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1.
The mechanism of acetate assimilation by the purple nonsulfur bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, which lacks the glyoxylate shortcut, has been studied. In a previous work, proceeding from data on acetate assimilation by Rba. sphaeroides cell suspensions, a suggestion was made regarding the operation, in this bacterium, of the citramalate cycle. This cycle was earlier found in Rhodospirillum rubrum in the form of an anaplerotic reaction sequence that operates during growth on acetate instead of the glyoxylate shortcut, which is not present in the latter bacterium. The present work considers the enzymes responsible for acetate assimilation in Rba. sphaeroides. It is shown that this bacterium possesses the key enzymes of the citramalate cycle: citramalate synthase, which catalyzes condensation of acetyl-CoA and pyruvate and, as a result, forms citramalate, and 3-methylmalyl-CoA lyase, which catalyzes the cleavage of 3-methylmalyl-CoA to glyoxylate and propionyl-CoA. The regeneration of pyruvate, which is the acetyl-CoA acceptor in the citramalate cycle, involves propionyl-CoA and occurs via the following reaction sequence: propionyl-CoA (+ CO2) --> methylmalonyl-CoA --> succinyl-CoA --> succinate --> fumarate --> malate --> oxalacetate (- CO2) --> phosphoenolpyruvate --> pyruvate. The independence of the cell growth and the acetate assimilation of CO2 is due to the accumulation of CO2/HCO3- (released during acetate assimilation) in cells to a level sufficient for the effective operation of propionyl-CoA carboxylase.  相似文献   

2.
Propionate is used to protect bread and animal feed from moulds. The mode of action of this short-chain fatty acid was studied using Aspergillus nidulans as a model organism. The filamentous fungus is able to grow slowly on propionate, which is oxidized to acetyl-CoA via propionyl-CoA, methylcitrate and pyruvate. Propionate inhibits growth of A. nidulans on glucose but not on acetate; the latter was shown to inhibit propionate oxidation. When grown on glucose a methylcitrate synthase deletion mutant is much more sensitive towards the presence of propionate in the medium as compared to the wild-type and accumulates 10-fold higher levels of propionyl-CoA, which inhibits CoA-dependent enzymes such as pyruvate dehydrogenase, succinyl-CoA synthetase and ATP citrate lyase. The most important inhibition is that of pyruvate dehydrogenase, as this affects glucose and propionate metabolism directly. In contrast, the blocked succinyl-CoA synthetase can be circumvented by a succinyl-CoA:acetate/propionate CoA-transferase, whereas ATP citrate lyase is required only for biosynthetic purposes. In addition, data are presented that correlate inhibition of fungal polyketide synthesis by propionyl-CoA with the accumulation of this CoA-derivative. A possible toxicity of propionyl-CoA for humans in diseases such as propionic acidaemia and methylmalonic aciduria is also discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Tricarboxylic acid cycle pool size is determined by anaplerosis and metabolite disposal. The regulation of the latter during propionate metabolism was studied in isolated perfused rat hearts in the light of the characteristics of NADP-linked malic enzyme, which is inhibited by acetyl-CoA. The acetyl-CoA concentration was varied by infusions of acetate and octanoate, and the rate of metabolite disposal was calculated from a metabolic balance sheet compiled from the relevant metabolic fluxes. Propionate addition increased the tricarboxylic acid cycle pool size 4-fold and co-infusion of acetate or octanoate did not change it further. Propionate caused a decrease in the CoA-SH concentration and a 10-fold increase in the propionyl-CoA concentration. A paradoxical increase in the CoA-SH concentration was observed upon co-infusion of acetate in the presence of propionate, an effect probably caused by competitive inhibition of propionate activation. A more pronounced decline in the propionyl-CoA concentration was observed upon the co-infusion of octanoate. In a metabolic steady state, acetate and octanoate reduced propionate disposal only slightly, but did not increase the tricarboxylic acid cycle pool size. The results are in accord with the notion that the tricarboxylic acid pool size is mainly regulated by the anaplerotic mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
Filamentous fungi metabolize toxic propionyl-CoA via the methylcitrate cycle. Disruption of the methylcitrate synthase gene leads to an accumulation of propionyl-CoA and attenuates virulence of Aspergillus fumigatus . However, addition of acetate, but not ethanol, to propionate-containing medium strongly reduces the accumulation of propionyl-CoA and restores growth of the methylcitrate synthase mutant. Therefore, the existence of a CoA-transferase was postulated, which transfers the CoASH moiety from propionyl-CoA to acetate and, thereby, detoxifying the cell. In this study, we purified the responsible protein from Aspergillus nidulans and characterized its biochemical properties. The enzyme used succinyl-, propionyl- and acetyl-CoA as CoASH donors and the corresponding acids as acceptor molecules. Although the protein displayed high sequence similarity to acetyl-CoA hydrolases this activity was hardly detectable. We additionally identified and deleted the coding DNA sequence of the CoA-transferase. The mutant displayed weak phenotypes in the presence of propionate and behaved like the wild type when no propionate was present. However, when a double-deletion mutant defective in both methylcitrate synthase and CoA-transferase was constructed, the resulting strain was unable to grow on media containing acetate and propionate as sole carbon sources, which confirmed the in vivo activity of the CoA-transferase.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism of the dark assimilation of acetate in the photoheterotrophically grown nonsulfur bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum was studied. Both in the light and in the dark, acetate assimilation in Rsp. rubrum cells, which lack the glyoxylate pathway, was accompanied by the excretion of glyoxylate into the growth medium. The assimilation of propionate was accompanied by the excretion of pyruvate. Acetate assimilation was found to be stimulated by bicarbonate, pyruvate, the C4-dicarboxylic acids of the Krebs cycle, and glyoxylate, but not by propionate. These data implied that the citramalate (CM) cycle in Rsp. rubrum cells grown aerobically in the dark can function as an anaplerotic pathway. This supposition was confirmed by respiration measurements. The respiration of cells oxidizing acetate depended on the presence of CO2 in the medium. The fact that the intermediates of the CM cycle (citramalate and mesaconate) markedly inhibited acetate assimilation but had almost no effect on cell respiration indicative that citramalate and mesaconate are intermediates of the acetate assimilation pathway. The inhibition of acetate assimilation and cell respiration by itaconate was due to its inhibitory effect on propionyl-CoA carboxylase, an enzyme of the CM cycle. The addition of 5 mM itaconate to extracts of Rsp. rubrum cells inhibited the activity of this enzyme by 85%. The data obtained suggest that the CM cycle continues to function in Rsp. rubrum cells that have been grown anaerobically in the light and then transferred to the dark and incubated aerobically.  相似文献   

6.
In propionic acidemia, propionate acts as a metabolic toxin in liver cells by accumulating in mitochondria as propionyl-CoA and its derivative, methylcitrate, two tricarboxylic acid cycle inhibitors. Little is known about the cerebral metabolism of propionate, although clinical effects of propionic acidemia are largely neurological. We found that propionate was metabolized oxidatively by glia: [3-(14)C]propionate injected into mouse striatum or cortex, gave a specific activity of glutamine that was 5-6 times that of glutamate, indicating metabolism in cells that express glutamine synthetase, i.e., glia. Further, cultured cerebellar astrocytes metabolized [3-(14)C]propionate; cultured neurons did not. However, both cultured cerebellar neurons and astrocytes took up [3H]propionate, and propionate exposure increased histone acetylation in cultured neurons and astrocytes as well as in hippocampal CA3 pyramidal neurons of wake mice. The inability of neurons to metabolize propionate may be due to lack of mitochondrial propionyl-CoA synthetase activity or transport of propionyl residues into mitochondria, as cultured neurons expressed propionyl-CoA carboxylase, a mitochondrial matrix enzyme, and oxidized isoleucine, which becomes converted into propionyl-CoA intramitochondrially. The glial metabolism of propionate suggests astrocytic vulnerability in propionic acidemia when intramitochondrial propionyl-CoA may accumulate. Propionic acidemia may alter both neuronal and glial gene expression by affecting histone acetylation.  相似文献   

7.
In this study, the product of the CIT3 gene has been identified as a dual specificity mitochondrial citrate and methylcitrate synthase and that of the CIT1 gene as a specific citrate synthase. Recombinant Cit1p had catalytic activity only with acetyl-CoA whereas Cit3p had similar catalytic efficiency with both acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA. Deletion of CIT1 dramatically shifted the ratio of these two activities in whole cell extracts towards greater methylcitrate synthase. Deletion of CIT3 had little effect on either citrate or methylcitrate synthase activities. A Deltacit2Deltacit3 strain showed no methylcitrate synthase activity, suggesting that Cit2p, a peroxisomal isoform, may also have methylcitrate synthase activity. Although wild-type strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae did not grow with propionate as a sole carbon source, deletion of CIT2 allowed growth on propionate, suggesting a toxic production of methylcitrate in the peroxisomes of wild-type cells. The Deltacit2Deltacit3 double mutant did not grow on propionate, providing further evidence for the role of Cit3p in propionate metabolism. (13)C NMR analysis showed the metabolism of 2-(13)C-propionate to acetate, pyruvate, and alanine in wild-type, Deltacit1 and Deltacit2 cells, but not in the Deltacit3 mutant. (13)C NMR and GC-MS analysis of pyruvate metabolism revealed an accumulation of acetate and of isobutanol in the Deltacit3 mutant, suggesting a metabolic alteration possibly resulting from inhibition of the lipoamide acetyltransferase subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex by propionyl-CoA. In contrast to Deltacit3, pyruvate metabolism in a Deltapda1 (pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 alpha subunit) mutant strain was only shifted towards accumulation of acetate.  相似文献   

8.
Propionate is a very abundant carbon source in soil, and many microorganisms are able to use this as the sole carbon source. Nevertheless, propionate not only serves as a carbon source for filamentous fungi but also acts as a preservative when added to glucose containing media. To solve this contradiction between carbon source and preservative effect, propionate metabolism of Aspergillus nidulans was studied and revealed the methylcitrate cycle as the responsible pathway. Methylisocitrate lyase is one of the key enzymes of that cycle. It catalyzes the cleavage of methylisocitrate into succinate and pyruvate and completes the alpha-oxidation of propionate. Previously, methylisocitrate lyase was shown to be highly specific for the substrate (2R,3S)-2-methylisocitrate. Here, the identification of the genomic sequence of the corresponding gene and the generation of deletion mutants is reported. Deletion mutants did not grow on propionate as sole carbon and energy source and were severely inhibited during growth on alternative carbon sources, when propionate was present. The strongest inhibitory effect was observed, when glycerol was the main carbon source, followed by glucose and acetate. In addition, asexual conidiation was strongly impaired in the presence of propionate. These effects might be caused by competitive inhibition of the NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase, because the K(i) of (2R,3S)-2-methylisocitrate, the product of the methylcitrate cycle, on NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase was determined as 1.55 microM. Other isomers had no effect on enzymatic activity. Therefore, methylisocitrate was identified as a potential toxic compound for cellular metabolism.  相似文献   

9.
3-Hydroxypropionate is a product or intermediate of the carbon metabolism of organisms from all three domains of life. However, little is known about how carbon derived from 3-hydroxypropionate is assimilated by organisms that can utilize this C(3) compound as a carbon source. This work uses the model bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides to begin to elucidate how 3-hydroxypropionate can be incorporated into cell constituents. To this end, a quantitative assay for 3-hydroxypropionate was developed by using recombinant propionyl coenzyme A (propionyl-CoA) synthase from Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Using this assay, we demonstrate that R. sphaeroides can utilize 3-hydroxypropionate as the sole carbon source and energy source. We establish that acetyl-CoA is not the exclusive entry point for 3-hydroxypropionate into the central carbon metabolism and that the reductive conversion of 3-hydroxypropionate to propionyl-CoA is a necessary route for the assimilation of this molecule by R. sphaeroides. Our conclusion is based on the following findings: (i) crotonyl-CoA carboxylase/reductase, a key enzyme of the ethylmalonyl-CoA pathway for acetyl-CoA assimilation, was not essential for growth with 3-hydroxypropionate, as demonstrated by mutant analyses and enzyme activity measurements; (ii) the reductive conversion of 3-hydroxypropionate or acrylate to propionyl-CoA was detected in cell extracts of R. sphaeroides grown with 3-hydroxypropionate, and both activities were upregulated compared to the activities of succinate-grown cells; and (iii) the inactivation of acuI, encoding a candidate acrylyl-CoA reductase, resulted in a 3-hydroxypropionate-negative growth phenotype.  相似文献   

10.
The growth of Megasphaera elsdenii on lactate with acrylate and acrylate analogues was studied under batch and steady-state conditions. Under batch conditions, lactate was converted to acetate and propionate, and acrylate was converted into propionate. Acrylate analogues 2-methyl propenoate and 3-butenoate containing a terminal double bond were similarly converted into their respective saturated acids (isobutyrate and butyrate), while crotonate and lactate analogues 3-hydroxybutyrate and (R)-2-hydroxybutyrate were not metabolized. Under carbon-limited steady-state conditions, lactate was converted to acetate and butyrate with no propionate formed. As the acrylate concentration in the feed was increased, butyrate and hydrogen formation decreased and propionate was increasingly generated, while the calculated ATP yield was unchanged. M. elsdenii metabolism differs substantially under batch and steady-state conditions. The results support the conclusion that propionate is not formed during lactate-limited steady-state growth because of the absence of this substrate to drive the formation of lactyl coenzyme A (CoA) via propionyl-CoA transferase. Acrylate and acrylate analogues are reduced under both batch and steady-state growth conditions after first being converted to thioesters via propionyl-CoA transferase. Our findings demonstrate the central role that CoA transferase activity plays in the utilization of acids by M. elsdenii and allows us to propose a modified acrylate pathway for M. elsdenii.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanism of the aerobic dark assimilation of acetate in the photoheterotrophically grown purple nonsulfur bacteriumRhodospirillum rubrum was studied. Both in the light and in the dark, acetate assimilation inRsp. rubrum cells, which lack the glyoxylate pathway, was accompanied by the excretion of glyoxylate into the growth medium. The assimilation of propionate was accompanied by the excretion of pyruvate. Acetate assimilation was found to be stimulated by bicarbonate, pyruvate, the C4-dicarboxylic acids of the Krebs cycle, and glyoxylate, but not by propionate. These data implied that the citramalate (CM) cycle inRsp. rubrum cells can function as an anaplerotic pathway under aerobic dark conditions. This supposition was confirmed by respiration measurements. The respiration of cells oxidizing acetate depended on the presence of CO2 in the medium. The fact that the intermediates of the CM cycle (citramalate and mesaconate) markedly inhibited acetate assimilation but had almost no effect on cell respiration indicated that citramalate and mesaconate were intermediates of the acetate assimilation pathway. The inhibition of acetate assimilation and cell respiration by itaconate was due to its inhibitory effect on propionyl-CoA carboxylase, an enzyme of the CM cycle. The addition of 5 mM itaconate to extracts ofRsp. rubrum cells inhibited the activity of this enzyme by 85%. The data obtained suggest that the CM cycle continues to function inRsp. rubrum cells that have been grown anaerobically in the light and then transferred to the dark and incubated aerobically.  相似文献   

12.
A method has been developed for the determination of low amounts of propionyl-CoA in biological material. The method involves 14CO2 fixation by propionyl-CoA in the presence of purified propionyl-CoA carboxylase. Values for propionyl-CoA in rat liver in vivo and in isolated rat livers perfused in the presence of propionate are reported.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Tethered rotating cells of Rhodobacter sphaeroides varied widely in their stopping frequency; 45% of cells showed no stops of longer than 1 s, whereas others showed stops of up to several seconds. Individual cells alternated between stops and rotation at a fairly constant rate, without continuous variation. Addition of the chemoattractant propionate to free-swimming cells of R. sphaeroides increased the mean population swimming speed from 15 to 23 microns s-1. After correction for nonmotile cells, the percentage swimming at less than 5 microns s-1 dropped from approximately 22 to 8, whereas the percentage swimming at greater than 50 microns s-1 increased from 6 to 15. However, cells already swimming did not swim faster after propionate addition; the increase in the mean population speed after propionate addition was caused by an increase in the mean run length between stops from 25 to 101 microns. The increased run length was the result of a drop in both the stopping frequency and the length of a stop. Addition of propionate over the range of 10 microM to 1 mM decreased the stopping frequency; this decrease was almost entirely blocked by benzoate, a competitive inhibitor of propionate transport. The chemoattractants acetate and potassium had the same effect as propionate on the distribution of stopping frequency, which demonstrated that this is a general behavioral response to chemotactic stimulation. Adaptation to propionate stimulation was slow and very variable, cultures frequently showing little adaptation over 30 min. This characteristic may be the result of the lack of a highly specific chemosensory system in R. sphaeroides.  相似文献   

15.
Methylcitrate synthase is a key enzyme of the methylcitrate cycle and required for fungal propionate degradation. Propionate not only serves as a carbon source, but also acts as a food preservative (E280-283) and possesses a negative effect on polyketide synthesis. To investigate propionate metabolism from the opportunistic human pathogenic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus, methylcitrate synthase was purified to homogeneity and characterized. The purified enzyme displayed both, citrate and methylcitrate synthase activity and showed similar characteristics to the corresponding enzyme from Aspergillus nidulans. The coding region of the A. fumigatus enzyme was identified and a deletion strain was constructed for phenotypic analysis. The deletion resulted in an inability to grow on propionate as the sole carbon source. A strong reduction of growth rate and spore colour formation on media containing both, glucose and propionate was observed, which was coincident with an accumulation of propionyl-CoA. Similarly, the use of valine, isoleucine and methionine as nitrogen sources, which yield propionyl-CoA upon degradation, inhibited growth and polyketide production. These effects are due to a direct inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and blockage of polyketide synthesis by propionyl-CoA. The surface of conidia was studied by electron scanning microscopy and revealed a correlation between spore colour and ornamentation of the conidial surface. In addition, a methylcitrate synthase deletion led to an attenuation of virulence, when tested in an insect infection model and attenuation was even more pronounced, when whitish conidia from glucose/propionate medium were applied. Therefore, an impact of methylcitrate synthase in the infection process is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The effect of propionate on the growth and 4-androstene-3, 17-dion (AD) yield was investigated in cultures of Mycobacterium sp. NRRL B-3805 growing in minimal medium containing -sitosterol as substrate for selective side chain cleavage. Although the addition of propionate (PA) resulted in a concentration-dependent inhibition of growth at the beginning of fermentation, cultures started to grow in the presence of 0.1% of propionic acid reached an AD concentration 38% higher than the cultures growing in the absence of propionate during two day cultivation. After three days of incubation, the AD yields in cultures containing 0, 0.1 and 0.2% propionate at the inoculation were 68, 79 and 73%, while the protein levels were 2.01, 2.11 and 2.60 mg/ml, respectively. Our data showed that the positive effect of PA on the AD production from sterols by Mycobacterium sp. NRRL B-3805 could be explained by the induction of the enzymes of the methylmalonate pathway. The activity of propionyl-CoA carboxylase was about 30% higher in the crude extracts from the induced cultures growing in minimal medium, after 20 hours of growth, than in those from the controls (18.2 and 14.1 mU/mg, respectively, using propionyl-CoA as substrate). The distribution of the acid-stable 14C-radioactivity which built into methylmalonate, succinate and fumarate indicated that methylmalonyl-CoA mutase was also induced. Our data demonstrated that elimination of the toxic propionyl-CoA released from the side chain of the sterol is likely the rate-determining step of the AD production, at least at the beginning of the process.  相似文献   

17.
Metabolism of propionate to acetate in the cockroach Periplaneta americana   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Carbon-13 NMR and radiotracer studies were used to determine the precursor to methylmalonate and to study the metabolism of propionate in the cockroach Periplaneta americana. [3,4,5-13C3]Valine labeled carbons 3, 4, and 26 of 3-methylpentacosane, indicating that valine was metabolized via propionyl-CoA to methylmalonyl-CoA and served as the methyl branch unit precursor. Potassium [2-13C]propionate labeled the odd-numbered carbons of hydrocarbons and potassium [3-13C]propionate labeled the even-numbered carbons of hydrocarbons in this insect. This labeling pattern indicates that propionate is metabolized to acetate, with carbon-2 of propionate becoming the methyl carbon of acetate and carbon-3 of propionate becoming the carboxyl carbon of acetate. In vivo studies in which products were separated by HPLC showed that [2-14C]propionate was readily metabolized to acetate. The radioactivity from sodium [1-14C]propionate was not incorporated into succinate nor into any other tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediate, indicating that propionate was not metabolized via methylmalonate to succinate. Similarly, [1-14C]propionate did not label acetate. An experiment designed to determine the subcellular localization of the enzymes involved in converting propionate to acetate showed that they were located in the mitochondrial fraction. Data from both in vivo and in vitro studies as a function of time indicated that propionate was converted directly to acetate and did not first go through tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates. These data demonstrate a novel pathway of propionate metabolism in insects.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Citrulline synthesis, mostly regulated at the carbamoyl-phosphate synthase I (EC 6.3.4.16) step by the intramitochondrial concentration of ATP and/or N-acetylglutamate is tested with four organic acids: propionate, alpha-ketobutyrate, dipropyl-acetate and 4-pentenoate. In the presence of 10 mM succinate, as the oxidizable substrate, citrullinogenesis was only inhibited by propionate and 4-pentenoate. With 10 mM L-glutamate, a significant inhibition was observed with the four acids. After the addition of ATP and N-acetylglutamate to uncoupled mitochondria, no inhibition could be demonstrated with dipropylacetate and 4-pentenoate. However, a slight inhibition remained with propionate and alpha-ketobutyrate. When mitochondria were incubated with 10 mM L-glutamate, ATP decreased with propionate, dipropylacetate and 4-pentenoate. Under the same conditions, N-acetylglutamate synthesis was strongly inhibited by each organic acid. The decrease of N-acetylglutamate synthesis was related to the constant diminution of intramitochondrial acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) and to the increase of propionyl-CoA with propionate and alpha-ketobutyrate. Acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA are respectively substrate and competitive inhibitor of the N-acetylglutamate synthase (EC 2.3.1.1). Each acid displayed its optimum inhibition at concentrations between 1 and 2 mM. At these acid concentrations, mitochondria had the lowest acetyl-CoA content and the highest propionyl-CoA content.  相似文献   

20.
The regulation of gluconeogenesis from alpha-ketoisovalerate and propionate was investigated in perfused livers from fasted rats. With alpha-ketoisovalerate as the gluconeogenic precursor, infusion of beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetate stimulated the rate of alpha-ketoisovalerate decarboxylation, but inhibited the rate of glucose production. Oleate, on the other hand, inhibited both alpha-ketoisovalerate decarboxylation and glucose production. When propionate was the primary gluconeogenic substrate, oleate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, and acetate infusion did not significantly alter hepatic glucose production. The present studies suggest that gluconeogenesis from alpha-ketoisovalerate is regulated at the level of various dehydrogenases prior to formation of propionyl-CoA, but subsequent to the branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase reaction.  相似文献   

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