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1.
The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was isolated from the mitochondria of broccoli florets and shown to be similar in its reaction mechanism to the complexes from other sources. Three families of parallel lines were obtained for the initial velocity patterns, indicating a multisite ping-pong mechanism. The apparent Km values obtained were 321 ± 18, 148 ± 13, and 7.2 ± 0.51 μm for pyruvate, NAD+, and CoA, respectively. Product inhibition studies using acetyl-CoA and NADH yielded results which were in agreement with those predicted by the multisite ping-pong mechanism. Acetyl-CoA and NADH were found to be competitive inhibitors versus CoA and NAD+, respectively. All other substrate-product combinations showed uncompetitive inhibition patterns, except for acetyl-CoA versus NAD+. Among various metabolites tested, only hydroxypyruvate (Ki = 0.11 mM) and glyoxylate (Ki = 3.27 mM) were found to be capable of inhibiting the broccoli enzyme to a significant degree. Initial velocity patterns using Mg2+? or Ca2+-thiamine pyrophosphate and pyruvate as the variable substrate were found to be consistent with an equilibrium ordered mechanism where Mg? or Ca-thiamine pyrophosphate bind first, with dissociation constants of 33.8 and 3 μm, respectively. The Mg- or Ca-thiamine pyrophosphate complexes also dissociated rapidly from the enzyme complex.  相似文献   

2.
Simultaneous measurements were made of lipogenesis and pyruvate dehydrogenase activity in segments of rat epididymal adipose tissue incubated with saturating amounts of [U-14C]glucose and insulin. Glucose was converted to fatty acids at a rate only 64–79% of that permitted by the tissue's content of the active form of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDHa). Addition of either of the electron acceptors, phenazine methosulfate (10 μm) or N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (50 μm), increased lipogenesis until it equalled the PDHa activity of the tissue. Pyruvate release was increased 2-fold or more by the electron acceptors, suggesting that the increase in lipogenesis might have resulted from an increase in the intracellular pyruvate levels such that PDHa became saturated with substrate. Higher levels of the electron acceptors decreased PDHa activity, and reduced lipogenesis correspondingly. The data suggest that the maximal rate of lipogenesis in the presence of glucose and insulin is limited by the inability of the tissue to elevate pyruvate levels sufficiently to saturate PDHa. Although glycerol release was increased by either electron acceptor and insulin partially overcame this effect, the effects of the electron acceptors on PDHa activity could not be attributed to an increase in lipolysis.  相似文献   

3.
Mechanisms regulating adipose tissue pyruvate dehydrogenase   总被引:21,自引:20,他引:1  
1. Isolated rat epididymal fat-cell mitochondria showed an inverse relationship between ATP content and pyruvate dehydrogenase activity consistent with competitive inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase by ADP. At constant ATP concentration pyruvate rapidly activated pyruvate dehydrogenase in fat-cell mitochondria, an observation consistent with inhibition of fat-cell pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase by pyruvate. Pyruvate dehydrogenase in fat-cell mitochondria was also activated by nicotinate (100mum) and by extramitochondrial Na(+) (replacing K(+)) but not by ouabain or insulin. 2. In rat epididymal fat-pads incubated in vitro pyruvate dehydrogenase was activated by addition of insulin in the absence of substrate or in the presence of glucose (10mm) or fructose (10mm). Glucose and fructose activated the dehydrogenase in the absence or in the presence of insulin, and pyruvate also activated in the absence of insulin. It is concluded that extracellular glucose, fructose and pyruvate may activate the dehydrogenase by raising intracellular pyruvate and that insulin may activate the dehydrogenase by some other mechanism. 3. Ouabain (300mum) and medium in which K(+) was replaced by Na(+), activated pyruvate dehydrogenase in epididymal fat-pads. Prostaglandin E(1) (1mug/ml), 5-methylpyrazole-3-carboxylate (10mum) and nicotinate (10mum), which are as effective as insulin as inhibitors of lipolysis and which like insulin lower tissue concentration of cyclic AMP (adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate), did not activate pyruvate dehydrogenase. Higher concentrations of prostaglandin E(1) (10mug/ml) and nicotinate (100mum) produced some activation of the dehydrogenase. 4. It is concluded that the activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase by insulin is not due to the antilipolytic effect of the hormone and that the action of insulin in lowering adipose-cell concentrations of cyclic AMP does not afford an obvious explanation for the effect of the hormone on pyruvate dehydrogenase. The possibility that the effects of insulin, ouabain and K(+)-free medium may be mediated by Ca(2+) is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Rat heart mitochondria have been incubated with concentrations of pyruvate from 50 to 500 μm as substrate in the presence or absence of an optimal concentration of palmitoylcarnitine and with respiration limited by phosphate acceptor. The rate of pyruvate utilization has been determined and compared with the amount of active (dephosphorylated) pyruvate dehydrogenase measured in samples of mitochondria taken throughout the experiments and assayed under Vmax conditions. At a given pyruvate concentration, differences in pyruvate utilization as a proportion of the content of active pyruvate dehydrogenase are attributed to differences in feed-back inhibition and interpreted in terms of the ratios of mitochondrial NAD+NADH and CoA/acetyl-CoA. Under most conditions, differences in inhibition can be attributed to differences in the CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio. Feed-back inhibition is very pronounced in the presence of palmitoylcarnitine. These parameters are also examined in the presence of dichloroacetate, used to raise the steady-state levels of active pyruvate dehydrogenase in the absence of changing the pyruvate concentration, and in the presence of various ratios of carnitine/acetylcarnitine, which predominantly change the mitochondrial CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio. The latter experiment provides evidence that a decrease in mitochondrial NAD+NADH ratio from 3.5 to 2.2 essentially balances an increase in CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio from 0.67 to 12 in modulating enzyme interconversion, whereas the change in CoA/acetyl-CoA ratio is preponderant in effecting feed-back inhibition. Increasing the free Ca2+ concentration of incubation media from 10?7 to 10?6m using CaCl2-ethylene glycol bis(β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N′-tetraacetic acid buffers is shown to increase the steady-state level of active pyruvate dehydrogenase in intact mitochondria, in the absence of added ionophores. Moreover, this activation is reversible. Effects of Ca2+ ions are dependent upon the poise of the enzyme interconversion system and were only seen in these experiments in the presence of palmitoylcarnitine.  相似文献   

5.
1. Monochloroacetate, dichloroacetate, trichloroacetate, difluoroacetate, 2-chloropropionate, 2,2'-dichloropropionate and 3-chloropropionate were inhibitors of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase. Dichloroacetate was also shown to inhibit rat heart pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase. The inhibition was mainly non-competitive with respect to ATP. The concentration required for 50% inhibition was approx. 100mum for the three chloroacetates, difluoroacetate and 2-chloropropionate and 2,2'-dichloropropionate. Dichloroacetamide was not inhibitory. 2. Dichloroacetate had no significant effect on the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate phosphatase when this was maximally activated by Ca(2+) and Mg(2+). 3. Dichloroacetate did not increase the catalytic activity of purified pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase. 4. Dichloroacetate, difluoroacetate, 2-chloropropionate and 2,2'-dichloropropionate increased the proportion of the active (dephosphorylated) form of pyruvate dehydrogenase in rat heart mitochondria with 2-oxoglutarate and malate as respiratory substrates. Similar effects of dichloroacetate were shown with kidney and fat-cell mitochondria. Glyoxylate, monochloroacetate and dichloroacetamide were inactive. 5. Dichloroacetate increased the proportion of active pyruvate dehydrogenase in the perfused rat heart, isolated rat diaphragm and rat epididymal fat-pads. Difluoroacetate and dichloroacetamide were also active in the perfused heart, but glyoxylate, monochloroacetate and trichloroacetate were inactive. 6. Injection of dichloroacetate into rats starved overnight led within 60 min to activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase in extracts from heart, psoas muscle, adipose tissue, kidney and liver. The blood concentration of lactate fell within 15 min to reach a minimum after 60 min. The blood concentration of glucose fell after 90 min and reached a minimum after 120 min. There was no significant change in plasma glycerol concentration. 7. In epididymal fatpads dichloroacetate inhibited incorporation of (14)C from [U-(14)C]glucose, [U-(14)C]fructose and from [U-(14)C]lactate into CO(2) and glyceride fatty acid. 8. It is concluded that the inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase by dichloroacetate may account for the activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase and pyruvate oxidation which it induces in isolated rat heart and diaphragm muscles, subject to certain assumptions as to the distribution of dichloroacetate across the plasma membrane and the mitochondrial membrane. 9. It is suggested that activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase by dichloroacetate could contribute to its hypoglycaemic effect by interruption of the Cori and alanine cycles. 10. It is suggested that the inhibitory effect of dichloroacetate on fatty acid synthesis in adipose tissue may involve an additional effect or effects of the compound.  相似文献   

6.
Procedures are described for isolating highly purified porcine liver pyruvate and α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complexes. Rabbit serum stabilized these enzyme complexes in mitochondrial extracts, apparently by inhibiting lysosomal proteases. The complexes were purified by a three-step procedure involving fractionation with polyethylene glycol, pelleting through 12.5% sucrose, and a second fractionation under altered conditions with polyethylene glycol. Sedimentation equilibrium studies gave a molecular weight of 7.2 × 106 for the liver pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Kinetic parameters are presented for the reaction catalyzed by the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and for the regulatory reactions catalyzed by the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase and pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase. For the overall catalytic reaction, the competitive Ki to Km ratio for NADH versus NAD+ and acetyl CoA versus CoA were 4.7 and 5.2, respectively. Near maximal stimulations of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase by NADH and acetyl CoA were observed at NADH:NAD+ and acetyl CoA:CoA ratios of 0.15 and 0.5, respectively. The much lower ratios required for enhanced inactivation of the complex by pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase than for product inhibition indicate that the level of activity of the regulatory enzyme is not directly determined by the relative affinity of substrates and products of catalytic sites in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. In the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase reaction, K+ and NH+4 decreased the Km for ATP and the competitive inhibition constants for ADP and (β,γ-methylene)adenosine triphosphate. Thiamine pyrophosphate strongly inhibited kinase activity. A high concentration of ADP did not alter the degree of inhibition by thiamine pyrophosphate nor did it increase the concentration of thiamine pyrophosphate required for half-maximal inhibition.  相似文献   

7.
Regulatory mutants of E. coli which synthesize the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex constitutively can be selected in strains lacking phosphoenol pyruvate synthase by taking advantage of the regulatory properties of the glyoxylate cycle operon. Constitutivity can lead to production of still more pyruvate dehydrogenase complex than has been found before as “fully-induced” synthesis; in one constitutive mutant about 5% of the total soluble protein is enzyme complex. The altered regulatory element in all nine mutants is closely linked to the structural genes for the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. There does not appear to be a common regulatory element involved in the control of glyoxylate cycle enzymes and pyruvate dehydrogenase synthesis. Both systems share only the same effector, pyruvate, which represses the synthesis of glyoxylate cycle enzymes and induces that of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex.  相似文献   

8.
In vitro, the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is sensitive to product inhibition by NADH and acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA). Based upon Km and Ki relationships, it was suggested that NADH can play a primary role in control of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity in vivo (JA Miernyk, DD Randall [1987] Plant Physiol 83:306-310). We have now extended the in vitro studies of product inhibition by assaying pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity in situ, using purified intact mitochondria from green pea (Pisum sativum) seedlings. In situ activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is inhibited when mitochondria are incubated with malonate. In some instances, isolated mitochondria show an apparent lack of coupling during pyruvate oxidation. The inhibition by malonate, and the apparent lack of coupling, can both be explained by an accumulation of acetyl-CoA. Inhibition could be alleviated by addition of oxalacetate, high levels of malate, or l-carnitine. The CoA pool in nonrespiring mitochondria was approximately 150 micromolar, but doubled during pyruvate oxidation, when 60 to 95% of the total was in the form of acetyl-CoA. Our results indicate that in situ activity of the mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase complex can be controlled in part by acetyl-CoA product inhibition.  相似文献   

9.
Regulation of heart muscle pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase   总被引:31,自引:25,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
1. The activity of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase was assayed by the incorporation of [(32)P]phosphate from [gamma-(32)P]ATP into the dehydrogenase complex. There was a very close correlation between this incorporation and the loss of pyruvate dehydrogenase activity with all preparations studied. 2. Nucleoside triphosphates other than ATP (at 100mum) and cyclic 3':5'-nucleotides (at 10mum) had no significant effect on kinase activity. 3. The K(m) for thiamin pyrophosphate in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction was 0.76mum. Sodium pyrophosphate, adenylyl imidodiphosphate, ADP and GTP were competitive inhibitors against thiamin pyrophosphate in the dehydrogenase reaction. 4. The K(m) for ATP of the intrinsic kinase assayed in three preparations of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase was in the range 13.9-25.4mum. Inhibition by ADP and adenylyl imidodiphosphate was predominantly competitive, but there was nevertheless a definite non-competitive element. Thiamin pyrophosphate and sodium pyrophosphate were uncompetitive inhibitors against ATP. It is suggested that ADP and adenylyl imidodiphosphate inhibit the kinase mainly by binding to the ATP site and that the adenosine moiety may be involved in this binding. It is suggested that thiamin pyrophosphate, sodium pyrophosphate, adenylyl imidodiphosphate and ADP may inhibit the kinase by binding through pyrophosphate or imidodiphosphate moieties at some site other than the ATP site. It is not known whether this is the coenzyme-binding site in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction. 5. The K(m) for pyruvate in the pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction was 35.5mum. 2-Oxobutyrate and 3-hydroxypyruvate but not glyoxylate were also substrates; all three compounds inhibited pyruvate oxidation. 6. In preparations of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase free of thiamin pyrophosphate, pyruvate inhibited the kinase reaction at all concentrations in the range 25-500mum. The inhibition was uncompetitive. In the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate (endogenous or added at 2 or 10mum) the kinase activity was enhanced by low concentrations of pyruvate (25-100mum) and inhibited by a high concentration (500mum). Activation of the kinase reaction was not seen when sodium pyrophosphate was substituted for thiamin pyrophosphate. 7. Under the conditions of the kinase assay, pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase forms (14)CO(2) from [1-(14)C]pyruvate in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate. Previous work suggests that the products may include acetoin. Acetoin activated the kinase reaction in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate but not with sodium pyrophosphate. It is suggested that acetoin formation may contribute to activation of the kinase reaction by low pyruvate concentrations in the presence of thiamin pyrophosphate. 8. Pyruvate effected the conversion of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate into pyruvate dehydrogenase in rat heart mitochondria incubated with 5mm-2-oxoglutarate and 0.5mm-l-malate as respiratory substrates. It is suggested that this effect of pyruvate is due to inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase reaction in the mitochondrion. 9. Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity was inhibited by high concentrations of Mg(2+) (15mm) and by Ca(2+) (10nm-10mum) at low Mg(2+) (0.15mm) but not at high Mg(2+) (15mm).  相似文献   

10.
The effect of the mitochondrial pyruvate transport inhibitors, α-cyanocinnamate and α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate, on the regulation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex was investigated in the isolated perfused rat heart. Metabolic flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase was monitored by measuring 14CO2 production from [1-14C]pyruvate infused into the heart. A stepwise increase in the concentration of the inhibitor in the influent perfusate effected a stepwise reduction of the flux through the enzyme complex at all pyruvate concentrations tested. However, the magnitude of the α-cyanocinnamate-insensitive flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase increased markedly as the infused pyruvate concentration was elevated. The inhibition of pyruvate decarboxylation in the heart was nearly completely reversed following cessation of the inhibitor infusion. α-Cyanocinnamate was nearly 10 times more potent than α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate as an inhibitor of the flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase. Maximally inhibiting levels of α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate caused an increase in the ratio of the active form of pyruvate dehydrogenase to the total extractable enzyme complex from a value of 0.5 at 1 mm infused pyruvate (in the absence of the inhibitor) to a value of near unity. This result indicated that the intramitochondrial pyruvate concentration was severely depleted by the infusion of the inhibitor and that the enzyme complex was interconverted to its active form under these conditions. Removal of the inhibitor from the perfusion medium again lowered the ratio of the active/total pyruvate dehydrogenase to near its original level of 0.5 and restored the original flux through the enzyme complex indicating that mitochondrial pyruvate transport has been restored. The results of this study indicate that α-cyanocinnamate and its derivatives are effective inhibitors of pyruvate transport in the perfused heart and that carrier-mediated pyruvate transport can be an important parameter in the regulation of the activation state and the metabolic flux through the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex in the heart.  相似文献   

11.
(1) d(-)-3-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase activity from guinea pig, rat, and bovine heart and from guinea pig liver is inhibited by malonate and tartronate, and more potently by the analogs methylmalonate, bromomalonate, chloromalonate, and mesoxalate. Little or no inhibitory effect was found for aminomalonate, ethylmalonate, dimethylmalonate, succinate, glutarate, oxaloacetate, malate, propionate, pyruvate, d- and l-lactate, n-butyrate, isobutyrate, and cyclopropanecarboxylate. (2) In initial velocity kinetics at pH 8.1 with a soluble enzyme preparation from bovine heart, the inhibition by the active malonate derivatives is competitive with respect to 3-hydroxybutyrate and uncompetitive with respect to acetoacetate, NAD+ or NADH. With d-3-hydroxybutyrate as the variable reactant (Km app = 0.26 mM) the inhibition constant of methylmalonate (Kis) was 0.09 mm. (3) The rate of utilization of d-3-hydroxybutyrate (78 μm) by coupled rat heart mitochondria in the presence of ADP was inhibited 50% by 150 μm methylmalonate. (4) With coupled guinea pig liver mitochondria oxidizing n-octanoate in the absence of added ADP, methylmalonate (1–3 mm) depressed 3-hydroxybutyrate formation substantially more than total ketone production. However, the intramitochondrial NADH (or NADPH) levels were unchanged by the addition of methylmalonate, indicating that the changes in ratios of accumulated 3-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate were caused by direct inhibition of 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase. Methylmalonate had the same effect on 3-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratios and ketone body formation with pyruvate or acetate as the source of acetyl groups. Similar results were obtained with malonate (10 mm) although the inhibition of total ketone formation from octanoate was more severe.  相似文献   

12.
The activity of pyruvate kinase from the isolated rat hepatocyte was studied under conditions which allow investigation into the hormonal regulation of the enzyme. Incubating hepatocytes from fed or fasted rats with 1 μm glucagon gives approximately 60% inhibition of the enzyme activity determined at 1.6 mm P-enolpyruvate. A good correlation between the regulation of pyruvate kinase and lactate formation from 10 mm dihydroxyacetone is observed in hepatocytes from fasted rats. When hepatocytes are incubated in a Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer, the inhibition of the pyruvate kinase activity by 1 μm glucagon is not accompanied by a marked inhibition of lactate production from fructose. Half-maximal regulation is observed at 0.26 ± 0.02 nm glucagon and 0.37 ± 0.05 nm glucagon for the enzyme and lactate formation from dihydroxyacetone respectively. Incubating hepatocytes with 10 mm l-alanine enhances inhibition of pyruvate kinase by physiological concentrations of glucagon, lowering the half-maximally effective concentration of glucagon from 0.3 nm to approximately 0.1 nm. A small but consistent inhibition of pyruvate kinase by 10 μm epinephrine is also observed and this inhibition is enhanced by 0.5 mm theophylline and by 10 mm l-alanine. The inhibition of pyruvate kinase by epinephrine both in the absence and presence of theophylline is blocked by the α-adrenergic antagonist phenoxybenzamine. The β-adrenergic blocker propranolol has no influence on the inhibition of the enzyme by epinephrine. Adenosine 3′:5′-monophosphate, N6O2-dibutyryl adenosine 3′:5′-monophosphate, and guanosine 3′:5′-monophosphate also inhibit glycolysis from dihydroxyacetone and modulate pyruvate kinase activity in hepatocytes from fasted rats. Oleate, ethanol, and 3-hydroxybutyrate inhibit dihydroxyacetone glycolysis, but they do not influence the activity of pyruvate kinase. The divalent metal ionophore A23187 slightly stimulates lactate synthesis from dihydroxyacetone, but it has no influence on pyruvate kinase activity.  相似文献   

13.
1. The mechanism by which insulin activates pyruvate dehydrogenase in rat epididymal adipose tissue was further investigated. 2. When crude extracts, prepared from tissue segments previously exposed to insulin (2m-i.u/ml) for 2min, were supplemented with Mg-2+, Ca-2+, glucose and hexokinase and incubated at 30 degrees C, they displayed an enhanced rate of increase in pyruvate dehydrogenase activity compared with control extracts. 3. When similar extracts were instead supplemented with fluoride, ADP, creatine phosphate and creatine kinase, the rate of decrease in pyruvate dehydrogenase activity observed during incubation at 30 degrees C was unaffected by insulin treatment. 4. It is suggested that insulin increases the fraction of pyruvate dehydrogenase present in the tissue in the active dephospho form by increasing the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate phosphatase.  相似文献   

14.
A substance capable of stimulating the activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase and low Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase was prepared from H4-II-EC3′ hepatoma cells by acid extraction and partially purified by molecular exclusion chromatography. The material thus prepared by gel chromatography was found to stimulate the activities of these enzymes in a concentration-dependent manner. The amount or activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase stimulating factor was increased in cells which had been treated with physiological concentrations of insulin (0.2 mU/ml). Increasing the concentration of insulin increased the amount or activity of the factor generated. High concentrations of insulin did not cause a reversal of the effects of insulin. The stimulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase activity by the factor was eliminated when sodium fluoride (75 mm) was present in the enzyme assay, implying that activation was mediated by the pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase. The enzyme-stimulating factor isolated from hepatoma cells shares a number of important characteristics with the putative second messenger of insulin prepared from other cell types: (1) it is heat and acid stable, (2) it has a similar apparent molecular weight, (3) it is generated in an insulin-dependent manner, (4) it stimulates the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase by a fluoride-sensitive mechanism, and (5) it elutes from the anion-exchange resin AG 1-X8 at an ionic strength of 0.4 m. These findings suggest that the stimulator of pyruvate dehydrogenase and of low Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase isolated from hepatoma cells has chemical properties identical with those of the putative second messenger of insulin action isolated from a number of other insulin-sensitive tissues.  相似文献   

15.
Isolated hepatocytes from 24-h-starved rats were used to assess the possible effect of Ahe hypoglycaemic agent 3-mercaptopicolinate on flux through the hepatic pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Increasing the extraceIIular pyruvate concentration from 1 mM to 2 mM or 5 mM resulted in an increase in flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase and the tricarboxylic acid cycle as measured by14CO2 evolution from [1-14C]pyruvate and [3-14C]pyruvate. Gluconeogenesis was inhibited by 3-mercaptopicolinate from both 1 mM and 2 mM pyruvate, but significant increases in malate and citrate concentrations only occurred in cells incubated with 1 mM pyruvate. Flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase was stimulated by 3-mercaptopicolinate with 1 mM pyruvate but was unaltered with 2 mM pyruvate. Dichloroacetate stimulated flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase with no effect on gluconeogenesis in the presence of I mM pyruvate. There was no effect of 3-mercaptopicolinate, administered in vivo, to 24-h-starved rats on the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase in freeze-clamped heart or liver tissue, although the drug did decrease blood glucose concentration and increase the blood concentrations of lactate and alanine. Dichloroacetate, administered in vivo to 24-h-starved rats, increased the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase in freeze-clamped heart and liver, and caused decreases in the blood concentrations of glucose, lactate , and alanine. The results suggest that 3-mercaptopicolinate increases flux through hepatocyte pyruvate dehydrogenase by an indirect mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity from spinach leaf mitochondria was inhibited up to 90% within 2 min of incubation with 1 mm ATP at 27 °C. The inhibition was time, temperature and ATP concentration dependent. The inhibition was partially prevented with 3.0 mm dichloroacetate, a known inhibitor of mammalian pyruvate dehydrogenase kinases. Optimum pH for ATP-dependent inactivation was between 8.0 and 9.0 The inactivated complex was reactivated with 10 to 20 mm MgCl2. Complete reactivation occurs within 10 min after MgCl2 addition. Reactivation was inhibited by fluoride, a known inhibitor of mammalian pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase. Optimum pH for Mg2+-dependent reactivation was 8.0. It is concluded that the inactivation and reactivation process of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex from spinach leaf mitochondria is due to phosphorylation and dephosphorylation.  相似文献   

17.
Blowfly (Phormia regina) flight muscle mitochondria oxidized pyruvate (+ proline) in the presence of either ADP (coupled respiration) or carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP-uncoupled respiration). There was an absolute requirement for ADP (Km = 8.0 μm) when pyruvate oxidation was stimulated by FCCP in the presence of oligomycin. This requirement for ADP was limited to the oxidation of pyruvate; uncoupled α-glycerolphosphate oxidation proceeded maximally even in the absence of added ADP. Atractylate inhibited uncoupled pyruvate oxidation whether added before (>99%) or after (95%) initiation of respiration with FCCP. In the presence of FCCP, oligomycin, and limiting concentrations of ADP (less than 110 μm), there was a shutoff in the uptake of oxygen. This inhibition of respiration was completely reversed by the addition of more ADP. Plots of net oxygen uptake as a function of the limiting ADP concentration were linear; the observed ADP/O ratio was 0.22 ± 0.025. An ADP/O ratio of 0.2 was predicted if phosphorylation occurred only at the succinyl-CoA synthetase step of the tricarboxylate cycle. Experiments performed in the presence of limiting concentrations of ADP, and designed to monitor changes in the mitochondrial content of ADP and ATP, demonstrated that the shutoff in oxygen uptake was not due to the presence of a high intramitochondrial concentration of ATP. Indeed, ATP, added to the medium prior to the addition of FCCP, inhibited uncoupled pyruvate oxidation; the apparent KI was 0.8 mm. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that it is the intramitochondrial ATP/ADP ratio that is one of the controlling factors in determining the rate of flux through the tricarboxylate cycle. Changes in the mitochondrial content of citrate, isocitrate, α-ketoglutarate, and malate during uncoupled pyruvate oxidation in the presence of a limiting concentration of ADP were consistent with the hypothesis that the mitochondrial NAD+-linked isocitric dehydrogenase is a major site for such control through the tricarboxylate cycle.  相似文献   

18.
1. Effects of alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate and alpha-cyanocinnamate on a number of enzymes involved in pyruvate metabolism have been investigated. Little or no inhibition was observed of any enzyme at concentrations that inhibit completely mitochondrial pyruvate transport. At much higher concentrations (1 mM) some inhibition of pyruvate carboxylase was apparent. 2. Alpha-Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate (1-100 muM) specifically inhibited pyruvate oxidation by mitochondria isolated from rat heart, brain, kidney and from blowfly flight muscle; oxidation of other substrates in the presence or absence of ADP was not affected. Similar concentrations of the compound also inhibited the carboxylation of pyruvate by rat liver mitochondria and the activation by pyruvate of pyruvate dehydrogenase in fat-cell mitochondria. These findings imply that pyruvate dehydrogenase, pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase and pyruvate carboxylase are exposed to mitochondrial matrix concentrations of pyruvate rather than to cytoplasmic concentrations. 3. Studies with whole-cell preparations incubated in vitro indicate that alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate or alpha-cyanocinnamate (at concentrations below 200 muM) can be used to specifically inhibit mitochondrial pyruvate transport within cells and thus alter the metabolic emphasis of the preparation. In epididymal fat-pads, fatty acid synthesis from glucose and fructose, but not from acetate, was markedly inhibited. No changes in tissue ATP concentrations were observed. The effects on fatty acid synthesis were reversible. In kidney-cortex slices, gluconeogenesis from pyruvate and lactate but not from succinate was inhibited. In the rat heart perfused with medium containing glucose and insulin, addition of alpha-cyanocinnamate (200 muM) greatly increased the output and tissue concentrations of lactate plus pyruvate but decreased the lactate/pyruvate ratio. 4. The inhibition by cyanocinnamate derivatives of pyruvate transport across the cell membrane of human erythrocytes requires much higher concentrations of the derivatives than the inhibition of transport across the mitochondrial membrane. Alpha-Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate appears to enter erythrocytes on the cell-membrane pyruvate carrier. Entry is not observed in the presence of albumin, which may explain the small effects when these compounds are injected into whole animals.  相似文献   

19.
The pyruvate dehydrogenase component of the bovine kidney pyruvate dehydrogenase complex has two thiamin-PP binding sites per α2β2 tetramer. Titration of these binding sites with the transition state analog, thiamin thiazolone pyrophosphate, strongly inhibits phosphorylation of pyruvate dehydrogenase by pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase and ATP. The analog has little effect, if any, on dephosphorylation of phosphorylated pyruvate dehydrogenase by pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase. Phosphorylation of pyruvate dehydrogenase inactivates the enzyme, but does not significantly affect the thiamin-PP binding sites. It appears that phosphorylation produces a conformational change in pyruvate dehydrogenase that displaces a catalytic group (or groups) at the active center.  相似文献   

20.
The metal-ion requirement of extracted and partially purified pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate phosphatase from rat epididymal fat-pads was investigated with pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase [(32)P]phosphate as substrate. The enzyme required Mg(2+) (K(m) 0.5mm) and was activated additionally by Ca(2+) (K(m) 1mum) or Sr(2+) and inhibited by Ni(2+). Isolated fat-cell mitochondria, like liver mitochondria, possess a respiration- or ATP-linked Ca(2+)-uptake system which is inhibited by Ruthenium Red, by uncouplers when linked to respiration, and by oligomycin when linked to ATP. Depletion of fat-cell mitochondria of 75% of their total magnesium content and of 94% of their total calcium content by incubation with the bivalent-metal ionophore A23187 leads to complete loss of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate phosphatase activity. Restoration of full activity required addition of both MgCl(2) and CaCl(2). SrCl(2) could replace CaCl(2) (but not MgCl(2)) and NiCl(2) was inhibitory. The metal-ion requirement of the phosphatase within mitochondria was thus equivalent to that of the extracted enzyme. Insulin activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase in rat epididymal fat-pads was not accompanied by any measurable increase in the activity of the phosphatase in extracts of the tissue when either endogenous substrate or (32)P-labelled pig heart substrate was used for assay. The activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase in fat-pads by insulin was inhibited by Ruthenium Red (which may inhibit cell and mitochondrial uptake of Ca(2+)) and by MnCl(2) and NiCl(2) (which may inhibit cell uptake of Ca(2+)). It is concluded that Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) are cofactors for pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate phosphatase and that an increased mitochondrial uptake of Ca(2+) might contribute to the activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase by insulin.  相似文献   

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