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1.
Unlike other lactic acid bacteria, Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis NCDO 2118 was able to grow in a medium lacking glutamate and the amino acids of the glutamate family. Growth in such a medium proceeded after a lag phase of about 2 days and with a reduced growth rate (0.11 h−1) compared to that in the reference medium containing glutamate (0.16 h−1). The enzymatic studies showed that a phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity was present, while the malic enzyme and the enzymes of the glyoxylic shunt were not detected. As in most anaerobic bacteria, no α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase activity could be detected, and the citric acid cycle was restricted to a reductive pathway leading to succinate formation and an oxidative branch enabling the synthesis of α-ketoglutarate. The metabolic bottleneck responsible for the limited growth rate was located in this latter pathway. As regards the synthesis of glutamate from α-ketoglutarate, no glutamate dehydrogenase was detected. While the glutamate synthase-glutamine synthetase system was detected at a low level, high transaminase activity was measured. The conversion of α-ketoglutarate to glutamate by the transaminase, the reverse of the normal physiological direction, operated with different amino acids as nitrogen donor. All of the enzymes assayed were shown to be constitutive.  相似文献   

2.
1. Increasing the substrate concentration only decreased the inhibition of mitochondrial oxidations by diphenyleneiodonium or by 2,4-dichlorophenyleneiodonium by a small amount. 2. Diphenyleneiodonium and 2,4-dichlorodiphenyleneiodonium lowered the amounts of succinate, citrate and glutamate accumulated in the matrix of mitochondria in the presence of Cl-, but not in its absences. 2,4-Dichlorodiphenyleneiodonium decreased the accumulation of substrates by mitochondria oxidizing glycerol 3-phosphate. 3. Diphenyleneiodonium caused an alkalinization of the medium with an anaerobic suspension of mitochondria, which was only partly reversed by Triton X-100. 4. The rate of proton extrusion by mitochondria oxidizing succinate was not altered by diphenyleneiodonium or by 2,4-dichlorodiphenyleneiodium, although the rate of decay of proton pulses was increased. 5. 2,4-Dichlorodiphenyleneiodonium shifted the pH optimum for succinate oxidation by intact mitochondria from pH 7.2 to 8.0, whereas there was no effect on that of freeze-thawed mitochondria, which was pH 8.0. 6. The concentration of 2,4-dichlorophenyleneiodonium required to inhibit respiration by 50% is less the higher the absolute rate of oxygen uptake. 7. EDTA, but not EGTA [ethanedioxybis(ethylamine)-tetra-acetic acid] increased the inhibition of respiration by diphenyleneiodonium, 2,4-dichlorodiphenyleneiodonium and by tri-n-propyltin. 8. It is concluded that diphenyleneiodonium and 2,4-dichlorodiphenyleneiodonium limit respiration in Cl--containing medium by causing an acidification of the matrix, and that there are pH-sensitive sites in the respiratory chain between NADH and succinate, and between succinate and cytochrome c.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of phthalate esters on the oxidation of succinate, glutamate, beta-hydroxybutyrate and NADH by rat liver mitochondria were examined and it was found that di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP) strongly inhibited the succinate oxidation by intact and sonicated rat mitochondria, but did not inhibit the State 4 respiration with NAD-linked substrates such as glutamate and beta-hydroxybutyrate. However, oxygen uptake accelerated by the presence of ADP and substrate (State 3) was inhibited and the rate of oxygen uptake decreased to that without ADP (State 4). It was concluded that phthalate esters were electron and energy transport inhibitors but not uncouplers. Phthalate esters also inhibited NADH oxidation by sonicated mitochondria. The degree of inhibition depended on the carbon number of alkyl groups of phthalate esters, and DBP was the most potent inhibitor of respiration. The activity of purified beef liver glutamate dehydrogenase [EC 1.4.1.3] was slightly inhibited by phthalate esters.  相似文献   

4.
Glutamate metabolism triggered by oxaloacetate in intact plant mitochondria   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In Percoll-purified potato tuber mitochondria, glutamate metabolism can be triggered by oxaloacetate, in the presence of ADP and thiamine pyrophosphate. There is a lag phase before O2 uptake is initiated. During this lag period, oxaloacetate is rapidly converted into α-ketoglutarate and succinate, or into malate at the expense of the NADH generated by α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase. The ratio of the flux rates of both pathways is strongly dependent on the glutamate concentration in the medium. When all the oxaloacetate is consumed, a rapid O2 uptake is initiated. The effects of malonate on glutamate metabolism triggered by oxaloacetate and on α-ketoglutarate oxidation are reported. It is concluded that the inhibition of the succinate dehydrogenase by either malonate or oxaloacetate does not affect the rate of α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase functioning. All the metabolites accumulated are excreted by the mitochondria in the supernatant. Some of them are then reabsorbed. These results emphasize the importance of the anion carriers in the overall process.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract Daily torpor results in an ~70% decrease in metabolic rate (MR) and a 20%-70% decrease in state 3 (phosphorylating) respiration rate of isolated liver mitochondria in both dwarf Siberian hamsters and mice even when measured at 37°C. This study investigated whether mitochondrial metabolic suppression also occurs in these species during euthermic fasting, when MR decreases significantly but torpor is not observed. State 3 respiration rate measured at 37°C was 20%-30% lower in euthermic fasted animals when glutamate but not succinate was used as a substrate. This suggests that electron transport chain complex I is inhibited during fasting. We also investigated whether mitochondrial metabolic suppression alters mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. In both torpor and euthermic fasting, ROS production (measured as H(2)O(2) release rate) was lower with glutamate in the presence (but not absence) of rotenone when measured at 37°C, likely reflecting inhibition at or upstream of the complex I ROS-producing site. ROS production with succinate (with rotenone) increased in torpor but not euthermic fasting, reflecting complex II inhibition during torpor only. Finally, mitochondrial ROS production was twofold more temperature sensitive than mitochondrial respiration (as reflected by Q(10) values). These data suggest that electron leak from the mitochondrial electron transport chain, which leads to ROS production, is avoided more efficiently at the lower body temperatures experienced during torpor.  相似文献   

6.
Effects of Gramicidin on Corn Mitochondria   总被引:5,自引:5,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The effects of gramicidin D, S, and J on corn mitochondria respiration and swelling were studied. Only gramicidin D was found to have any pronounced effect on mitochondrial swelling. In buffered KCl gramicidin D produced a rapid, respiration-independent swelling which was not reversed with respiratory inhibitors or substrate exhaustion. The respiration rate of exogenous reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide was stimulated by all three gramicidins, but the effects on malate-pyruvate and succinate respiration depended on the type of gramicidin and the reaction media. The respiration effects of gramicidin D may be due to action at specific sites for each substrate.  相似文献   

7.
《BBA》2023,1864(1):148930
At low inner mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ) oxaloacetate (OAA) accumulates in the organelles concurrently with decreased complex II-energized respiration. This is consistent with ΔΨ-dependent OAA inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase. To assess the metabolic importance of this process, we tested the hypothesis that perturbing metabolic clearance of OAA in complex II-energized mitochondria would alter O2 flux and, further, that this would occur in both ΔΨ and tissue-dependent fashion. We carried out respiratory and metabolite studies in skeletal muscle and interscapular brown adipose tissue (IBAT) directed at the effect of OAA transamination to aspartate (catalyzed by the mitochondrial form of glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase, Got2) on complex II-energized respiration. Addition of low amounts of glutamate to succinate-energized mitochondria at low ΔΨ increased complex II (succinate)-energized respiration in muscle but had little effect in IBAT mitochondria. The transaminase inhibitor, aminooxyacetic acid, increased OAA concentrations and impaired succinate-energized respiration in muscle but not IBAT mitochondria at low but not high ΔΨ. Immunoblotting revealed that Got2 expression was far greater in muscle than IBAT mitochondria. Because we incidentally observed metabolism of OAA to pyruvate in IBAT mitochondria, more so than in muscle mitochondria, we also examined the expression of mitochondrial oxaloacetate decarboxylase (ODX). ODX was detected only in IBAT mitochondria. In summary, at low but not high ΔΨ, mitochondrial transamination clears OAA preventing loss of complex II respiration: a process far more active in muscle than IBAT mitochondria. We also provide evidence that OAA decarboxylation clears OAA to pyruvate in IBAT mitochondria.  相似文献   

8.
The utilization of iron and its complexes by mammalian mitochondria   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Sonicated mitochondria catalyse the reduction of ferric salts, and the subsequent incorporation of Fe(2+) into haem, when provided with a reducing substrate such as succinate or NADH. The rate of haem synthesis was low under aerobic conditions and, after a short lag period, accelerated once anaerobic conditions were achieved; it was insensitive to antimycin A. The lag period was decreased by preincubating the mitochondria with NADH and Fe(3+). Newly formed Fe(2+) was autoxidized rapidly and the consequent O(2) uptake was measured with an oxygen electrode to determine the rate of enzymic formation of Fe(2+) from FeCl(3); this reaction was rapid in sonicated mitochondria provided with NADH or succinate and was insensitive to antimycin A. The reaction was very slow in intact mitochondria, suggesting a permeability barrier to Fe(3+) ions. This system was used to test the permeability of the mitochondrial membrane to various iron complexes of biological importance. Of the compounds tested only ferrioxamine G appeared to penetrate readily and the iron of this complex was reduced when intact mitochondria were supplied with succinate or NADH-linked substrates. The reduction was insensitive to rotenone or antimycin A. Both ferrioxamine G and ferrioxamine B were, however, reduced by particles. The membrane fraction of sonicated mitochondria was necessary for the reduction. The rate of ferrioxamine B reduction by sonicated mitochondria was measured by a dual-wavelength spectrophotometric assay and was found to be stimulated in conditions where the Fe(2+) produced was utilized for haem synthesis. The addition of FeCl(3) to anaerobic particles caused an oxidation of cytochrome b when this region of the respiratory chain was isolated by treatment with rotenone and antimycin A. These results suggest that the reduction of ferric iron and its complexes occurs inside the inner mitochondrial membrane in proximity to ferrochelatase. Possible sites for this reduction are the flavoproteins, succinate and NADH dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

9.
The products of the reactions of mitochondrial 2-oxo acids with hydrogen peroxide and tert-butyl hydroperoxide (tert-BuOOH) were studied in a chemical system and in rat liver mitochondria. It was found by HPLC that the decarboxylation of alpha-ketoglutarate (KGL), pyruvate (PYR), and oxaloacetate (OA) by both oxidants results in the formation of succinate, acetate, and malonate, respectively. The two latter products do not metabolize in rat liver mitochondria, whereas succinate is actively oxidized, and its nonenzymatic formation from KGL may shunt the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle upon inactivation of alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (KGDH) under oxidative stress, which is inherent in many diseases and aging. The occurrence of nonenzymatic oxidation of KGL in mitochondria was established by an increase in the CO(2) and succinate levels in the presence of the oxidants and inhibitors of enzymatic oxidation. H(2)O(2) and menadione as an inductor of reactive oxygen species (ROS) caused the formation of CO(2) in the presence of sodium azide and the production of succinate, fumarate, and malate in the presence of rotenone. These substrates were also formed from KGL when mitochondria were incubated with tert-BuOOH at concentrations that completely inhibit KGDH. The nonenzymatic oxidation of KGL can support the TCA cycle under oxidative stress, provided that KGL is supplied via transamination. This is supported by the finding that the strong oxidant such as tert-BuOOH did not impair respiration and its sensitivity to the transaminase inhibitor aminooxyacetate when glutamate and malate were used as substrates. The appearance of two products, KGL and fumarate, also favors the involvement of transamination. Thus, upon oxidative stress, nonenzymatic decarboxylation of KGL and transamination switch the TCA cycle to the formation and oxidation of succinate.  相似文献   

10.
Low concentrations of HPE and MLA inhibited state 3 respiration of rat liver mitochondria in the presence of different NAD+-dependent substrates. MLA appeared to be more active than HPE. High aldehyde concentrations inhibited the state 3 respiration with succinate. The restraint of succinate oxidation by HPE and MLA and of glutamate plus malate oxidation by MLA correlated with the inhibition of succinate and glutamate dehydrogenase activites, respectively. HPE inhibited glutamate dehydrogenase at concentrations higher than those affecting glutamate oxidation. Malate dehydrogenase activity was slightly sensitive to HPE and MLA. Both aldehydes inhibited NADH oxidation by freeze-thawed mitochondria. These results suggest the existence of a site particularly sensitive to aldehydes in the electron transport chain between the specific NAD+-linked dehydrogenases and ubiquinone.  相似文献   

11.
Shieh, K. Z. (Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago), and L. R. Hedrick. Energy requirement for l-glutamate uptake and utilization by Hansenula subpelliculosa cells. J. Bacteriol. 92:1638-1644. 1966.-Cells of the yeast Hansenula subpelliculosa require an energy source for the uptake of glutamate. A lag period of 20 to 40 min was required after the addition of glucose to the cells before glutamate uptake was initiated. When cells were preincubated in glucose, and washed with distilled water prior to the addition of glutamate, there was no lag period. Preincubation in glucose and glutamate lowered both the rate and the total uptake of glutamate as compared with cells preincubated in glucose alone. This is attributed to the partial utilization of the glucose-metabolite by glutamate or to the partial saturation of binding sites by glutamate during the preincubation period. Transport of glutamate by these yeast cells appears to be via a carrier, where energy is required for the binding of the amino acid to nonspecific binding sites. In addition to total uptake, some aspects of the C(14)-glutamate utilization were measured. Of the total uptake, 58% was metabolized and converted to CO(2), 25.2% remained in the soluble pool, and 16.8% was incorporated into trichloroacetic acid-insoluble products. When the available energy source was depleted, the processes of uptake, metabolism, and incorporation ceased, even though there was an ample supply of glutamate present within the cells. Removal of cells from glutamate and addition of glucose reinitiated the incorporation of glutamate into proteins and other trichloroacetic acid-insoluble compounds. Therefore, an additional energy source is required with this species of yeast for glutamate uptake, for the priming of mechanisms required for its metabolism, and for its incorporation.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Palmitylcarnitine oxidation by isolated liver mitochondria has been used to investigate the interaction of fatty acid oxidation with malate, glutamate, succinate, and the malate-aspartate shuttle. Mitochondria preincubated with fluorocitrate were added to a medium containing 2mM ATP and ATPase. This system, characterized by a high energy change, allowed titration of respiration to any desired rate between States 4 and 3 (Chance, B., and Williams, G. R. (1956) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 17, 65-134). When respiration (reference, with palmitylcarnitine and malate as substrates) was set at 75% of State 3, the oxidation of palmitylcarnitine was limited by acetoacetate formation. The addition of malate or glutamate approximately doubled the rate of beta oxidation. Malate circumvented this limitation by citrate formation, but the effect of glutamate apparently was due to enhancement of the capacity for ketogenesis. The rate of beta oxidation was curtailed when malate and glutamate were both present. This curtailment was more pronounced when the malate-aspartate shuttle was fully reconstituted. Among the oxidizable substrates examined, succinate was most effective in inhibiting palmitylcarnitine oxidation. Mitochondrial NADH/NAD+ ratios were correlated positively with suppression of beta oxidation. The degree of suppression of beta oxidation by the malate-aspartate shuttle (NADH oxidation) or by succinate oxidation was dependent on the respiratory state. Both substrates extensively reduced mitochondrial NAD+ and markedly suppressed beta oxidation as respiration approached State 4. Calculations of the rates of flux of hydrogen equivalents through beta oxidation show that the suppression of beta oxidation by glutamate or by the malate-aspartate shuttle is accounted for by increased flux of reducing equivalents through mitochondrial malic dehydrogenase. This increased Flux is accompanied by an increase in the steady state NADH/NAD+ ratio and a marked decrease in the synthesis of citrate. The alpha-glycerophosphate shuttle was reconstituted with mitochondria isolated from rats treated with L-thyroxine. This shuttle was about equal to the reconstructed malate-aspartate shuttle in supression of palmitylcarnitine oxidation. This interaction could not be demonstrated in euthyroid animals owing to the low activity of the mitochondrial alpha-glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase. It is concluded that beta oxidation can be regulated by the NADH/NAD+ ratio. The observed stimulation of flux through malate dehydrogenase both by glutamate and by the malate-aspartate shuttle results in an increased steady state NADH/NAD+ ratio, and is linked to a stoichiometric outward transport of aspartate. We suggest, therefore, that some of the reducing pressure exerted by the malate-aspartate shuttle and by glutamate plus malate is provided through the energy-linked, electrogenic transport of aspartate out of the mitochondria. These results are discussed with respect to the mechanism of the genesis of ethanol-induced fatty liver.  相似文献   

14.
Transport of succinate into Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells was determined using the endogenous coupled mitochondrial succinate oxidase system. The dependence of succinate oxidation rate on the substrate concentration was a curve with saturation. At neutral pH the K(m) value of the mitochondrial "succinate oxidase" was fivefold less than that of the cellular "succinate oxidase". O-Palmitoyl-L-malate, not penetrating across the plasma membrane, completely inhibited cell respiration in the presence of succinate but not glucose or pyruvate. The linear inhibition in Dixon plots indicates that the rate of succinate oxidation is limited by its transport across the plasmalemma. O-Palmitoyl-L-malate and L-malate were competitive inhibitors (the K(i) values were 6.6 +/- 1.3 microM and 17.5 +/- 1.1 mM, respectively). The rate of succinate transport was also competitively inhibited by the malonate derivative 2-undecyl malonate (K(i) = 7.8 +/- 1.2 microM) but not phosphate. Succinate transport across the plasma membrane of S. cerevisiae is not coupled with proton transport, but sodium ions are necessary. The plasma membrane of S. cerevisiae is established to have a carrier catalyzing the transport of dicarboxylates (succinate and possibly L-malate and malonate).  相似文献   

15.
NH4C1 inhibited oxygen consumption (State 3, ADP induced) by rat liver mitochondria respiring on palmitoyl-L-carnitine or octanoic acid but not on succinate or malate + glutamate. The inhibition became apparent at 0.02 mM reaching a plateau (40%) at 2 mM NH4C1. Similar inhibition was observed with uncoupled (in the presence of 2, 4-dinitrophenol) mitochondria. The inhibition of uncoupled mitochondria was reversible as the rate of respiration with palmitoyl-L-carnitine was further increased by succinate and the total rate was unaffected by NH4C1. Therefore, NH+4 inhibition of mitochondrial respiration may lead to fatty infiltration and be one of the causes of the pathophysiology in children with Reye's syndrome and disorders of urea cycle enzymes.  相似文献   

16.
It has been shown that a three-week feeding of rats with oil derived from seeds of amaranth (Amaranthus cruentus L.) leads to a moderate activation of respiration of coupled and uncoupled rat liver mitochondria (MCh) that oxidize succinate and succinate + glutamate, as well as alpha-ketoglutarate and alpha-ketoglutarate + malonate. In animals receiving the amaranth oil, the injection of adrenaline did not affect the oil-activated respiration of MCh during succinate oxidation; i. e., animals prepared by an oil-enriched diet were resistant to the action of adrenaline, which prevented from possible hyperactivation of mitochondrial functions. In the group of control animals, which received no oil, the injection of adrenaline activated the rate of phosphorylating respiration of MCh during oxidation of succinate or succinate + glutamate: the rate of oxygen uptake in state 3 respiration (by Chance) increased, and the phosphorylation time decreased. The injection of adrenaline did not affect the parameters of respiration of MCh that oxidize a-ketoglutarate; however, in the presence of malonate, the oxidation of alpha-ketoglutarate in state 3 and uncoupled respiration have shown mild but significant increase in response to adrenaline. In animals receiving the amaranth oil, the oil-induced activation of respiration of MCh in response to adrenaline retained but did not increase; however, the phosphorylation time significantly decreased. Thus, concentrated oil of seeds activates the respiration of MCh. In addition, it enhances an energetic function of MCh, which prevents from the hyper-activation of mitochondrial respiration by adrenaline. Therefore an activation of energetic function of MCh by amaranth oil could explain its adaptogenic effect on rats.  相似文献   

17.
Frankia vesicle clusters were prepared from root nodules ofAlnus incana (L.) Moench inoculated either with a local sourceof Frankia or with Frankia Cpll. The capacity of vesicle clustersto respire was investigated by respirometric and enzymologicalstudies. Simultaneous addition of malate, glutamate, and NAD+supported respiration in both types of Frankia, though at asmaller rate compared to the substrates NADH or 6-phosphogluconate.The saturating concentrations of malate and glutamate were alsomuch higher than with the other substrates. No respiration wassupported by succinate. Activity of the enzymes malate dehydrogenase(EC 1.1.1.37 [EC] ) and glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase (EC 2.6.1.1 [EC] )was demonstrated in crude extracts from both types of symbioticFrankia. Their maximum rates were high enough to account forthe respiration of malate and glutamate. This respiration wasinhibited by mersalylic acid, an inhibitor of the dicarboxylateshuttle in mitochondria, but it was shown that inhibition ofrespiration could be due to a direct effect on the enzymes.We conclude that respiration of malate and glutamate is mostlikely mediated by malate dehydrogenase and glutamate oxaloacetatetransaminase, but no explicit evidence for or against the presenceof a dicarboxylate carrier was found. The utilization of respiratorysubstrates was largely similar in the two types of Frankia,except for some differences in maximum rates and cofactor dependency. Key words: Actinorhizal symbioses, Alnus, dicarboxylate shuttle, Frankia, reducing power, respiration  相似文献   

18.
Glutamate-supported respiration in mitochondria is inhibited by palmityl-CoA in the presence of carnitine. Palmityl-CoA-induced lag phase and depressed state 3 rates increase with increasing ADP. Palmityl-CoA inhibition of state 3 respiration with glutamate shows an increased I50 for palmityl-CoA (three to fourfold) when ADP increases and carnitine is present. ADP alone has a small effect. Glutamate-supported respiration is more profoundly inhibited by palmityl-CoA (+carnitine) than palmityl-CoA oxidation. With palmityl-CoA (+ carnitine) alone, the I50 for palmityl-CoA is two-to threefold greater than when glutamate is also present. Active respiration with palmityl-CoA as substrate demonstrates a 2.5-fold greater apparent affinity for ADP than when glutamate is also present. The kinetics are competitive in both cases. Palmitylcarnitine, above 30 μm, produces inhibition of glutamate-supported respiration, concomitant with mitochondrial swelling and eventual lysis. At 15 μm palmitylcarnitine (minimal swelling), succinate (+ rotenone)-supported respiration decreases with a decrease in Kapp for ADP; no effect of 15–20 μm palmitylcarnitine on glutamate-supported respiration is observed. However, palmityl-CoA (+ carnitine)-inhibited respiration with glutamate is further decreased with 15 and 20 μm palmitylcarnitine, i.e., by 13 and 29%, respectively. Inhibition is competitive with ADP. With 3 μm palmitylCoA and 20 μm palmitylcarnitine, a decrease in carnitine (1.5 to 0.25 mm) decreases the apparent Ki for palmityl-CoA from 2.6 to 1.8 μm. The results suggest that glutamate increases the palmityl-CoA available to inhibit adenine nucleotide transport. Inhibition may take place external to the inner membrane. Competition of carnitine and palmitylcarnitine for substrate sites may explain the decreased apparent Ki for palmityl-CoA as carnitine decreases.  相似文献   

19.
Isocitrate lyase of germinating castor seed endosperm catalyzes the reactions of succinate and of isocitrate (but not of glyoxylate) with tetranitromethane (TNM), giving rise to the nitroform anion (C-(NO2)3), analogous to the reaction of TNM with carbanions (O.P. Malhotra and U.N. Dwivedi, 1984, Ind. J. Biochem. Biophys. 21, 65-67). The kinetics of this reaction have been investigated under a variety of conditions. At a fixed TNM concentration, the initial rate of reaction exhibits a hyperbolic saturation of the enzyme with isocitrate. The reaction with succinate, however, shows "negative cooperativity" in succinate saturation and the data are consistent with the existence of two sets of succinate binding sites of unequal affinity ("tight" and "loose" sites). Equal reaction rates are observed at enzyme-saturating concentrations of succinate and isocitrate. In every case, the rate of reaction is proportional to the TNM concentration. In the presence of alpha-ketoglutarate, hyperbolic saturation curves are obtained for all the substrates (TNM and succinate or TNM and isocitrate). In the presence of this effector the Km of succinate and TNM are independent of the concentration of the second substrate. On the other hand, sets of parallel straight lines are obtained in the double-reciprocal plots for the enzymatic reaction of TNM with isocitrate in the presence of alpha-ketoglutarate. Studies on the effect of pH on the isocitrate lyase-catalyzed reactions of TNM with succinate, TNM with isocitrate, and succinate with glyoxylate in the absence as well as in the presence of alpha-ketoglutarate show that the proton behaves as an uncompetitive inhibitor in all these reactions, suggesting the presence of a "masked" basic group at the enzyme site, which is protonated in the presence of substrate only. The pKa value of this group lies in the range 6.7-6.9. The enzymatic reactions of TNM with succinate and isocitrate exhibit identical Mg2+ ion dependence. From a comparison of the data on the enzymatic reactions of TNM with the corresponding results on the physiological reaction catalyzed by this enzyme, it has been suggested that an ion pair intermediate (E+ X S-, in which E, S, and S- stand for enzyme, succinate, and succinate carbanion, respectively) lies on the pathway of catalysis by isocitrate lyase.  相似文献   

20.
Malate and succinate were taken up rapidly by isolated, intact peribacteroid units (PBUs) from soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) root nodules and inhibited each other in a competitive manner. Malonate uptake was slower and was severely inhibited by equimolar malate in the reaction medium. The apparent Km for malonate uptake was higher than that for malate and succinate uptake. Malate uptake by PBUs was inhibited by (in diminishing order of severity) oxaloacetate, fumarate, succinate, phthalonate and oxoglutarate. Malonate and butylmalonate inhibited only slightly and pyruvate,isocitrate and glutamate not at all. Of these compounds, only oxaloacetate, fumarate and succinate inhibited malate uptake by free bacteroids. Malate uptake by PBUs was inhibited severely by the uncoupler carbonylcyanidem-chlorophenyl hydrazone and the respiratory poison KCN, and was stimulated by ATP. We conclude that the peribacteroid membrane contains a dicarboxylate transport system which is distinct from that on the bacteroid membrane and other plant membranes. This system can catalyse the rapid uptake of a range of dicarboxylates into PBUs, with malate and succinate preferred substrates, and is likely to play an important role in symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Energization of both the bacteroid and peribacteroid membranes controls the rate of dicarboxylate transport into peribacteroid units.  相似文献   

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