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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)
Methanosarcina barkeri was able to grow on L-alanine and L-glutamate as sole nitrogen sources. Cell yields were 0.5 g/l and 0.7 g/l (wet wt), respectively. The mechanism of ammonia assimilation in Methanosarcina barkeri strain MS was studied by analysis of enzyme activities. Activity levels of nitrogen-assimilating enzymes in extracts of cells grown on different nitrogen sources (ammonia, 0.05-100 mM; L-alanine, 10 mM; L-glutamate, 10 mM) were compared. Activities of
glutamate dehydrogenase
,
glutamate synthase
, glutamine synthetase, glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase and glutamate pyruvate transaminase could be measured in cells grown on these three nitrogen sources. Alanine dehydrogenase was not detected under the growth conditions used. None of the measured enzyme activities varied significantly in response to the NH4+ concentration. The length of the poly-gamma-glutamyl side chain of F420 derivatives turned out to be independent of the concentration of ammonia in the culture medium.
...
PMID:Ammonia assimilation and glutamate incorporation in coenzyme F420 derivatives of Methanosarcina barkeri. 167 22
The reaction mechanism of Azospirillum brasilense
glutamate synthase
has been investigated by several approaches. 15N nuclear magnetic resonance studies demonstrate that the amide nitrogen of glutamine is reductively transferred to 2-oxoglutarate in an irreversible manner with no release of the transferred ammonia group into the medium. Identical results were obtained using thio-NADPH and acetylpyridine-NADPH, which are shown to be less efficient substrates of the enzyme than NADPH. Similarly, no exchange of the ammonia group being transferred with exogenous ammonium ion was observed during catalysis. The glutamate formed as the product of the iminoglutarate reduction was determined to be in the L configuration. The enzyme was also found to catalyze, under anaerobic conditions, the exchange of the 4proS H of NADPH with solvent both in the absence and in the presence of 2-oxoglutarate and glutamine. The reductive half-reaction is therefore a reversible segment of the overall irreversible amidotransferase reaction. 15N NMR studies also showed that the enzyme does not catalyze
glutamate dehydrogenase
/oxidase reactions or any observable glutaminase activity under neutral (pH 7.5) conditions. Glutaminase activity was also not observable with the reduced enzyme alone or in the presence of D-glutamate (a competitive inhibitor of
glutamate synthase
with respect to 2-oxoglutarate, with a Ki of about 11 microM) or with the oxidized enzyme in the presence of 2-oxoglutarate, D-glutamate, or NADP+. These data confirm species-dependent differences of A. brasilense
glutamate synthase
with respect to the enzyme from other sources.
...
PMID:Mechanistic studies on Azospirillum brasilense glutamate synthase. 168 91
Two pathways serve for assimilation of ammonia in Paracoccus denitrificans. Glutamate dehydrogenase (NADP+) catalyzes the assimilation at a high NH4+ concentration. If nitrate serves as the nitrogen source, glutamate is synthesized by glutamate-ammonia ligase and
glutamate synthase
(NADPH). At a very low NH4+ concentration, all three enzymes are synthesized simultaneously. No direct relationship exists between
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP+) and glutamate-ammonia ligase in P. denitrificans, while the
glutamate synthase
(NADPH) activity changes in parallel with that of the latter enzyme. Ammonia does not influence the induction or repression of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP+). The inner concentration of metabolites indicates a possible repression of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP+) by the high concentration of glutamine or its metabolic products as in the case when NH4+ is formed by assimilative nitrate reduction. No direct effect of the intermediates of nitrate assimilation on the synthesis of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP+) was observed.
...
PMID:Assimilation of ammonia in Paracoccus denitrificans. 168 63
Frankia spp. are filamentous actinomycetes that fix N2 in culture and in actinorhizal root nodules. In combined nitrogen-depleted aerobic environments, nitrogenase is restricted to thick-walled spherical structures, Frankia vesicles, that are formed on short stalks along the vegetative hyphae. The activities of the NH4(+)-assimilating enzymes (glutamine synthetase [GS],
glutamate synthase
,
glutamate dehydrogenase
, and alanine dehydrogenase) were determined in cells grown on NH4+ and N2 and in vesicles and hyphae from N2-fixing cultures separated on sucrose gradients. The two frankial GSs, GSI and GSII, were present in vesicles at levels similar to those detected in vegetative hyphae from N2-fixing cultures as shown by enzyme assay and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Glutamate synthase,
glutamate dehydrogenase
, and alanine dehydrogenase activities were restricted to the vegetative hyphae. Vesicles apparently lack a complete pathway for assimilating ammonia beyond the glutamine stage.
...
PMID:Enzymes of ammonia assimilation in hyphae and vesicles of Frankia sp. strain CpI1. 196 54
We cloned GDH2, the gene that encodes the NAD-linked
glutamate dehydrogenase
in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, by purifying the enzyme, making polyclonal antibodies to it, and using the antibodies to screen a lambda gt11 yeast genomic library. A yeast strain with a deletion-disruption allele of GDH2 which replaced the wild-type gene grew very poorly with glutamate as a nitrogen source, but growth improved significantly when the strain was also provided with adenine or other nitrogenous compounds whose biosynthesis requires glutamine. Our results indicate that the NAD-linked
glutamate dehydrogenase
catalyzes the major, but not sole, pathway for generation of ammonia from glutamate. We also isolated yeast mutants that lacked
glutamate synthase
activity and present evidence which shows that normally NAD-linked
glutamate dehydrogenase
is not involved in glutamate biosynthesis, but that if the enzyme is overexpressed, it may function reversibly in intact cells.
...
PMID:Role of NAD-linked glutamate dehydrogenase in nitrogen metabolism in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 197 78
A positive, genetic selection against the activity of the nitrogen regulatory (NTR) system was used to isolate insertion mutations affecting nitrogen regulation in Klebsiella aerogenes. Two classes of mutation were obtained: those affecting the NTR system itself and leading to the loss of almost all nitrogen regulation, and those affecting the nac locus and leading to a loss of nitrogen regulation of a family of nitrogen-regulated enzymes. The set of these nac-dependent enzymes included histidase,
glutamate dehydrogenase
,
glutamate synthase
, proline oxidase, and urease. The enzymes shown to be nac independent included glutamine synthetase, asparaginase, tryptophan permease, nitrate reductase, the product of the nifLA operon, and perhaps nitrite reductase. The expression of the nac gene was itself highly nitrogen regulated, and this regulation was mediated by the NTR system. The loss of nitrogen regulation was found in each of the four insertion mutants studied, showing that loss of nitrogen regulation resulted from the absence of nac function rather than from an altered form of the nac gene product. Thus we propose two classes of nitrogen-regulated operons: in class I, the NTR system directly activates expression of the operon; in class II, the NTR system activates nac expression and the product(s) of the nac locus activates expression of the operon.
...
PMID:Role of the nac gene product in the nitrogen regulation of some NTR-regulated operons of Klebsiella aerogenes. 197 23
Evidence for the existence of a glutamine cycle in Neurospora crassa is reviewed. Through this cycle glutamine is converted into glutamate by
glutamate synthase
and catabolized by the glutamine transaminase-omega-amidase pathway, the products of which (2-oxoglutarate and ammonium) are the substrates for
glutamate dehydrogenase
-NADPH, which synthesizes glutamate. In the final step ammonium is assimilated into glutamine by the action of a glutamine synthetase (GS), which is formed by two distinct polypeptides, one catalytically very active (GS beta), and the other (GS alpha) less active but endowed with the capacity to modulate the activity of GS alpha. Glutamate synthase uses the amide nitrogen of glutamine to synthesize glutamate;
glutamate dehydrogenase
uses ammonium, and both are required to maintain the level of glutamate. The energy expended in the synthesis of glutamine drives the cycle. The glutamine cycle is not futile, because it is necessary to drive an effective carbon flow to support growth; in addition, it facilitates the allocation of nitrogen or carbon according to cellular demands. The glutamine cycle which dissipates energy links catabolism and anabolism and, in doing so, buffers variations in the nutrient supply and drives energy generation and carbon flow for optimal cell function.
...
PMID:Glutamine metabolism and cycling in Neurospora crassa. 214 4
L-[amide-13N]glutamine in Neurospora crassa is metabolized to [13N]glutamate by
glutamate synthase
and to [13N]ammonium by the glutamine transaminase-omega-amidase pathway. The [13N]ammonium released is assimilated by
glutamate dehydrogenase
and glutamine synthetase, confirming the operation of a glutamine cycle. Most of the nitrogen is retained during cycling between glutamate and glutamine.
...
PMID:13N isotope studies of glutamine assimilation pathways in Neurospora crassa. 252 94
Pathways of ammonia assimilation into glutamic acid were investigated in ammonia-grown and N2-fixing Clostridium kluyverii and Clostridium butyricum by measuring the specific activities of
glutamate dehydrogenase
, glutamine synthetase, and
glutamate synthase
. C. kluyverii had NADPH-
glutamate dehydrogenase
with a Km of 12.0 mM for NH4+. The
glutamate dehydrogenase
pathway played an important role in ammonia assimilation in ammonia-grown cells but was found to play a minor role relative to that of the glutamine synthetase/NADPH-glutamate synthase pathway in nitrogen-fixing cells when the intracellular NH4+ concentration and the low affinity of the enzyme for NH4+ were taken into account. In C. butyricum grown on glucose-salt medium with ammonia or N2 as the nitrogen source,
glutamate dehydrogenase
activity was undetectable, and the glutamine synthetase/NADH-glutamate synthase pathway was the predominant pathway of ammonia assimilation. Under these growth conditions, C. butyricum also lacked the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, which catalyzes the regeneration of NADPH from NADP+. However, high activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase as well as of NADPH-
glutamate dehydrogenase
with a Km of 2.8 mM for NH4+ were present in C. butyricum after growth on complex nitrogen and carbon sources. The ammonia-assimilating pathway of N2-fixing C. butyricum, which differs from that of the previously studied Bacillus polymyxa and Bacillus macerans, is discussed in relation to possible effects of the availability of ATP and of NADPH on ammonia-assimilating pathways.
...
PMID:Ammonia assimilation pathways in nitrogen-fixing Clostridium kluyverii and Clostridium butyricum. 256 48
No active uptake of ammonium was detected in Proteus vulgaris, Bacillus pasteurii, and Sporosarcina ureae, which indicates that these bacteria depend on the passive diffusion of ammonia across the cell membrane. In P. vulgaris the glutamine synthetase-
glutamate synthase
(GS-GOGAT) pathway and
glutamate dehydrogenase
(
GDH
) were present, and these enzymes exhibited high affinities for ammonium. In B. pasteurii and S. ureae, however, no GS activity was detected, and GOGAT activity was only present in S. ureae.
GDH
enzymes were present in these two organisms, but showed only low affinity for ammonium, with apparent Km-values of 55.2 mM in B. pasteurii and 36.7 mM in S. ureae, respectively. These observations explain why P. vulgaris is able to grow at neutral pH and low ammonium concentration (2 mM), while B. pasteurii and S. ureae require high ammonium concentration (40 mM) and alkaline pH for growth.
...
PMID:Ammonium assimilation in Proteus vulgaris, Bacillus pasteurii, and Sporosarcina ureae. 257 May 57
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