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Raso MJ  Muñoz A  Pineda M  Piedras P 《Planta》2007,226(5):1333-1342
In tropical legumes like French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) or soybean (Glycine max), most of the atmospheric nitrogen fixed in nodules is used for synthesis of the ureides allantoin and allantoic acid, the major long distance transport forms of organic nitrogen in these species. The purpose of this investigation was to characterise the allantoate degradation step in Phaseolus vulgaris. The degradation of allantoin, allantoate and ureidoglycolate was determined “in vivo” using small pieces of chopped seedlings. With allantoate and ureidoglycolate as substrates, the determination of the reaction products required the addition of phenylhydrazine to the assay mixture. The protein associated with the allantoate degradation has been partially purified 22-fold by ultracentrifugation and batch separation with DEAE-Sephacel. This enzyme was specific for allantoate and could not use ureidoglycolate as substrate. The activity was completely dependent on phenylhydrazine, which acts as an activator at low concentrations and decreases the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate at higher concentrations. The optimal pH for the activity of the purified protein was 7.0 and the optimal temperature was 37°C. The activity was completely inhibited by EDTA and only manganese partially restored the activity. The level of activity was lower in extracts obtained from leaves and fruits of French bean grown with nitrate than in plants actively fixing nitrogen and, therefore, relying on ureides as nitrogen supply. This is the first time that an allantoate-degrading activity has been partially purified and characterised from a plant extract. The allosteric regulation of the enzyme suggests a critical role in the regulation of ureide degradation.  相似文献   

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In plants, the ureide pathway is a metabolic route that converts the ring nitrogen atoms of purine into ammonia via sequential enzymatic reactions, playing an important role in nitrogen recovery. In the final step of the pathway, (S)-ureidoglycolate amidohydrolase (UAH) catalyzes the conversion of (S)-ureidoglycolate into glyoxylate and releases two molecules of ammonia as by-products. UAH is homologous in structure and sequence with allantoate amidohydrolase (AAH), an upstream enzyme in the pathway with a similar function as that of an amidase but with a different substrate. Both enzymes exhibit strict substrate specificity and catalyze reactions in a concerted manner, resulting in purine degradation. Here, we report three crystal structures of Arabidopsis thaliana UAH (bound with substrate, reaction intermediate, and product) and a structure of Escherichia coli AAH complexed with allantoate. Structural analyses of UAH revealed a distinct binding mode for each ligand in a bimetal reaction center with the active site in a closed conformation. The ligand directly participates in the coordination shell of two metal ions and is stabilized by the surrounding residues. In contrast, AAH, which exhibits a substrate-binding site similar to that of UAH, requires a larger active site due to the additional ureido group in allantoate. Structural analyses and mutagenesis revealed that both enzymes undergo an open-to-closed conformational transition in response to ligand binding and that the active-site size and the interaction environment in UAH and AAH are determinants of the substrate specificities of these two structurally homologous enzymes.  相似文献   

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Our previous work demonstrated substantial accumulation of allantoate in leaf tissue of nodulated soybeans (Glycine max L. Merr., cv Williams) in response to nitrogen fertilization. Research was continued to determine the effect of nitrate and asparagine on ureide assimilation in soybean leaves. Stem infusion of asparagine into ureide-transporting soybeans resulted in a significant increase in allantoate concentration in leaf tissue. Accumulation of allantoate was also observed when asparagine was supplied in the presence of allopurinol, an inhibitor of xanthine dehydrogenase in the pathway of ureide biosynthesis. In vitro, asparagine was found to have an inhibitory effect on the activity of allantoate amidohydrolase, a Mn2+-dependent enzyme catalyzing allantoate breakdown in soybean leaves. The inhibition was partially overcome by supplemental Mn2+ in enzyme assays. Another inhibitor of allantoate amidohydrolase, boric acid, applied foliarly on field-grown nodulated soybeans, caused up to a 10-fold increase in allantoate content of leaf tissue. Accumulation of allantoate in response to boric acid was either eliminated or greatly reduced in plants presprayed with Mn2+. We conclude that elevated levels of allantoate in leaves of ureide-transporting soybeans fertilized with ammonium nitrate result from inhibition of allantoate degradation by asparagine and that Mn2+ is a critical factor in this inhibition. Furthermore, our studies with asparagine and boric acid indicate that availability of Mn2+ has a direct effect on ureide catabolism in soybean.  相似文献   

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During vertebrate evolution, the uric acid degradation pathway has been modified and several enzymes have been lost. Consequently, the end product of purine catabolism varies from species to species. In the past few years, we have focused our attention on vertebrate allantoicase (an uricolytic pathway enzyme), whose activity is present in certain fish and amphibians only, but whose mRNA we detected also in mammals. As allantoicase activity disappeared in amniotes, we wonder why these sequences not only remain present in the mammalian genome, but are still transcribed. To elucidate this issue, we have cloned and analyzed comparable cDNA sequences of different organisms from ascidians to mammals. The analysis of the nonsynonymous–synonymous substitution rate that we performed on the coding region comprising exons 3 to 8 by means of maximum likelihood suggested that a certain amount of purifying selection is acting on the allantoicase sequences. Some implications of the preservation of an apparently unnecessary gene in higher vertebrates are discussed.  相似文献   

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An allantoate-degrading enzyme has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity for the first time from a photosynthetic organism, the unicellular green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The purification procedure included a differential protein extraction followed by conventional steps such as ammonium sulfate fractionation, gel filtration, anion exchange chromatography, and preparative electrophoresis. Under the routine assay conditions (7 mM allantoate), specific activity for the purified enzyme was 185 U/mg, which rose to 225 U/mg under kinetic considerations (saturating substrate). Therefore, a turnover number of 4.5 x 10(4) min(-1) can be deduced for the 200-kDa protein. The enzyme is a true allantoicase (EC 3.5.3.4) that catalyzes the degradation of allantoate to (-)ureidoglycolate and (+)ureidoglycolate to glyoxylate. The enzyme exhibited hyperbolic kinetic for allantoate and ureidoglycolate with K(m) values of 2 and 0.7 mM, respectively. V(max) of the reaction with allantoate as substrate was nine times higher than that with ureidoglycolate. The native enzyme has a molecular weight of 200 kDa and consists of six identical or similar-sized subunits of 34 kDa each, organized in two trimers of 100 kDa. Each subunit has five cysteine residues, four of which are involved in disulfide bonds, with a total of 12 disulfide bonds in the 200-kDa protein. Allantoate inhibits competitively the reaction with ureidoglycolate as substrate. In addition, buffers and group-specific reagents affect the activity in the same manner irrespective of the substrate used. Those results suggest that both substrates use the same active site. The effect of group-specific reagents suggest that the amino acids histidine, tyrosine, and cysteine are essentials for the allantoicase activity with both substrates.  相似文献   

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