Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.2.1.13 (
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
)
6,511
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Deletion of the
phosphoglucose isomerase
gene, PGI1, in Saccharomyces cerevisiae leads to a phenotype for which glucose is toxic. This is related to overproduction of NADPH through the oxidative part of the pentose phosphate pathway and the incompetence of S. cerevisiae to deal with this overproduction. A similar deletion (rag2) in Kluyveromyces lactis does not lead to such a phenotype. We transformed a genomic library of K. lactis in a yeast vector to a S. cerevisiae strain with a pgi1 deletion and screened for growth on glucose. We found a gene (GDP1) which encodes a phosphorylating
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
, NADP-
GAPDH
(
EC 1.2.1.13
), that accepts both NADP and NAD. This is the first report of a eukaryotic, nonplant, NADP-linked
GAPDH
. Presumably, operation of this enzyme in the reverse direction enabled the transformed S. cerevisiae pgi1 deletion mutant to reoxidize the excess NADPH produced when glucose catabolism was forced through the pentose pathway. On the other hand, transcription of the gene in K. lactis was upregulated during growth on D-xylose, which suggests that in K. lactis the enzyme is involved in regeneration of NADPH needed for xylose assimilation, but transcription was not detected in a rag2 mutant grown on glucose. The presence of an asparagine (Asn46 in NADP-
GAPDH
) instead of the conserved aspartate found in related but NAD-specific enzymes may explain the ability of NADP-
GAPDH
to work with NADP as well as NAD.
...
PMID:Identification of the first fungal NADP-GAPDH from Kluyveromyces lactis. 1242 47
Raps, Shirley (University of Illinois, Urbana) and R. D. DeMoss. Glycolytic enzymes in Zymomonas mobilis. J. Bacteriol. 84:115-118. 1962-An enzyme extract of Zymomonas mobilis (Pseudomonas lindneri) was capable of fermenting glucose-6-phosphate to CO(2) and ethanol. The extract was found to contain
phosphohexoisomerase
, aldolase, and
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
, but no demonstrable phosphohexokinase. The lack of isotope-mixing found in earlier studies is, thus, explained on an enzymatic basis.
...
PMID:Glycolytic enzymes in Zymomonas mobilis. 1449 Apr
Group II introns are autocatalytic RNAs which self-splice in vitro. However, in vivo additional protein factors might be involved in the splicing process. We used an affinity chromatography method called 'StreptoTag' to identify group II intron binding proteins from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This method uses a hybrid RNA consisting of a streptomycin-binding affinity tag and the RNA of interest, which is bound to a streptomycin column and incubated with yeast protein extract. After several washing steps the bound RNPs are eluted by addition of streptomycin. The eluted RNPs are separated and the proteins identified by mass-spectrometric analysis. Using crude extract from yeast in combination with a substructure of the bl1 group II intron (domains IV-VI) we were able to identify four glycolytic enzymes;
glucose-6-phosphate isomerase
(
GPI
), 3-phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK),
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(
GAPDH
) and triosephosphate isomerase (TPI). From these proteins
GAPDH
increases in vitro splicing of the bl1 group II intron by up to three times. However, in vivo
GAPDH
is not a group II intron-splicing factor, since it is not localised in yeast mitochondria. Therefore, the observed activity reflects an unexpected property of
GAPDH
. Band shift experiments and UV cross linking demonstrated the interaction of
GAPDH
with the group II intron RNA. This novel activity expands the reaction repertoire of
GAPDH
to a new RNA species.
...
PMID:GAPDH enhances group II intron splicing in vitro. 1531 10
Although glycolysis is a biochemical pathway that evolved under ancient anaerobic terrestrial conditions, recent studies have provided evidence that some glycolytic enzymes are more complicated, multifaceted proteins rather than simple components of the glycolytic pathway. These glycolytic enzymes have acquired additional non-glycolytic functions in transcriptional regulation [hexokinase (HK)-2, lactate dehydrogenase A,
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(
GAPD
) and enolase 1], stimulation of cell motility (
glucose-6-phosphate isomerase
) and the regulation of apoptosis (glucokinase, HK and
GAPD
). The existence of multifaceted roles of glycolytic proteins suggests that links between metabolic sensors and transcription are established directly through enzymes that participate in metabolism. These roles further underscore the need to consider the non-enzymatic functions of enzymes in proteomic studies of cells and tissues.
...
PMID:Multifaceted roles of glycolytic enzymes. 1575 86
Gymnemic acids (GA) inhibited rabbit muscle
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(
GAPDH
) activity. Binding of GA to
GAPDH
was observed by surface plasmon resonance measurement. Incubation of
GAPDH
with GA induced a smearing of the
GAPDH
band in SDS-PAGE. The GA-induced smearing was diminished by prior incubation of GA with gamma-cyclodextrin or by GA treatment with NAD. GA treatment did not affect the electrophoretic mobility of
glucose-6-phosphate isomerase
and dehydrogenase. GA treatment diminished the
GAPDH
band detected by an antibody to phosphoserine, but did not affect the phosphoserine bands of
glucose-6-phosphate isomerase
and dehydrogenase. These results indicated that GA specifically induced dephosphorylation of
GAPDH
.
...
PMID:Gymnemic acids inhibit rabbit glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and induce a smearing of its electrophoretic band and dephosphorylation. 1605 41
Colias eurytheme butterflies display extensive allozyme polymorphism in the enzyme
phosphoglucose isomerase
(
PGI
). Earlier studies on biochemical and fitness effects of these genotypes found evidence of strong natural selection maintaining this polymorphism in the wild. Here we analyze the molecular features of this polymorphism by sequencing multiple alleles and modeling their structures.
PGI
is a dimer with rotational symmetry. Each monomer provides a critical residue to the other monomer's catalytic center. Sequenced alleles differ at multiple amino acid positions, including cryptic charge-neutral variation, but most consistent differences among the electromorph alleles are at the charge-changing amino acid sites. Principal candidate sites of selection, identified by structural and functional analyses and by their variants' population frequencies, occur in interpenetrating loops across the interface between monomers, where they may alter subunit interactions and catalytic center geometry. Comparison to a second (and basal) species, Colias meadii, also polymorphic for
PGI
under natural selection, reveals one fixed amino acid difference between their PGIs, which is located in the interpenetrating loop and accompanies functional differences among their variants. We also study nucleotide variability among the
PGI
alleles, comparing these data to similar data from another glycolytic enzyme gene,
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
. Despite extensive nonsynonymous and synonymous polymorphism at
PGI
in each species, the only base changes fixed between species are the two causing the amino acid replacement; this absence of synonymous fixation yields a significant McDonald-Kreitman test. Analyses of these data suggest historical population expansion. Positive peaks of Tajima's D statistic, representing regions of neutral "hitchhiking," are found around the principal candidate sites of selection. This study provides novel views of molecular-structural mechanisms, and beginnings of historical evidence, for a long-persistent balanced enzyme polymorphism at
PGI
in these and perhaps other species.
...
PMID:From DNA to fitness differences: sequences and structures of adaptive variants of Colias phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI). 1629
Mesembryanthemum crystallinum, a halophilic, inducible Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) species, was grown at NaCl concentrations of 20 and 400 millimolar in the rooting medium. Plants from the low salinity treatment showed exclusively C(3)-photosynthetic net CO(2) fixation, whereas plants exposed to the high salinity level exhibited net CO(2) dark fixation involving CAM. Mesophyll protoplasts, isolated from both tissues, were gently ruptured, and the intracellular localization of enzymes was studied following differential centrifugation and Percoll density gradient centrifugation of protoplast extracts. Both centrifugation techniques resulted in the separation of intact chloroplasts, with up to 90% yield, from other organelles and the nonparticulate fraction of cells. Enzymes were identified by determination of activity and by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis of enzyme protein.Experiments established the extraorganellar (cytoplasmic) location of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, enolase, phosphoglyceromutase, and NADP-malic enzyme; the mitochondrial location of NAD-malic enzyme; and the chloroplastic location of pyruvate, Pi dikinase. NAD-
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
,
phosphohexose isomerase
, and phosphoglycerate kinase were associated with both cytoplasm and chloroplasts. NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase activity was found in both the chloroplastic and extrachloroplastic fractions; the activity in the chloroplast showed an optimum at pH 8.0 and was dependent upon preincubation of enzyme with dithiothreitol. The extrachloroplastic activity showed an optimum at pH 6.5 and was independent of pretreatment with dithiothreitol. Protoplast extracts of M. crystallinum performing CAM exhibited higher activities (expressed per mg chlorophyll per min) of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, pyruvate, Pi dikinase, NADP-malic enzyme, NAD-malic enzyme, NADP-malate dehydrogenase, enolase, phosphoglyceromutase, NAD-
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
, phosphoglycerate kinase, and
phosphohexose isomerase
than protoplast extracts from M. crystallinum not exhibiting CAM. The increase in total activity of the latter three enzymes following exposure of plants to 400 millimolar NaCl and the development of CAM was due to specific increases in the levels of activity in the cytoplasm.
...
PMID:Intracellular Localization of Enzymes of Carbon Metabolism in Mesembryanthemum crystallinum Exhibiting C(3) Photosynthetic Characteristics or Performing Crassulacean Acid Metabolism. 1666 97
A proteome survey and MS analysis were conducted to investigate glucose metabolism in Fusobacterium varium, a butyrate-producing constituent of the indigenous human gut microflora. The bacterium was capable of catabolizing glucose as the main energy source via the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway. 2-DE analyses revealed that the apparent concentrations of the six identified glycolytic enzymes (pyruvate kinase, enolase,
glucose-6-phosphate isomerase
, phosphoglycerate kinase, triosephosphate isomerase, and
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
) were specifically increased in response to the presence of glucose in the chemically defined minimal growth medium, and did not diminish when the medium was additionally supplemented with L-glutamate, an amino acid readily fermented by members of the Fusobacterium genus. A substrate pool depletion study revealed that the sugar, and not the amino acid, is the more efficient growth substrate. Both proteomics and substrate pool depletion studies revealed that F. varium can simultaneously utilize both glucose and L-glutamate as energy sources. Enzymes involved in L-glutamate metabolism were also identified, including an NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase and two enzymes of the methylaspartate pathway of L-glutamate catabolism (glutamate mutase and methylaspartate ammonia-lyase). Their apparent intracellular concentrations were elevated when the bacterium was cultured in media supplemented with excess L-glutamate. Our observation that the apparent concentrations of specific proteins were elevated in response to a particular growth substrate supplied as an energy source provides the first evidence for the presence of a nutrient-responsive mechanism governing intracellular protein concentration in F. varium.
...
PMID:Proteomic investigation of glucose metabolism in the butyrate-producing gut anaerobe Fusobacterium varium. 1746 38
Phosphoglucose isomerase-deficient (pgi1) strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were studied for the production of D-ribose and ribitol from D-glucose via the intermediates of the pentose phosphate pathway. Overexpression of the genes coding for NAD(+)-specific glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH2) of S. cerevisiae or NADPH-utilising
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(gapB) of Bacillus subtilis enabled growth of the pgi1 mutant strains on D-glucose. Overexpression of the gene encoding sugar phosphate phosphatase (DOG1) of S. cerevisiae was needed for the production of D-ribose and ribitol; however, it reduced the growth of the pgi1 strains expressing GDH2 or gapB in the presence of higher D-glucose concentrations. The CEN.PK2-1D laboratory strain expressing both gapB and DOG1 produced approximately 0.4 g l(-1) of D-ribose and ribitol when grown on 20 g l(-1) (w/v) D-fructose with 4 g l(-1) (w/v) D-glucose. Nuclear magnetic resonance measurements of the cells grown with (13)C-labelled D-glucose showed that about 60% of the D-ribose produced was derived from D-glucose. Strains deficient in both
phosphoglucose isomerase
and transketolase activities, and expressing DOG1 and GDH2 tolerated only low D-glucose concentrations (< or =2 g l(-1) (w/v)), but produced 1 g l(-1) (w/v) D-ribose and ribitol when grown on 20 g l(-1) (w/v) D-fructose with 2 g l(-1) (w/v) D-glucose.
...
PMID:Enhancing the flux of D-glucose to the pentose phosphate pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for the production of D-ribose and ribitol. 1971 Oct 72
Glutamine synthetase (GS) and
glucose-6-phosphate isomerase
(
GPI
) were identified as novel adhesive moonlighting proteins of Lactobacillus crispatus ST1. Both proteins were bound onto the bacterial surface at acidic pHs, whereas a suspension of the cells to pH 8 caused their release into the buffer, a pattern previously observed with surface-bound enolase and
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(
GAPDH
) of L. crispatus. The pH shift was associated with a rapid and transient increase in cell wall permeability, as measured by cell staining with propidium iodide. A gradual increase in the release of the four moonlighting proteins was also observed after the treatment of L. crispatus ST1 cells with increasing concentrations of the antimicrobial cationic peptide LL-37, which kills bacteria by disturbing membrane integrity and was here observed to increase the cell wall permeability of L. crispatus ST1. At pH 4, the fusion proteins His(6)-GS, His(6)-
GPI
, His(6)-enolase, and His(6)-
GAPDH
showed localized binding to cell division septa and poles of L. crispatus ST1 cells, whereas no binding to Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG was detected. Strain ST1 showed a pH-dependent adherence to the basement membrane preparation Matrigel. Purified His(6)-GS and His(6)-
GPI
proteins bound to type I collagen, and His(6)-GS also bound to laminin, and their level of binding was higher at pH 5.5 than at pH 6.5. His(6)-GS also expressed a plasminogen receptor function. The results show the strain-dependent surface association of moonlighting proteins in lactobacilli and that these proteins are released from the L. crispatus surface after cell trauma, under conditions of alkaline stress, or in the presence of the antimicrobial peptide LL-37 produced by human cells.
...
PMID:Glutamine synthetase and glucose-6-phosphate isomerase are adhesive moonlighting proteins of Lactobacillus crispatus released by epithelial cathelicidin LL-37. 2238 74
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>