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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)
Trinitroglycerin oxidizes the essential sulfhydryl group, Cys-149, of pig muscle
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate : NAD+ oxidoreductase(phosphorylating) EC 1.2.1.12) TO A SLUFENIC ACID, NOT TO A DISULFIDE. This conclusion is based on the observation that the inactivation of the dehydrogenase activity of the enzyme by the organic
nitrate
induces the acylphosphatase activity which is catalyzed by the sulfenic acid form of the enzyme. Inorganic nitrite is released during this process which is stoichiometric with the degree of inactivation of the dehydrogenase. The acylphosphatase activity induced by trinitroglycerin, unlike the dehydrogenase activity, is sensitive to CN-. Treatment of the enzyme oxidized with trinitroglycerin with 14-CN- leads to the incorporation of protein-bound 14-CN-, which is stoichiometric with the degree of inactivation of the dehydrogenase. Treatment of the sulfenic acid form of
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
at pH 5.3 with a 10-fold molar excess of azide over the concentration of enzyme subunit completely inactivates the acylphosphatase reaction catalyzed by the oxidized enzyme. Concomitantly, the dehydrogenase activity catalyzed by the sulfhydryl form of the enzyme reappears which indicates that excess azide reduces the sulfenic acid which is required for the acylphosphatase. Treatment of the oxidized enzyme with a stoichiometric amount of azide at pH 5.3 stimulates the acylphosphatase activity and does not lead to the reappearance of dehydrogenase activity. When the sulfenic acid form of the enzyme is incubated with 20 mM L-ascorbate at pH 5.3, the acylphosphatase activity is completely inactivated and the dehydrogenase activity catalyzed by the reduced form of the enzyme is recovered. Thus, L-ascorbate also reduces the protein sulfenic acid which is required for the acylphosphatase activity.
...
PMID:The conversion of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase to an acylphosphatase by trinitroglycerin and inactivation of this activity by azide and ascorbate. 23 96
Male Wistar rats were given a single i.v. injection of lead
nitrate
(10 mumol/100 g body wt) and were killed with matched controls 24, 48, 72 h and 20 days after the treatment. Changes of liver carbohydrate metabolism were studied histochemically testing the following parameters: glycogen content, activities of glycogen synthase (SYN), glycogen phosphorylase (PHO), glucose-6-phosphatase (G6PASE), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGDH),
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(
GAPDH
). In addition, gammaglutamyltransferase (GGT) activity was demonstrated. Between 24 and 48 h after lead
nitrate
injection there was a nearly complete loss of liver glycogen. Seventy-two hours later the polysaccharide reappeared in single hepatocytes and after 20 days the livers of the lead-treated animals not only had replenished their glycogen stores but contained even more glycogen than the matched controls. SYN and PHO activities were diminished from 24 to 72 h, but returned to control values after 20 days. G6PASE and GGT remained elevated up to 72 h before dropping to normal at 20 days after treatment. The pentose phosphate pathway enzymes G6PDH and 6PGDH showed the most remarkable changes in livers treated with lead
nitrate
. G6PDH was already elevated at 24 h, but only in Kupffer cells. At 48 and 72 h, when hepatocytes exhibited a highly increased mitotic rate, the levels of G6PDH, 6PGDH and
GAPDH
were elevated. After 20 days dehydrogenase activities were comparable to those of controls. The results of this study suggest that a single dose of lead
nitrate
not only stimulates proliferation of hepatocytes but also induces considerable changes in rat liver carbohydrate metabolism, especially between 24 and 72 h after administration. During that period glycogen metabolism undergoes a strong reduction, whereas gluconeogenesis and particularly the pentose phosphate pathway respond with a remarkable increase. This metabolic profile is most likely associated with lead biotransformation as well as with liver cell proliferation. It corresponds only partially to that found in preneoplastic and neoplastic liver lesions observed in chemical carcinogenesis, and is reversible, in contrast to the persistent alterations associated with neoplastic transformation.
...
PMID:Effect of lead nitrate on liver carbohydrate enzymes and glycogen content in the rat. 217 37
The anti-inflammatory role of nitric oxide (NO) was studied in a model of hepatic ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) in rats. Male Fischer rats were subjected to 30 min of no-flow ischemia of the left and median lobes of the liver, and animals were examined for a 4-h period of reperfusion. The animals were divided into the following groups: control-vehicle; I/R-vehicle; I/R-Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 10 mg/kg iv, 10 min before reperfusion); sham control-L-NAME, and I/R-S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP, 25 micromol/kg iv, 10 min before reperfusion, followed by 20 micromol. kg-1. h-1 in 1.0 ml saline infused for 4 h). Results showed that mean arterial blood pressure was significantly increased in the sham control-L-NAME or I/R-L-NAME groups compared with either the I/R-vehicle or I/R-SNAP groups. However, cardiac index (CI) and stroke volume index (SVI) were markedly decreased, and systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) was dramatically increased. Interestingly, the CI and SVI in rats treated with SNAP were markedly improved over that of the I/R group. Plasma
nitrate
and nitrite levels were significantly decreased in the I/R-L-NAME group; however, superoxide generation in the ischemic lobes and plasma alanine aminotransferase activity were higher compared with I/R-SNAP rats. The L-NAME-induced enhancement of hepatic injury in rats with I/R may be due in part to neutrophil infiltration, which was significantly increased compared with animals subjected to I/R or I/R-SNAP. The mechanism of L-NAME-enhanced neutrophil infiltration may be due to the fact that the ratios of P-selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) mRNA to
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
mRNA extracted from the ischemic lobes of I/R-L-NAME rats were significantly increased when compared with the I/R-SNAP group. These results suggest that 1) endogenous NO reduces the SVRI and permits an increased CI and SVI; 2) exogenous NO further improves CI and SVI; and 3) endogenous, but not exogenous, NO decreases P-selectin and ICAM-1 mRNA expression, thereby reducing polymorphonuclear neutrophil-dependent reperfusion tissue injury.
...
PMID:NO modulates P-selectin and ICAM-1 mRNA expression and hemodynamic alterations in hepatic I/R. 984 19
The high-resolution two-dimensional (2D) protein gel electrophoresis technique combined with matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry was used for identification of proteins whose levels were changed by a mutation in hemB. Cytoplasmic protein extracts obtained from the mutant and the wild type (strain COL) at different stages of growth in tryptone soya broth (exponential, transitional, and stationary growth phases) were separated on 2D protein gels. Comparison of the 2D patterns of the protein extracts of the two strains revealed major differences. Because the electron transport chain of the mutant is interrupted due to the deficiency of heme, this organism should be unable to use oxygen or
nitrate
as a terminal electron acceptor. Consistent with this hypothesis, proteins involved in the glycolytic pathway and related pathways (
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
, enolase, and phosphoglycerate kinase) and in fermentation pathways (lactate dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, and pyruvate formate lyase) were induced in exponentially growing cells of the mutant. These results strongly indicate that the hemB mutant generates ATP from glucose or fructose only by substrate phosphorylation. Analyses of the fermentation reactions showed that the main product was lactate. Although pyruvate formate lyase (Pfl) and pyruvate dehydrogenase were present, neither ethanol nor acetate was detected in significant amounts. Presumably, Pfl was not activated in the presence of oxygen, and pyruvate dehydrogenase might have very low activity. Transcriptional analysis of citB, encoding the aconitase, revealed that the activity of the citrate cycle enzymes was down-regulated in the hemB mutant. The arginine deiminase pathway was also induced, and it could provide ATP as well. Furthermore, the amounts of most of the extracellular virulence factors were significantly reduced by a mutation in hemB, which is consistent with previous reports.
...
PMID:Physiological characterization of a heme-deficient mutant of Staphylococcus aureus by a proteomic approach. 1461 57
In green parts of the plant, during illumination ATP and NAD(P)H act as energy sources that are generated mainly in photosynthesis and respiration, whereas in darkness, glycolysis, respiration and the oxidative pentose-phosphate pathway (OPP) generate the required energy forms. In non-green parts, sugar oxidation in glycolysis, respiration and OPP are the only means of producing energy. For energy-consuming reactions, the delivery of NADPH, NADH, reduced ferredoxin and ATP has to take place at the required rates and in the specific compartments, since the pool sizes of these energy carriers are rather limited and, in general, they are not directly transported across biomembranes. Indirect transport of reducing equivalents can be achieved by malateoxaloacetate shuttles, involving malate dehydrogenase (MDH) for the interconversion. Isoenzymes of MDH are present in each cellular compartment. Chloroplasts contain the redox-controlled NADP-MDH that is only active in the light. In addition, a plastid NAD-MDH that is permanently active and is present in all plastid types has been found. Export of excess NAD(P)H through the malate valves will allow for the continued production of ATP (1) in photosynthesis, and (2) in oxidative phosphorylation. In the latter case, the coupled production of NADH is catalysed by the bispecific NAD(P)-
GAPDH
(GapAB) in chloroplasts that is active with NAD even in darkness, or by the specific plastid NAD-
GAPDH
(GapCp) in non-green tissues. When plants are subjected to conditions such as high light, high CO(2), NH(4) (+) nutrition, cold stress, which require changed activities of the enzymes of the malate valves, changed expression levels of the MDH isoforms can be observed. In nodules, the induction of a nodule-specific plastid NAD-MDH indicates the changed requirements for energy supply during N(2) fixation. Furthermore, the induction of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase isoforms by ammonium and of ferredoxin and ferredoxin-NADP reductase by
nitrate
has been described. All these findings are in line with the assumption that a changed redox state caused by metabolic variability leads to the induction of enzymes involved in redox poise.
...
PMID:Malate valves to balance cellular energy supply. 1503 73
The localization of enzymes responsible for
nitrate
assimilation and the generation of NADH for
nitrate
reduction were studied in corn (Zea mays L.) leaf blades. The techniques used effectively separated mesophyll and bundle sheath cells as judged by microscopic observations, enzymic assays, chlorophyll a/b ratios and photochemical activities. Nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, and the
nitrate
content of leaf blades were localized primarily in the mesophyll cells, although some nitrite reductase was found in the bundle sheath cells. Glutamine synthetase, NAD-malate dehydrogenase, NAD-
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
, and NADP-glutamate dehydrogenase were found in both types of cells, however, more NADP-glutamate dehydrogenase was found in the bundle sheath cells than in the mesophyll cells. These data indicate that the mesophyll cells are the major site for
nitrate
assimilation in the leaf blade because they contained an ample supply of
nitrate
and the enzymes considered essential for the assimilation of
nitrate
into amino acids. Because the specific activity of nitrate reductase was severalfold lower than the other enzymes involved in
nitrate
assimilation,
nitrate
reduction is indicated as the rate-limiting step in situ. A sequence of reactions is proposed for
nitrate
assimilation in the mesophyll cells of corn leaves as related to the C-4 pathway of photosynthesis.
...
PMID:Pathway for Nitrate Assimilation in Corn (Zea mays L.) Leaves: Cellular Distribution of Enzymes and Energy Sources for Nitrate Reduction. 1666 May 71
cDNA clones were selected from a corn (Zea mays L.) leaf lambda gt11 expression library using polyclonal antibodies for corn leaf NADH:nitrate reductase. One clone, Zmnrl, had a 2.1 kilobase insert, which hybridized to a 3.2 kilobase mRNA. The deduced amino acid sequence of Zmnrl was nearly identical to peptide sequences of corn leaf NADH:nitrate reductase. Another clone, Zm6, had an insert of 1.4 kilobase, which hybridized to a 1.4 kilobase mRNA, and its sequence coded for chloroplastic NAD(P)(+):
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
based on comparisons to sequences of this enzyme from tobacco and corn. When
nitrate
was supplied to N-starved, etiolated corn plants, nitrate reductase, and
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
mRNA levels in leaves increased in parallel. When green leaves were treated with
nitrate
, only nitrate reductase mRNA levels were increased.
Nitrate
is a specific inducer of nitrate reductase in green leaves, but appears to have a more general effect in etiolated leaves. In the dark,
nitrate
induced nitrate reductase expression in both etiolated and green leaves, indicating light and functional chloroplast were not required for enzyme expression.
...
PMID:cDNA Clones for Corn Leaf NADH:Nitrate Reductase and Chloroplast NAD(P):Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase : Characterization of the Clones and Analysis of the Expression of the Genes in Leaves as Influenced by Nitrate in the Light and Dark. 1666 79
Nitric oxide ((*)NO)-derived reactive species
nitrate
unsaturated fatty acids, yielding nitroalkene derivatives, including the clinically abundant nitrated oleic and linoleic acids. The olefinic nitro group renders these derivatives electrophilic at the carbon beta to the nitro group, thus competent for Michael addition reactions with cysteine and histidine. By using chromatographic and mass spectrometric approaches, we characterized this reactivity by using in vitro reaction systems, and we demonstrated that nitroalkene-protein and GSH adducts are present in vivo under basal conditions in healthy human red cells. Nitro-linoleic acid (9-, 10-, 12-, and 13-nitro-9,12-octadecadienoic acids) (m/z 324.2) and nitro-oleic acid (9- and 10-nitro-9-octadecaenoic acids) (m/z 326.2) reacted with GSH (m/z 306.1), yielding adducts with m/z of 631.3 and 633.3, respectively. At physiological concentrations, nitroalkenes inhibited
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(
GAPDH
), which contains a critical catalytic Cys (Cys-149).
GAPDH
inhibition displayed an IC(50) of approximately 3 microM for both nitroalkenes, an IC(50) equivalent to the potent thiol oxidant peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) and an IC(50) 30-fold less than H(2)O(2), indicating that nitroalkenes are potent thiol-reactive species. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis revealed covalent adducts between fatty acid nitroalkene derivatives and
GAPDH
, including at the catalytic Cys-149. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based proteomic analysis of human red cells confirmed that nitroalkenes readily undergo covalent, thiol-reversible post-translational modification of nucleophilic amino acids in GSH and
GAPDH
in vivo. The adduction of
GAPDH
and GSH by nitroalkenes significantly increased the hydrophobicity of these molecules, both inducing translocation to membranes and suggesting why these abundant derivatives had not been detected previously via traditional high pressure liquid chromatography analysis. The occurrence of these electrophilic nitroalkylation reactions in vivo indicates that this reversible post-translational protein modification represents a new pathway for redox regulation of enzyme function, cell signaling, and protein trafficking.
...
PMID:Reversible post-translational modification of proteins by nitrated fatty acids in vivo. 1668 16
Leptin, a hormone regulating body weight, food intake, and metabolism, is associated with activation of immune cells and inflammation. In this study we analyzed levels of leptin, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), corticosterone, interleukin 1beta (IL-1beta), and nitric oxide (NO) production on days 10 and 22 of adjuvant arthritis (AA) in male Long Evans rats to ascertain possible relationship of leptin with its modulators during the early and late phases of chronic inflammation. The circulating leptin levels were significantly reduced already on day 10 of AA compared to controls (1.97+/-0.22 ng/ml vs. 3.08+/-0.25 ng/ml, p<0.05); on day 22 no significant further drop was observed (1.06+/-0.21 ng/ml). Leptin mRNA in epididymal fat tissue was reduced in arthritic animals compared to controls on day 22 (0.61+/-0.09 vs. 1.30+/-0.1 arbU/
GAPDH
(p<0.01). IL-1beta concentration in spleen was enhanced on day 10 of AA (24.55+/-4.67 pg/100 microg protein vs. 14.33+/-1.71 pg/100 microg protein; p<0.05); on day 22 it did not differ from controls. ACTH and corticosterone levels were significantly elevated only on day 22 of AA (ACTH: 306.17+/-42.22 pg/ml vs. 157.61+/-23.94 pg/ml; p<0.05; corticosterone: 5.24+/-1.38 microg/100 ml vs. 1.05+/-0.23 microg/100 ml; p<0.01).
Nitrate
levels were enhanced similarly on days 10 (49.86+/-1.83 microM) and 22 of AA (43.58+/-2.17 microM), compared to controls (23.42+/-1.39 microM, p<0.001). These results show that corticosterone does not stimulate leptin production during AA. The suppression of leptin may be a consequence of permanent activation of NO, IL-1beta, and of lower weight gain. Circulating leptin does not seem to play a key role in the progression of chronic arthritis.
...
PMID:Relationship among nitric oxide, leptin, ACTH, corticosterone, and IL-1beta, in the early and late phases of adjuvant arthritis in male Long Evans rats. 1696 44
Nitric oxide ((.)NO) induces apoptosis at high concentrations by S-nitrosating proteins such as
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
. This literature analysis revealed that failure to sustain high (.)NO concentrations is common to all cancers. In cervical, gastric, colorectal, breast, and lung cancer, the cause of this failure is the inadequate expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), resulting from the inhibition of iNOS expression by TGF-beta1 at the mRNA level. In bladder, renal, and prostate cancer, the reason for the insufficient (.)NO levels is the depletion of arginine, resulting from arginase overexpression. Arginase competes with iNOS for arginine, catalyzing its hydrolysis to ornithine and urea. In gliomas and ovarian sarcomas, low (.)NO levels are caused by inhibition of iNOS by N-chlorotaurine, produced by infiltrating neutrophils. Stimulated neutrophils express myeloperoxidase, catalyzing H2O2 oxidation of Cl- to HOCl, which N-chlorinates taurine at its concentration of 19 mM in neutrophils. In squamous cell carcinomas of the skin, ovarian cancers, lymphomas, Hodgkin's disease, and breast cancers, low (.)NO concentrations arise from the inhibition of iNOS by N-bromotaurine, produced by eosinophil-peroxidase-expressing infiltrating eosinophils. Eosinophil peroxidase catalyzes the H2O2 oxidation of Br- to HOBr, which N-brominates taurine to N-bromotaurine at its concentration of 15 mM in eosinophils. In microvascularized tumors, the (.)NO concentration is further depleted; (.)NO is rapidly consumed by red blood cells (RBCs) through S-nitrosation of RBC glutathione and hemoglobin, and by oxidation to
nitrate
by RBC oxyhemoglobin. Angiogenesis-inhibiting antibodies are currently used to treat cancers; their mode of action is not, as previously thought, reduction of the tumor O2 or nutrient supply. They actually decrease the loss of (.)NO to RBCs.
...
PMID:Apoptosis-inducing high (.)NO concentrations are not sustained either in nascent or in developed cancers. 1875 45
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