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1.
L-arginine plays an important role in physiology of spermatozoa and is shown to enhance the metabolism of these cells. We report here the effect of L-arginine on membrane lipid peroxidation of goat epididymal spermatozoa. Both natural peroxidation as well as that induced by UV radiation, freezing and oxidizing agents have been studied. Irrespective of the nature of induction of peroxidation, L-arginine reduces the extent of lipid peroxidation in a concentration dependent manner. Both L-arginine and alpha-tocopherol act synergistically in protecting against lipid peroxidation induced by the above methods. Thus, in order to provide protection against lipid peroxidation, L-arginine may be added in media used to preserve spermatozoa.  相似文献   

2.
The regulation exerted by ammonium and other nitrogen sources on amino acid utilization was studied in swollen spores of Penicillium chrysogenum. Ammonium prevented the L-lysine, L-arginine and L-ornithine utilization by P. chrysogenum swollen spores seeded in complete media, but not in carbon-deficient media. Transport of L-[14C]lysine into spores incubated in presence of carbon and nitrogen sources was fully inhibited by ammonium ions (35 mM). However, in carbon-derepressed conditions (growth in absence of sugars, with amino acids as the sole carbon source) L-[14C]lysine transport was only partially inhibited. Competition experiments showed that L-lysine (1 mM) inhibits the utilization of L-arginine, and vice versa, L-arginine inhibits the L-lysine uptake. High concentrations of L-ornithine (100 mM) prevented the L-lysine and L-arginine utilization in P. chrysogenum swollen spores. In summary, ammonium seems to prevent the utilization of basic amino acids in P. chrysogenum spores by inhibiting the transport of these amino acids through their specific transport system(s), but not through the general amino acid transport system that is operative under carbon-derepression conditions.  相似文献   

3.
L-Lysine alpha-oxidase from Trichoderma viride Y244-2 has been purified to homogeneity. The enzyme shows absorption maxima at 277, 388, and 466 nm and a shoulder around 490 nm and contains 2 mol of FAD/mol of enzyme. The enzyme has a molecular weight of approximately 116,000 and consists of two subunits identical in molecular weight (about 56,000). In addition to L-lysine, L-ornithine, L-phenylalanine, L-tyrosine, L-arginine, and L-histidine are oxidized by the enzyme to a lesser extent. Several lysine analogs such as delta-hydroxylysine are oxidized efficiently. Balance studies showed that 1 mol of L-lysine is converted to an equimolar amount of alpha-keto-epsilon-aminocaproate, ammonia, and hydrogen peroxide with the consumption of 1 mol of oxygen. alpha-Keto-epsilon-aminocaproate spontaneously is dehydrated intramolecularly into delta 1-piperideine-2-carboxylate in the presence of catalase, and is oxidatively decarboxylated into delta-aminovalerate in the absence of catalase. The Michaelis constants are as follows: 0.04 mM for L-lysine, 0.44 mM for L-ornithine, 14 mM for L-phenylalanine, and 1.6 mM for oxygen with L-lysine.  相似文献   

4.
High-output synthesis of nitric oxide (NO) by the inducible isoform of NO-synthases (NOS-2) plays an important role in hepatic pathophysiological processes and may contribute to both organ protection and organ destruction during inflammatory reactions. As they compete for the same substrate, L-arginine, an interdependence of NOS-2 and arginase-1 has been repeatedly observed in cells where arginase-1 is cytokine-inducible. However, in hepatocytes, arginases are constitutively expressed and thus, their impact on hepatic NOS-2-derived NO synthesis as well as the influence of L-arginine influx via cationic amino acid transporters during inflammatory reactions are still under debate. Freshly isolated rat hepatocytes were cultured for 24h in the presence of various L-arginine concentrations with or without cytokine addition and nitrite and urea accumulation in culture supernatants was measured. We find that both, cytokine-induced NOS-2 and arginase activities strongly depend on extracellular L-arginine concentrations. When we competed for L-arginine influx via the cationic amino acid transporters by addition of L-lysine, we find a 60-70% inhibition of arginase activity without significant loss of NOS-2 activity. Addition of L-valine, as an arginase inhibitor, leads to a 25% increase in NO formation and an 80-90% decrease in arginase activity. Interestingly, product inhibition of arginase and competitive inhibition of CATs through the addition of L-ornithine leads to a highly significant increase in hepatocytic NOS-2 activity with a concomitant and complete abolishment of its dependence on extracellular L-arginine concentrations. In conclusion, hepatocytic NOS-2 activity shows a surprising pattern of dependence on exogenous L-arginine concentrations. Inhibition and competition experiments suggest a relatively tight link of NOS-2 and urea cycle activities. These data stress the hypothesis of a metabolon-like organization of the urea cycle together with NOS-2 in hepatocytes as excess L-ornithine will be metabolized to l-arginine and thereby increases NO production.  相似文献   

5.
Sperm capacitation and acrosome reaction are essential for fertilization and they are considered as part of an oxidative process involving superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. In human spermatozoa, the amino acid L-arginine is a substrate for the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) producing nitric oxide (NO*), a reactive molecule that participates in capacitation as well as in acrosome reaction. L-arginine plays an important role in the physiology of spermatozoa and has been shown to enhance their metabolism and maintain their motility. Moreover, L-arginine has a protective effect on spermatozoa against the sperm plasma membrane lipid peroxidation. In this paper, we have presented, for the first time, the effect of L-arginine on cryopreserved bovine sperm capacitation and acrosome reaction and the possible participation of NOS in both processes. Frozen-thawed bovine spermatozoa have been incubated in TALP medium with different concentrations of L-arginine and the percentages of capacitated and acrosome reacted spermatozoa have been determined. L-arginine induced both capacitation and acrosome reaction. NO* produced by L-arginine has been inhibited or inactivated using NOS inhibitors or NO* scavengers in the incubation medium, respectively. Thus, the effect of NOS inhibitors and NO* scavengers in capacitated and non-capacitated spermatozoa treated with L-arginine has also been monitored. The data presented suggest the participation of NO*, produced by a sperm NOS, in cryopreseved bovine sperm capacitation and acrosome reaction.  相似文献   

6.
L-Arginine and L-ornithine stimulate insulin release from pancreatic islets exposed to D-glucose. This coincides with an increased outflow of 86Rb and 45Ca from prelabelled islets and an increased net uptake of 45Ca by the islets. In the presence of D-glucose, L-lysine stimulates insulin secretion to the same extent as L-arginine or L-ornithine, but the hormonal release is not further enhanced by combinations of these cationic amino acids. L-Arginine or L-ornithine failed to enhance insulin release evoked by either L-leucine or 2-ketoisocaproate. The inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase D,L-alpha-difluoromethyl ornithine failed to affect the metabolism and insulinotropic action of D-glucose in pancreatic islets, and only caused a partial inhibition of the secretory response to either L-arginine or L-ornithine. The latter amino acids inhibited modestly but significantly D-glucose utilization and oxidation by pancreatic islets. These and complementary findings suggest that the secretory response to L-arginine and L-ornithine is not attributable to any major change in the overall oxidative catabolism of nutrients, but involves mainly a biophysical component, such as the depolarization of the plasma membrane by these cationic amino acids.  相似文献   

7.
Previous work from our laboratory has demonstrated that the inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) expresses a large amount of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity. The present study was designed to characterize the transport of NOS substrate, L-arginine, in a suspension of bulk-isolated IMCD cells from the Sprague-Dawley rat kidney. Biochemical transport studies demonstrated an L-arginine transport system in IMCD cells that was saturable and Na(+) independent (n = 6). L-Arginine uptake by IMCD cells was inhibited by the cationic amino acids L-lysine, L-homoarginine, and L-ornithine (10 mmol/l each) and unaffected by the neutral amino acids L-leucine, L-serine, and L-glutamine. Both L-ornithine (n = 6) and L-lysine (n = 6) inhibited NOS enzymatic activity in a dose-dependent manner in IMCD cells, supporting the important role of L-arginine transport for NO production by this tubular segment. Furthermore, RT-PCR of microdissected IMCD confirmed the presence of cationic amino acid transporter CAT1 mRNA, whereas CAT2A, CAT2B, and CAT3 were not detected. These results indicate that L-arginine uptake by IMCD cells occurs via system y(+), is encoded by CAT1, and may participate in the regulation of NO production in this renal segment.  相似文献   

8.
Lipopeptides on the basis of L-glutamic acid and glutamine di- and monoesters with aliphatic alcohols of various lengths that contain L-arginine, L-ornithine, and L-lysine were synthesized. The behavior of these amphiphiles in aqueous medium was shown to depend on their structure.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND: Arginase is a manganese-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of L-arginine to L-ornithine and urea. In ureotelic animals arginase is the final enzyme of the urea cycle, but in many species it has a wider role controlling the use of arginine for other metabolic purposes, including the production of creatine, polyamines, proline and nitric oxide. Arginase activity is regulated by various small molecules, including the product L-ornithine. The aim of these structural studies was to test aspects of the catalytic mechanism and to investigate the structural basis of arginase inhibition. RESULTS: We report here the crystal structures of arginase from Bacillus caldovelox at pH 5.6 and pH 8.5, and of binary complexes of the enzyme with L-arginine, L-ornithine and L-lysine at pH 8.5. The arginase monomer comprises a single compact alpha/beta domain that further associates into a hexameric quaternary structure. The binary complexes reveal a common mode of ligand binding, which places the substrate adjacent to the dimanganese centre. We also observe a conformational change that impacts on the active site and is coupled with the occupancy of an external site by guanidine or arginine. CONCLUSIONS: The structures reported here clarify aspects of the active site and indicate key features of the catalytic mechanism, including substrate coordination to one of the manganese ions and an orientational role for a neighboring histidine residue. Stereospecificity for L-amino acids is found to depend on their precise recognition at the active-site rim. Identification of a second arginine-binding site, remote from the active site, and associated conformational changes lead us to propose a regulatory role for this site in substrate hydrolysis.  相似文献   

10.
Amino acid transport in horse erythrocytes is regulated by three co-dominant allelomorphic genes coding for high-affinity transport activity (system asc1), low-affinity transport activity (system asc2) and transport-deficiency, respectively. The asc systems are selective for neutral amino acids of intermediate size, but unlike conventional system ASC, do not require Na+ for activity. In the present series of experiments we have used a combined kinetic and genetic approach to establish that dibasic amino acids are also asc substrates, systems asc1 and asc2 representing the only mediated routes of cationic amino acid transport in horse erythrocytes. Both transporters were found to exhibit a strong preference for dibasic amino acids compared with neutral amino acids of similar size. Apparent Km values (mM) for influx via system asc1 were L-lysine (9), L-ornithine (27), L-arginine (27), L-alanine (0.35). Corresponding Vmax estimates (mmol/l cells per h, 37 degrees C) were L-lysine (1.65), L-ornithine (2.15), L-arginine (0.54), L-alanine (1.69). Apparent Km values for L-lysine and L-ornithine influx via system asc2 were approximately 90 and greater than 100 mM, respectively, with Vmax values greater than 2 and greater than 1 mmol/l cells per h, respectively. Apparent Km and Vmax values for L-alanine uptake by system asc2 were 14 mM and 6.90 mmol/l cells per h. In contrast, L-arginine was transported by system asc2 with the same apparent Km as L-alanine (14 mM), but with a 77-fold lower Vmax. This dibasic amino acid was shown to cause cis- and trans-inhibition of system asc2 in a manner analogous to its interaction with system ASC, where the side-chain guanidinium group is considered to occupy the Na+-binding site on the transporter. Concentrations of extracellular L-arginine causing 50% inhibition of zero-trans L-alanine influx and half-maximum inhibition of L-alanine zero-trans efflux were 14 mM (extracellular L-alanine concentration 15 mM) and 3 mM (intracellular L-alanine concentration 15.5 mM), respectively. We interpret these observations as evidence of structural homology between the horse erythrocyte asc transporters and system ASC. Physiologically, intracellular L-arginine may function as an endogenous inhibitor of system asc2 activity.  相似文献   

11.
Dietary supplements of L-arginine, a substrate for nitric oxide synthases, may promote formation of nitric oxide and thus may be of clinical benefit. However, the optimal level of L-arginine supplementation is unclear. The objective of this study was to evaluate the response of healthy individuals to increasing doses of L-arginine (as free acid). Twelve healthy subjects were recruited and instructed to take L-arginine for 1-week periods at daily doses of 3, 9, 21, and 30 g. At baseline and at the end of each week, 24-hour urine and fasting blood samples were collected, and weight, diastolic blood pressure, and systolic blood pressure were recorded. Samples were analyzed for L-arginine, L-citrulline, glycine, L-lysine, L-ornithine, asymmetric dimethy L-arginine, symmetric dimethy L-arginine, glucose, insulin (serum), creatinine, cGMP (urine), and total nitrates (serum and urine). Ten subjects reported adverse side effects at initial L-arginine doses of 21 g/day (five subjects) or 30 g/day (five subjects), respectively. Blood pressure and weight did not change during the supplementation period. Of the individual biochemical measures, only L-arginine, glycine, and L-ornithine concentrations changed significantly. The mean concentration of L-arginine reached a peak during supplementation at 9 g/d; however, individuals differed markedly in their response. Availability of L-arginine, relative to that of asymmetric dimethy L-arginine, increased significantly at both 9 g/day and 21 g/day. Mean values indicate that supplementation with 9 g/day of L-arginine, a dose associated with minimal adverse side effects, is sufficient to increase circulating L-arginine concentrations. However, subjects varied widely in their responses, indicating that L-arginine supplementation needs to be tailored to individuals.  相似文献   

12.
The author describes a method, for the determination of bacterial L-histidine, L-tyrosine, L-tryptophan, L-arginine, L-lysine, L-ornithine, L-serine, L-phenyl-alanine, L-glutamic acid and L-aspartic acid decarboxylase by means of high voltage paper electrophoresis, using electrolytes of low ionic strength. For the group of test microorganisms (Enterobacteriaceae, Achromobacteriaceae andPseudomonas), L-histidine, L-arginine, L-lysine, L-ornithine and L-glutamic acid decarboxylases were found to be of the greatest practical significance. The optimal conditions for maximum formation of these decarboxylases by some of the test strains ofEscherichia coli, Hafnia andProteus are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Two transport systems for L-arginine were evident in Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120: a high-affinity one (Km, 1.7 microM) that accumulated arginine within the cells through an energy-requiring process and another one that exhibited low affinity for L-arginine (Km, 0.75 mM) and was unable to accumulate the substrate. Both systems were inhibited by L-canavanine, L-lysine, and L-ornithine. Two systems were also evident for L-lysine uptake (Km, 1.9 and 110 microM, respectively). After selection for resistance to canavanine or hydroxylysine, independent mutants were isolated which were impaired in the high-affinity uptake of arginine and lysine. A common permease appears, therefore, to be involved in the high-affinity transport of these basic amino acids. Both the high- and the low-affinity systems can contribute to the growth of Anabaena sp. on L-arginine. However, arginine did not effectively repress either nitrogenase or nitrate reductase.  相似文献   

14.
The lysine-, arginine-, ornithine-binding protein (LAO) from Salmonella typhimurium has been purified to homogeneity and characterized. The dissociation constants (KD) were determined by equilibrium dialysis assay to be 14, 15, and 29 nM for L-arginine, L-lysine, and L-ornithine respectively. L-Histidine was found to be a relatively good ligand (KD, 500 nM). Methods have been developed for the separation of liganded from unliganded LAO, for the estimation of bound ligand, and for unliganding LAO. Liganded and unliganded LAO are shown to have distinct UV spectra. The UV spectrum also varies with the nature of the substrate. Inhibition studies with substrate analogs yielded information useful for understanding the nature of the ligand-binding pocket.  相似文献   

15.
Recently, we observed that central administration of L-arginine attenuated stress responses in neonatal chicks, but the contribution of nitric oxide (NO) to this response was minimal. The sedative and hypnotic effects of L-arginine may be due to L-arginine itself and/or its metabolites, excluding NO. To clarify the mechanism, the effect of intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of L-arginine metabolites on behavior under social separation stress was investigated. The i.c.v. injection of agmatine, a guanidino metabolite of L-arginine, had no effect during a 10 min behavioral test. In contrast, the i.c.v. injection of L-ornithine clearly attenuated the stress response in a dose-dependent manner, and induced sleep-like behavior. The L-ornithine concentration in the telencephalon and diencephalon increased following the i.c.v. injection of L-arginine. In addition, several free amino acids including L-alanine, glycine, L-proline and L-glutamic acid concentrations increased in the telencephalon. In conclusion, it appears that L-ornithine, produced by arginase from L-arginine in the brain, plays an important role in the sedative and hypnotic effects of L-arginine observed during a stress response. In addition, several other amino acids having a sedative effect might partly participate in the sedative and hypnotic effects of L-arginine.  相似文献   

16.
Tsikas  Dimitrios 《Amino acids》2023,55(2):203-213

Arginine:glycine amidinotransferase (AGAT) catalyzes mainly two reactions that generate 1) L-homoarginine (hArg) from L-arginine and L-lysine (Kharg) and 2) guanidinoacetate (GAA) and L-ornithine from L-arginine and glycine (Kgaa). Previously, we found that pharmacological treatment of Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) patients with metformin or L-citrulline resulted in antidromic effects on serum hArg and GAA concentrations, seemingly acting as an inhibitor and effector of AGAT activity, respectively. Here, we used data of this study as a model to determine Kharg and Kgaa values by using the concentrations of the participating amino acids measured in serum samples of the BMD patients. The study aimed to prove the general utility of this approach to investigate effects of amino acids and drugs on AGAT-catalyzed reactions in vivo in humans.

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17.
Experiments were performed to determine whether L-arginine transport regulates nitric oxide (NO) production and hemodynamics in the renal medulla. The effects of renal medullary interstitial infusion of cationic amino acids, which compete with L-arginine for cellular uptake, on NO levels and blood flow in the medulla were examined in anesthetized rats. NO concentration in the renal inner medulla, measured with a microdialysis-oxyhemoglobin trapping technique, was significantly decreased by 26-44% and renal medullary blood flow, measured by laser Doppler flowmetry, was significantly reduced by 20-24% during the acute renal medullary interstitial infusion of L-ornithine, L-lysine, and L-homoarginine (1 micromol.kg(-1).min(-1) each; n = 6-8/group). In contrast, intramedullary infusion of L-arginine increased NO concentration and medullary blood flow. Flow cytometry experiments with 4-amino-5-methylamino-2',7'-difluorescein diacetate, a fluorophore reactive to intracellular NO, demonstrated that L-ornithine, L-lysine, and L-homoarginine decreased NO by 54-57% of control, whereas L-arginine increased NO by 21% in freshly isolated inner medullary cells (1 mmol/l each, n > 1,000 cells/experiment). The mRNA for the cationic amino acid transporter-1 was predominantly expressed in the inner medulla, and cationic amino acid transporter-1 protein was localized by immunohistochemistry to the collecting ducts and vasa recta in the inner medulla. These results suggest that L-arginine transport by cationic amino acid transport mechanisms is important in the production of NO and maintenance of blood flow in the renal medulla.  相似文献   

18.
One of the limiting steps in the regulation of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis is the availability of its precursor, L-arginine, which depends on the presence of a specific uptake system. A characterization of the L-arginine uptake mechanism in the golden hamster retina was performed. This mechanism was stereospecific, saturable, and monophasic, with an apparent of 56.1 +/- 2.0 microM and a maximum velocity of 36.0 +/- 2.8 pmol/mg prot/min. The basic amino acids L-lysine and L-ornithine but not D-arginine or the nitric oxide synthase inhibitors, N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester and N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine impaired L-arginine influx. Preincubation with L-lysine for 1 h prior to the transport assay significantly stimulated L-arginine uptake. Saturation studies of L-arginine uptake performed at 12.00 and 24.00 h indicated a higher value of Vmax at midnight than at midday. When the hamsters were placed under constant darkness or constant light for 48 h and killed at equivalent time points, representing subjective day and subjective night, the differences in L-arginine influx disappeared. Semiquantitative RT-PCR analysis showed that the levels of mRNAs for both CAT-1 and CAT-2B were significantly higher at midnight than at midday. L-Arginine significantly increased cGMP accumulation in a time-dependent manner, with maximal effects during the night. Based on these results, it might be presumed that hamster retinal L-arginine uptake is regulated by the photic stimulus.  相似文献   

19.
Fresh and post-thaw parameters (motility, morphology and viability) of stallion epididymal spermatozoa that have been and have not been exposed to seminal plasma were evaluated, and directly compared to fresh and post-thaw parameters of ejaculated spermatozoa. Six sperm categories of each stallion (n=4) were evaluated for motility, morphology and viability. These categories were fresh ejaculated spermatozoa (Fr-E), fresh epididymal spermatozoa that had been exposed to seminal plasma (Fr-SP+), fresh epididymal spermatozoa that had never been exposed to seminal plasma (Fr-SP-), frozen-thawed ejaculated spermatozoa (Cr-E), frozen-thawed epididymal spermatozoa that had been exposed to seminal plasma prior to freezing (Cr-SP+) and frozen-thawed epididymal spermatozoa that had never been exposed to seminal plasma (Cr-SP-). Results show that seminal plasma stimulates initial motility of fresh epididymal stallion spermatozoa while this difference in progressive motility is no longer present post-thaw; and that progressive motility of fresh or frozen-thawed ejaculated stallion spermatozoa is not always a good indicator for post-thaw progressive motility of epididymal spermatozoa. This study shows that seminal plasma has a positive influence on the incidence of overall sperm defects, midpiece reflexes and distal cytoplasmic droplets in frozen-thawed stallion epididymal spermatozoa while the occurance of midpiece reflexes is likely to be linked to distal cytoplasmic droplets. Furthermore, seminal plasma does not have an influence on viability of fresh and frozen-thawed morphologically normal epididymal spermatozoa. We recommend the retrograde flushing technique using seminal plasma as flushing medium to harvest and freeze stallion epididymal spermatozoa.  相似文献   

20.
A differential fixation of poly(L-arginine) and poly(L-lysine) has been demonstrated by means of cellulose acetate electrophoresis and colorimetric titration. Electrophoresis showed that at pH 3.0 and concentrations between 0.025% and 2% the reagent interacts with poly(L-arginine) but not with poly(L-lysine). at pH 7.5, however, poly(L-lysine) also reacts, although at a higher concentration of tannic acid than was required to fix poly(L-arginine) at this pH. Colorimetric titration revealed that for poly(L-arginine) the reaction with tannic acid commences at pH 3.0 and is complete at pH 4.1 whereas for poly(L-lysine) the reaction commences at pH 3.5 and is complete at pH 4.9. It is suggested that the reaction is predominantly electrostatic. The results are discussed in relation to the use of tannic acid as a protein fixative in electron microscopy.  相似文献   

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