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1.
The intraventricular administration of nerve growth factor causes a marked increase in the activity of ornithine decarboxylase in rat brain. This increase is much smaller in adrenalectomized rats. Dexamethasone and corticosterone, administered either systemically or intraventricularly, are able to restore the ability of nerve growth factor to induce ornithine decarboxylase. The steroids must be given at least three hours before the nerve growth factor to be fully effective.  相似文献   

2.
Streptozotocin-induced diabetes of 7 weeks duration increased male Sprague-Dawley rat kidney ornithine decarboxylase activity by 4.8-fold but did not affect the liver enzyme. Hydrazine treatment of 4 hr duration stimulated equally kidney ornithine decarboxylase activities of nondiabetic and diabetic rats. Hydrazine treatment increased liver ornithine decarboxylase activity in the nondiabetic rat but did not increase it in the diabetic rat. Since hydrazine stimulates ornithine decarboxylase activity prior to polyamine and protein syntheses, we speculate that the lack of hydrazine stimulation of ornithine decarboxylase in the diabetic liver may be related in part to the unrestrained gluconeogenesis and depressed Kreb's cycle activity: the latter being required for protein synthesis.  相似文献   

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

4.
1. Ornithine-2-oxo acid aminotransferase activity was inhibited by amino-oxyacetate (10(-5) M). This permitted the measurement of ornithine decarboxylase in the presence of mitochondria by using the 14CO2-trapping technique. 2. Subcellular fractionation of rat liver by differential centrifugation, followed by the assay of ornithine decarboxylase in the presence of amino oxyacetate and of marker enzymes for each fraction, demonstrated that ornithine decarboxylase was located in the cytosol. 3. The greatly increased ornithine decarboxylase activity observed after growth-hormone administration was also found to be localized in the cytosol. 4. The Km of ornithine decarboxylase from rat liver for ornithine was 28 muM. Administration of growth hormone 4 h before death did not affect the apparent affinity of ornithine decarboxylase for ornithine.  相似文献   

5.
Antiserum against ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) was prepared in rabbits using purified ornithine decarboxylase from rat liver as the antigen. Immunoglobulins from the immune sera were covalently coupled to agarose by cyanogen bromide activation. With the aid of this immunoadsorbent against the enzyme it has been shown that following partial hepatectomy and growth hormone administration, the ornithine decarboxylase activity is elevated concomitantly with the increase in the immunoreactive enzyme protein. In addition, the rapid decay in ornithine decarboxylase activity in regenerating rat liver after cycloheximide injection is accompanied by a decrease in the immunoreactive protein. These results suggest that the activity of ornithine decarboxylase in rat liver is regulated through rapid changes in de novo synthesis and degradation of the enzyme protein.  相似文献   

6.
The possibility that arginine and lysine might be decarboxylated by rat tissues was investigated. No evidence for decarboxylation of arginine could be found. Lysine decarbosylase (L-lysine carboxy-lyase, EC 4.1.1.18) activity producing CO2 and cadaverine was detected in extracts from rat ventral prostate, androgen-stimulated mouse kidney, regenerating rat liver and livers from rats pretreated with thioacetamide. These tissues all have high ornithine decarboxylase (L-ornithine carboxy-lyase, EC 4.1.1.17) activities. Lysine and ornithine decarboxylase activities were lost to similar extents on inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide and on exposure to alpha-difluoromethylornithine. A highly purified ornithine decarboxylase preparation was able to decarboxylate lysine and the ratio of ornithine to lysine decarboxylase activities was constant throughout purification. Kinetic studies of the purified preparation showed that the V for ornithine was about 4-fold greater than for lysine, but the Km for lysine (9 mM) was 100-times greater than that for ornithine (0.09 mM). These experiments indicate that all of the detectable lysine decarboxylase activity in rat and mouse tissues was due to the action of ornithine decarboxylase and that significant cadaverine production in vivo would occur only when ornithine decarboxylase activity is high and lysine concentrations substantially exceed those of ornithine.  相似文献   

7.
Highly purified preparations of rat heart ornithine decarboxylase are readily phosphorylated by rat liver type-2 casein kinase-TS at the same 54 KDa protein band which is also radiolabeled by 3H-DFMO. The reaction, which is stimulated by polylysine leads to the incorporation of up to 0.8 mol P/mol ornithine decarboxylase at seryl residue(s) included in a single 8.6 KDa CNBr fragment. Partially purified preparations of ornithine decarboxylase contain a type-2 casein kinase which promotes the phosphorylation of ornithine decarboxylase at the same CNBr fragment affected by rat liver casein kinase-TS.  相似文献   

8.
A focal freeze injury to rat cerebral cortex induces an early (less than 5 min) increase in brain ornithine decarboxylase activity and an accumulation of polyamines involving cerebral microvessels. This polyamine synthesis correlates with the abnormal increase in microvascular permeability, monitored by uptake of Evans Blue and sod. fluorescein. The ornithine decarboxylase inhibitor alpha-difluoromethylornithine suppressed the injury-induced increment in spermidine and spermine and microvascular permeability. Putrescine nullified alpha-difluoromethylornithine inhibition and restored microvessel spermidine and spermine and the pathological increase in microvascular permeability. These results indicate that polyamine synthesis is obligatory for blood-brain barrier breakdown. alpha-Difluoromethylornithine may be useful in the treatment of vasogenic brain edema.  相似文献   

9.
A human neuroblastoma cell line (Paju) grew in 10 mM difluoromethyl-ornithine, which at this concentration normally stops the growth of all mammalian cells. Ornithine decarboxylase from Paju was resistant to inhibition in vitro by difluoromethylornithine, and required 10 microM of the compound for 50% inhibition, whereas ornithine decarboxylase from SH-SY5Y cells (another human neuroblastoma) and from rat liver needed only 0.5 microM difluoromethylornithine. Paju ornithine decarboxylase also exhibited a long half-life (over eight hours) in vivo. The half-life of immunoreactive protein was significantly longer than that of the activity. The long half-life of ornithine decarboxylase in Paju cells leads to its accumulation to a specific activity of 2000 nmol/mg of protein per 30 min during rapid growth (the corresponding activity in SH-SY5Y cells was about 2.5). When partially purified ornithine decarboxylase from Paju cells was incubated with rat liver microsomes it was inactivated with a half-life of 75 min. This inactivation was accompanied by a fall in the amount of immunoreactive protein. In the same inactivating system partially purified SH-SY5Y ornithine decarboxylase had a half-life of 38 min and its half-life in vivo was 50 min. The corresponding values for rat liver ornithine decarboxylase were 45 min and 40 min, respectively. Rat liver microsomes also inactivated rat liver adenosylmethionine decarboxylase. These results suggest that Paju ornithine decarboxylase has an altered molecular conformation, rendering it resistant to (i) difluoromethylornithine and (ii) proteolytic degradation both in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: Although experimental animal data have implicated ornithine decarboxylase, a key regulatory enzyme of polyamine biosynthesis, in brain development and function, little information is available on this enzyme in normal or abnormal human brain. We examined the influence, in autopsied human brain, of postnatal development and aging, regional distribution, and Alzheimer's disease on the activity of ornithine decarboxylase. Consistent with animal data, human brain ornithine decarboxylase activity was highest in the perinatal period, declining sharply (by ∼60%) during the first year of life to values that remained generally unchanged up to senescence. In adult brain, a moderately heterogeneous regional distribution of enzyme activity was observed, with high levels in the thalamus and occipital cortex and low levels in cerebellar cortex and putamen. In the Alzheimer's disease group, mean ornithine decarboxylase activity was significantly increased in the temporal cortex (+76%), reduced in occipital cortex (−70%), and unchanged in hippocampus and putamen. In contrast, brain enzyme activity was normal in patients with the neurodegenerative disorder spinocerebellar ataxia type I. Our demonstration of ornithine decarboxylase activity in neonatal and adult human brain suggests roles for ornithine decarboxylase in both developing and mature brain function, and we provide further evidence for the involvement of abnormal polyamine system activity in Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

11.
—Acute hyperthermia produces in situ disaggregation of brain polyribosomes in infant rats, as determined by electron microscopy. Protein synthesis is inhibited in infant, but not weanling, rat brain by 45 min of hyperthermia; this inhibition is reversed during a 2 h recovery period at normothermic conditions. Hepatic protein synthesis was inhibited less than that of brain. Acute hyperthermia also leads to a profound loss of ornithine decarboxylase activity in brain; during recovery the activity of this enzyme overshoots to values greater than those of normothermic control rats. This increase is blocked by cycloheximide administration. In testis, a tissue with high ornithine decarboxylase activity, enzyme activity was not affected by hyperthermia and recovery, indicating tissue specificity for these effects.  相似文献   

12.
The activities of ornithine decarboxylase and spermidine N1-acetyltransferase started to rise in normal rat liver 4 h after the intraperitoneal injection of methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) (MGBG; 80 mg/kg). Ornithine decarboxylase had its greatest activity 24 h after a single injection of MGBG and the acetyltransferase peaked 8 h after the injection. Measurement of the apparent half-life of ornithine decarboxylase after MGBG treatment revealed a clear decrease in the decay rate of the enzyme in both normal and regenerating rat liver. MGBG slowed the decay of the transferase also in normal rat liver, as well as inhibiting its activity in vitro. The stabilization by MGBG of these two short-lived proteins involved in metabolism of polyamines should lead to their accumulation in liver, thus explaining their increased activities. In the case of ornithine decarboxylase, studies with a specific antibody against mouse kidney ornithine decarboxylase showed that the rise in ornithine decarboxylase activity after MGBG application was not due to the appearance of an immunologically different isozyme.  相似文献   

13.
Various hormonal and non-hormonal agents were tested for their ability to induce ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) in primary cultures of fetal rat liver cells that retain many of the differentiated functions of hepatocytes. The only agents to induce ornithine decarboxylase in this cell type were fetal calf serum, prostaglandin E1 and cyclic AMP derivatives. Also, the amino acid arginine would induce ornithine decarboxylase in this cell type following arginine starvation for 24 h. These observations are in contrast to the wide range of hormones, e.g. insulin, hydrocortisone, glucagon and growth hormone, than can induce ornithine decarboxylase in vivo in the adult rat liver but which are all without effect on fetal rat liver cells.  相似文献   

14.
The specific activities of ornithine decarboxylase and S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase were determined during growth of the rat epididymis. Ornithine decarboxylase activity was first detectable on day 21 and increased 10-fold in both the head and tail of epididymis prior to their rapid growth responses. Hypophysectomy reduced ornithine decarboxylase activity to undetectable levels, but enzyme activity was restored by treatment with gonadotropins or testosterone. Testosterone also induced a precocious 10-fold increase of epididymal ornithine decarboxylase in the pre-pubertal rat. In contrast, the specific activity of S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase changed little during development and merely doubled in response to hormonal treatments. The results describe a pattern of changes in these enzyme activities during hormone-dependent development of the epididymis, and suggest that ornithine decarboxylase is the rate-limiting activity in the regulation of spermidine biosynthesis by testosterone in this organ.  相似文献   

15.
Ornithine decarboxylase was purified from androgen-treated mouse kidney to homogeneity and high specific activity. The purified enzyme was utilized for production and screening of rat monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies. A rat monoclonal antibody was isolated which was capable of immunoprecipitation of native mouse kidney ornithine decarboxylase activity or the [3H]difluoromethylornithine-inactivated enzyme. Phosphorylation of mouse ornithine decarboxylase by casein kinase-II prior to immunoprecipitation led to complete loss of the epitope recognized by the monoclonal antibody but did not alter recognition by polyclonal antibody. Mammalian ornithine decarboxylase activity obtained from several species, in crude or partially purified extracts, was subjected to quantitative immunoprecipitation with monoclonal and polyclonal antibody. Polyclonal antibody immunoprecipitated all of the ornithine decarboxylase activity from every extract tested, while monoclonal antibody was capable of only limited immunoprecipitation (60-80%). Due to the inability of the monoclonal antibody to recognize ornithine decarboxylase phosphorylated in vitro by casein kinase-II and the partial immunoprecipitation of ornithine decarboxylase activity from cell extracts, a portion of the ornithine decarboxylase molecule population must exist in a phosphorylated state. This immunological evidence further confirms existing data that the enzyme exists in at least two distinct forms.  相似文献   

16.
Various hormonal and non-hormonal agents were tested for their ability to induce ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) in primary cultures of fetal rat liver cells that retain many of the differentiated functions of hepatocytes. The only agents to induce ornithine decarboxylase in this cell type were fetal calf serum, prostaglandin E1 and cyclic AMP derivatives. Also, the amino acid arginine would induce ornithine decarboxylase in this cell type following arginine starvation for 24 h. These observations are in contrast to the wide range of hormones, e.g. insulin, hydrocotisone, glucagon and growth hormone, that can induce ornithine decarboxylase in vivo in the adult rat liver but which are all without effect on fetal rat liver cells.  相似文献   

17.
In primary cultures of adult rat hepatocytes maintained in a salts/glucose medium, a more than 100-fold increase in ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17) activity was caused by asparagine and glucagon in a synergistic manner. The synthesis rate of ornithine decarboxylase was determined by [35S]methionine incorporation into the enzyme protein, and the amount of ornithine decarboxylase-mRNA was measured by hybridization with a cloned rat liver ornithine decarboxylase-cDNA. The synthesis rate of ornithine decarboxylase was stimulated more than 20-fold by asparagine and glucagon together, but the amount of ornithine decarboxylase-mRNA was increased only 3-4-fold, indicating that translational stimulation was involved in the induction process. Asparagine alone stimulated the synthesis of ornithine decarboxylase without substantial effect on the amount of ornithine decarboxylase-mRNA, whereas glucagon alone increased the amount of ornithine decarboxylase-mRNA about 3-fold without a detectable change in either enzyme activity or enzyme synthesis. Asparagine, at least in part, also suppressed degradation of ornithine decarboxylase.  相似文献   

18.
Ornithine decarboxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in polyamine synthesis, was significantly induced in female rat liver following oral administration of the pesticide mirex. After dual oral exposure (120 mg/kg of mirex; 21 and 4 hr prior to sacrifice), ornithine decarboxylase activity in rat liver cytosol was 70-fold higher than control values. A single oral dose of mirex (180 mg/kg) induced hepatic ornithine decarboxylase activity 55-fold over controls. After a single oral dose of mirex the maximal induction of ODC activity occurred at 36 hr. Mirex is an unusually potent and long-lasting inducer of rat hepatic ornithine decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

19.
Ornithine decarboxylase was present in a cryptic, complexed form in an amount approximately equivalent to that of free ornithine decarboxylase activity in adult rat heart. Addition of isoproterenol (10 mg/kg) caused a notable rise in ornithine decarboxylase activity and a simultaneous decrease in the amount of the complexed enzyme. During the period of ornithine decarboxylase decay, when cardiac putrescine content had reached high values, the level of the complex increased above that of the control. Administration of putrescine (1.5 mmol/kg, twice) or dexamethasone (4 mg/kg) produced a decrease of heart ornithine decarboxylase activity, while it did not remarkably affect the level of complexed ornithine decarboxylase, therefore raising significantly the ratio of bound to total ornithine decarboxylase. Putrescine also elicited the appearance of free antizyme, concomitantly with the disappearance of free ornithine decarboxylase activity after 3-4 h of treatment. These results indicate that a significant amount of ornithine decarboxylase occurs in an inactive form in the heart under physiological conditions and that its absolute and relative levels may vary following stimuli which affect heart ornithine decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

20.
Diamine oxidase and ornithine decarboxylase activities are shown to have a parallel distribution across rat small intestine mucosa; levels of both enzyme activities are sharply higher in mature cells in the villus tip region than in proliferating cells in the crypt areas. Histidine decarboxylase levels were not measurable in the same cell preparations and aromatic-L-amino-acid decarboxylase activity was distributed in an opposite pattern to diamine oxidase and ornithine decarboxylase. The results suggest that intestinal diamine oxidase could be involved with polyamine metabolism. The new findings for ornithine decarboxylase suggest an in vivo role for polyamines in non-proliferative cells; rat small intestinal mucosa may be an excellent model for investigating the function of polyamines in regenerating cells.  相似文献   

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