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1.
The enzymes responsible for the biosynthesis of phosphatidylglycerol, CTP:phosphatidate cytidylyltransferase, CDP-diacylglycerol: glycerophosphate phosphatidyltransferase and phosphatidylglycerophosphate phosphatase demonstrated a coordinate increase in activity in fetal rat lung at term when the demand for pulmonary surfactant increases. The activity of CTP:cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase, the enzyme responsible for CDP-choline production also increased in the perinatal period. The activity of cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase in fetal and neonatal cytosol was stimulated by the addition of phosphatidylglycerol but no effect was noted with cytosol from adult lung. These results are consistent with the suggestion that the activity of cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase, a potential rate-determining enzyme in pulmonary phosphatidylcholine synthesis, may be regulated in the perinatal period both through an activation by phosphatidylglycerol and by an increase in total enzyme units.  相似文献   

2.
A rapid and sensitive assay for CTP and phosphocholine was required for us to determine the concentration of these compounds in tissues and cell cultures. Such a procedure was devised with CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase, an enzyme which is highly specific for CTP and phosphocholine. The 0--22% ammonium sulfate precipitate of a cytosolic extract from rat liver was used as the source of the enzyme. The amount of CTP in an extract was estimated by the conversion of [3H]phosphocholine to 3H-labelled CDP-choline. Similarly, the concentration of phosphocholine was estimated by the formation of 3H-labelled CDP-choline from 3H-labelled CTP. The conversion of CTP and phosphocholine to CDP-choline was 90% when inorganic pyrophosphatase was added to the incubations. The formation of CDP-choline was linear between 1 and 10 nmol of CTP or phosphocholine. The concentration of CTP was determined in rat liver (62 nmol/g wet weight) and baby hamster kidney 21 (BHK-21) cells (161 nmol/g wet weight). The concentration of phosphocholine in rat liver was 1.16 mumol/g wet weight whereas in BHK-21 cells it was much less (69 nmol/g wet weight). By this procedure, it may be possible to establish the importance of CTP and phosphocholine in the control of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis.  相似文献   

3.
The cytidylyltransferases are a family of enzymes that utilize cytidine 5′-triphosphate (CTP) to synthesize molecules that are typically precursors to membrane phospholipids. The most extensively studied cytidylyltransferase is CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT), which catalyzes conversion of phosphocholine and CTP to cytidine diphosphocholine (CDP-choline), a step critical for synthesis of the membrane phospholipid phosphatidylcholine (PC). The current method used to determine catalytic activity of CCT measures production of radiolabeled CDP-choline from 14C-labeled phosphocholine. The goal of this research was to develop a CCT enzyme assay that employed separation of non-radioactive CDP-choline from CTP. A C18 reverse phase column with a mobile phase of 0.1 M ammonium bicarbonate (98%) and acetonitrile (2%) (pH 7.4) resulted in separation of solutions of the substrate CTP from the product CDP-choline. A previously characterized truncated version of rat CCTα (denoted CCTα236) was used to test the HPLC enzyme assay by measuring CDP-choline product formation. The Vmax for CCTα236 was 3850 nmol/min/mg and K0.5 values for CTP and phosphocholine were 4.07 mM and 2.49 mM, respectively. The HPLC method was applied to glycerol 3-phosphate cytidylyltransferase (GCT) and CTP:2-C-methyl-D-erythritol-4-phosphate cytidylyltransferase synthetase (CMS), members of the cytidylyltransferase family that produce CDP-glycerol and CDP-methylerythritol, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
CTP : phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activity exists in both the microsome and cytosol fractions of adult lung, 36 and 59%, respectively. Although these enzyme activities are stimulated in vitro by added lipid activators (i.e. phosphatidylglycerol), there are significant levels of activity in the absence of added lipid. We have removed endogenous lipid material from microsome and cytosol preparations of rat lung by rapid extraction with isopropyl ether. The extraction procedure did not cause any loss of cytidylyltransferase activity in the cytosol. After the extraction the enzyme was almost completely dependent upon added lipid activator. Isopropyl ether extraction of microsome preparations produced a loss of 40% of the cytidylyltransferase activity, when measured in the presence of added phosphatidylglycerol. Lipid material extracted into isopropyl ether restored the cytidylyltransferase activity in cytosol. The predominant species of enzyme activator in the isopropyl ether extracts was fatty acid. A variety of naturally occurring unsaturated fatty acids stimulated the cytidylyltransferase to the same extent as phosphatidylglycerol. Saturated fatty acids were inactive.  相似文献   

5.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) catalyzes the conversion of phosphocholine and cytidine 5'-triphosphate (CTP) to CDP-choline for the eventual synthesis of phosphatidylcholine (PC). The enzyme is regulated by reversible association with cellular membranes, with the rate of catalysis increasing following membrane association. Two isoforms of CCT appear to be present in higher eukaryotes, including Drosophila melanogaster, which contains the tandem genes Cct1 and Cct2. Before this study, the CCT1 isoform had not been characterized and the cellular location of each enzyme was unknown. In this investigation, the cDNA encoding the CCT1 isoform from D. melanogaster has been cloned and the recombinant enzyme purified and characterized to determine catalytic properties and the effect of lipid vesicles on activity. CCT1 exhibited a V max of 23904 nmol of CDP-choline min (-1) mg (-1) and apparent K m values for phosphocholine and CTP of 2.29 and 1.21 mM, respectively, in the presence of 20 muM PC/oleate vesicles. Cytidylyltransferases require a divalent cation for catalysis, and the cation preference of CCT1 was found to be as follows: Mg (2+) > Mn (2+) = Co (2+) > Ca (2+) = Ni (2+) > Zn (2+). The activity of the enzyme is stimulated by a variety of lipids, including phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylserine, diphosphatidylglycerol, and the fatty acid oleate. Phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidic acid, however, did not have a significant effect on CCT1 activity. The cellular location of both CCT1 and CCT2 isoforms was elucidated by expressing green fluorescent fusion proteins in cultured D. melanogaster Schneider 2 cells. CCT1 was identified as the nuclear isoform, while CCT2 is cytoplasmic.  相似文献   

6.
The cytidylyltransferase activity in fresh cytosol from different tissues of the rat was measured in the absence and presence of phosphatidylglycerol. In all cases addition of this lipid produced large increases in enzyme activity. Agarose gel (A-5.0) filtration profiles of the enzyme activities indicated that the L-form of the enzyme (190 000 molecular weight) predominated in liver, brain, kidney, and fetal lung. However, adult lung cytosol contained 70--80% of the activity in the H-form (molecular weight greater than or equal to 5 x 10(6)). Removal of phospholipid material from the alveolar spaces by lavage produced a significant reduction of the H-form of the enzyme in the cytosol fraction. The L-form of the cytidylyltransferases from fetal lung and adult liver, kidney, and brain all possess the same specificities for activation by phospholipids in vitro. In all cases, phosphatidylglycerol was the most potent activator at 0.2 mM. Lysophosphatidylethanolamine stimulated enzyme activity, whereas lysophosphatidylglycerol was a potent inhibitor. These studies implicate the role of acidic phospholipids in the regulation of cytidylyltransferase activity in vivo and the existence of a common L-form of the enzyme in serveral tissues of the rat.  相似文献   

7.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) is an enzyme critical for cellular phosphatidylcholine (PC) synthesis, converting phosphocholine and cytidine 5'-triphosphate (CTP) to CDP-choline. We have isolated a cDNA encoding an isoform of CCT from Drosophila melanogaster and expressed the recombinant native and 6 x -His-tagged forms using a baculovirus expression system in Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) insect cells. Immunoblot using anti-phospho amino acid antibodies reveals the enzyme is phosphorylated on serine and threonine residues, but not tyrosine. The purified native enzyme exhibits a V(max) value of 1352+/-159 nmol CDP-choline/min/mg, a K(m) value of 0.50+/-0.09 mM for phosphocholine, and a K' (Hill constant) value of 0.72+/-0.10 mM for CTP. The 6 x -His-tagged enzyme has similar properties with a V(max) value of 2254+/-253 nmol CDP-choline/min/mg, a K(m) value of 0.63+/-0.13 mM for phosphocholine and a K' for CTP equal to 0.81+/-0.20 mM. Each form of the enzyme was activated to a similar extent by synthetic PC vesicles containing 50 mol% oleate. The efficiency of lipid activation was greatest using PC vesicles containing diphosphatidylglycerol (DPG), significantly less efficient activation was seen when phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylinositol (PI) were incorporated into vesicles, and PC alone or PC vesicles containing phosphatidylethanolamine were the least efficient enzyme activators.  相似文献   

8.
Cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase (CTP : cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase, EC 2.7.7.15) is located in both the microsomal and supernatant fractions of adult lung when the tissue is homogenized in 0.145 M NaCl. The activity is located predominantly in the supernatant fraction in fetal lung. Cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase in the supernatant from fetal lung is stimulated 4- to 6-fold by the additions of total lung lipid. Serine phosphoglycerides and inositol phosphoglycerides specifically caused stimulation whereas choline phosphoglycerides and ethanolamine phosphoglycerides produced no stimulation. Lysophosphatidylcholine cause some stimulation, but only at high concentrations. A number of detergents were investigated. All produced inhibition except for the ampholytic detergent, miranol H2M which was not inhibitory. None of the detergents produced any stimulation of activity. Cytidylyltransferase activity in fetal lung when assayed in the absence of lipid is about 25% of the adult. The activity when assayed in the presence of lipid is equal or slightly higher than adult levels. The activity, measured without added phospholipid, increases 5- to 6-fold within 12 h after birth, to values higher than in the adult. The activity, measured in the presence of phospholipid, increased almost linearly from -2 day until +1 day. There is an inverse relationship between the concentration of phospholipid in the fetal lung supernatant and the degree of lipid stimulation. Chromatographic experiments with Biogel A 1.5 columns have shown that cytidylyltransferase can exist in two molecular sizes, a small molecular size that requires phospholipid for activity, and a larger molecular weight species which does not require the addition of phospholipid for activity. Fetal lung has a higher proportion of the low molecular weight form than adult lung. The small molecular weight species can be converted to the larger molecular weight form by the addition of phospholipids.  相似文献   

9.
When type II pneumonocytes from adult rats were maintained in a medium that lacked choline, the incorporation of [14C]glycerol into phosphatidylcholine was not greatly diminished during the period that the cells displayed characteristics of type II pneumonocytes. Cells that were maintained in choline-free medium that contained choline oxidase and catalase, however, became depleted of choline and subsequent synthesis of phosphatidylcholine by these cells was responsive to choline in the extracellular medium. Incorporation of [14C]glycerol into phosphatidylcholine by choline-depleted cells was stimulated maximally (approx. 6-fold) by extracellular choline at a concentration (0.05 mM) that also supported the greatest incorporation into phosphatidylglycerol. The incorporation of [14C]glycerol into other glycerophospholipids by choline-depleted cells was not increased by extracellular choline. When cells were incubated in the presence of [3H]cytidine, the choline-dependent stimulation of the synthesis of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol was accompanied by an increased recovery of [3H]CMP. This increased recovery of [3H]CMP reflected an increase in the intracellular amount of CMP from 48 +/- 9 to 76 +/- 16 pmol/10(6) cells. Choline-depleted cells that were exposed to [3H]choline contained [3H]CDP-choline as the principal water-soluble choline derivative. As the extracellular concentration of choline was increase, however, the amount of 3H in phosphocholine greatly exceeded that in all other water-soluble derivatives. Choline-depletion of cells resulted in an increase in the specific activity of CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase in cell homogenates (from 0.40 +/- 0.15 to 1.31 +/- 0.20 nmol X min-1 X mg of protein-1). These data are indicative that the biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine is integrated with that of phosphatidylglycerol and are consistent with the proposed involvement of CMP in this integration. The choline-depleted type II pneumonocyte provides a new model for investigating the regulation of CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase activity.  相似文献   

10.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) is the key regulatory enzyme in the synthesis of phosphatidylcholine, the most abundant phospholipid in eukaryotic cell membranes. The CCT-catalyzed transfer of a cytidylyl group from CTP to phosphocholine to form CDP-choline is regulated by a membrane lipid-dependent mechanism imparted by its C-terminal membrane binding domain. We present the first analysis of a crystal structure of a eukaryotic CCT. A deletion construct of rat CCTα spanning residues 1–236 (CCT236) lacks the regulatory domain and as a result displays constitutive activity. The 2.2-Å structure reveals a CCT236 homodimer in complex with the reaction product, CDP-choline. Each chain is composed of a complete catalytic domain with an intimately associated N-terminal extension, which together with the catalytic domain contributes to the dimer interface. Although the CCT236 structure reveals elements involved in binding cytidine that are conserved with other members of the cytidylyltransferase superfamily, it also features nonconserved active site residues, His-168 and Tyr-173, that make key interactions with the β-phosphate of CDP-choline. Mutagenesis and kinetic analyses confirmed their role in phosphocholine binding and catalysis. These results demonstrate structural and mechanistic differences in a broadly conserved protein fold across the cytidylyltransferase family. Comparison of the CCT236 structure with those of other nucleotidyltransferases provides evidence for substrate-induced active site loop movements and a disorder-to-order transition of a loop element in the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
In hamster heart, the majority of the phosphatidylcholine is synthesized via the CDP-choline pathway, and the rate-limiting step of this pathway is catalysed by CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.15). We have shown previously [Choy (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 10928-10933] that, in the myopathic heart, the level of cardiac CTP was diminished during the development of the disease. In order to maintain the level of CDP-choline, and consequently the rate of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis, cardiac cytidylyltransferase activity was increased. However, it was not clear if the same compensatory mechanism would occur when the cardiac CTP level was decreased rapidly. In this study, hypoxia of the hamster heart was produced by perfusion with buffer saturated with 95% N2. The heart was pulse-labelled with radioactive choline and then chased with non-radioactive choline for various periods under hypoxic conditions. There was a severe decrease in ATP and CTP levels within 60 min of hypoxic perfusion, with a corresponding fall in the rate of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis. Analysis of the choline-containing metabolites revealed that the lowered ATP level did not affect the phosphorylation of choline to phosphocholine, but the lower CTP level resulted in the decreased conversion of phosphocholine to CDP-choline. Determination of enzyme activities revealed that hypoxic treatment resulted in the enhanced translocation of cytidylyltransferase from the cytosolic to the microsomal form. This enhanced translocation was probably caused by the accumulation of fatty acids in the heart during hypoxia. We postulate that the enhancement of translocation of the cytidylyltransferase to the microsomal form (a more active form) is a mechanism by which the heart can compensate for the decrease in CTP level during hypoxia in order to maintain phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis.  相似文献   

12.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae URA7-encoded CTP synthetase is phosphorylated and stimulated by protein kinases A and C. Previous studies have revealed that Ser424 is the target site for protein kinase A. Using a purified S424A mutant CTP synthetase enzyme, we examined the effect of Ser424 phosphorylation on protein kinase C phosphorylation. The S424A mutation in CTP synthetase caused a 50% decrease in the phosphorylation of the enzyme by protein kinase C and an 80% decrease in the stimulatory effect on CTP synthetase activity by protein kinase C. The S424A mutation caused increases in the apparent Km values of CTP synthetase and ATP of 20-and 2-fold, respectively, in the protein kinase C reaction. The effect of the S424A mutation on the phosphorylation reaction was dependent on time and protein kinase C concentration. A CTP synthetase synthetic peptide (SLGRKDSHSA) containing Ser424 was a substrate for protein kinase C. Comparison of phosphopeptide maps of the wild type and S424A mutant CTP synthetase enzymes phosphorylated by protein kinases A and C indicated that Ser424 was also a target site for protein kinase C. Phosphorylation of Ser424 accounted for 10% of the total phosphorylation of CTP synthetase by protein kinase C. The incorporation of [methyl-3H]choline into phosphocholine, CDP-choline, and phosphatidylcholine in cells carrying the S424A mutant CTP synthetase enzyme was reduced by 48, 32, and 46%, respectively, when compared with control cells. These data indicated that phosphorylation of Ser424 by protein kinase A or by protein kinase C was required for maximum phosphorylation and stimulation of CTP synthetase and that the phosphorylation of this site played a role in the regulation of phosphatidylcholine synthesis by the CDP-choline pathway.  相似文献   

13.
Uridine kinase from mouse Ehrlich ascites cells can exist in a variety of different aggregation states, from monomer up to aggregates that may contain 32 or more subunits. With very crude enzyme preparations, uridine kinase activity is always associated with several different coexisting molecular weight species. Changes in the aggregation state are produced in the presence of normal effectors (orthophosphate, ATP and CTP) at physiological concentrations. With uridine kinase that has been purified 9,000-fold, enzyme activity is associated with only a single molecular weight species, but is still responsive to the same physiological effectors. In the presence of orthophosphate, uridine kinase has a molecular weight of 380,000 (appropriate for a dodecamer). In the presence of CTP, the enzyme dissociates with concomitant loss of activity. The dissociated enzyme can be reassociated to the native size. These results imply that alteration of the enzyme's quaternary structure by normal effectors constitutes a mechanism for regulating uridine kinase activity in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a member of a small group of bacteria that display phosphocholine on the cell surface, covalently attached to the sugar groups of teichoic acid and lipoteichoic acid. The putative pathway for this phosphocholine decoration is, in its first two enzymes, functionally similar to the CDP-choline pathway used for phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis in eukaryotes. We show that the licC gene encodes a functional CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT). The enzyme has been expressed and purified to homogeneity. Assay conditions were optimized, particularly with respect to linearity with time, pH, Mg(2+), and ammonium sulfate concentration. The pure enzyme has K(M) values of 890+/-240 microM for CTP, and 390+/-170 microM for phosphocholine. The k(cat) is 17.5+/-4.0 s(-1). S. pneumoniae CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (SpCCT) is specific for CTP or dCTP as the nucleotide substrate. SpCCT is strongly inhibited by Ca(2+). The IC(50) values for recombinant and native SpCCT are 0.32+/-0.04 and 0.27+/-0.03 mM respectively. The enzyme is also inhibited by all other tested divalent cations, including Mg(2+) at high concentrations. The cloning and expression of this enzyme sets the stage for design of inhibitors as possible antipneumococcal drugs.  相似文献   

15.
The acyl specificity of 1,2-diacylglycerol: CDP-choline phosphocholine transferase (EC 2.7.8.2) for the formation of phosphatidylcholine with the appropriate acyl groups in hamster heart was investigated. Enzyme activity was determined in the microsomal fraction with 1,2-diacylglycerols of known acyl content. Maximum enzyme activity was obtained with diacylglycerol containing a monoenoic acyl group at the C-2 position of the glycerol moiety, regardless of the acyl group at the C-1 position. The specificity of the enzymes was also investigated by perfusing the isolated hamster heart with labelled glycerol. Comparison of the molecular species of the labelled diacylglycerols and phosphatidylcholine subsequent to perfusion revealed that the specificity of phosphocholine transferase was not limited to the monoenoic species of diacylglycerol. The difference in specificity observed between the in vitro assay and the perfusion study may partly be attributed to the presence of detergent in the enzyme assay mixture (to facilitate solubility of diacylglycerol). It is concluded that in the hamster heart, phosphocholine transferase has only limited ability to select the appropriate acyl groups for phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis. It appears that the majority of the newly formed phosphatidylcholine in the heart via the CDP-choline pathway is subsequently resynthesized by deacylation-reacylation process.  相似文献   

16.
Helmink BA  Braker JD  Kent C  Friesen JA 《Biochemistry》2003,42(17):5043-5051
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase alpha (CCTalpha) contains a central region that functions as a catalytic domain, converting phosphocholine and cytidine 5'-triphosphate (CTP) to CDP-choline for the subsequent synthesis of phosphatidylcholine. We have investigated the catalytic role of lysine 122 and arginine 196 of rat CCTalpha using site-directed mutagenesis and a baculovirus expression system. Arginine 196 is part of the highly conserved RTEGIST motif, while lysine 122 has not previously been identified by protein sequence alignment as a candidate catalytic amino acid. Removing the side chain of lysine 122 compromises the catalytic ability of CCTalpha, decreasing the apparent V(max) value in mutant enzymes Lys122Ala and Lys122Arg to 0.30 and 0.09% of the wild-type value, respectively. The decrease in V(max) is accompanied by dramatic 471- and 80-fold increases in the apparent K(m) value for phosphocholine but no greater than 3-fold increases in the apparent Hill constant (K*) value for CTP. Mutation of arginine 196 to lysine results in an enzyme that retains 24% of the wild-type V(max) value with a modest 5-fold increase in the K(m) value for phosphocholine. However, the Arg196Lys mutant enzyme exhibits a 23-fold increase in the K* value for CTP. These data suggest lysine 122 and arginine 196 of rat CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase are functionally important amino acids, perhaps at or near the active site involved in forming contacts with the substrates phosphocholine and CTP, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Poliovirus increases phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis in HeLa cells by stimulation of the reaction catalyzed by CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (Vance, D.E., Trip, E.M., and Paddon, H.B. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 1064-1069). The mechanism for the virus effect has been investigated. An assay for the cytidylyltransferase which mimics the physiological conditions within the cell was developed. The enzyme activity was not changed at 3 h but was stimulated more than 2-fold at 4 and 5 h after infection with poliovirus. Enzyme activity was stimulated by addition of CTP to the assay. At 0.10 mM CTP the difference in activities from poliovirus- and mock-infected cells was abolished. Mg2+ inhibited the cytidylyltransferase activities and eliminated the differences between the two activities at a concentration of 0.05 mM. However, the endogenous amount of Mg2+ in the postmitochondrial supernatants was the same for infected and mock-infected cells. The addition of CDP-choline or PPi inhibited the cytidylyltransferase activity but had no effect on the relative differences in activities from infected and mock-infected cells. Measurement of CTP in the postmitochondrial fraction showed no differences at 3 h but was elevated 2- to 3-fold in poliovirus-infected cells at 4 and 5 h. It appears that the cytidylyltransferase reaction is faster in poliovirus-infected HeLa cells because of an increase of CTP in the cytoplasmic compartment. Moreover, it appears that the concentration of CTP in the cytoplasm can determine the rate of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis in HeLa cells.  相似文献   

19.
CTP-phosphatidic acid cytidyltransferase catalyzes the formation of CDP-diglyceride from CTP and phosphatidic acid. The enzyme was solubilized from crude mitochondrial membrane by treatment with digitonin and was further purified by chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex, quaternary aminoethyl (QAE) Sephadex, and Sepharose 6B columns. At this stage the enzyme, enriched 550-fold over crude cell homogenate, still remains associated with phospholipid and has an estimated approximate molecular weight of 400,000 on the basis of gel filtration chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the 550-fold enriched enzyme yielded two major protein bands having molecular weights of 45,000 and 19,000. The enzyme exhibits an absolute dependence on Triton X-100, a sharp Mg2+ dependence with an optimum at 20 mM, and a pH optimum of 6.5 for activity. The product of the CTP-phosphatidic acid cytidyl-transferase reaction has been isolated and identified as CDP-diglyceride, both for the crude enzyme preparation as well as for the 550-fold enriched enzyme. CTP-phosphatidic acid cytidyltransferase is capable of catalyzing the reverse reaction in the presence of pyrophosphate, utilizing CDP-diglyceride as substrate. The product of the reverse reaction was identified as CTP. Kinetic analysis of the behavior of CTP-phosphatidic acid cytidyltransferase was performed at three different stages of its purification. Initial analysis of the data yielded biphasic behavior in double reciprocal plots with respect to both substrates. Hill plots of the data indicated the presence of negative cooperativity. A detailed analysis of the kinetic behavior was performed on the enzyme purified 550-fold. The data suggest a mechanism involving two distinct cycles of catalysis, responsive to homotropic modification, with different affinities for both substrates. Further analysis of the kinetic behavior in the presence of inhibitors (dCTP and PPi) yielded a reaction order for the entrance of substrates and departure of products from the reaction cycles. The high affinity site catalyzes the reaction via a double displacement mechanism and is the predominant form at low concentrations of substrates. At high concentrations of substrates the low affinity site starts contributing significantly to the reaction velocity with an ordered single displacement mechanism. In each case CTP is the first substrate to attach and PPi is the first product released.  相似文献   

20.
The aims of this study were to (i) elucidate the biosynthetic pathways for the formation of plasmenylcholine in the mammalian heart and (ii) investigate whether the control of choline glycerophospholipid production is different in hearts with high plasmenylcholine content. Guinea pig hearts were used throughout this study, since 34% of the cardiac choline glycerophospholipids in this species is present in the plasmenylcholine form. By perfusion of the guinea pig heart in the Langendorff mode with labeled choline, we demonstrated that the majority of plasmenylcholine in the heart was synthesized via the CDP-choline pathway. The ability of the heart to form plasmenylcholine from CDP-choline and 1-alkenyl-2-acylglycerol was also shown. We postulate that 1-alkenyl-2-acylglycerol in the guinea pig heart might originate from the hydrolysis of plasmenylethanolamine. In mammalian liver and other tissues, the CDP-choline pathway is the major pathway for phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis and the rate-limiting step is catalyzed by CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase. The results obtained from the present study support this supposition. In addition, evidence was obtained indicating that phosphorylation of choline by choline kinase in the CDP-choline pathway may also be rate limiting. Although the involvement of choline kinase as a rate-limiting enzyme in the CDP-choline pathway has been shown in a number of cell cultures, the rate-limiting role of this enzyme in intact mammalian organs has not been previously reported. The rationale for the presence of more than one rate-limiting step in the CDP-choline pathway in the guinea pig heart remains undefined.  相似文献   

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