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1.
The synaptosomal metabolism of glutamine was studied under in vitro conditions that simulate depolarization in vivo. With [2-15N]glutamine as precursor, the [glutamine]i was diminished in the presence of veratridine or 50 mM KCl, but the total amounts of [15N]glutamate and [15N]aspartate formed were either equal to those of control incubations (veratridine) or higher (50 mM [KCl]). This suggests that depolarization decreases glutamine uptake and independently augments glutaminase activity. Omission of sodium from the medium was associated with low internal levels of glutamine which indicates that influx occurs as a charged Na(+)-amino acid complex. It is postulated that a reduction in membrane potential and a collapse of the Na+ gradient decrease the driving forces for glutamine accumulation and thus inhibit its uptake and enhance its release under depolarizing conditions. Inorganic phosphate stimulated glutaminase activity, particularly in the presence of calcium. At 2 mM or lower [phosphate] in the medium, calcium inhibited glutamine utilization and the production of glutamate, aspartate, and ammonia from glutamine. At a high (10 mM) medium [phosphate], calcium stimulated glutamine catabolism. It is suggested that a veratridine-induced increase in intrasynaptosomal inorganic phosphate is responsible for the enhancement of flux through glutaminase; calcium affects glutaminase indirectly by modulating the level of free intramitochondrial [phosphate]. Because phosphate also lowers the Km of glutaminase for glutamine, augmentation of the amino acid breakdown may occur even when depolarization lowers [glutamine]i. Reducing the intrasynaptosomal glutamate to 26 nmol/mg of protein had little effect on glutamine catabolism, but raising the pH to 7.9 markedly increased formation of glutamate and aspartate. It is concluded that phosphate and H+ are the major physiologic regulators of glutaminase activity.  相似文献   

2.
Phosphate-activated glutaminase in intact pig renal mitochondria was inhibited 50-70% by the sulfhydryl reagents mersalyl and N-ethylmaleimide (0.3-1.0 mM), when assayed at pH 7.4 in the presence of no or low phosphate (10 mM) and glutamine (2 mM). However, sulfhydryl reagents added to intact mitochondria did not inhibit the SH-enzyme beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (a marker of the inner face of the inner mitochondrial membrane), but did so upon addition to sonicated mitochondria. This indicates that the sulfhydryl reagents are impermeable to the inner membrane and that regulatory sulfhydryl groups for glutaminase have an external localization here. The inhibition observed when sulfhydryl reagents were added to intact mitochondria could not be attributed to an effect on a phosphate carrier, but evidence was obtained that pig renal mitochondria have also a glutamine transporter, which is inhibited only by mersalyl and not by N-ethylmaleimide. Mersalyl and N-ethylmaleimide showed nondistinguishable effects on the kinetics of glutamine hydrolysis, affecting only the apparent Vmax for glutamine and not the apparent Km calculated from linear Hanes-Woolf plots. Furthermore, both calcium (which activates glutamine hydrolysis), as well as alanine (which has no effect on the hydrolytic rate), inhibited glutamine transport into the mitochondria, indicating that transport of glutamine is not rate-limiting for the glutaminase reaction. Desenzitation to inhibition by mersalyl and N-ethylmaleimide occurred when the assay was performed under optimal conditions for phosphate activated glutaminase (i.e. in the presence of 150 mM phosphate, 20 mM glutamine and at pH 8.6). Desenzitation also occurred when the enzyme was incubated with low concentrations of Triton X-100 which did not affect the rate of glutamine hydrolysis. Following incubation with [14C]glutamine and correction for glutamate in contaminating subcellular particles, the specific activity of [14C]glutamate in the mitochondria was much lower than that of the surrounding incubation medium. This indicates that glutamine-derived glutamate is released from the mitochondria without being mixed with the endogenous pool of glutamate. The results suggest that phosphate-activated glutaminase has a functionally predominant external localization in the inner mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Phosphate-dependent glutaminase was present at approximately similar activities in lymph nodes from mammals other than rat, and in thymus, spleen, Peyer's patches and bone marrow of the rat. This suggests that glutamine is important in all lymphoid tissues. Phosphate-dependent glutaminase activity was shown to be present primarily in the mitochondria of rat mesenteric lymph nodes, and most of the activity could be released by detergents. The properties of the enzyme in mitochondrial extracts were investigated. The pH optimum was 8.6 and the Km for glutamine was 2.0 mM. The enzyme was activated by phosphate, other phosphorylated compounds including phosphoenolpyruvate, and also leucine: 50% activation occurred at 5, 0.2 and 0.6 mM for phosphate, phosphoenolpyruvate and leucine respectively. The enzyme was inhibited by glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, citrate and ammonia, and by N-ethylmaleimide and diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine; 50% inhibition was observed at 0.7 and 0.1 mM for glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate respectively. Some of these properties may be important in the control of the enzyme activity in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium stimulation of glutamine hydrolysis in synaptosomes from rat brain   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2  
Calcium stimulates the hydrolysis of glutamine in synaptosomes prepared from rat brain both by the sucrose- (12) and the Ficoll/sucrose-gradient techniques (13). The calcium activation is phosphate-dependent and maximal effect is obtained at a calcium concentration of 0.5-1.0 mM. It is reduced by increasing the numbers of synaptosomes in the incubation mixture, and abolished by the product inhibitors of glutaminase, glutamate and ammonia, but unaffected by the uncoupler 2,4-dinitrophenol which inhibits the mitochondrial proton pump. Moreover, since the hydrolysis of glutamine is mediated by glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2), and calcium does not activate the purified enzyme, an indirect phosphate-dependent effect of calcium on glutaminase is most likely. Calcium activates preferentially the N-ethylmaleimide insensitive fraction of glutaminase. The calcium activation is not dependent on synaptosomal membranes as it is found in synaptosomes subject to previous freezing. It is also found in isolated synaptosomal mitochondria and is thus a property of nerve endings. The calcium activation of glutaminase is unaffected by potassium in depolarizing concentrations, and may not be directly involved in the neurotransmission processes, but possibly in replenishing depleted stores of transmitter glutamate.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract: It has been proposed that hyperammonemia may be associated with valproate therapy. As astrocytes are the primary site of ammonia detoxification in brain, the effects of valproate on glutamate and glutamine metabolism in astrocytes were studied. It is well established that, because of compartmentation of glutamine synthetase, astrocytes are the site of synthesis of glutamine from glutamate and ammonia. The reverse reaction is catalyzed by the ubiquitous enzyme glutaminase, which is present in both neurons and astrocytes. In astrocytes exposed to 1.2 mM valproate, glutaminase activity increased 80% by day 2 and remained elevated at day 4; glutamine synthetase activity was decreased 30%. Direct addition of valproate to assay tubes with enzyme extracts from untreated astrocytes had significant effects only at concentrations of 10 and 20 mM, When astrocytes were exposed for 4 days to 0.3, 0.6, or 1.2 mM valproate and subsequently incubated with l -[U-14C]glutamate, label incorporation into [14C]glutamine was decreased by 11, 25, and 48%, respectively, and is consistent with a reduction in glutamine synthetase activity. Label incorporation from l -[U-14C]glutamate into [14C]aspartate also decreased with increasing concentrations of valproate. Following a 4-day exposure to 0.6 mM valproate, the glutamine levels increased 40% and the glutamate levels 100%. These effects were not directly proportional to valproate concentration, because exposure to 1.2 mM valproate resulted in a 15% decrease in glutamine levels and a 25% increase in glutamate levels compared with control cultures. Intracellular aspartate was inversely proportional to all concentrations of extracellular valproate, decreasing 60% with exposure to 1.2 mM valproate. These results indicate that valproate increases glutaminase activity, decreases glutamine synthetase activity, and alters Krebs-cycle activity in astrocytes, suggesting a possible mechanism for hyperammonemia in brain during valproate therapy.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphate activated glutaminase comprises two kinetically distinguishable enzyme forms in cultures of cerebellar granule cells, of cortical neurons and of astrocytes. Specific activity of glutaminase is higher in cultured neurons compared with astrocytes. Glutaminase is activated by phosphate in all cell types investigated, however, glutaminase in astrocytes reguires a much higher concentration of phosphate for half maximal activation. One of the products, glutamate, inhibits the enzyme strongly, whereas the other product ammonia has only a slight inhibitory action on the enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Phosphate activated glutaminase in synaptosomal enriched preparation from rat brain is very sensitive to inhibition by low concentration of glutamate, ammonia and 2-oxoglutarate when added to the incubation medium at pH 7.6. By increasing the concentration of either of these compounds up to 0.5 mM a pronounced initial inhibition is followed by little or no further effect when the concentration is increased beyond this level. By lowering the pH of the reaction mixture to 7.0, the inhibition by glutamate is almost abolished and that of ammonia reduced. Glutamate inhibits mainly the N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fraction of glutaminase which previously is suggested to be localized to the outer phase of the mitochondrial inner membrane, whereas ammonia inhibits both the N-ethylmaleimidesensitive and-insensitive fraction. Evidence has been produced to show that the inhibition by 2-oxoglutarate is caused by glutamate formation by aminotransferase reactions. Since 2-oxoglutarate is produced by the tricarboxylic acid cycle, the operation of this cycle may regulate the glutaminase reaction by controlling glutamate formation via the aminotransferase reactions.Abbreviations used NEM N-ethylmaleimide - PAG phosphate activated glutaminase - AOA aminooxyacetic acid  相似文献   

8.
An alternative route for the primary assimilation of ammonia proceeds via glutamine synthetase-carbamyl phosphate synthetase and its inherent glutaminase activity in Anabaena sp. strain 1F, a marine filamentous, heterocystous cyanobacterium. Evidence for the presence of this possible alternative route to glutamate was provided by the use of amino acid analogs as specific enzyme inhibitors, enzymological studies, and radioistopic labeling experiments. The amino acid pool patterns of continuous cultures of Anabaena sp. strain 1F were markedly influenced by the nitrogen source. A relatively high concentration of glutamate was maintained in the amino acid pools of all cultures irrespective of the nitrogen source, reflecting the central role of glutamate in nitrogen metabolism. The addition of 1.0 microM azaserine increased the intracellular pools of glutamate and glutamine. All attempts to detect any enzymatic activity for glutamate synthase by measuring the formation of L-[14C]glutamate from 2-keto-[1-14C]glutarate and glutamine failed. The addition of 10 microM DL-7-azatryptophan caused a transient accumulation of intracellular citrulline and alanine which was not affected by the presence of chloramphenicol. The in vitro activity of carbamyl phosphate synthetase and glutaminase increased severalfold in the presence of azatryptophan. Results from radioisotopic labeling experiments with [14C]bicarbonate and L-[1-14C]ornithine also indicated that citrulline was formed via carbamyl phosphate synthetase and ornithine transcarbamylase. In addition to its effects on nitrogen metabolism, azatryptophan also affected carbon metabolism by inhibiting photosynthetic carbon assimilation and photosynthetic oxygen evolution.  相似文献   

9.
Guinea-pig cerebral cortical synaptosomes were preincubated for 60 min with 100 microM D-aspartate, L-aspartate, or L-glutamate. The total D- plus L-aspartate content of the synaptosomal fraction increased to 235%, 195%, or 164%, respectively, of the control. Despite this no increase was seen in the very low KCl evoked, Ca2+-dependent release of aspartate. Preincubation with the three amino acids changed the synaptosomal glutamate content to 78% (D-aspartate), 149% (L-aspartate), or 168% (L-glutamate) of control. However there was no statistically significant effect of these preincubations on the extent of Ca2+-dependent glutamate release. Thus the Ca2+-dependent release of aspartate and glutamate is not determined by the total synaptosomal content of these amino acids. The addition of 0.1-0.5 mM glutamine to the incubation caused a massive appearance of glutamate in the extrasynaptosomal medium. Analysis of specific activities showed that glutamine was hydrolysed directly by an extrasynaptosomal glutaminase, and that intrasynaptosomal glutamate was predominantly labelled by uptake of this glutaminase-derived glutamate. No increase was seen in the extent of Ca2+-dependent release of glutamate (by fluorimetry) either after preincubation with glutamine or in the continued presence of glutamine. Thus we are unable to confirm reports that glutamine expands the transmitter pool of glutamate. The extrasynaptosomal glutaminase activity in the synaptosomal preparation was inhibited by Ca2+ and activated by phosphate. Identical kinetics were obtained with "free" brain mitochondria, confirming the origin of the glutamine-derived glutamate.  相似文献   

10.
Glutamine synthetase in brain: effect of ammonia   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Glutamine synthetase (GS) in brain is located mainly in astrocytes. One of the primary roles of astrocytes is to protect neurons against excitotoxicity by taking up excess ammonia and glutamate and converting it into glutamine via the enzyme GS. Changes in GS expression may reflect changes in astroglial function, which can affect neuronal functions.Hyperammonemia is an important factor responsible of hepatic encephalopathy (HE) and causes astroglial swelling. Hyperammonemia can be experimentally induced and an adaptive astroglial response to high levels of ammonia and glutamate seems to occur in long-term studies. In hyperammonemic states, astroglial cells can experience morphological changes that may alter different astrocyte functions, such as protein synthesis or neurotransmitters uptake. One of the observed changes is the increase in the GS expression in astrocytes located in glutamatergic areas. The induction of GS expression in these specific areas would balance the increased ammonia and glutamate uptake and protect against neuronal degeneration, whereas, decrease of GS expression in non-glutamatergic areas could disrupt the neuron-glial metabolic interactions as a consequence of hyperammonemia.Induction of GS has been described in astrocytes in response to the action of glutamate on active glutamate receptors. The over-stimulation of glutamate receptors may also favour nitric oxide (NO) formation by activation of NO synthase (NOS), and NO has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several CNS diseases. Hyperammonemia could induce the formation of inducible NOS in astroglial cells, with the consequent NO formation, deactivation of GS and dawn-regulation of glutamate uptake. However, in glutamatergic areas, the distribution of both glial glutamate receptors and glial glutamate transporters parallels the GS location, suggesting a functional coupling between glutamate uptake and degradation by glutamate transporters and GS to attenuate brain injury in these areas.In hyperammonemia, the astroglial cells located in proximity to blood-vessels in glutamatergic areas show increased GS protein content in their perivascular processes. Since ammonia freely crosses the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and astrocytes are responsible for maintaining the BBB, the presence of GS in the perivascular processes could produce a rapid glutamine synthesis to be released into blood. It could, therefore, prevent the entry of high amounts of ammonia from circulation to attenuate neurotoxicity. The changes in the distribution of this critical enzyme suggests that the glutamate-glutamine cycle may be differentially impaired in hyperammonemic states.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics and other properties of phosphate-activated glutaminase have for the first time been studied in the crude mitochondrial fraction (P2 fraction) from human brain. The enzyme is for unexplained reasons inactivated postmortem. The enzyme activity decreases by storing the tissue or homogenate at 37 degrees C. The inactivation is not caused by formation of a dialysable inhibiting compound. No large proteolytic degradation has occurred, since the phosphate-activated glutaminase-like immunoreactive band did not disappear during the storage. The molecular weight of the subunit of the enzyme as determined by immunoblots of sodium dodecyl sulfate-treated homogenates from human brain is estimated to be approximately 64 K. The enzyme has been shown to have a pH optimum of 8.6; it is activated by phosphate, inhibited by glutamate, and partially inhibited by ammonia. Double-inverse plots of enzyme activity against phosphate are concave-upward, and more so in the presence of an inhibitor. The inhibition by glutamate appears to be noncompetitive with the substrate glutamine, and competitive with the activator phosphate. These kinetic properties are not significantly different from our earlier observations concerning phosphate-activated glutaminase from pig brain and pig kidney.  相似文献   

12.
Zoran Kovačević 《BBA》1976,430(3):399-412
The effect of mersalyl, an inhibitor of phosphate transport across the inner mitochondrial membrane, was investigated on the uncoupled respiration of pig kidney mitochondria in the presence of glutamine as substrate and on the activity of the phosphate-dependent glutaminase in the intact organelles. In addition, the submitochondrial location of the enzyme was reinvestigated.

1. (1) It was found that mersalyl completely inhibits uncoupled respiration of the mitochondria in the presence of glutamine as substrate, whereas respiration with glutamate was not affected. The same amount of mersalyl which inhibits coupled oxidation of glutamine also inhibits coupled oxidation of glutamate and some other substrates.

2. (2) Mersalyl strongly inhibited the activation of glutaminase in intact mitochondria only in the presence of inhibitors of electron transport or of an uncoupler. The addition of a detergent prevented or fully released the inhibition. The effect of mersalyl was observed even when the mitochondria were pre-incubated with phosphate or incubated in the phosphate-free medium. If mersalyl and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) were added 3 min after pre-incubation with phosphate the same intramitochondrial concentration of the anion as in control experiments was found, whereas the activity of glutaminase was severely inhibited. These findings suggest that the activation of the enzyme by phosphate in intact nonenergized mitochondria occurs only if the activator moves across the inner mitochondrial membrane.

3. (3) Mersalyl (plus CCCP) markedly decreased [14C]glutamine- and [32P]-phosphate-permeable mitochondrial spaces. A close correlation between the decrease of phosphate and glutamine permeable spaces and the inhibition of glutaminase activity was found.

4. (4) If the activation energy of the enzyme was determined with frozen mitochondrial preparations, a discontinuity or break in the Arrhenius plot was observed, whereas the presence of a detergent completely abolished the break. Digitonin or ultrasonic treatment of the mitochondria followed by separation of the membrane and the soluble fraction revealed that glutaminase is a membrane-bound enzyme.

On the basis of these findings it is concluded that there is an association between the transport of phosphate on one side and the transport of glutamine and glutaminase activity on the other. It is possible that the movement of phosphate across the membrane activates the enzyme which facilitates diffusion of glutamine down a concentration gradient. However, the existence of a specific glutamine-phosphate carrier is not ruled out.  相似文献   


13.
Neurochemical Research - The high in vivo flux of the glutamate/glutamine cycle puts a strong demand on the return of ammonia released by phosphate activated glutaminase from the neurons to the...  相似文献   

14.
A membrane-associated form of phosphate-dependent glutaminase was derived from sonicated mitochondria and purified essentially free of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity. Increasing concentrations of phosphate cause a sigmoidal activation of the membrane-bound glutaminase. Phosphate also causes a similar effect on the rate of glutaminase inactivation by the two affinity labels, L-2-amino-4-oxo-5-chloropentanoic acid and 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine, as observed previously for the solubilized and purified enzyme. Therefore the two forms of glutaminase undergo similar phosphate-induced changes in conformation. A sensitive radioactive assay was developed and used to determine the kinetics of glutamate inhibition of the membrane-associated glutaminase. The Km for glutamine decreases from 36 to 4 mM when the phosphate concentration is increased from 5 to 100 mM. Glutamate is a competitive inhibitor with respect to glutamine at both high and low concentrations of phosphate. However, the Ki for glutamate is increased from 5 to 52 mM with increasing phosphate concentration. Therefore glutamine and glutamate interact with the same site on the glutaminase, but the specificity of the site is determined by the available phosphate concentration.  相似文献   

15.
We studied the effects of sodium valproate, a widely used antiepileptic drug and a hyperammonemic agent, on L-[1-14C]glutamine and L-[1-14C]glutamate metabolism in isolated human kidney-cortex tubules. Valproate markedly stimulated glutamine removal as well as the formation of ammonia, 14CO2, pyruvate, lactate and alanine, but it inhibited glucose synthesis; the increase in ammonia formation was explained by a stimulation by valproate mainly of flux through glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2) and to a much lesser extent of flux through glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3). By contrast, valproate did not stimulate glutamate removal or ammonia formation, suggesting that the increase in flux through glutamate dehydrogenase observed with glutamine as substrate was secondary to the increase in flux through glutaminase. Accumulation of pyruvate, alanine and lactate in the presence of valproate was less from glutamate than from glutamine. Inhibition by aminooxyacetate of accumulation of alanine from glutamine caused by valproate did not prevent the acceleration of glutamine utilization and the subsequent stimulation of ammonia formation. It is concluded from these data, which are the first concerning the in vitro metabolism of glutamine and glutamate in human kidney-cortex tubules, that the stimulatory effect of valproate is primarily exerted at the level of glutaminase in human renal cortex.  相似文献   

16.
The transport of glutamate across the inner membrane of kidney mitochondria and the influx of glutamine into the mitochondria was studied using an oxygen electrode, the swelling technique and by continous recording of the activity of the mitochondrial glutaminase by an NH4+-sensitive electrode. It is well known that the enzyme is activated by inorganic phosphate and strongly inhibited by glutamate. 1. Avenaciolide, Bromocresal purple and Bromothymol blue inhibited the respiration of the mitochondria almost completely in the presence of glutamate as substrate but not in the presence of glutamine. Production of aspartate during the oxidation of glutamine was not significantly inhibited by avenaciolide but it was markedly suppressed by Bomocresol purple and Bromothymol blue. 2. Swelling of kidney mitochondria in an isosmotic solution of glutamine and ammonium phosphate was not inhibted by avenaciolide or Bromocresol purple indicating that these substances do not inhibit the penetration of the mitochondrial membrane by glutamine or phosphate. 3. The activity of the mitochondrial glutaminase was strongly inhibited by avenaciolide or Bromocresol purple in the presence of inhibitos of respiration or an uncoupler but not in ther absence. Experimental data suggest that this was caused by the inhibition of glutamate efflux. The addition of a detergent removed this inhibition. On the basis of these observations it was concluded that two mechanisms exist which enable glutamate to leave the inner space of kidney mitochondria: (a) an electrogenic efflux coupled to the respiration-driven proton translocation and the presence of a membrane potential (positive outside) and (b) an electroneutral glutamate-hydroxyl antiporter which is inhibted by avenaciolide and which operates in both directions. Our observations do not support the existence of the electrogenic glutamine-glutamate antiporter or glutamate-aspartate exchange in the mitochondria studied.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract— Uptake and release of glutamine were measured in primary cultures of astrocytes together with the activity of the phosphate activated glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2). In contrast to previous findings of an effective, high affinity uptake of other amino acids (e.g. glutamate, GABA) no such uptake of glutamine was observed, though a saturable, concentrative uptake mechanism did exist (K m = 3.3 ± 0.5 m m ; V max= 50.2 ± 12.6 nmol ± min−1± mg−1). The phosphate activated glutaminase activity in the astrocytes (6.9 ± 0.9 nmol ± min−1± mg−1) was similar to the activity found in whole brain (5.4 ± 0.7 nmol ± min −l± mg−1), which may contrast with previous findings of a higher activity of the glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) in astrocytes than in whole brain. The observations are compatible with the hypothesis of an in vivo flow of glutamate (and GABA) from neurons to astrocytes where it is taken up and metabolized, and a compensatory flow of glutamine towards neurons and away from astrocytes although the latter cell type may be more deeply involved in glutamine metabolism than envisaged in the hypothesis.  相似文献   

18.
Zoran Kova evi&#x; 《BBA》1975,396(3):325-334
The transport of glutamate across the inner membrane of kidney mitochondria and the influx of glutamine into the mitochondria was studied using an oxygen electrode, the swelling technique and by continous recording of the activity of the mitochondrial glutaminase by an NH4+-sensitive electrode. It is well known that the enzyme is activated by inorganic phosphate and strongly inhibited by glutamate.

1. 1. Avenaciolide, Bromocresal purple and Bromothymol blue inhibited the respiration of the mitochondria almost completely in the presence of glutamate as substrate but not in the presence of glutamine. Production of aspartate during the oxidation of glutamine was not significantly inhibited by avenaciolide but it was markedly suppressed by Bomocresol purple and Bromothymol blue.

2. 2. Swelling of kidney mitochondria in an isosmotic solution of glutamine and ammonium phosphate was not inhibited by avenaciolide or Bromocresol purple indicating that these substances do not inhibit the penetration of the mitochondrial membrane by glutamine or phosphate.

3. 3. The activity of the mitochondrial glutaminase was strongly inhibited by avenaciolide or Bromocresol purple in the presence of inhibitors of respiration or an uncoupler but not in their absence. Experimental data suggest that this was caused by the inhibition of glutamate efflux. The addition of a detergent removed this inhibition.

On the basis of these observations it was concluded that two mechanisms exist which enable glutamate to leave the inner space of kidney mitochondria: (a) an electrogenic efflux coupled to the respiration-driven proton translocation and the presence of a membrane potential (positive outside) and (b) an electroneutral glutamate-hydroxyl antiporter which is inhibited by avenaciolide and which operates in both directions. Our observations do not support the existence of the electrogenic glutamine-glutamate antiporter or glutamate-aspartate exchange in the mitochondria studied.  相似文献   


19.
Phosphate-activated glutaminase was isolated from synaptosomes from three areas of rat brain. Glutamine utilization phosphate activation and inhibition by glutamate or ammonia were assessed in the absence or presence of haloperidol, chlorpromazine, or clozapine. All three drugs (at 1 micromolar concentration) elevated theK m for glutamine using preparations from the amygdala, hippocampus, or striatum. They interfered with phosphate activation only in the amygdala preparation. No drug affected end-product inhibition. The data suggest that neuroleptics may depress the release of glutamic acid from synaptosomes by interfering with the activation of glutaminase by phosphate.  相似文献   

20.
Glutamine-dependent carbamyl phosphate synthetase (from Escherichia coli) was previously shown to be composed of a light subunit (molecular weight similar to 42,000) which has the binding site for glutamine and a heavy subunit (molecular weight similar to 130,000) which has binding sites for the other reactants and allosteric effectors. The subunits may be separated with retention of catalytic activities; only the separated light subunit exhibits glutaminase activity. The previous finding that storage of the native enzyme at pH 9 at 0 degrees increased its glutaminase activity by about 25-fold was further investigated; such storage markedly decreased the glutamine- and ammonia-dependent synthetase activities of the enzyme. Treatment of the enzyme with p-hydroxymercuribenzoate led to transient increase of glutaminase activity followed by inhibition. When the enzyme was treated with N-ethylmaleimide or with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate), the glutaminase activity was increased by about 250-fold with concomitant loss of synthetase activities. The enhancement of glutaminase produced by storage of the enzyme at pH 9 was associated with intermolecular disulfide bond formation and aggregation of the enzyme. Aggregation also was observed after extensive treatment of the enzyme with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoate) or N-ethylmaleimide. However, a moderate increase of glutaminase activity (about 30-fold) was observed without aggregation under conditions in which one sulfhydryl group on the light subunit reacted with either reagent. The findings suggest that the increased glutaminase activities observed here are associated with structural changes in the enzyme in which the intersubunit relationship is altered so as to uncouple the catalytic functions of the enzyme and to facilitate access of water to the glutamine binding site on the light subunit.  相似文献   

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