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1.
Rates of glutamine formation and of carbon dioxide production (as an indication of oxidative deamination of glutamate) were determined in primary cultures of astrocytes exposed to 50 microM labeled glutamate in the absence or presence of added ammonia (0.1-3 mM). Glutamine formation (1.7 nmol/min/mg protein) was unaffected by all concentrations of added ammonia. This probably reflects the presence of a low content of ammonia (0.1-0.2 mM), originating from degradation of glutamine, in the cells even in the absence of added ammonia, and it shows that pathophysiological concentrations of ammonia do not increase the formation of glutamine from exogenous glutamate. The carbon dioxide production rate was 5.9 nmol/min/mg protein, i.e., three to four times higher than the rate of glutamine formation. It was significantly reduced (to 3.5 nmol/min/mg protein) in the presence of 1 mM or more of ammonia. This is in keeping with suggestions by others that toxic levels of ammonia affect oxidative metabolism.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of long-chain acyl-CoA on glutamate dehydrogenase activity was studied in uncoupled rabbit kidney cortex mitochondria incubated with glutamate and palmitoylcarnitine in the presence of arsenite. The mitochondrial long-chain acyl-CoA (about 2 nmol/mg of protein) accumulated in the presence of arsenite resulted in an inhibition of ammonia production from 4.1 to 1.2 nmol/min per mg of protein. Leucine and ADP, activators of glutamate dehydrogenase, did not release the inhibitory effect of long-chain acyl-CoA on glutamate deamination. In view of the presented data it seems that inhibitory effect of long-chain acyl-CoA on glutamate dehydrogenase activity may have a physiological significance.  相似文献   

3.
Metabolic Fate of 14C-Labeled Glutamate in Astrocytes in Primary Cultures   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The metabolic fate of L-[U-14C]- and L-[1-14C]glutamate was studied in primary cultures of mouse astrocytes. Conversion of the uniformly labeled compound to glutamine and aspartate was followed by determination of specific activities after dansylation with [3H]dansyl chloride and subsequent thin layer chromatography of the dansylated amino acids. Metabolic fluxes were calculated from the alterations of specific activities and the pool sizes, which were likewise measured by a dansylation method. Formation of 14CO2 from [1-14C]glutamate was determined by the trapping of CO2 in hyamine hydroxide in a gas-tight chamber, which is, in the known absence of glutamate decarboxylase activity in the cultured astrocytes, an unequivocal expression of the metabolic flux via alpha-ketoglutarate to CO2 and succinyl-CoA. The metabolic fluxes determined by these procedures amounted to 2.4 nmol/min/mg protein for glutamine synthesis, 1.1 nmol/min/mg protein for aspartate production, and 4.1 nmol/min/mg protein for formation and subsequent decarboxylation of alpha-ketoglutarate. The latter process was unaffected by virtually complete inhibition of glutamate-oxaloacetic transaminase with aminooxyacetic acid, indicating that the formation of alpha-ketoglutarate occurs as an oxidative deamination rather than as a transamination. This suggests that the formation of alpha-ketoglutarate from glutamate represents a net degradation, not an isotopic exchange.  相似文献   

4.
Streptococcus bovis JB1 cells energized with glucose transported glutamine at a rate of 7 nmol/mg of protein per min at a pH of 5.0 to 7.5; sodium had little effect on the transport rate. Because valinomycin-treated cells loaded with K and diluted into Na (pH 6.5) to create an artificial delta psi took up little glutamine, it appeared that transport was driven by phosphate-bond energy rather than proton motive force. The kinetics of glutamine transport by glucose-energized cells were biphasic, and it appeared that facilitated diffusion was also involved, particularly at high glutamine concentrations. Glucose-depleted cultures took up glutamine and produced ammonia, but the rate of transport per unit of glutamine (V/S) by nonenergized cells was at least 1,000-fold less than the V/S by glucose-energized cells. Glutamine was converted to pyroglutamate and ammonia by a pathway that did not involve a glutaminase reaction or glutamate production. No ammonia production from pyroglutamate was detected. S. bovis was unable to take up glutamate, but intracellular glutamate concentrations were as high as 7 mM. Glutamate was produced from ammonia via a glutamate dehydrogenase reaction. Cells contained high concentrations of 2-oxoglutarate and NADPH that inhibited glutamate deamination and favored glutamate formation. Since the carbon skeleton of glutamine was lost as pyroglutamate, glutamate formation occurred at the expense of glucose. Arginine deamination is often used as a taxonomic tool in classifying streptococci, and it had generally been assumed that other amino acids could not be fermented. To our knowledge, this is the first report of glutamine conversion to pyroglutamate and ammonia in streptococci.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of ammonia on glutamate accumulation and metabolism was examined in astrocyte cultures prepared from neonatal rat cortices. Intact astrocytes were incubated with 70 microM L-[14C(U)]glutamate and varying amounts of ammonium chloride. The media and cells were analyzed separately by HPLC for amino acids and labelled metabolites. Extracellular glutamate was reduced to 8 microM by 60 min. Removal of glutamate from the extracellular space was not altered by addition of ammonia. The rate of glutamine synthesis was increased from 3.6 to 9.3 nmol/mg of protein/min by addition of 100 microM ammonia, and intracellular glutamate was reduced from 262 to 86 nmol/mg of protein after 30 min. The metabolism of accumulated glutamate was matched nearly perfectly by the synthesis of glutamine, and both processes were proportional to the amount of added ammonia. The transamination and deamination products of glutamate were minor metabolites that either decreased or remained unchanged with increasing ammonia. Thus, ammonia addition stimulates the conversion of glutamate to glutamine in intact astrocyte cultures. At physiological concentrations of ammonia, glutamine synthesis appears to be limited by the rate of glutamate accumulation and the activity of competing reactions and not by the activity of glutamine synthetase.  相似文献   

6.
Glutamate transprot in rat kidney mitochondria   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The quantitative characteristics of [U-14C]glutamate transport were determined in rotenone-inhibited energized rat kidney mitochondria at pH 7.0 and 28 degrees C. Glutamate efflux was observed to be first order with respect to matrix glutamate with a rate constant of 0.457 min-1. Uptake kinetic studies indicated that the Km of external glutamate was 1.4 mM and the Vmax 3.2 nmol/mg X min. These kinetic values were found to be unchanged at pH 6.6 or in mitochondria obtained from kidneys of chronically acidotic rats. Parallel studies of glutamate deamination were performed in which mitochondria were incubated in state 3, state 4, and with carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone, in the presence of malonate. The oxidative deamination of glutamate determined with 1 and 10 mM glutamate never exceeded the simultaneously measured rate of glutamate transport. No glutamate was detectable within the mitochondrial matrix under the conditions of these metabolic experiments. The studies indicate that the glutamate hydroxyl transporter is quite slow and rate limiting for the oxidative deamination of external glutamate in rat kidney mitochondria.  相似文献   

7.
1. The synthesis and efflux of N-acetyl-l-aspartate from brain mitochondria of rats of different ages has been studied. 2. Brain mitochondrial State 3 (+ADP) respiration rate, using 10mm-glutamate and 2.5mm-malate as substrates, increases during the suckling period and reaches approx. 50% of the adult value at 17 days after birth [adult State 3 respiration rate=160+/-7ng-atoms of O/min per mg of mitochondrial protein(mean+/-s.d.; n=3)]. 3. The influence of 5mm-pyruvate or 10mm-dl-3-hydroxybutyrate on aspartate efflux from brain mitochondira from rats of different ages oxidizing glutamate and malate was studied. In all cases the aspartate efflux in State 3 was greater than in State 4, but, whereas the aspartate efflux in State 3 increased as the animals developed, that of State 4 showed only a small increase. However, the rate of aspartate efflux in the presence of pyruvate or 3-hydroxybutyrate as well as glutamate and malate was approx. 60-65% of that in the presence of glutamate and malate alone. 4. An inverse relationship between aspartate efflux and N-acetylaspartate efflux was observed with adult rat brain mitochondria oxidizing 10mm-glutamate and 2.5mm-malate in the presence of various pyruvate concentrations (0-5mm). 5. N-Acetylaspartate efflux by brain mitochondria of rats of different ages was studied in States 3 and 4, utilizing 5mm-pyruvate or 10mm-dl-3-hydroxybutyrate as acetyl-CoA sources. A similar pattern of increase during development was seen in State 3 for N-acetylaspartate efflux as for aspartate efflux (see point 3 above). Also only very small increases in N-acetylaspartate efflux occurred during development in State 4.6. Rat brain mitochondria in the presence of iso-osmotic N-acetylaspartate showed some swelling which was markedly increased in the presence of malate. 7. It is concluded that N-acetylaspartate may be synthesized and exported from both neonatal and adult rat brain mitochondria. It is proposed that the N-acetylaspartate is transported by the dicarboxylic acid translocase and may be an additional mechanism for mitochondrial/cytosolic carbon transport to that of citrate.  相似文献   

8.
Illuminated pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplasts catalyze (ammonia plus alpha-ketoglutarate [alpha-KG])-dependent O(2) evolution at rates which are commensurate with other estimates of the flux of assimilated nitrogen (mean of eight determinations, 8.3 mumole per mg chlorophyll per hour, sd 2.4). The reaction was usually initiated with 1 mm ammonia after preincubating chloroplasts in the presence of alpha-KG, ADP, pyrophosphate, and MgCl(2).Progressive increases in ammonia concentration gave V(max)/2 at 0.2 mm (approximately) and V(max) at about 1 mm. Higher concentrations were inhibitory; at 7 mm the rate was again about V(max)/2. The highest ratio of O(2) evolved per mol of ammonia supplied was 0.36.The (ammonia plus alpha-KG)-dependent reaction was inhibited by methionine sulfoximine, azaserine, and aspartate in the presence of amino-oxyacetate but not by amino-oxyacetate alone and not by l-glutamate. The rate of O(2) evolution in the presence of 1 mm ammonia and 2.5 mm alpha-KG was increased only slightly by addition of 5 mm glutamine. Similarly, the rate of O(2) evolution in the presence of 5 mm glutamine and 2.5 mm alpha-KG was increased only slightly by addition of 1 mm ammonia.The results are attributed to the incorporation of ammonia via glutamine synthetase and reductive transamination of the glutamine formed by photosynthetically coupled glutamate synthase using alpha-KG as the amino acceptor. Several lines of evidence rule out the possibility that photosynthetically coupled glutamate dehydrogenase is involved.  相似文献   

9.
1. Pyruvate strongly inhibited aspartate production by mitochondria isolated from Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells, and rat kidney and liver respiring in the presence of glutamine or glutamate; the production of (14)CO(2) from l-[U-(14)C]glutamine was not inhibited though that from l-[U-(14)C]glutamate was inhibited by more than 50%. 2. Inhibition of aspartate production during glutamine oxidation by intact Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells in the presence of glucose was not accompanied by inhibition of CO(2) production. 3. The addition of amino-oxyacetate, which almost completely suppressed aspartate production, did not inhibit the respiration of the mitochondria in the presence of glutamine, though the respiration in the presence of glutamate was inhibited. 4. Glutamate stimulated the respiration of kidney mitochondria in the presence of glutamine, but the production of aspartate was the same as that in the presence of glutamate alone. 5. The results suggest that the oxidation of glutamate produced by the activity of mitochondrial glutaminase can proceed almost completely through the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway if the transamination pathway is inhibited. This indicates that the oxidation of glutamate is not limited by a high [NADPH]/[NADP(+)] ratio. 6. It is suggested that under physiological conditions the transamination pathway is a less favourable route for the oxidation of glutamate (produced by hydrolysis of glutamine) in Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells, and perhaps also kidney, than the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway, as the production of acetyl-CoA strongly inhibits the first mechanism. The predominance of the transamination pathway in the oxidation of glutamate by isolated mitochondria can be explained by a restricted permeability of the inner mitochondrial membrane to glutamate and by a more favourable location of glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase compared with that of glutamate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

10.
Illuminated pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplasts actively catalyzed (glutamine plus alpha-ketoglutarate)-dependent O(2) evolution (average of 12 preparations 10.6 mumole mg chlorophyll per hour). The reaction was specific for glutamine and alpha-ketoglutarate; concentrations of 0.2 mm alpha-ketoglutarate and 0.6 mm glutamine, respectively, effected half-maximum rates of O(2) evolution. The reaction was inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1-1-dimethylurea and did not occur in the dark. After osmotic shock chloroplasts did not catalyze O(2) evolution. The reaction was inhibited by azaserine and glutamate but not by 10 mm ammonia, 2.5 mm methionine sulfoximine, or 5 mm amino-oxyacetate; addition of amino-oxyacetate together with aspartate inhibited O(2) evolution. Arsenate (3 mm) enhanced O(2) evolution. The highest molar ratio for O(2) evolved per mole of alpha-ketoglutarate supplied was 0.40; the corresponding values for glutamine in the absence and presence of 3 mm arsenate were 0.20 and 0.24, respectively. The (glutamine plus alpha-ketoglutarate)-dependent O(2) evolution is attributed to photosynthetically coupled glutamate synthase activity and the activity is sufficient to account for the assimilation of inorganic nitrogen. The low molar ratio for glutamine is discussed.Chloroplasts also catalyzed (aspartate plus alpha-ketoglutarate)-dependent O(2) evolution but this reaction was inhibited by 5 mm amino-oxyacetate and it was insensitive to azaserine and methionine sulfoximine. This reaction was attributed to transaminase and photosynthetically coupled malate dehydrogenase activities.  相似文献   

11.
1. The kinetics of glutamate transport into mitochondria were determined by using Bromocresol Purple to terminate the transport process. 2. Glutamate transport was found to have a V(max.) of 9.1nmol/min per mg of protein at pH6.9 and 20 degrees C; the K(m) for glutamate was 4mm. 3. The rate of glutamate deamination in intact mitochondria was tenfold slower than in disrupted mitochondria. 4. These results suggest that glutamate deamination may be controlled by the rate of glutamate transport. Possible consequences of these findings are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Axenic mycelia of the ectomycorrhizal basidiomycete, Suillus bovinus, were grown in liquid media under continuous aeration with compressed air at 25 degrees C in darkness. Provided with glucose as the only carbohydrate source, they produced similar amounts of dry weight with ammonia, with nitrate or with alanine, 60-80% more with glutamate or glutamine, but about 35% less with urea as the respectively only exogenous nitrogen source. In crude extracts of cells from NH4(+)-cultures, NADH-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase exhibited high aminating (688 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)) and low deaminating (21 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)) activities. Its Km-values for 2-oxoglutarate and for glutamate were 1.43 mM and 23.99 mM, respectively. pH-optimum for amination was about 7.2, that for deamination about 9.3. Glutamine synthetase activity was comparatively low (59 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)). Its affinity for glutamate was poor (Km = 23.7 mM), while that for the NH4+ replacing NH2OH was high (Km = 0.19 mM). pH-optimum was found at 7.0. Glutamate synthase (= GOGAT) revealed similar low activity (62 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)), Km-values for glutamine and for 2-oxoglutarate of 2.82 mM and 0.28 mM, respectively, and pH-optimum around 8.0. Aspartate transaminase (= GOT) exhibited similar affinities for aspartate (Km = 2.55 mM) and for glutamate (Km = 3.13 mM), but clearly different Km-values for 2-oxoglutarate (1.46 mM) and for oxaloacetate (0.13 mM). Activity at optimum pH of about 8.0 was 506 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1) for aspartate conversion, but only 39 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1) at optimum pH of about 7.0 for glutamate conversion. Activity (599 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)), substrate affinities (Km for alanine = 6.30 mM, for 2-oxoglutarate = 0.45 mM) and pH-optimum (6.5-7.5) proved alanine transaminase (= GPT) also important in distribution of intracellular nitrogen. There was comparatively low activity of the obviously constitutive enzyme, urease, (42 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)) whose substrate affinity was rather high (Km = 0.56 mM). Nitrate reductase proved substrate induced; activity could only be measured after exposure of the mycelia to exogenous nitrate. Routes of entry of exogenous nitrogen and tentative significance of the various enzymes in cell metabolism are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was used to evaluate the metabolism of [15N]glutamine in isolated rat brain synaptosomes. In the presence of 0.5 mM glutamine, synaptosomes accumulated this amino acid to a level of 25-35 nmol/mg protein at an initial rate greater than 9 nmol/min/mg of protein. The metabolism of [15N]glutamine generated 15N-labelled glutamate, aspartate, and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). An efflux of both [15N]glutamate and [15N]aspartate from synaptosomes to the medium was observed. Enrichment of 15N in alanine could not be detected because of a limited pool size. Elimination of glucose from the incubation medium substantially increased the rate and amount of [15N]aspartate formed. It is concluded that: (1) With 0.5 mM external glutamine, the glutaminase reaction, and not glutamine transport, determines the rate of metabolism of this amino acid. (2) The primary route of glutamine catabolism involves aspartate aminotransferase which generates 2-oxoglutarate, a substrate for the tricarboxylic acid cycle. This reaction is greatly accelerated by the omission of glucose. (3) Glutamine has preferred access to a population of synaptosomes or to a synaptosomal compartment that generates GABA. (4) Synaptosomes maintain a constant internal level of glutamate plus aspartate of about 70-80 nmol/mg protein. As these amino acids are produced from glutamine in excess of this value, they are released into the medium. Hence synaptosomal glutamine and glutamate metabolism are tightly regulated in an interrelated manner.  相似文献   

14.
The relative contribution of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and the aminotransferase activity to mitochondrial glutamate metabolism was investigated in dilute suspensions of purified mitochondria from potato (Solanum tuberosum) tubers. Measurements of glutamate-dependent oxygen consumption by mitochondria in different metabolic states were complemented by novel in situ NMR assays of specific enzymes that metabolize glutamate. First, a new assay for aminotransferase activity, based on the exchange of deuterium between deuterated water and glutamate, provided a method for establishing the effectiveness of the aminotransferase inhibitor amino-oxyacetate in situ, and thus allowed the contribution of the aminotransferase activity to glutamate oxidation to be assessed unambiguously. Secondly, the activity of GDH in the mitochondria was monitored in a coupled assay in which glutamine synthetase was used to trap the ammonium released by the oxidative deamination of glutamate. Thirdly, the reversibility of the GDH reaction was investigated by monitoring the isotopic exchange between glutamate and [(15)N]ammonium. These novel approaches show that the oxidative deamination of glutamate can make a significant contribution to mitochondrial glutamate metabolism and that GDH can support the aminotransferases in funneling carbon from glutamate into the TCA cycle.  相似文献   

15.
1. The metabolism of glutamate was followed by measurements of phosphoenolpyruvate production, aspartate synthesis and ammonia release, whereas the transport of glutamate across the inner membrane of kidney cortex mitochondria was studied using an oxygen electrode and the swelling technique.2. When added separately, avenaciolide and aminooxyacetate only partially inhibited both State 3 and uncoupled respiration of the mitochondria, as studied in the presence of glutamate as substrate. In contrast, the addition of both inhibitors to the reaction medium resulted in an almost complete inhibition of glutamate oxidation.3. Swelling of kidney mitochondria in an isosmotic solution of ammonium glutamate was accelerated by uncoupler and inhibited by avenaciolide, while the swelling of mitochondria in potassium glutamate was stimulated by valinomycin and inhibited by uncoupler.4. When glutamate was used as the sole substrate, inhibition of aspartate formation by aminooxyacetate resulted in a stimulation of both ammonia release and phosphoenolpyruvate production. In contrast, with glutamate plus malate as substrate an elevation of the rate of glutamate deamination on the addition of aminooxyacetate was accompanied by an inhibition of phosphoenolpyruvate synthesis in both State 3 and uncoupled conditions.5. In the presence of valinomycin to induce K+-permeability a marked enhancement of glutamate deamination was accompanied by a significant inhibition of glutamate transamination.6. Based on the presented results it was concluded that in rabbit renal mitochondria utilizing glutamate as substrate the rates of ammonia production, phosphoenolpyruvate formation and aspartate synthesis vary in response to different metabolic conditions, in which both the glutamate—H+ symport and the glutamate—aspartate exchange systems are functioning to different extents.  相似文献   

16.
More monensin-sensitive, ammonia-producing bacteria from the rumen   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Two monensin-sensitive bacteria which utilized carbohydrates poorly and grew rapidly on amino acids were isolated from the bovine rumen. The short rods (strain SR) fermented arginine, serine, lysine, glutamine, and threonine rapidly (greater than 158 nmol/mg of protein per h) and grew faster on casein digest containing short peptides than on free amino acids ().34 versus 0.29 h(-1)). Gelatin hydrolysate, an amino acid source containing an abundance of long peptides, was unable to support growth or ammonia production, but there was a large increase in ammonia production if strain SR was cocultured with peptidase-producing ruminal bacteria (Bacteroides ruminicola or Streptococcus bovis). Cocultures showed no synergism with short peptides. Strain SR washed out of continuous culture ().1 h(-1)) at pH 5.9. The irregularly shaped organisms (strain F) deaminated glutamine, histidine, glutamate, and serine rapidly (greater than 137 nmol/mg of protein per min) and grew faster on free amino acids than on short peptides ().43 versus 0.21 h(-1)). When strain F was provided with casein or gelatin hydrolysate and cocultured with peptidase-producing bacteria, there was a more than additive increase in ammonia production. Strain F grew in continuous culture (0.1 h(-1)) when the pH was as low as 5.3. The irregularly shaped cells and short rods were present at less than 10(9)/ml in vivo, but they ahd very high specific activities of ammonia production (greater than 310 nmol of ammonia/mg of protein per min) and could play an important role in ruminal amino acid fermentation.  相似文献   

17.
More monensin-sensitive, ammonia-producing bacteria from the rumen.   总被引:10,自引:9,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Two monensin-sensitive bacteria which utilized carbohydrates poorly and grew rapidly on amino acids were isolated from the bovine rumen. The short rods (strain SR) fermented arginine, serine, lysine, glutamine, and threonine rapidly (greater than 158 nmol/mg of protein per h) and grew faster on casein digest containing short peptides than on free amino acids ().34 versus 0.29 h(-1)). Gelatin hydrolysate, an amino acid source containing an abundance of long peptides, was unable to support growth or ammonia production, but there was a large increase in ammonia production if strain SR was cocultured with peptidase-producing ruminal bacteria (Bacteroides ruminicola or Streptococcus bovis). Cocultures showed no synergism with short peptides. Strain SR washed out of continuous culture ().1 h(-1)) at pH 5.9. The irregularly shaped organisms (strain F) deaminated glutamine, histidine, glutamate, and serine rapidly (greater than 137 nmol/mg of protein per min) and grew faster on free amino acids than on short peptides ().43 versus 0.21 h(-1)). When strain F was provided with casein or gelatin hydrolysate and cocultured with peptidase-producing bacteria, there was a more than additive increase in ammonia production. Strain F grew in continuous culture (0.1 h(-1)) when the pH was as low as 5.3. The irregularly shaped cells and short rods were present at less than 10(9)/ml in vivo, but they ahd very high specific activities of ammonia production (greater than 310 nmol of ammonia/mg of protein per min) and could play an important role in ruminal amino acid fermentation.  相似文献   

18.
The role of the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction as a pathway of glutamate synthesis was studied by incubating synaptosomes with 5 mM 15NH4Cl and then utilizing gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to measure isotopic enrichment in glutamate and aspartate. The rate of formation of [15N]glutamate and [15N]aspartate from 5 mM 15NH4Cl was approximately 0.2 nmol/min/mg of protein, a value much less than flux through glutaminase (4.8 nmol/min/mg of protein) but greater than flux through glutamine synthetase (0.045 nmol/min/mg of protein). Addition of 1 mM 2-oxoglutarate to the medium did not affect the rate of [15N]glutamate formation. O2 consumption and lactate formation were increased in the presence of 5 mM NH3, whereas the intrasynaptosomal concentrations of glutamate and aspartate were unaffected. Treatment of synaptosomes with veratridine stimulated reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate during the early time points. The production of ([15N]glutamate + [15N]aspartate) was enhanced about twofold in the presence of 5 mM beta-(+/-)-2-aminobicyclo [2.2.1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid, a known effector of glutamate dehydrogenase. Supplementation of the incubation medium with a mixture of unlabelled amino acids at concentrations similar to those present in the extracellular fluid of the brain had little effect on the intrasynaptosomal [glutamate] and [aspartate]. However, the enrichment in these amino acids was consistently greater in the presence of supplementary amino acids, which appeared to stimulate modestly the reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate. It is concluded: (a) compared with the phosphate-dependent glutaminase reaction, reductive amination is a relatively minor pathway of synaptosomal glutamate synthesis in both the basal state and during depolarization; (b) NH3 toxicity, at least in synaptosomes, is not referable to energy failure caused by a depletion of 2-oxoglutarate in the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction; and (c) transamination is not a major mechanism of glutamate nitrogen production in nerve endings.  相似文献   

19.
The isolated perfused rat kidney was shown to synthesize serine from aspartate or glutamate, both of which are also precursors of glucose. The major products of aspartate metabolism were ammonia, serine, glutamate, glucose, glutamine and CO2. Perfusion of kidneys with aspartate in the presence of amino-oxyacetate resulted in a near-complete inhibition of aspartate metabolism, illustrating the essential role of aspartate aminotransferase in the metabolism of this substrate. Radioactivity from 14C-labelled aspartate and from 14C-labelled glycerol was incorporated into serine and glucose. Production of both glucose and serine from aspartate was suppressed in the presence of 3-mercaptopicolinic acid. These data provide evidence for the operation of the phosphorylated and/or non-phosphorylated pathway for serine production to the presence of 3-mercaptopicolinic acid. This is explained by simultaneous glycolysis. The rate of glucose production, but not that of serine, was greater in kidneys perfused with glutamate or with aspartate plus glycerol than the rates obtained by perfusion with aspartate alone. These data are taken to suggest that serine synthesis occurred at a near-maximal rate, and that the capacity of the kidney for serine synthesis from glucose precursors is lower than that for glucose synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
The oxidative metabolism of glutamine in HeLa cells was investigated using intact cells and isolated mitochondria. The concentrations of the cytoplasmic amino acids were found to be aspartate, 8.0 mM; glutamate, 22.2 mM; glutamine, 11.3 mM; glycine, 9.8 mM; taurine, 2.3 mM; and alanine, <1 mM. Incubation of the cells with [14C]glutamine gave steady-state recoveries of 14C-label (estimated as exogenous glutamine) in the glutamine, glutamate, and aspartate pools, of 103%, 80%, and 25%, respectively, indicating that glutamine synthetase activity was absent and that a significant proportion of glutamate oxidation proceeded through aspartate aminotransferase. No label was detected in the alanine pool, suggesting that alanine aminotransferase activity was low in these cells. The clearance rate of [14C]glutamine through the cellular compartment was 65 nmol/min per mg protein. There was a 28 s delay after [14C]glutamine was added to the cell before 14C-label was incorporated into the cytoplasm, while the formation of glutamate commenced 10 s later. Aspartate was the major metabolite formed when the mitochondria were incubated in a medium containing either glutamine, glutamate, or glutamate plus malate. The transaminase inhibitor AOA inhibited both aspartate efflux from the mitochondria and respiration. The addition of 2-oxoglutarate failed to relieve glutamate plus malate respiration, indicating that 2-oxoglutarate is part of a well-coupled truncated cycle, of which aspartate aminotransferase has been shown to be a component [Parlo and Coleman (1984): J Biol Chem 259:9997–10003]. This was confirmed by the observation that, although it inhibited respiration, AOA did not affect the efflux of citrate from the mitochondria. Thus citrate does not appear to be a cycle component and is directly transported to the medium. Therefore, it was concluded that the truncated TCA cycle in HeLa cells is the result of both a low rate of citrate synthesis and an active citrate transporter. DNP (10 μM) induced a state III-like respiration only in the presence of succinate, which supports the evidence that NAD-linked dehydrogenases were not coupled to respiration, and suggests that these mitochondria may have a defect in complex I of the electron transport chain. Arising from the present results with HeLa cells and results extant in the literature, it has been proposed that a major regulating mechanism for the flux of glutamate carbon in tumour cells is the competitive inhibition exerted by 2-oxoglutarate on aspartate and alanine aminotransferases. This has been discussed and applied to the data. J. Cell. Biochem. 68:213–225, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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