367 was most prominently modified. The ratios of the amounts of labels incorporated into these residues were similar for the two reagents. Furthermore, linear relationships were observed between the residual activities and the amounts of incorporation into each lysyl residue. We conclude that the five lysyl residues are located at or near the UDP-Glc(UTP)-binding site of potato tuber UDP-Glc pyrophosphorylase and that the modification of these residues occurs in a mutually exclusive manner, leading to the inactivation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Giardia lamblia is a pathogen of humans and other vertebrates. The synthesis of glycogen and of structural oligo and polysaccharides critically determine the parasite's capacity for survival and pathogenicity. These characteristics establish that UDP-glucose is a relevant metabolite, as it is a main substrate to initiate varied carbohydrate metabolic routes.

Results

Herein, we report the molecular cloning of the gene encoding UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase from genomic DNA of G. lamblia, followed by its heterologous expression in Escherichia coli. The purified recombinant enzyme was characterized to have a monomeric structure. Glucose-1-phosphate and UTP were preferred substrates, but the enzyme also used galactose-1-phosphate and TTP. The catalytic efficiency to synthesize UDP-galactose was significant. Oxidation by physiological compounds (hydrogen peroxide and nitric oxide) inactivated the enzyme and the process was reverted after reduction by cysteine and thioredoxin. UDP-N-acetyl-glucosamine pyrophosphorylase, the other UTP-related enzyme in the parasite, neither used galactose-1-phosphate nor was affected by redox modification.

Conclusions

Our results suggest that in G. lamblia the UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is regulated by oxido-reduction mechanism. The enzyme exhibits the ability to synthesize UDP-glucose and UDP-galactose and it plays a key role providing substrates to glycosyl transferases that produce oligo and polysaccharides.

General significance

The characterization of the G. lamblia UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase reinforces the view that in protozoa this enzyme is regulated by a redox mechanism. As well, we propose a new pathway for UDP-galactose production mediated by the promiscuous UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase of this organism.  相似文献   

17.
Potato tuber UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (EC 2.7.7.9) catalyzes the reversible uridylyl transfer from UDP-glucose to MgPPi forming glucose 1-phosphate and MgUTP, according to an ordered bi-bi mechanism in which UDP-glucose and MgPPi bind in this order. To probe the active site of this enzyme, we have applied pyridoxal 5'-diphosphate, a reactive PPi analogue. The enzyme was rapidly inactivated when incubated with the reagent in the presence of Mg2+ followed by sodium borohydride reduction. The degree of the inactivation was decreased by MgUTP, MgPPi, and glucose 1-phosphate, but enhanced by UDP-glucose. The enhancement was prevented by co-addition of Pi, the competitive inhibitor with respect to PPi. The complete inactivation corresponded to the incorporation of 0.9-1.1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme monomer. In the presence of UDP-glucose, labels were almost exclusively incorporated into Lys-329. Thus, this residue may be located near the bound MgPPi and its modification is promoted, probably through conformational changes, by the binding of UDP-glucose to the enzyme. The results of the modification by the same reagent of the mutant enzymes in which Lys-329 and Lys-263 are individually replaced by Gln suggest the roles of these lysyl residues in the binding of MgPPi and in the UDP-glucose-induced conformational changes, respectively.  相似文献   

18.
Levels of fructose 6-phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate were measured in chloroplasts which had been isolated non-aqueously from leaves of various plants. a large decrease in the ratio of glucose 6-phosphate to fructose 6-phosphate in the light indicated considerable displacement of the hexosephosphate isomerase reaction from equilibrium in leaves of spinach and red beet which were photosynthesizing at high rates. The decrease in the ratio of glucose 6-phosphate to fructose 6-phosphate was correlated with an increase in the chloroplastic level of 3-phosphoglyceric acid, which proved to be a competitive inhibitor of chloroplast hexosephosphate isomerase. Other metabolites, especially the product of the reaction, glucose 6-phosphate, and ions in concentrations as present in the stroma under natural conditions, cause a further reduction in the rate of the forward reaction of the hexosemonophosphate isomerase. When the concentration of O2 in air was decreased from 21 to 2%, both the rate of leaf photosynthesis and the ratio of glucose 6-phosphate to fructose 6-phosphate increased, whereas the concentration of 3-phosphoglyceric acid and starch synthesis decreased. The results are explained in terms of activation of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase and of inhibition of hexosephosphate isomerase by 3-phosphoglyceric acid. Hexosephosphate isomerase appears to assume a rate-limiting function in starch synthesis in the light when ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase is activated.  相似文献   

19.
1. The involvement of cysteine residues in the catalytic mechanism of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase was suggested by the rapid inactivation of the enzyme by N-ethylmaleimide, even at 1:1 reagent/enzyme stoichiometric ratios. 2. The inactivation is largely prevented by uridine substrates (UDP-glucose and UTP) in agreement with the assumption that the reactive cysteine is located at the active site.  相似文献   

20.
Expanding the scope of stereoselectivity is of current interest in enzyme catalysis. In this study, using error-prone polymerase chain reaction (PCR), a thermostable adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase) from Thermus caldophilus GK-24 has been altered to improve its catalytic activity toward enatiomeric substrates including [glucose-1-phosphate (G-1-P) + uridine triphosphate (UTP)] and [N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphate (GlcNAc) + UTP] to produce uridine diphosphate (UDP)-glucose and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine, respectively. To elucidate the amino acids responsible for catalytic activity, screening for UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (UGPase) and UDP-N-acetylglucosamine pyrophosphorylase (UNGPase) activities was carried out. Among 656 colonies, two colonies showed UGPase activities and three colonies for UNGPase activities. DNA sequence analyses and enzyme assays showed that two mutant clones (H145G) specifically have an UGPase activity, indicating that the changed glycine residue from histidine has the base specificity for UTP. Also, three double mutants (H145G/A325V) showed a UNGPase, and A325 was associated with sugar binding, conferring the specificity for the sugar substrates and V325 of the mutant appears to be indirectly involved in the binding of the N-acetylamine group of N-acetylglucosmine-1-phosphate. The authors Hosung Sohn and Yong-Sam Kim equally contributed to the study.  相似文献   

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