Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.12.7.2 (hydrogenase)
3,522 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The possible involvement of NtrA in the expression of several anaerobically induced genes in Salmonella typhimurium was investigated. Unlike Escherichia coli, where hydrogenase 3 is ntrA dependent, the introduction of a mutation in ntrA had virtually no effect on the hydrogenase activity, thought to be hydrogenase 3, of S. typhimurium LT7. Fumarate reductase and alcohol dehydrogenase activities were found to be diminished in ntrA mutant strains, but this may very well be indirect since fdhF mutant strains showed the same effect. These results suggest that in S. typhimurium NtrA is highly specific for the anaerobic expression of fdhF.
...
PMID:The role of ntrA in the anaerobic metabolism of Salmonella typhimurium. 153 37

Halobacteroides acetoethylicus grew in media with 6 to 20% NaCl and displayed optimal growth at 10% NaCl. When grown in medium with an [NaCl] of 1.7 M, the internal cytoplasmic [Na+] and [Cl-] were 0.92 and 1.2 M, respectively, while K+ and Mg2+ concentrations in cells were 0.24 and 0.02 M, respectively. Intracellular [Na+] was fourfold higher than intracellular [K+]. Since Na+ and Cl- ions were not excluded from the cell, the influence of high salt concentrations on key enzyme activities was investigated in crude cell extracts. Activities greater than 60% of the maximal activity of the following key catabolic enzymes occurred at the following [NaCl] ranges: glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, 1 to 2 M; alcohol dehydrogenase (NAD linked), 2 to 4 M; pyruvate dehydrogenase, 0.5 to 1 M; and hydrogenase (methyl viologen linked), 0.5 to 3 M. These studies support the hypothesis that obligately halophilic, anaerobic eubacteria adapt to extreme salt concentrations differently than do halophilic, aerobic eubacteria, because they do not produce osmoregulants or exclude Cl-. This study also demonstrated that these halophilic, anaerobic eubacteria have a physiological similarity to archaebacterial halophiles, since Na+ and Cl- are present in high concentrations and are required for enzymatic activity.
...
PMID:Effect of extreme salt concentrations on the physiology and biochemistry of Halobacteroides acetoethylicus. 329 Jan 95

The metabolic and enzymatic bases for growth tolerance to ethanol (4%) and H2 (2 atm [1 atm = 101.29 kPa]) fermentation products in Clostridium thermohydrosulfuricum were compared in a sensitive wild-type strain and an insensitive alcohol-adapted strain. In the wild-type strain, ethanol (4%) and H2 (2 atm) inhibited glucose but not pyruvate fermentation parameters (growth and end product formation). Inhibition of glucose fermentation by ethanol (4%) in the wild-type strain was reversed by addition of acetone (1%), which lowered H2 and ethanol production while increasing isopropanol and acetate production. Pulsing cells grown in continuous culture on glucose with 5% ethanol or 1 atm of H2 significantly raised the NADH/NAD ratio in the wild-type strain but not in the alcohol-adapted strain. Analysis of key oxidoreductases demonstrated that the alcohol-adapted strain lacked detectable levels of reduced ferredoxin-linked NAD reductase and NAD-linked alcohol dehydrogenase activities which were present in the wild-type strain. Differences in the glucose fermentation product ratios of the two strains were related to differences in lactate dehydrogenase and hydrogenase levels and sensitivity of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity to NADH inhibition. A biochemical model is proposed which describes a common enzymatic mechanism for growth tolerance of thermoanaerobes to moderate concentrations of both ethanol and hydrogen.
...
PMID:Ethanol production by thermophilic bacteria: biochemical basis for ethanol and hydrogen tolerance in Clostridium thermohydrosulfuricum. 337 83

Cells of the aerotolerant anaerobe Giardia lamblia respire in the presence of oxygen. Endogenous respiration is stimulated by glucose but not by other carbohydrates and Krebs cycle intermediates. Endogenous and glucose-stimulated respiration are insensitive to cyanide, malonate, and 2,4-dinitrophenol, but are inhibited by atabrin and iodoacetamide. G. lamblia produces ethanol, acetate and CO2 both aerobically and anaerobically either from endogenous reserves or exogenous glucose. Molecular hydrogen is not produced. The following enzyme activities were detected in homogenates: hexokinase, fructose-biphosphate aldolase, pyruvate kinase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, malate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase (decarboxylating), pyruvate synthase, acetyl-CoA synthetase, alcohol dehydrogenase (NADP+), NADH dehydrogenase, NADPH dehydrogenase, NADPH oxidoreductase and superoxide dismutase. The enzymes of energy and carbohydrate metabolism are nonsedimentable (109 000 x g for 30 min). Activities of lactate dehydrogenase, hydrogenase, phosphate acetyltransferase, acetate kinase, citrate synthase, succinate dehydrogenase, fumarate hydratase and catalase were below the limits of detection. The results suggest the occurrence of glycolysis, energy production by substrate level phosphorylation and a flavin, iron-sulfur protein mediated electron transport system as well as the absence of cytochrome mediated oxidative phosphorylation and functional Krebs cycle.
...
PMID:Energy metabolism of the anaerobic protozoon Giardia lamblia. 610 7

Tritrichomonas foetus mutants resistant to metronidazole lack the hydrogenosomal enzymes pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase and hydrogenase. Hydrogenosomes of these organisms did not oxidize pyruvate or produce ATP in its presence. Elimination of hydrogenosomal metabolism of pyruvate was compensated by an increased rate of glycolysis. The resistant mutants excreted no organic acids and H2 as metabolic end products. Glycolysis of the resistant T. foetus KV1-1MR-100 can be summarized as 1 mol glucose----2 mol ethanol + 2 mol CO2. The parent strain KV1, excreting H2, CO2 and acidic end products, converted about 10% of glucose to ethanol. Both strains produced ethanol from pyruvate through the action of two cytoplasmic enzymes: pyruvate decarboxylase and alcohol dehydrogenase. The specific activity of the former enzyme, catalyzing nonoxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetaldehyde, was nearly seven times higher in the resistant than in the parent strain. Alcohol dehydrogenase reducing acetaldehyde to ethanol was specific to NADPH; it catalyzed the reverse reaction only slowly, and displayed similar activities in both resistant and sensitive trichomonads. Development of anaerobic metronidazole resistance in T. foetus depended on the loss of pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase as well as on the ability to increase alcoholic fermentation.
...
PMID:Metabolic differences between metronidazole resistant and susceptible strains of Tritrichomonas foetus. 637 46

Cells, as well as crude extracts of Clostridium kluyveri or Clostridium spec. La 1, catalyze the hydrogenation of (E)- or (Z)-2-butenol to n-butanol. No single enzyme could be detected which directly accomplishes this reaction. It turned out that the reduction occurs as follows: 2-butenol leads to 2-butenal leads to n-butanal leads to n-butanol. The first step is catalyzed by the NAD-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase in C. kluyveri, the second by the recently detected enoate reductase which reduces not only nonactivated alpha, beta-unsaturated acylates but also alpha, beta-unsaturated aldehydes in a NADH-dependent reaction and the third step is again catalyzed by alcohol dehydrogenase. In Clostridium La 1 the alcohol dehydrogenase is NADP-dependent. The rate of the reduction of 2-butenol to n-butanol depends not only on the enzymes, but also on the ratio NAD(P)/NAD(P)H. In the presence of methylviologen cation radical which is formed by the reduction of methylviologen by the system H2/hydrogenase, the ratio NAD(P)/NAD(P)H is too small for the dehydrogenation of 2-butenol to 2-butenal. This explains the antagonistic effect of methylviologen in the hydrogenation of allyl alcohols and 2-enoates by both Clostridium species. Furthermore, the mechanism explains the finding that from a preparative point of view ethanol is a better electron donor than hydrogen for the stereospecific reduction of allyl alcohols.
...
PMID:The reduction of allyl alcohols by Clostridium species is catalyzed by the combined action of alcohol dehydrogenase and enoate reductase. 702 92

The strictly anaerobic archaeon Thermococcus strain ES-1 was recently isolated from near a deep-sea hydrothermal vent. It grows at temperatures up to 91 degrees C by the fermentation of peptides and reduces elemental sulfur (S(o)) to H2S. It is shown here that the growth rates and cell yields of strain ES-1 are dependent upon the concentration of S(o) in the medium, and no growth was observed in the absence of S(o). The activities of various catabolic enzymes in cells grown under conditions of sufficient and limiting S(o) concentrations were investigated. These enzymes included alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH); formate benzyl viologen oxidoreductase; hydrogenase; glutamate dehydrogenase; alanine dehydrogenase; aldehyde ferredoxin (Fd) oxidoreductase; formaldehyde Fd oxidoreductase; and coenzyme A-dependent, Fd-linked oxidoreductases specific for pyruvate, indolepyruvate, 2-ketoglutarate, and 2-ketoisovalerate. Of these, changes were observed only with ADH, formate benzyl viologen oxidoreductase, and hydrogenase, the specific activities of which all dramatically increased in cells grown under S(o) limitation. This was accompanied by increased amounts of H2 and alcohol (ethanol and butanol) from cultures grown with limiting S(o). Such cells were used to purify ADH to electrophoretic homogeneity. ADH is a homotetramer with a subunit M(r) of 46,000 and contains 1 g-atom of Fe per subunit, which, as determined by electron paramagnetic resonance analyses, is present as a mixture of ferrous and ferric forms. No other metals or acid-labile sulfide was detected by colorimetric and elemental analyses. ADH utilized NADP(H) as a cofactor and preferentially catalyzed aldehyde reduction. It is proposed that, under So limitation, ADH reduces to alcohols the aldehydes that are generated by fermentation, thereby serving to dispose of excess reductant.
...
PMID:Effects of elemental sulfur on the metabolism of the deep-sea hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus strain ES-1: characterization of a sulfur-regulated, non-heme iron alcohol dehydrogenase. 764 2

Continuous cultures, under cellobiose sufficient concentrations (14. 62 mM) using a chemically defined medium, were examined to determine the carbon regulation selected by Clostridium cellulolyticum. Using a synthetic medium, a q(cellobiose) of 2.57 mmol g cells(-1) h(-1) was attained whereas the highest value obtained on complex media was 0.68 mmol g cells(-1) h(-1) (Payot et al. 1998. Microbiology 144:375-384). On a synthetic medium at D = 0.035 h(-1) under cellobiose excess, lactate and ethanol biosynthesis were able to use the reducing equivalents supplied by acetic acid formation and the H(2)/CO(2) ratio was found equal to 1. At a higher dilution rate (D = 0.115 h(-1)), there was no lactate production and the pathways toward ethanol and NADH-ferredoxin-hydrogenase contributed to balance the reducing equivalents; in this case a H(2)/CO(2) ratio of 1.54 was found. With increasing D, there was a progressive increase (i) in the steady-state concentration of NADH and NAD(+) pools from 11.8 to 22.1 micromol (g cells) (-1), (ii) in the intracellular NADH/NAD(+) ratios from 0.43 to 1.51. On synthetic media, under cellobiose excess the carbon flow was also equilibrated by three overflows: exopolysaccharide, extracellular protein, and amino acid excretions. At D = 0.115 h(-1), 34% of the cellobiose consumed was converted into exopolysaccharides; this deviation of the carbon flow and the increase of the phosphoroclastic activity decreased dramatically the pyruvate excretion and explained the break in lactate production. Whatever the dilution rate, C. cellulolyticum, using ammonium and cellobiose excess, always spilled usual amino acids accompanied by other amino compounds. In vitro, GAPDH, phosphoroclastic reaction, alcohol dehydrogenase, and acetate kinase activities were high under conditions giving high in vivo specific production rates. There were also correlations between the in vitro lactate dehydrogenase activity and in vivo lactate production, but in contrast with the preceding activities, these two parameters decreased with D. All the results demonstrate that C. cellulolyticum was able to optimize carbon catabolism from cellulosic substrates in a synthetic medium.
...
PMID:Relationships between cellobiose catabolism, enzyme levels, and metabolic intermediates in Clostridium cellulolyticum grown in a synthetic medium. 1062 Feb 63

Comparison of the proteomes of the wild-type and Fe-only hydrogenase mutant strains of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, grown in lactate-sulfate (LS) medium, indicated the near absence of open reading frame 2977 (ORF2977)-coded alcohol dehydrogenase in the hyd mutant. Hybridization of labeled cDNA to a macroarray of 145 PCR-amplified D. vulgaris genes encoding proteins active in energy metabolism indicated that the adh gene was among the most highly expressed in wild-type cells grown in LS medium. Relative to the wild type, expression of the adh gene was strongly downregulated in the hyd mutant, in agreement with the proteomic data. Expression was upregulated in ethanol-grown wild-type cells. An adh mutant was constructed and found to be incapable of growth in media in which ethanol was both the carbon source and electron donor for sulfate reduction or was only the carbon source, with hydrogen serving as electron donor. The hyd mutant also grew poorly on ethanol, in agreement with its low level of adh gene expression. The adh mutant grew to a lower final cell density on LS medium than the wild type. These results, as well as the high level of expression of adh in wild-type cells on media in which lactate, pyruvate, formate, or hydrogen served as the sole electron donor for sulfate reduction, indicate that ORF2977 Adh contributes to the energy metabolism of D. vulgaris under a wide variety of metabolic conditions. A hydrogen cycling mechanism is proposed in which protons and electrons originating from cytoplasmic ethanol oxidation by ORF2977 Adh are converted to hydrogen or hydrogen equivalents, possibly by a putative H(2)-heterodisulfide oxidoreductase complex, which is then oxidized by periplasmic Fe-only hydrogenase to generate a proton gradient.
...
PMID:Gene expression analysis of energy metabolism mutants of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough indicates an important role for alcohol dehydrogenase. 1286 42

Anaerobic chytridiomycete fungi possess hydrogenosomes, which generate hydrogen and ATP, but also acetate and formate as end-products of a prokaryotic-type mixed-acid fermentation. Notably, the anaerobic chytrids Piromyces and Neocallimastix use pyruvate:formate lyase (PFL) for the catabolism of pyruvate, which is in marked contrast to the hydrogenosomal metabolism of the anaerobic parabasalian flagellates Trichomonas vaginalis and Tritrichomonas foetus, because these organisms decarboxylate pyruvate with the aid of pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFO). Here, we show that the chytrids Piromyces sp. E2 and Neocallimastix sp. L2 also possess an alcohol dehydrogenase E (ADHE) that makes them unique among hydrogenosome-bearing anaerobes. We demonstrate that Piromyces sp. E2 routes the final steps of its carbohydrate catabolism via PFL and ADHE: in axenic culture under standard conditions and in the presence of 0.3% fructose, 35% of the carbohydrates were degraded in the cytosol to the end-products ethanol, formate, lactate and succinate, whereas 65% were degraded via the hydrogenosomes to acetate and formate. These observations require a refinement of the previously published metabolic schemes. In particular, the importance of the hydrogenase in this type of hydrogenosome has to be revisited.
...
PMID:The anaerobic chytridiomycete fungus Piromyces sp. E2 produces ethanol via pyruvate:formate lyase and an alcohol dehydrogenase E. 1498 32


1 2 3 Next >>