Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.2.1.13 (glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase)
6,511 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of a xanthine oxidase-mediated free radical-generating system containing purine and iron-loaded transferrin or solutions containing hydrogen peroxide and iron-loaded transferrin on substrate utilization and high-energy phosphates were evaluated by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy in isolated perfused rat hearts. Hearts were supplied with lactate, acetate, and glucose, and the contribution of each substrate to acetyl coenzyme A was measured in control hearts and in the presence of a free radical-generating system. Perfused hearts were monitored by 31P NMR, and tissue extracts were analyzed by 13C NMR. Free radicals decreased the phosphocreatine and beta-ATP peak areas and reduced contractile function. Under control conditions, lactate, acetate, and endogenous sources were the major contributors of acetyl coenzyme A units, with only 5% originating from glucose. In the presence of a xanthine oxidase-mediated free radical-generating system, the glucose contribution increased to 54%, while contributions from acetate and endogenous sources were significantly reduced. Both 13C and 31P NMR analyses showed no significant accumulation of glycolytic sugar phosphates, suggesting little inhibition of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The increased contribution of glucose to the tricarboxylic acid cycle relative to acetate and endogenous sources is consistent with activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase. In contrast, hearts exposed to a hydrogen peroxide-based free radical-generating system showed an increase in lactate utilization, a decrease in acetate utilization, and no change in glucose utilization compared with control hearts. Glycolytic sugar phosphates were found to accumulate, suggesting possible inhibition of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate. Thus, different radicals or their metabolites may have varying effects on myocardial metabolism.
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PMID:Effects of oxidant exposure on substrate utilization and high-energy phosphates in isolated rat hearts. 791 69

Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) may incite cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury. We evaluate herein the influence of H2O2-induced oxidative stress on heart muscle hexose metabolism in cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes, which have a substrate preference for carbohydrate. Cardiomyocyte exposure to 50 microM-1.0 mM bolus H2O2 transiently activated the pentose phosphate cycle and thereafter inhibited cellular glucose oxidation and glycolysis. These metabolic derangements were nonperoxidative in nature (as assessed in alpha-tocopherol-loaded cells) and occurred without acute change in cardiomyocyte hexose transport or glucose/glycogen reserves. Glycolytic inhibition was supported by the rapid, specific inactivation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH). The degree of GAPDH inhibition correlated directly with the magnitude of the oxidative insult and was independent of both metal-catalyzed H2O2 reduction to free radicals and lipid peroxidation. Severe GAPDH inhibition was required for a rate-limiting effect on glycolytic flux. Cardiomyocyte pyruvate dehydrogenase was also inhibited by H2O2 overload, but to a lesser degree than GAPDH such that entry of hexose-derived acetyl units into the tricarboxylic acid cycle was not as restrictive as GAPDH inactivation to glycolytic ATP production. An increase in phosphofructokinase activity accompanied GAPDH inactivation, leading to the production and accumulation of glycolytic sugar phosphates at the expense of ATP equivalents. Cardiomyocyte treatment with iodoacetate or 2-deoxyglucose indicated that GAPDH inactivation/glycolytic blockade could account for approximately 50% of the maximal ATP loss following H2O2 overload. Partial restoration of GAPDH activity after a brief H2O2 "pulse" afforded some ATP recovery. These data establish that specific aspects of heart muscle hexose catabolism are H2O2-sensitive injury targets. The biochemical pathology of H2O2 overload on cardiomyocyte carbohydrate metabolism has implications for post-ischemic cardiac bioenergetics and function.
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PMID:Hydroperoxide-induced oxidative stress impairs heart muscle cell carbohydrate metabolism. 830 15

Oligonucleotide-directed site-specific mutagenesis was carried out on pyruvate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.1) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae at three of the four cysteines (152, 221, and 222), the fourth (69) being buried according to X-ray crystallographic results [Arjunan et al. (1996) J. Mol. Biol. 256, 590-600]. All of the variants still retained significant activity, and all could be purified to homogeneity. FT-IR experiments were run on the C221S, C222S, C221S/C222S and C152A variants, as well as on the wild-type enzyme. There is a band present at 2557 cm-1 in the spectra of all variants and the wild-type enzyme, except in the spectrum of the C152A variant. This frequency is appropriate to a cysteine S-H stretching mode. It was therefore concluded that C152 is the only undissociated cysteine on the enzyme at pH 6.0, the pH optimum of this enzyme, whereas C221, C222, and C69 are all ionized. Isoelectric focusing experiments were carried out on all of these variants, as well as on the H92A variant (H92 is across the domain divide on the alpha domain, from C221 located on the beta domain). The variation in isoelectric points deduced from the data was consistent with removal of negative charges concomitant with the C221S, C222S, and C221S/C222S substitutions and removal of a positive charge with the H92A substitution when compared to that of the wild-type enzyme. The results of these two types of experiments are in good accord and suggest that the site of substrate activation at C221 [Baburina et al. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 5630-5635] is comprised of a Cys221S- +HHis92 ion pair, not unlike that found in papain and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. This finding suggests that the regulatory site of this enzyme has been optimized for nucleophilic reactivity between the thiolate of C221 and the keto carbon of the 2-oxoacid.
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PMID:Three of four cysteines, including that responsible for substrate activation, are ionized at pH 6.0 in yeast pyruvate decarboxylase: evidence from Fourier transform infrared and isoelectric focusing studies. 875 79

The mammalian heart is normally well oxygenated and anaerobic glycolysis is extremely rare except for the production of extra ATP during extreme exercise like a marathon race. Anaerobic glycolysis plays a role when there is a serious impairment in coronary blood flow such as during heart attack and open heart surgery. The control of glycolysis in ischemic myocardial tissue appears to be extremely complex. During aerobic glycolysis, phosphofructokinase is the most important regulatory enzyme that controls the energy requirements of the cell. Under anaerobic conditions, however, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase becomes the key enzyme because it responds promptly to any changes in the essential supply of co-factors for oxidation. The conversion of pyruvate to acetyl CoA (aerobic metabolism) involves a series of chain reactions primarily catalyzed by pyruvate dehydrogenase complex which is situated at the cross roads between both aerobic and anaerobic glycolysis. It is important to remember that substrate utilization is carefully controlled by substrate availability. During aerobic metabolism, control mechanisms using fatty acids, lactate and glucose as energy substrates regulate the rate of ATP production according to energy demand. This precise mechanism is upset during ischemia and post-ischemic reperfusion for reasons discussed in this review. The demand for ATP can no longer be met by its supply because of severely reduced anaerobic glycolysis and significantly inhibited beta-oxidation of fatty acids. The impairment of bioenergetics is discussed in the context of several diseases such as cardiomyopathy, heart failure, diabetes, arrhythmias, cardiac surgery, heart-lung transplantation, and also in aging and oxidative stress. The regulation of energy metabolism in preconditioned heart is also discussed. Finally, methods used to preserve energy in ischemic myocardium are summarized and quantitation of the high-energy phosphates is discussed. This review challenges scientists to discover drugs which will stimulate energy supply during myocardial ischemia.
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PMID:Bioenergetics, ischemic contracture and reperfusion injury. 880 94

In rat hepatocytes exposed to [2-13C]pyruvate, newly formed glucose was more efficiently labeled in the carbon C5 than C2, as well as in the carbon C6 than C1, suggesting enzyme-to-enzyme channeling of D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate between glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphofructoaldolase. Likewise the C1/C2 and C6/C5 ratios for 13C abundance in newly formed glucose, which largely exceeded the C3/C2 ratio of lactate or alanine and could reflect reversibility in the fumarase reaction, were compatible with the enzyme-to-enzyme tunneling of symmetrical Krebs cycle intermediates in the sequence of reactions catalyzed by succinyl-CoA synthetase, succinate dehydrogenase, and fumarase. This study further indicates that the major fraction of pyruvate is metabolized via pyruvate carboxylase rather than pyruvate dehydrogenase.
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PMID:D-glucose generation from [2-13C]pyruvate in rat hepatocytes: implications in terms of enzyme-to-enzyme channelling. 880 44

Zymomonas mobilis growing aerobically with 20 g glucose-1 (carbon-limited) in a chemostat exhibited an increase in both the molar growth yield (Yx/s) and the maximum molar growth yield (Yx/smax) and a decrease in both the specific substrate consumption rate (qs) and the maintenance energy consumption rate (me). Stepwise increase in the input oxygen partial pressure showed that anaerobic-to-aerobic transitional adaptation occurred in four stages: anaerobic (0 mm HgO2), oxygen-limited (7.6- 230 mm HgO2), intermediate (273 mm HgO2), and oxygen excess (290 mm HgO2). The steady-state biomass concentration, Yx/s, and intracellular ATP content increased between oxygen partial pressures of 7.6 and 120 mm HgO2, accompanied by a decrease in the qs and the specific acid production rate. The membrane ATPase activity decreased with increasing oxygen partial pressure and reached its lowest levels at 273 mm HgO2, which was the highest input oxygen partial pressure where steady-state conditions were possible. Glucokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and alcohol dehydrogenase activities also decreased when the oxygen partial pressure was increased above 15 mm Hg, whereas pyruvate decarboxylase was unaffected by aeration. Growth inhibition at 290 mm HgO2 was characterised by a drastic reduction in the pyruvate kinase activity and a collapse in the intracellular ATP pool. The growth and enzyme data suggest that at low glucose concentrations and oxygen-limited conditions, the increase in biomass yields is a reflection of a redirection of ATP usage rather than a net increase in energy production.
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PMID:Changes in the growth and enzyme level of Zymomonas mobilis under oxygen-limited conditions at low glucose concentration. 921 13

Continuous cultures of Enterobacter agglomerans CNCM 1210 were performed under regulated pH conditions (pH 7.0) with glycerol or glucose (20 g l-1) as carbon source. Cultures grown on glucose produced mainly acetate, ethanol and formate. In contrast, 1,3-propanediol (PPD) was the main product with glycerol. The carbon flow distribution at branching metabolic points was investigated. Higher PPD yields with increased dilution rate were correlated with an important increase in the relative ratio of glycerol dehydratase to glycerol dehydrogenase. Determination of intracellular triose-phosphate and fructose 1,6-biphosphate concentrations demonstrated that glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase is the limiting step in glycerol dissimilation. At the pyruvate branching point, pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity was systematically detected. The pyruvate flow shifted to PDH is suspected to represent up to 22% of the acetyl-CoA formed. In addition, this enzyme pattern combined with the enhanced in vivo lactate dehydrogenase activity at high growth rates, was correlated with a decrease in the pyruvate formate-lyase activity. A regulation of this latter enzyme by the accumulation of triose-phosphate is suspected.
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PMID:Anaerobic pathways of glycerol dissimilation by Enterobacter agglomerans CNCM 1210: limitations and regulations. 924 23

Growth of Corynebacterium glutamicum on fructose was significantly less than that obtained on glucose, despite similar rates of substrate uptake. This was in part due to the production of overflow metabolites (dihydroxyacetone and lactate) but also to the increased production of CO2 during growth on fructose. These differences in carbon-metabolite accumulation are indicative of a different pattern of carbon-flux distribution through the central metabolic pathways. Growth on glucose has been previously shown to involve a high flux (> 50% of total glucose consumption) via the pentose pathway to generate anabolic reducing equivalents. NMR analysis of carbon-isotope distribution patterns of the glutamate pool after growth on 1-13C- or 6-13C-enriched fructose indicates that the contribution of the pentose pathway is significantly diminished during exponential growth on fructose with glycolysis being the predominant pathway (80% of total fructose consumption). The increased flux through glycolysis during growth on fructose is associated with an increased NADH/NAD+ ratio susceptible to inhibit both glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and pyruvate dehydrogenase, and provoking the overflow of metabolites derived from the substrates of these two enzymes. The biomass yield observed experimentally is higher than can be estimated from the apparent quantity of NADPH associated with the pentose pathway and the flux through isocitrate dehydrogenase, suggesting an additional reaction yielding NADPH. This may involve a modified tricarboxylic acid cycle involving malic enzyme, expressed to significantly higher levels during growth on fructose than on glucose, and a pyruvate carboxylating anaplerotic enzyme.
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PMID:Carbon-flux distribution in the central metabolic pathways of Corynebacterium glutamicum during growth on fructose. 965

Alterations in glucose metabolism have been implicated in the cardiovascular complications of diabetes. Previous work in this laboratory demonstrated that hearts from diabetic animals have an elevated cytosolic redox ratio (NADH/NAD+) and that this redox imbalance is probably due to elevated polyol pathway flux. We therefore hypothesized that 1) the elevated cytosolic redox ratio of diabetic hearts could result in inhibition of glycolytic enzymes sensitive to the redox state, 2) polyol pathway inhibition could restore the abnormal glucose metabolism of diabetic hearts, and 3) the relative incorporation of mixed substrates into hearts from diabetic animals would demonstrate less glycolytic and more fatty acid oxidation. Hearts from diabetic (BB/W) and nondiabetic control rats were perfused with buffers containing 13C-labeled substrates, and the metabolism of these hearts was analyzed using 13C NMR spectroscopy. Tissue samples were analyzed for metabolite levels using biochemical assay. Compared with controls, diabetic hearts had glyceraldeyde 3-phosphate levels that were four times greater than nondiabetic hearts and exhibited 91% less 13C labeling of lactate and 92% less 13C labeling of glutamate (P < 0.03). Aldose reductase inhibition with zopolrestat restored the metabolite labeling of diabetic hearts. Diabetic hearts perfused with a mixture of substrates used 53% more acetate than nondiabetic control hearts (P < 0.05), and aldose reductase inhibition lowered the acetate utilization of diabetic hearts by 9% (P < 0.05). These data suggest that glycolytic flux in diabetic hearts is inhibited at glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and that inhibition of the polyol pathway with zopolrestat increases glycolytic flux in these hearts. Furthermore, hearts from diabetic animals showed a marked dependence on fatty acids for substrate utilization compared with nondiabetic controls, consistent with inhibition of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in diabetic hearts.
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PMID:Aldose reductase inhibition improves altered glucose metabolism of isolated diabetic rat hearts. 968 98

A developmental block is induced by phosphate in rat embryos at the late two-cell stage. The present study was designed to examine the energy metabolism of rat two-cell blocked and non-blocked embryos. Enzyme activity was measured in individual embryos by histochemical techniques. The activities of malate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, pyruvate dehydrogenase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, glucose-6-phosphatase, and phosphorylase did not differ among non-blocked and blocked embryos. However, the activity of succinate dehydrogenase was significantly decreased in blocked embryos compared with non-blocked embryos. In blocked embryos, cytochrome oxidase activity was distributed homogeneously, but was located at the perinuclear region in non-blocked embryos. Active mitochondrial organization was visualized using the fluorescent probe rhodamine 123 and laser scanning confocal microscopy. In both non-blocked and blocked embryos, mitochondria were distributed homogeneously. The concentration of H2O2 measured fluorometrically in embryos cultured without phosphate did not change significantly during the culture period, but decreased in embryos cultured with phosphate. The timing corresponded to the occurrence of the two-cell block. In summary, these results suggest that the developmental block in rat two-cell embryos is induced by disturbance of mitochondrial energy metabolism.
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PMID:Microscopic analysis of enzyme activity, mitochondrial distribution and hydrogen peroxide in two-cell rat embryos. 986 Nov 63


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