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1.
Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase is a flavoenzyme that reversibly catalyzes the oxidation of reduced lipoyl substrates with the reduction of NAD+ to NADH. In vivo, the dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase component (E3) is associated with the pyruvate, α-ketoglutarate, and glycine dehydrogenase complexes. The pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex connects the glycolytic flux to the tricarboxylic acid cycle and is central to the regulation of primary metabolism. Regulation of PDH via regulation of the E3 component by the NAD+/NADH ratio represents one of the important physiological control mechanisms of PDH activity. Furthermore, previous experiments with the isolated E3 component have demonstrated the importance of pH in dictating NAD+/NADH ratio effects on enzymatic activity. Here, we show that a three-state mechanism that represents the major redox states of the enzyme and includes a detailed representation of the active-site chemistry constrained by both equilibrium and thermodynamic loop constraints can be used to model regulatory NAD+/NADH ratio and pH effects demonstrated in progress-curve and initial-velocity data sets from rat, human, Escherichia coli, and spinach enzymes. Global fitting of the model provides stable predictions to the steady-state distributions of enzyme redox states as a function of lipoamide/dihydrolipoamide, NAD+/NADH, and pH. These distributions were calculated using physiological NAD+/NADH ratios representative of the diverse organismal sources of E3 analyzed in this study. This mechanistically detailed, thermodynamically constrained, pH-dependent model of E3 provides a stable platform on which to accurately model multicomponent enzyme complexes that implement E3 from a variety of organisms.  相似文献   

2.
In this article we compare the kinetic behavior toward pyridine nucleotides (NAD+, NADH) of NAD+-malic enzyme, pyruvate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, and glycine decarboxylase extracted from pea (Pisum sativum) leaf and potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber mitochondria. NADH competitively inhibited all the studied dehydrogenases when NAD+ was the varied substrate. However, the NAD+-linked malic enzyme exhibited the weakest affinity for NAD+ and the lowest sensitivity for NADH. It is suggested that NAD+-linked malic enzyme, when fully activated, is able to raise the matricial NADH level up to the required concentration to fully engage the rotenone-resistant internal NADH-dehydrogenase, whose affinity for NADH is weaker than complex I.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
A sensitive isotope exchange method was developed to assess the requirements for and compartmentation of pyruvate and oxalacetate production from malate in proliferating and nonproliferating human fibroblasts. Malatedependent pyruvate production (malic enzyme activity) in the particulate fraction containing the mitochondria was dependent on either NAD+ or NADP+. The production of pyruvate from malate in the soluble, cytosolic fraction was strictly dependent on NADP+. Oxalacetate production from malate (malate dehydrogenase, EC 1.1.1.37) in both the particulate and soluble fraction was strictly dependent on NAD+. Relative to nonproliferating cells, NAD+-linked malic enzyme activity was slightly reduced and the NADP+-linked activity was unchanged in the particulate fraction of serum-stimulated, exponentially proliferating cells. However, a reduced activity of particulate malate dehydrogenase resulted in a two-fold increase in the ratio of NAD(P)+-linked malic enzyme to NAD+-linked malate dehydrogenase activity in the particulate fraction of proliferating fibroblasts. An increase in soluble NADP+-dependent malic enzyme activity and a decrease in NAD+-linked malate dehydrogenase indictated an increase in the ratio of pyruvate-producing to oxalacetate-producing malate oxidase activity in the cytosol of proliterating cells. These coordinate changes may affect the relative amount of malate that is oxidized to oxalacetate and pyruvate in proliferating cells and, therefore, the efficient utilization of glutamine as a respiratory fuel during cell proliferation.  相似文献   

5.
1. The kinetic and metabolic properties of lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme LDHx from human sperm cells and rat testes were studied. 2. LDHx shows a sensitivity to inhibition by stilboestrol diphosphate, urea and guanidinium chloride different from that of the LDH-H4 and LDH-M4 isoenzymes. 3. About 10 and 20% of the total lactate dehydrogenase activity of testes and sperm cells respectively were associated with particulate fractions. In sperm cells 11% was localized in the middle piece and 18·8% in the head fraction. LDHx was found in all particulate fractions of sperm cells. The middle piece contained 41·0% of total LDHx activity and showed high succinate dehydrogenase activity. 5. The pH-dependence of lactate/pyruvate and NAD+/NADH concentration ratios were estimated. Lactate dehydrogenase in sperm cells has maximal activity with NADH as coenzyme at pH7·5 and with NADPH as coenzyme at pH6·0. At pH6·0 a 10% greater oxidation of NADPH than of NADH was found. At acid pH lactate hydrogenase may function as an enzyme bringing about transhydrogenation from NADPH to NAD+. 6. In agreement with the stoicheiometry of the lactate de- hydrogenase reaction, the lactate/pyruvate concentration ratio decreased with increasing pH. 7. The lactate/pyruvate and NAD+/NADH concentration ratios were estimated with glucose, fructose and sorbitol as substrates and as a function of time after addition of these substrates. During a 20min. period after the addition of the substrates, changes in lactate/pyruvate and NAD+/NADH concentration ratios were noticed. Increasing concentration of the substrates mentioned gave rise to asymptotic increases in lactate and pyruvate. 8. Sorbitol did not act as a substrate for LDHx. 9. The findings described are consistent with the idea that LDHx is different from other known lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes, but that it has a metabolic function similar to that of the isoenzymes of other tissues.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetic mechanism of betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase from leaves of the plant Amaranthus hypochondriacus is ordered with NAD+ adding first. NADH is a noncompetitive inhibitor against NAD+, which was interpreted before as evidence of an iso mechanism, in which NAD+ and NADH binds to different forms of free enzyme. With the aim of testing the proposed kinetic mechanism, we have now investigated the ability of NADH to form different complexes with the enzyme. By initial velocity and equilibrium binding studies, we found that the steady-state levels of E.glycine betaine are negligible, ruling out binding of NADH to this complex. However, NADH readily bind to E.betaine aldehyde, whose levels most likely are kinetically significant given its low dissociation constant. Also, NADH combined with E.NADH and E.NAD+. Finally, NADH was not able to revert the hydride transfer step, what suggest that there is no acyl-enzyme intermediate, i.e. the release of the reduced dinucleotide takes place after the deacylation step. Although formation of the complex E.NAD+.NADH would produce an uncompetitive effect in the inhibition of NADH against NAD+, the iso mechanism cannot be conclusively discarded.  相似文献   

7.
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPD) was isolated from human erythrocyte ghosts by a simple procedure utilizing ammonium sulfate precipitation and affinity chromatography on NAD+-Sepharose 4B. The purified enzyme had a specific activity of 98 units/mg protein. The kinetic mechanism of GAPD was studied by product and deadend inhibition using NADH, α-glycerophosphate, nitrate, and 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. The results indicated that the human erythrocyte GAPD-catalyzed reaction follows an ordered ter bi mechanism characterized by the sequential addition of NAD+, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (GAP), and phosphate to the enzyme and the sequential release of 1,3-diphosphoglycerate and NADH from the enzyme. This contrasts with the mechanism (rapid equilibrium random ter bi) proposed by Oguchi (1970, J. Biochem. (Tokyo)68, 427–439) who based his conclusion on the initial rate data alone. Since the Michaelis-Menten kinetics were not applicable to this enzyme because of the competitive substrate inhibition by GAP, we devised a new kinetic approach for determining the parameters of the GAPD-catalyzed reaction. Results of this study indicate that the GAPD-catalyzed reaction is regulated by both ATP and GAP. We propose that GAP acts as an “amplifier” for the feedback inhibition effect of ATP. We discuss the effect this may have played in causing controversy over the regulatory role of this enzyme in glycolysis.  相似文献   

8.
Michel Neuburger  Roland Douce 《BBA》1980,589(2):176-189
Mitochondria isolated from spinach leaves oxidized malate by both a NAD+-linked malic enzyme and malate dehydrogenase. In the presence of sodium arsenite the accumulation of oxaloacetate and pyruvate during malate oxidation was strongly dependent on the malate concentration, the pH in the reaction medium and the metabolic state condition.Bicarbonate, especially at alkaline pH, inhibited the decarboxylation of malate by the NAD+-linked malic enzyme in vitro and in vivo. Analysis of the reaction products showed that with 15 mM bicarbonate, spinach leaf mitochondria excreted almost exclusively oxaloacetate.The inhibition by oxaloacetate of malate oxidation by spinach leaf mitochondria was strongly dependent on malate concentration, the pH in the reaction medium and on the metabolic state condition.The data were interpreted as indicating that: (a) the concentration of oxaloacetate on both sides of the inner mitochondrial membrane governed the efflux and influx of oxaloacetate; (b) the NAD+/NADH ratio played an important role in regulating malate oxidation in plant mitochondria; (c) both enzymes (malate dehydrogenase and NAD+-linked malic enzyme) were competing at the level of the pyridine nucleotide pool, and (d) the NAD+-linked malic enzyme provided NADH for the reversal of the reaction catalyzed by the malate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

9.
An immunochemical enzyme immunoassay model system was developed and compared for maximum sensitivity with a radioimmunoassay method and the classic enzyme activity method for the detection of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHc) and its decarboxylating subunit, pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1), isolated from Escherichia coli. Cross-linked large molecular weight antibody-enzyme conjugate systems are compared with heterobifunctional singular antibody conjugates substituted with high levels of horseradish peroxidase. Both polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies generated to the Escherichia coli PDHc and E1 antigens were used to develop a double-antibody sandwich microtiter plate enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. It is demonstrated that a double sandwich immunochemical assay system can be quantitative for PDHc, can detect PDHc in crude cell lysates and has levels of sensitivity of 2.0.10(-16) mol for the detection of PDHc. This assay model system provides specific antibody selection criteria and coupling methods needed to select specific antisera that cross-react with human PDHc. This rapid and sensitive immunochemical assay method clearly demonstrates that sensitive mass assay systems can be developed for the detection of PDHc. Different from Western blot, this methodology could be used to generate mass assays which could be applied to the rapid detection of mammalian antigens (employing the corresponding antibodies) implicated in a number of pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiencies associated with human disorders.  相似文献   

10.
T. Betsche  K. Bosbach  B. Gerhardt 《Planta》1979,146(5):567-574
By ammonium sulfate fractionation and gel filtration an enzyme preparation which catalyzed NAD+-dependent L-lactate oxidation (10-4 kat kg-1 protein), as well as NADH-dependent pyruvate reduction (10-3 kat kg-1 protein), was obtained from leaves of Capsella bursa-pastoris. This lactate dehydrogenase activity was not due to an unspecific activity of either glycolate oxidase, glycolate dehydrogenase, hydroxypyruvate reductase, alcohol dehydrogenase, or a malate oxidizing enzyme. These enzymes could be separated from the protein displaying lactate dehydrogenase activity by gel filtration and electrophoresis and distinguished from it by their known properties. The enzyme under consideration does not oxidize D-lactate, and reduces pyruvate to L-lactate (the configuration of which was determined using highly specific animal L-lactate dehydrogenase). Based on these results the studied Capsella leaf enzyme is classified as L-lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27). It has a Km value of 0.25 mmol l-1 (pH 7.0, 0.3 mmol l-1 NADH) for pyruvate and of 13 mmol l-1 (pH 7.8, 3 mmol l-1 NAD+) for L-lactate. Lactate dehydrogenase activity was also detected in the leaves of several other plants.Abbreviation FMN flavin adenine mononucleotide  相似文献   

11.
Lactate dehydrogenase from yellow yam tuber (Dioscorea cayenensis Lam.) was isolated and purified using various chromatographic methods and electrophoresis. Only one form of the enzyme obtained, which obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, was activated by Mg2+ and Ca2+ and inhibited by nucleotides and PEP. AMP, which activated the enzyme in the direction of pyruvate reduction, inhibited it in the direction of lactate oxidation. The enzyme is specific for pyruvate L-lactate and uses only NADH and NAD+ as the electron carriers. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed single band of lactate dehydrogenase activity. The average molecular mass obtained for the enzyme was 160 ± 1.2 kDa, while SDS gel electrophoresis indicated a dimer for the enzyme protein. The enzyme is very stable when frozen but its activity was hardly detectable when the tubers were stored in a well aerated place.  相似文献   

12.
The nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-specific glutamate dehydrogenase (l-glutamate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.4.1.2) of Chlorella sorokiniana was purified 1,000-fold to electrophoretic homogeneity. The native enzyme was shown to have a molecular weight of 180,000 and to be composed of four identical subunits with a molecular weight of 45,000. The N-terminal amino acid was determined to be lysine. The pH optima for the aminating and deaminating reactions were approximately 8 and 9, respectively. The Km values for α-ketoglutarate, NADH, NH4+, NAD+, and l-glutamate were 2 mm, 0.15 mm, 40 mm, 0.15 mm, and 60 mm, respectively. Whereas the Km for α-ketoglutarate and l-glutamate increased 10-fold, 1 pH unit above or below the pH optima for the aminating or deaminating reactions, respectively, the Km values for NADH and NAD+ were independent of change in pH from 7 to 9.6. By initial velocity, product inhibition, and equilibrium substrate exchange studies, the kinetic mechanism of enzyme was shown to be consistent with a bi uni uni uni ping-pong addition sequence. Although this kinetic mechanism differs from that reported for any other glutamate dehydrogenase, the chemical mechanism still appears to involve the formation of a Schiff base between α-ketoglutarate and an ε-amino group of a lysine residue in the enzyme. The physical, chemical, and kinetic properties of this enzyme differ greatly from those reported for the NH4+-inducible glutamate dehydrogenase in this organism.  相似文献   

13.
The rate of pyruvate oxidation by isolated rabbit heart mitochondria was inhibited by fatty acylcarnitine derivatives. The extent of inhibition by pyruvate oxidation in State 3 was greatest with palmitylcarnitine and only a minimal inhibition was observed with acetylcarnitine, while octanoylcarnitine or octanoate caused an intermediate extent of inhibition. Analyses of the intramitochondrial ATPADP and NADHNAD+ ratios under the different conditions of incubation indicated that it is unlikely that changes in either or both of these parameters were the primary negative effectors of the rate of pyruvate oxidation. A positive correlation between the decrease in the rate of pyruvate oxidation and the decrease in the level of free CoASH in the mitochondria was observed. Extraction and assay of the pyruvate dehydrogenase from rabbit heart mitochondria during the time course of the fatty acid-mediated inhibition of pyruvate oxidation indicated that pyruvate dehydrogenase was strongly inactivated when palmitylcarnitine was the fatty acid, while incubation with octanoate and acetylcarnitine resulted in less extensive inactivation of pyruvate dehydrogenase. Measurement of the effects of NADH, NAD+, acetyl-CoA, and CoASH on the inactivation of pyruvate dehydrogenase extracted from rabbit heart mitochondria indicated that NADH and acetyl-CoA activated the pyruvate dehydrogenasee kinase while CoASH strongly inhibited the kinase and NAD+ was without effect. In addition, palmityl-CoA and octanoyl-CoA had little, if any, effect on the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity. It was observed that palmityl-CoA but not octanoyl-CoA strongly inhibited the activity of the extracted pyruvate dehydrogenase. Hence, it is concluded that (a) decreased mitochondrial CoASH levels, which essentially remove a potent inhibitor of the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase, (b) possibly a diminished free CoASH supply, which may be utilized as a substrate for the active complex, and (c) direct inhibitory effects of palmityl-CoA on the active form of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex combine to make palmitylcarnitine a much more potent inhibitor of mitochondrial pyruvate oxidation than shorter chain length acylcarnitine derivatives.  相似文献   

14.
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides utilizes either NAD+ or NADP+ as coenzyme. Kinetic studies showed that NAD+ and NADP+ interact with different enzyme forms (Olive, C., Geroch, M. E., and Levy, H. R. (1971) J. Biol. Chem.246, 2047–2057). In the present study the techniques of fluorescence quenching and fluorescence enhancement were used to investigate the interaction between Leuconostoc mesenteroides glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and coenzymes. In addition, kinetic studies were performed to examine interaction between the enzyme and various coenzyme analogs. The maximum quenching of protein fluorescence is 5% for NADP+ and 50% for NAD+. The dissociation constant for NADP+, determined from fluorescence quenching measurements, is 3 μm, which is similar to the previously determined Km of 5.7 μm and Ki of 5 μm. The dissociation constant for NAD+ is 2.5 mm, which is 24 times larger than the previously determined Km of 0.106 mm. Glucose 1-phosphate, a substrate-competitive inhibitor, lowers the dissociation constant and maximum fluorescence quenching for NAD+ but not for NADP+. This suggests that glucose 6-phosphate may act similarly and thus play a role in enabling the enzyme to utilize NAD+ under physiological conditions. When NADPH binds to the enzyme its fluorescence is enhanced 2.3-fold. The enzyme was titrated with NADPH in the absence and presence of NAD+; binding of these two coenzymes is competitive. The dissociation constant for NADPH from these measurements is 24 μm; the previously determined Ki is 37.6 μm. The dissociation constant for NAD′ is 2.8 mm, in satisfactory agreement with the value obtained from protein fluorescence quenching measurements. Various compounds which resemble either the adenosine or the nicotinamide portion of the coenzyme structure are coenzyme-competitive inhibitors; 2′,5′-ADP, the most inhibitory analog tested, gives NADP+-competitive and NAD+-noncompetitive inhibition, consistent with the kinetic mechanism previously proposed. By using pairs of coenzyme-competitive inhibitors it was shown in kinetic studies that the two portions of the NAD+ structure cannot be accommodated on the enzyme simultaneously unies they are covalently linked. Fluorescence studies showed that there are both “buried” and “exposed” tryptophan residues in the enzyme structure.  相似文献   

15.
The transient kinetics of aldehyde reduction by NADH catalyzed by liver alcohol dehydrogenase consist of two kinetic processes. This biphasic rate behavior is consistent with a model in which one of the two identical subunits in the enzyme is inactive during the reaction at the adjacent protomer. Alternatively, enzyme heterogeneity could result in such biphasic behavior. We have prepared liver alcohol dehydrogenase containing a single major isozyme; and the transient kinetics of this purified enzyme are biphasic.Addition of two [14C]carboxymethyl groups per dimer to the two “reactive” sulfhydryl groups (Cys46) yields enzyme which is catalytically inactive toward alcohol oxidation. Alkylated enzyme, as initially isolated by gel filtration chromatography at pH 7·5, forms an NAD+-pyrazole complex. However, the ability to bind NAD+-pyrazole is rapidly lost in pH 8·75 buffer; therefore, our alkylated preparations, as isolated by chromatography at pH 8·75, are inactive toward NAD+-pyrazole complex formation. We have prepared partially inactivated enzyme by allowing iodoacetic acid to react with liver alcohol dehydrogenase until 50% of the NAD+-pyrazole binding capacity remains; under these reaction conditions one [14C]carboxymethyl group is added per dimer. This partially alkylated enzyme preparation is isolated by gel filtration and has been aged sufficiently to lose NAD+-pyrazole binding ability at alkylated subunits. When solutions of native liver alcohol dehydrogenase and partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase containing the same number of unmodified active sites are allowed to react with substrate under single turnover conditions, partially alkylated enzyme is only half as reactive as native enzyme. This indicates that some molecular species in partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase that react with pyrazole and NAD+ during the active site titration do not react with substrate. These data are consistent with a model in which a subunit adjacent to an alkylated protomer in the dimeric enzyme is inactive toward substrate. In addition, NAD+-pyrazole binding at the protomers adjacent to alkylated subunits is slowly lost so that 75% of the enzyme-NAD+-pyrazole binding capacity is lost in 50% alkylated enzyme. These data supply strong evidence for subunit interactions in liver alcohol dehydrogenase.Binding experiments performed on partially alkylated liver alcohol dehydrogenase indicate that coenzyme binding is normal at a subunit adjacent to an alkylated protomer even though active ternary complexes cannot be formed. One hypothesis consistent with these results is the unavailability of zinc for substrate binding at the active site in subunits adjacent to alkylated protomers in monoalkylated dimer.  相似文献   

16.
Sirtuins are key regulators of many cellular functions including cell growth, apoptosis, metabolism, and genetic control of age-related diseases. Sirtuins are themselves regulated by their cofactor nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) as well as their reaction product nicotinamide (NAM), the physiological concentrations of which vary during the process of aging. Nicotinamide inhibits sirtuins through the so-called base exchange pathway, wherein rebinding of the reaction product to the enzyme accelerates the reverse reaction. We investigated the mechanism of nicotinamide inhibition of human SIRT3, the major mitochondrial sirtuin deacetylase, in vitro and in silico using experimental kinetic analysis and Molecular Mechanics-Poisson Boltzmann/Generalized Born Surface Area (MM-PB(GB)SA) binding affinity calculations with molecular dynamics sampling. Through experimental kinetic studies, we demonstrate that NAM inhibition of SIRT3 involves apparent competition between the inhibitor and the enzyme cofactor NAD+, contrary to the traditional characterization of base exchange as noncompetitive inhibition. We report a model for base exchange inhibition that relates such kinetic properties to physicochemical properties, including the free energies of enzyme-ligand binding, and estimate the latter through the first reported computational binding affinity calculations for SIRT3:NAD+, SIRT3:NAM, and analogous complexes for Sir2. The computational results support our kinetic model, establishing foundations for quantitative modeling of NAD+/NAM regulation of mammalian sirtuins during aging and the computational design of sirtuin activators that operate through alleviation of base exchange inhibition.  相似文献   

17.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a major human pathogen that must adapt to unique nutritional environments in several host niches. The pneumococcus can metabolize a range of carbohydrates that feed into glycolysis ending in pyruvate, which is catabolized by several enzymes. We investigated how the pneumococcus utilizes these enzymes to metabolize different carbohydrates and how this impacts survival in the host. Loss of ldh decreased bacterial burden in the nasopharynx and enhanced bacteremia in mice. Loss of spxB, pdhC or pfl2 decreased bacteremia and increased host survival. In glucose or galactose, loss of ldh increased capsule production, whereas loss of spxB and pdhC reduced capsule production. The pfl2 mutant exhibited reduced capsule production only in galactose. In glucose, pyruvate was metabolized primarily by LDH to generate lactate and NAD+ and by SpxB and PDHc to generate acetyl-CoA. In galactose, pyruvate metabolism was shunted toward acetyl-CoA production. The majority of acetyl-CoA generated by PFL was used to regenerate NAD+ with a subset used in capsule production, while the acetyl-CoA generated by SpxB and PDHc was utilized primarily for capsule biosynthesis. These data suggest that the pneumococcus can alter flux of pyruvate metabolism dependent on the carbohydrate present to succeed in distinct host niches.  相似文献   

18.
The steady-state kinetics of alcohol dehydrogenases (alcohol:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.1 and alcohol:NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.2), lactate dehydrogenases (l-lactate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.27 and d-lactate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.28), malate dehydrogenase (l-malate:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.37), and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases [d-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate:NAD+ oxidoreductase (phosphorylating), EC 1.2.1.12] from different sources (prokaryote and eukaryote, mesophilic and thermophilic organisms) have been studied using NAD(H), N6-(2-carboxyethyl)-NAD(H), and poly(ethylene glycol)-bound NAD(H) as coenzymes. The kinetic constants for NAD(H) were changed by carboxyethylation of the 6-amino group of the adenine ring and by conversion to macromolecular form. Enzymes from thermophilic bacteria showed especially high activities for the derivatives. The relative values of the maximum velocity (NAD = 1) of Thermus thermophilus malate dehydrogenase for N6-(2-carboxyethyl)-NAD and poly(ethylene glycol)-bound NAD were 5.7 and 1.9, respectively, and that of Bacillus stearothermophilus glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase for poly(ethylene glycol)-bound NAD was 1.9.  相似文献   

19.
At physiological pH values the thermodynamic equilibrium constant was determined to be 6,9,10−11 (mol/l). Product inhibition studies are reported which clearly show that the kinetic mechanism of the NAD+-xylitol dehydrogenase is “Ordered-bi-bi”. It can be seen from experimental results that a cosubstrate inhibition with a dead end EA2-complex occurs at elevated NAD+-concentrations. Simulations were carried out which indicate, that under intracellular conditions the NAD+-xylitol dehydrogenase is regulated by the catabolic reduction charge and not by the total concentrations of NAD+ and NADH.  相似文献   

20.
Methionine metabolism is disrupted in patients with alcoholic liver disease, resulting in altered hepatic concentrations of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH), and other metabolites. The present study tested the hypothesis that reductive stress mediates the effects of ethanol on liver methionine metabolism. Isolated rat livers were perfused with ethanol or propanol to induce a reductive stress by increasing the NADH/NAD+ ratio, and the concentrations of SAM and SAH in the liver tissue were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. The increase in the NADH/NAD+ ratio induced by ethanol or propanol was associated with a marked decrease in SAM and an increase in SAH liver content. 4-Methylpyrazole, an inhibitor the NAD+-dependent enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase, blocked the increase in the NADH/NAD+ ratio and prevented the alterations in SAM and SAH. Similarly, co-infusion of pyruvate, which is metabolized by the NADH-dependent enzyme lactate dehydrogenase, restored the NADH/NAD+ ratio and normalized SAM and SAH levels. The data establish an initial link between the effects of ethanol on the NADH/NAD+ redox couple and the effects of ethanol on methionine metabolism in the liver.  相似文献   

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