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1.
In Escherichia coli, the branch point between the Krebs cycle and the glyoxylate bypass is regulated by the phosphorylation of isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH). Phosphorylation inactivates IDH, forcing isocitrate through the bypass. This bypass is essential for growth on acetate but does not serve a useful function when alternative carbon sources, such as glucose or pyruvate, are also present. When pyruvate or glucose is added to a culture growing on acetate, the cells responded by dephosphorylating IDH and thus inhibiting the flow of isocitrate through the glyoxylate bypass. In an effort to identify the primary rate-limiting step in the response of IDH phosphorylation to alternative carbon sources, we have examined the response rates of congenic strains of E. coli which express different levels of IDH kinase/phosphatase, the bifunctional protein which catalyzes this phosphorylation cycle. The rate of the pyruvate-induced dephosphorylation of IDH was proportional to the level of IDH kinase/phosphatase, indicating that IDH kinase/phosphatase was primarily rate-limiting for dephosphorylation. However, the identity of the primary rate-limiting step appears to depend on the stimulus, since the rate of dephosphorylation of IDH in response to glucose was independent of the level of IDH kinase/phosphatase.  相似文献   

2.
During growth of Escherichia coli on acetate, isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH) is partially inactivated by phosphorylation and is thus rendered rate-limiting in the Krebs cycle so that the intracellular concentration of isocitrate rises which, in turn, permits an increased flux of carbon through the anaplerotic sequence of the glyoxylate bypass. A large number of metabolites stimulate ICDH phosphatase and inhibit ICDH kinase in the wild-type (E. coli ML308) and thus regulate the utilization of isocitrate by the two competing enzymes, ICDH and isocitrate lyase. Addition of pyruvate to acetate grown cultures triggers a rapid dephosphorylation and threefold activation of ICDH, both in the wild-type (ML308) and in mutants lacking pyruvate dehydrogenase (ML308/Pdh-), PEP synthase (ML308/Pps-) or both enzymes (ML308/Pdh-Pps-). Pyruvate stimulates the growth on acetate of those strains with an active PEP synthase but inhibits the growth of those strains that lack this enzyme. When pyruvate is exhausted, ICDH is again inactivated and the growth rate reverts to that characteristic of growth on acetate. Because pyruvate stimulates dephosphorylation of ICDH in strains with differing capabilities for pyruvate metabolism, it seems likely that pyruvate itself is a sufficient signal to activate the dephosphorylation mechanism, but this does not discount the importance of other signals under other circumstances.  相似文献   

3.
The inhibition of Escherichia coli isocitrate dehydrogenase by glyoxylate and oxaloacetate was examined. The shapes of the progress curves in the presence of the inhibitors depended on the order of addition of the assay components. When isocitrate dehydrogenase or NADP+ was added last, the rate slowly decreased until a new, inhibited, steady state was obtained. When isocitrate was added last, the initial rate was almost zero, but the rate increased slowly until the same steady-state value was obtained. Glyoxylate and oxaloacetate gave competitive inhibition against isocitrate and uncompetitive inhibition against NADP+. Product-inhibition studies showed that isocitrate dehydrogenase obeys a compulsory-order mechanism, with coenzyme binding first. Glyoxylate and oxaloacetate bind to and dissociate from isocitrate dehydrogenase slowly. These observations can account for the shapes of the progress curves observed in the presence of the inhibitors. Condensation of glyoxylate and oxaloacetate produced an extremely potent inhibitor of isocitrate dehydrogenase. Analysis of the reaction by h.p.l.c. showed that this correlated with the formation of oxalomalate. This compound decomposed spontaneously in assay mixtures, giving 4-hydroxy-2-oxoglutarate, which was a much less potent inhibitor of the enzyme. Oxalomalate inhibited isocitrate dehydrogenase competitively with respect to isocitrate and was a very poor substrate for the enzyme. The data suggest that the inhibition of isocitrate dehydrogenase by glyoxylate and oxaloacetate is not physiologically significant.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of the introduction of a synthetic bypass, providing 2-ketoglutarate to succinate conversion via the intermediate succinate semialdehyde formation, on aerobic biosynthesis of succinic acid from glucose through the oxidative branch of the tricarboxylic acid cycle in recombinant Escherichia coli strains has been studied. The strain lacking the key pathways of acetic, lactic acid and ethanol formation from pyruvate and acetyl-CoA and possessing modified system of glucose transport and phosphorylation was used as a chassis for the construction of the target recombinants. The operation of the glyoxylate shunt in the strains was precluded resulting from the deletion of the aceA, aceB, and glcB genes encoding isocitrate lyase and malate synthases A and G. The constitutive activity of isocitrate dehydrogenase was ensured due to deletion of isocitrate dehydrogenase kinase/phosphatase gene, aceK. Upon further inactivation of succinate dehydrogenase, the corresponding strain synthesized succinic acid from glucose with a molar yield of 24.9%. Activation of the synthetic bypass by the induced expression of Mycobacterium tuberculosis 2-ketoglutarate decarboxylase gene notably increased the yield of succinic acid. Functional activity of the synthetic bypass in the strain with the inactivated glyoxylate shunt and opened tricarboxylic acid cycle led to 2.7-fold increase in succinate yield from glucose. As the result, the substrate to the target product conversion reached 67.2%. The respective approach could be useful for the construction of the efficient microbial succinic acid producers.  相似文献   

5.
For Escherichia coli, growth on acetate requires the induction of the enzymes of the glyoxylate bypass, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase. The branch point between the glyoxylate bypass and the Krebs cycle is controlled by phosphorylation of isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH), inhibiting that enzyme's activity and thus forcing isocitrate through the bypass. This phosphorylation cycle is catalyzed by a bifunctional enzyme, IDH kinase/phosphatase, which is encoded by aceK. We have employed random mutagenesis to isolate novel alleles of aceK. These alleles were detected by the loss of ability to complement an aceK null mutation. The products of one class of these alleles retain IDH kinase activity but have suffered reductions in IDH phosphatase activity by factors of 200 to 400. Selective loss of the phosphatase activity also appears to have occurred in vivo, since cells expressing these alleles exhibit phenotypes which are reminiscent of strains lacking IDH; these strains are auxotrophic for glutamate. Assays of cell-free extracts confirmed that this phenotype resulted from nearly quantitative phosphorylation of IDH. The availability of these novel alleles of aceK allowed us to assess the significance of the precise control which is a characteristic of the IDH phosphorylation cycle in vivo. The fractional phosphorylation of IDH was varied by controlled expression of one of the mutant alleles, aceK3, in a wild-type strain. Reduction of IDH activity to 50% of the wild-type level did not adversely affect growth on acetate. However, further reductions inhibited growth, and growth arrest occurred when the IDH activity fell to 15% of the wild-type level. Thus, although wild-type cells maintain a precise effective IDH activity during growth on acetate, this precision is not critical.  相似文献   

6.
7.
When Escherichia coli grows on acetate, the flow of isocitrate through the glyoxylate bypass is regulated, in part, through the phosphorylation of isocitrate dehydrogenase. In addition to its role in adaptation to alternative carbon sources, this phosphorylation system responds to variation in the intracellular level of isocitrate dehydrogenase. This system can compensate for changes in the cellular level of isocitrate dehydrogenase in excess of 10-fold, maintaining a nearly constant activity for isocitrate dehydrogenase during growth on acetate. The behavior of the phosphorylation system exhibited considerable strain-specific variation. This was most clearly demonstrated using mutants which lacked the ability to phosphorylate isocitrate dehydrogenase. In two strains, mutation of the gene for isocitrate dehydrogenase kinase/phosphatase rendered the cells unable to grow on acetate. In contrast, a third strain was relatively insensitive to a mutation in this gene. This lack of phenotypic expression appears to result from a lower cellular level of isocitrate dehydrogenase in this strain which renders the phosphorylation (and consequent inhibition) of isocitrate dehydrogenase less essential. The gene for isocitrate dehydrogenase kinase/phosphatase (aceK) was located in the glyoxylate bypass operon, downstream from the genes for isocitrate lyase and malate synthase.  相似文献   

8.
To understand how enzymatic pathways respond to changing external conditions, the fluxes through the tricarboxylic acid cycle and ancillary reactions were determined under three different growth conditions in Escherichia coli. The velocities through the major steps in each pathway were measured (a) for growth on acetate alone, (b) for growth on acetate plus glucose, and (c) during the transition caused by addition of glucose to cells growing on acetate. During the transition, the carbon flow through the Krebs cycle decreased by a factor of 5 despite an increase in the growth rate of the culture. Under these conditions, the dephosphorylation of isocitrate dehydrogenase caused a 4-fold increase in its activity. This, together with the decreased rate of substrate production and the kinetic parameters of the branch point enzymes, led to a cessation of the flux through the glyoxylate shunt. The decreased rate of acetyl-CoA turnover, not an inhibition of acetate transport, caused a slower rate of acetate uptake in the presence of glucose. The modulation of protein phosphorylation and metabolite levels is one of the regulatory mechanisms which enables the bacterium to make dramatic shifts between metabolic pathways within a fraction of a doubling time.  相似文献   

9.
SYNOPSIS. Seven strains of Tetrahymena pyriformis were assayed for log phase activity of the glyoxylate bypass enzymes isocitrate lyase and malate synthase. In strains 6I, 6II, 6III, and W, isocitrate lyase was induced; in HS, neither enzyme was induced by acetate. During growth in glucose- or acetate-containing media, strains 6III and GL had 2 periods of increased glyoxylate bypass and isocitrate dehydrogenase enzyme activities. Enzyme activities reached a maximum at the end of log phase, declined until the middle of stationary phase, and then increased again to a maximum near the end of stationary phase.  相似文献   

10.
The 46,000 dalton phosphoprotein in Salmonella typhimurium is isocitrate dehydrogenase, an enzyme at the branch point between the glyoxylate and Krebs cycle pathways. The enzyme is phosphorylated by a kinase which is controlled by growth conditions; and it is dephosphorylated by a phosphatase. Acetate, ethanol, α-methylglucoside, and deoxyglucose cause an activation of the phosphorylation reaction in intact cells. A number of other compounds are found to affect the kinase and phosphatase activities. The reversible phosphorylation of isocitrate dehydrogenase plays a major role in the control of the Krebs cycle and glyoxylate pathways.  相似文献   

11.
The composition and properties of the tricarboxylic acid cycle of the microaerophilic human pathogen Helicobacter pylori were investigated in situ and in cell extracts using [1H]- and [13C]-NMR spectroscopy and spectrophotometry. NMR spectroscopy assays enabled highly specific measurements of some enzyme activities, previously not possible using spectrophotometry, in in situ studies with H. pylori, thus providing the first accurate picture of the complete tricarboxylic acid cycle of the bacterium. The presence, cellular location and kinetic parameters of citrate synthase, aconitase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, alpha-ketoglutarate oxidase, fumarate reductase, fumarase, malate dehydrogenase, and malate synthase activities in H. pylori are described. The absence of other enzyme activities of the cycle, including alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, succinyl-CoA synthetase, and succinate dehydrogenase also are shown. The H. pylori tricarboxylic acid cycle appears to be a noncyclic, branched pathway, characteristic of anaerobic metabolism, directed towards the production of succinate in the reductive dicarboxylic acid branch and alpha-ketoglutarate in the oxidative tricarboxylic acid branch. Both branches were metabolically linked by the presence of alpha-ketoglutarate oxidase activity. Under the growth conditions employed, H. pylori did not possess an operational glyoxylate bypass, owing to the absence of isocitrate lyase activity; nor a gamma-aminobutyrate shunt, owing to the absence of both gamma-aminobutyrate transaminase and succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase activities. The catalytic and regulatory properties of the H. pylori tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes are discussed by comparing their amino acid sequences with those of other, more extensively studied enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Regulation by covalent modification is a common mechanism to transmit signals in biological systems. The modifying reactions are catalyzed either by two distinct converter enzymes or by a single bifunctional enzyme (which may employ either one or two catalytic sites for its opposing activities). The reason for this diversification is unclear, but contemporary theoretical models predict that systems with distinct converter enzymes can exhibit enhanced sensitivity to input signals whereas bifunctional enzymes with two catalytic sites are believed to generate robustness against variations in system’s components. However, experiments indicate that bifunctional enzymes can also exhibit enhanced sensitivity due to the zero-order effect, raising the question whether both phenomena could be understood within a common mechanistic model. Here, I argue that this is, indeed, the case. Specifically, I show that bifunctional enzymes with two catalytic sites can exhibit both ultrasensitivity and concentration robustness, depending on the kinetic operating regime of the enzyme’s opposing activities. The model predictions are discussed in the context of experimental observations of ultrasensitivity and concentration robustness in the uridylylation cycle of the PII protein, and in the phosphorylation cycle of the isocitrate dehydrogenase, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Two strains of Klebsiella (SM6 and SM11) were isolated from rhizospheric soil that solubilized mineral phosphate by secretion of oxalic acid from glucose. Activities of enzymes for periplasmic glucose oxidation (glucose dehydrogenase) and glyoxylate shunt (isocitrate lyase and glyoxylate oxidase) responsible for oxalic acid production were estimated. In presence of succinate, phosphate solubilization was completely inhibited, and the enzymes glucose dehydrogenase and glyoxylate oxidase were repressed. Significant activity of isocitrate lyase, the key enzyme for carbon flux through glyoxylate shunt and oxalic acid production during growth on glucose suggested that it could be inducible in nature, and its inhibition by succinate appeared to be similar to catabolite repression.  相似文献   

14.
Regulation by covalent modification is a common mechanism to transmit signals in biological systems. The modifying reactions are catalyzed either by two distinct converter enzymes or by a single bifunctional enzyme (which may employ either one or two catalytic sites for its opposing activities). The reason for this diversification is unclear, but contemporary theoretical models predict that systems with distinct converter enzymes can exhibit enhanced sensitivity to input signals whereas bifunctional enzymes with two catalytic sites are believed to generate robustness against variations in system’s components. However, experiments indicate that bifunctional enzymes can also exhibit enhanced sensitivity due to the zero-order effect, raising the question whether both phenomena could be understood within a common mechanistic model. Here, I argue that this is, indeed, the case. Specifically, I show that bifunctional enzymes with two catalytic sites can exhibit both ultrasensitivity and concentration robustness, depending on the kinetic operating regime of the enzyme’s opposing activities. The model predictions are discussed in the context of experimental observations of ultrasensitivity and concentration robustness in the uridylylation cycle of the PII protein, and in the phosphorylation cycle of the isocitrate dehydrogenase, respectively.  相似文献   

15.
16.
A comparative study of the enzymes of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) and glyoxylate cycles in the mutant Yarrowia lipolytica strain N1 capable of producing -ketoglutaric acid (KGA) and citric acid showed that almost all enzymes of the TCA cycle are more active under conditions promoting the production of KGA. The only exception was citrate synthase, whose activity was higher in yeast cells producing citric acid. The production of both acids was accompanied by suppression of the glyoxylate cycle enzymes. The activities of malate dehydrogenase, aconitase, NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase, and fumarase were higher in cells producing KGA than in cells producing citric acid.  相似文献   

17.
In Escherichia coli, a single operon encodes the metabolic and regulatory enzymes of the glyoxylate bypass. The metabolic enzymes, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, are expressed from aceA and aceB, and the regulatory enzyme, isocitrate dehydrogenase kinase/phosphatase, is expressed from aceK. We cloned this operon and determined its functional map by deletion analysis. The order of the genes in this operon is aceB-aceA-aceK, with aceB proximal to the promoter, consistent with the results of previous experiments using genetic techniques. The promoter was identified by S1 nuclease mapping, and its nucleotide sequence was determined. Isocitrate lyase and malate synthase were readily identified by autoradiography after the products of the operon clone were labeled by the maxicell procedure and then resolved by electrophoresis. In contrast, isocitrate dehydrogenase kinase/phosphatase, expressed from the same plasmid, was undetectable. This observation is consistent with a striking downshift in expression between aceA and aceK.  相似文献   

18.
Acinetobacter calcoaceticus is capable of growing on acetate or compounds that are metabolized to acetate. During adaptation to growth on acetate, A. calcoaceticus B4 exhibits an increase in NADP(+)-isocitrate dehydrogenase and isocitrate lyase activities. In contrast, during adaptation to growth on acetate, Escherichia coli exhibits a decrease in NADP(+)-isocitrate dehydrogenase activity that is caused by reversible phosphorylation of specific serine residues on this enzyme. Also, in E. coli, isocitrate lyase is believed to be active only in the phosphorylated form. This phosphorylation of isocitrate lyase may regulate entry of isocitrate into the glyoxylate bypass. To understand the relationships between these two isocitrate-metabolizing enzymes and the metabolism of acetate in A. calcoaceticus B4 better, we have purified isocitrate lyase to homogeneity. Physical and kinetic characterization of the enzyme as well as the inhibitor specificity and divalent cation requirement have been examined.  相似文献   

19.
Acinetobacter calcoaceticus contains two forms of NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenases differing, among others, by their molecular weights and regulatory properties. The regulation of the high-molecular form of isocitrate dehydrogenase and of isocitrate lyase by organic acids, either belonging or related to the citrate and glyoxalate cycle, is investigated. While alpha-ketoglutarate and oxalacetate competitively inhibit the isocitrate dehydrogenase against Ds-isocitrate, glyoxylate and pyruvate were found to increase Vmax and to lower the KM value for Ds-isocitrate and NADP+. Simultaneous addition of oxalacetate and glyoxylate (not, however, addition of the nonenzymatically formed condensation product of both compound) nullified the activation of isocitrate dehydrogenase by glyoxylate, and potentiates the inhibitory effect of oxalacetate. Alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, and phosphoenolpyruvate inhibit the isocitrate lyase in a noncompetitive fashion against DS-isocitrate; L-malate, oxalacetate and glyoxylate inhibit competitively. The intermediates of the citrate and glyoxylate cycle afford additive inhibition of the isocitrate lyase. The importance of organic acids of the citrate and glyoxylate cycle and of phosphoenolpyruvate for the regulation of the citrate and glyoxylate cycle at the level of isocitrate dehydrogenase and isocitrate lyase is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
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