Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.4.1.2 (glutamate dehydrogenase)
4,380 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The levels of glutamate synthase and of glutamine synthetase are both derepressed 10-fold in strain JP1449 of Escherichia coli carrying a thermosensitive mutation in the glutamyl-transfer ribonucleic acid (tRNA) synthetase and growing exponentially but at a reduced rate at a partially restrictive temperature, compared with the levels in strain AB347 isogenic with strain JP1449 except for this thermosensitive mutation and the marker aro. These two enzymes catalyze one of the two pathways for glutamate biosynthesis in E. coli, the other being defined by the glutamate dehydrogenase. We observed a correlation between the percentage of charged tRNAGlu and the level of glutamate synthase in various mutants reported to have an altered glutamyl-tRNA synthetase activity. These results suggest that a glutamyl-tRNA might be involved in the repression of the biosynthesis of the glutamate synthase and of the glutamine synthetase and would couple the regulation of the biosynthesis of these two enzymes, which can work in tandem to synthesize glutamate when the ammonia concentration is low in E. coli but whose structural genes are quite distant from each other. No derepression of the level of the glutamate dehydrogenase was observed in mutant strain JP1449 under the conditions where the levels of the glutamine synthetase and of the glutamate synthase were derepressed. This result indicates that the two pathways for glutamate biosynthesis in E. coli are under different regulatory controls. The glutamate has been reported to be probably the key regulatory element of the biosynthesis of the glutamate dehydrogenase. Our results indicate that the cell has chosen the level of glutamyl-tRNA as a more sensitive probe to regulate the biosynthesis of the enzymes of the other pathway, which must be energized at a low ammonia concentration.
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PMID:Derepressed levels of glutamate synthase and glutamine synthetase in Escherichia coli mutants altered in glutamyl-transfer ribonucleic acid synthetase. 23 24

The regulation of glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.4), glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2), and glutamate synthase (EC 2.6.1.53) was examined for cultures of Salmonella typhimurium grown with various nitrogen and amino acid sources. In contrast to the regulatory pattern observed in Klebsiella aerogenes, the glutamate dehydrogenase levels of S. typhimurium do not decrease when glutamine synthetase is derepressed during growth with limiting ammonia. Thus, it appears that the S. typhimurium glutamine synthetase does not regulate the synthesis of glutamate dehydrogenase as reported for K. aerogenes. The glutamate dehydrogenase activity does increase, however, during growth of a glutamate auxotroph with glutamate as a limiting amino acid source. The regulation of glutamate synthase levels is complex with the enzyme activity decreasing during growth with glutamate as a nitrogen source, and during growth of auxotrophs with either glutamine or glutamate as limiting amino acids.
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PMID:Regulation of the ammonia assimilatory enzymes in Salmonella typhimurium. 24 Aug 4

Glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate:NADP+ oxidoreductase [deaminating], EC 1.4.1.4) has been purified from Escherichia coli B/r. The purity of the enzyme preparation has been established by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, ultracentrifugation, and gel filtration. A molecular weight of 300,000 +/- 20,000 has been calculated for the enzyme from sedimentation equilibrium measurements. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate and sedimentation equilibrium measurements in guanidine hydrochloride have revealed that glutamate dehydrogenase consists of polypeptide chains with the identical molecular weight of 50,000 +/- 5,000. The results of molecular weight determination lead us to propose that glutamate dehydrogenase is a hexamer of subunits with identical molecular weight. We also have studied the stability and kinetics of purified glutamate dehydrogenase. The enzyme remains active when heat treated or when left at room temperature for several months but is inactivated by freezing. The Michaelis constants of glutamate dehydrogenase are 1,100,640, and 40 muM for ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate, and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, respectively.
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PMID:Glutamate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli: purification and properties. 24 44

Two strains of Cyanidium caldarium, one able to utilize nitrate as a substrate, and the other not, were tested for the presence of enzymes of ammonia assimilation. The nitrate-assimilating strain exhibits glutamate dehydrogenase activity. By contrast, the other strain lacks glutamate dehydrogenase; it possesses high alanine dehydrogenase and L-alanine aminotransferase activities which suggest that this strain may incorporate ammonia through reductive amination of pyruvate and may form glutamate from 2-ketoglutarate by a transamination reaction with alanine. Neither strain reveals glutamate synthase activity. Both strains contain similar levels of glutamine synthetase.
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PMID:Observations on enzymes of ammonia assimilation in two different strains of Cyanidium caldarium. 24 91

Klebsiella aerogenes utilized arginine as the sole source of carbon or nitrogen for growth. Arginine was degraded to 2-ketoglutarate and not to succinate, since a citrate synthaseless mutant grows on arginine as the only nitrogen source. When glucose was the energy source, all four nitrogen atoms of arginine were utilized. Three of them apparently did not pass through ammonia but were transferred by transamination, since a mutant unable to produce glutamate by glutamate synthase or glutamate dehydrogenase utilized three of four nitrogen atoms of arginine. Urea was not involved as intermediate, since a unreaseless mutant did not accumulate urea and grew on arginine as efficiently as the wild-type strain. Ornithine appeared to be an intermediate, because cells grown either on glucose and arginine or arginine alone could convert arginine in the presence of hydroxylamine to ornithine. This indicates that an amidinotransferase is the initiating enzyme of arginine breakdown. In addition, the cells contained a transaminase specific for ornithine. In contrast to the hydroxylamine-dependent reaction, this activity could be demonstrated in extracts. The arginine-utilizing system (aut) is apparently controlled like the enzymes responsible for the degradation of histidine (hut) through induction, catabolite repression, and activation by glutamine synthetase.
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PMID:Utilization of arginine by Klebsiella aerogenes. 34 1

The principal initial product of metabolism of 13N-labeled ammonium by Anabaena cylindrica grown with either NH4+ or N2 as nitrogen source is amide-labeled glutamine. The specific activity of glutamine synthetase is approximately half as great in NH4+-grown as in N2-grown filaments. After 1.5 min of exposure to 13NH4+, the ratio of 13N in glutamate to 13N in glutamine reaches a value of approximately 0.1 for N2- and 0.15 for NH4+-grown filaments, whereas after the same period of exposure to [13N]N2, that ratio has reached a value close to unity and is rising rapidly. During pulse-chase experiments, 13N is transferred from the amide group to glutamine into glutamate, and then apparently into the alpha-amino group of glutamine. Methionine sulfoximine, an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, inhibits the formation of glutamine. In the presence of the inhibitor, direct formation of glutamate takes place, but accounts for only a few per cent of the normal rate of formation of that amino acid; and alanine is formed about as rapidly as glutamate. Azaserine reduces formation of [13N]glutamate approximately 100-fold, with relatively little effect on the formation of [13N]glutamine. Aminooxyacetate, an inhibitor of transaminase reactions blocks transfer of 13N to aspartate, citrulline, and arginine. We conclude, on the basis of these results and others in the literature, that the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase pathway mediates most of the initial metabolism of ammonium in A. cylindrica, and that glutamic acid dehydrogenase and alanine dehydrogenase have only a very minor role.
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PMID:The pathways of assimilation of 13NH4+ by the cyanobacterium, Anabaena cylindrica. 41 Aug 9

These studies were designed to determine the biochemical nature of the Bacillus thuringiensis growth being dependent on glutamate during cultivation in a minimal medium. This is possible to be due to the absence of enzymes which catalyze glutamic acid synthesis by direct amination of alpha-ketoglutaric acid, glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamate synthase, and a decrease in the activity of the enzyme catalyzing amination of pyruvic acid, alanine dehydrogenase. It has been shown that the lack of glutamate can be compensated by histidine and proline; in this case, the growth efficiency of R form is greater than that of S form which is consistent with an increased rate of protein synthesis of R form.
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PMID:[Amination and biosynthesis of glutamate by R- and S-forms of Bacillus thuringiensis]. 47 Jun 35

This communication describes the isolation and characterization of mutants of Rhizobium trifolii which can induce nitrogenase activity in defined liquid medium. Two procedures were used for the isolation of these mutants from R. trifolii strain DT-6: (1) following chemical mutagenesis, slow growing mutants were selected which were unable to utilize NH+4 as sole source of nitrogen; (2) as spontaneous mutants resistant to the glutamate analogue L-methionine-DL-sulfoximine. Mutants (DT-71, DT-125) isolated by these procedures induced nitrogenase activity in the free-living state, whereas the parent strain lacked this property. Induction of nitrogenase activity in these mutants occurred during the late exponential phase of growth when the rate of protein synthesis was decreasing. The addition of NH+4 to a medium containing glutamate as the nitrogen-source resulted in a 50--70% reduction (repression?) of nitrogenase activity; in contrast, the rate of protein synthesis or the rate of respiration was not influenced by exogenous NH+4. Biochemical analysis showed that these mutants (strains DT-71 and DT-125) have defects in both nitrogen and carbon metabolism. The levels of glutamate synthase (both NADP+ -and NAD+ -dependent activities) and glutamate dehydrogenase (NAD+-dependent activity) were markedly lower. In addition, the mutants were found to have no detectable ribitol dehydrogenase or beta-galactosidase activity. These findings are discussed in relation to a mechanism of regulation of symbiotic nitrogen fixation.
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PMID:Regulation of nitrogen fixation in Rhizobium spp. Isolation of mutants of Rhizobium trifolii which induce nitrogenase activity. 58 92

Genetic manipulation of nitrogenase and key glutamate-forming enzymes can provide mutants that excrete fixed N2 as NH4+. A derepressed N2 fxation mutant (SK-24) has been isolated , which excretes up to 20.2 mumol of fixed N2 as NH4+ per mg of cell protein in 24 hr at room temperature. Biochemical analysis shows that this mutant, which requires glutamate for growth, releases fixed N2 as NH4+ into the environment because of (i) constitutive synthesis of nitrogenase and (ii) genetic blocks resulting in losses of glutamate synthase [L-glutamine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (NADPH oxidizing), EC 2.6.1.53] and glutamate dehydrogenase [L-glutamate:NADP oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.1.4] activities, enzymes essential for NH4+ assimilation into cell material. The parent strain (asm-1), missing only glutamate synthase activity, also actively excretes NH4+ during early phases of its growth but eventually reutilizes the NN4+. A miximum yield of 4.0 mumol of NH4+/ml per 24 hr has been noted for asm-1 only during the growth period. Biosynthesis of NH4+ PROCEEDS AT THE EXPENSE OF A Variety of fermentable sugars, such as sucrose or glucose, with a maximum energy conversion efficiency of about 5 glucose degraded per NH4+ formed. The use of microbes for production of NH4+ fertilizer is discussed.
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PMID:Microbial production of ammonium ion from nitrogen. 109 Sep 30

A Saccharomyces cerevisiae glutamate auxotroph, lacking NADP-glutamate dehydrogenase (NADP-GDH) and glutamate synthase (GOGAT) activities, was complemented with a yeast genomic library. Clones were obtained which still lacked NADP-GDH but showed GOGAT activity. Northern analysis revealed that the DNA fragment present in the complementing plasmids coded for a 1.5kb mRNA. Since the only GOGAT enzyme so far purified from S. cerevisiae is made up of a small and a large subunit, the size of the mRNA suggested that the cloned DNA fragment could code for the GOGAT small subunit. Plasmids were purified and used to transform Escherichia coli glutamate auxotrophs. Transformants were only recovered when the recipient strain was an E. coli GDH-less mutant lacking the small GOGAT subunit. These data show that we have cloned the structural gene coding for the yeast small subunit (GUS2). Evidence is also presented indicating that the GOGAT enzyme which is synthesized in the E. coli transformants is a hybrid comprising the large E. coli subunit and the small S. cerevisiae subunit.
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PMID:Cloning of a yeast gene coding for the glutamate synthase small subunit (GUS2) by complementation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli glutamate auxotrophs. 134 1


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