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:1.4.1.2 (
glutamate dehydrogenase
)
4,380
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Effects of repeated administration of benthiocarb on the nitrogen metabolism of hepatic and neuronal systems have been studied. Repeated benthiocarb treatment was associated with significant decrease in proteins with a concomitant increase in free amino acids (FAA) and specific activity levels of proteases suggesting impaired protein synthesis or elevated proteolysis. The glycogenic aminotransferases showed a significant elevation in both the tissues indicating high feeding of ketoacids into oxidative pathway for efficient operation of TCA cycle to combat energy crisis during induced benthiocarb stress. However, the activity levels of branched-chain aminotransferases decreased suggesting their reduced contribution of intermediates to TCA cycle. A comparative evaluation of the activity levels of ammonogenic enzymes, AMP deaminase, adenosine deaminase and
glutamate dehydrogenase
(
GDH
) indicated that ammonia was mostly contributed by nucleotide deamination rather than by oxidative deamination.
GDH
exhibited reduced activity due to low availability of glutamate. In accordance with increased levels of urea, the activity levels of arginase, a terminal enzyme of urea cycle was increased suggesting increased urea cycle operation in order to combat the increased ammonia content. As the presence of urea cycle in the brain is rather doubtful, the conversion of ammonia to glutamine for the synthesis of GABA is envisaged in brain whereas in liver, excess ammonia was converted to urea through ornithine-arginine reacting system. The increased
glutaminase
activity observed during benthiocarb intoxication is accounted for counteracting acidosis or maintenance of metabolic homeostasis. Arginase, a terminal enzyme of ornithine cycle showed increased activity denoting the efficient potentiality of tissues to avert ammonia toxicity. The changes observed in tissues of rat administered with benthiocarb reflects a shift in nitrogen metabolism for efficient mobilization of end products of protein catabolism.
...
PMID:Perturbations in nitrogen metabolism of brain and liver of rat following repeated benthiocarb administration. 266 46
Streptococcus bovis JB1 cells energized with glucose transported glutamine at a rate of 7 nmol/mg of protein per min at a pH of 5.0 to 7.5; sodium had little effect on the transport rate. Because valinomycin-treated cells loaded with K and diluted into Na (pH 6.5) to create an artificial delta psi took up little glutamine, it appeared that transport was driven by phosphate-bond energy rather than proton motive force. The kinetics of glutamine transport by glucose-energized cells were biphasic, and it appeared that facilitated diffusion was also involved, particularly at high glutamine concentrations. Glucose-depleted cultures took up glutamine and produced ammonia, but the rate of transport per unit of glutamine (V/S) by nonenergized cells was at least 1,000-fold less than the V/S by glucose-energized cells. Glutamine was converted to pyroglutamate and ammonia by a pathway that did not involve a
glutaminase
reaction or glutamate production. No ammonia production from pyroglutamate was detected. S. bovis was unable to take up glutamate, but intracellular glutamate concentrations were as high as 7 mM. Glutamate was produced from ammonia via a
glutamate dehydrogenase
reaction. Cells contained high concentrations of 2-oxoglutarate and NADPH that inhibited glutamate deamination and favored glutamate formation. Since the carbon skeleton of glutamine was lost as pyroglutamate, glutamate formation occurred at the expense of glucose. Arginine deamination is often used as a taxonomic tool in classifying streptococci, and it had generally been assumed that other amino acids could not be fermented. To our knowledge, this is the first report of glutamine conversion to pyroglutamate and ammonia in streptococci.
...
PMID:Transport of glutamine by Streptococcus bovis and conversion of glutamine to pyroglutamic acid and ammonia. 272 40
Rats were fed a standard diet or the standard diet supplemented with ammonium acetate (20% w/w) for up to 100 days. The effect of the ingestion of the high-ammonium diet on some aspects of nitrogen metabolism in rats was studied. Ammonia levels in blood increased approximately 3-fold; in brain, liver and muscle the increases were 36, 34 and 50%, respectively. Urea levels in blood and urea excretion increased approximately 2-fold. There was no increase of carbamyl phosphate synthase. Liver glutamine synthase activity increased by 58% and
glutamate dehydrogenase
by 40%, whereas
glutaminase
was not affected. Glutamine content in brain was twice that of controls. This new animal model to study hyperammonemia offers several advantages over others: it is simpler, is bloodless, requires no animal manipulation and permits long-term studies.
...
PMID:A simple animal model of hyperammonemia. 275 49
Sixteen independent Azorhizobium sesbaniae ORS571 vector insertion (Vi) mutants defective in ammonium assimilation (Asm-) were selected; genomic DNA sequences flanking the insertion endpoints were cloned directly. Resulting recombinant plasmids were used to identify, by hybridization, corresponding wild-type DNA sequences from an A. sesbaniae lambda EMBL3 genomic library (lambda Asm phages). All 16 Asm- Vi mutants physically mapped to a single genomic locus. Plasmid subclones of recombinant phage lambda Asm152 were able to complement both Escherichia coli gltB and A. sesbaniae Asm- Vi mutants; NADPH-glutamate synthase activity was detected in all such strains complemented to Asm+. Heterologous and homologous complementations required both A. sesbaniae gltA+ and (inferred) gltB+ genes. Eleven A. sesbaniae Asm- Vi mutants mapped to a 4-kilobase-pair (kbp) DNA region that exhibited homology with Bacillus subtilis gltA+. In E. coli maxicell labeling experiments, this 4-kbp DNA region encoded a 165-kilodalton polypeptide that was inferred to be the product of the A. sesbaniae gltA+ gene (
glutaminase
NADPH-dependent L-glutamate synthase subunit). Site-directed Tn5-lacZ mutagenesis of a glt plasmid subclone identified a region that bisected this locus into (at least) two cistrons. Because the remaining five A. sesbaniae Asm- mutants mapped to a 1.5-kbp region adjacent to gltA+, these mutants probably define a single gltB+ gene (
glutamate dehydrogenase
NADPH-dependent L-glutamate synthase subunit); this region did not exhibit homology with the B. subtilis gltB+ gene.
...
PMID:Characterization of the Azorhizobium sesbaniae ORS571 genomic locus encoding NADPH-glutamate synthase. 283 Feb 30
The activities of several enzymes involved in the metabolism of aspartate and glutamate were measured in striatal (nucleus caudatus and putamen) homogenates 2-3, 6-7, and 35-40 days following frontoparietal and frontal cortical ablation. The activity of glutamine synthetase (GS) was substantially increased (46-48%) on the operated side 6-7 days following the lesion whereas smaller changes were observed at 2-3 and 35-40 days after lesion. In contrast, decreased levels of
glutaminase
and malate dehydrogenase (MDH) were observed by 6-7 days while no significant change was found at either 2-3 or 35-40 after the lesion. The activities of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(
GDH
) and glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) were elevated after 35-40 days whereas no changes in the levels of either
GDH
or aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT) were found at 2-3 or 6-7 days after the fronto-parietal decortication. When only the frontal cortex was removed quantitatively similar changes were observed in striatal GS and
glutaminase
activity. The content of glutamate and glutamine in the denervated striatum followed qualitatively the changes in
glutaminase
and GS. The results indicate that the degeneration of cortico-striatal terminals causes a profound glial reaction in the striatum, and both
glutaminase
and MDH are present in relatively high concentrations in the corticostriatal terminals.
...
PMID:Effect of cortico-striate pathway lesion on the activities of enzymes involved in synthesis and metabolism of amino acid neurotransmitters in the striatum. 285 84
The ontogenetic development of the enzymes phosphate activated
glutaminase
(PAG),
glutamate dehydrogenase
(GLDH), glutamic-oxaloacetic-transaminase (GOT), glutamine synthetase (GS), and ornithine-delta-aminotransferase (Orn-T) was followed in cerebellum in vivo and in cultured cerebellar granule cells. It was found that PAG, GLDH, and GOT exhibited similar developmental patterns in the cultured neurons compared to cerebellum. PAG showed, however, a more pronounced phosphate activation in the cultured granule cells compared to in vivo. The activity of GS remained low in the cultured neurons compared to the increasing activity of this enzyme found in vivo. On the other hand Orn-T exhibited an increase in its specific activity in the cultured cells as a function of time in culture in contrast to the non-changing activity of this enzyme in vivo. Compared to cerebellum the cultured neurons exhibited higher activities of GLDH, GOT, and Orn-T whereas the activity of PAG was only slightly higher in the cultured cells. The activity of GS in the cultured neurons was only 5-10% of the activity in cerebellum in vivo. It is concluded that cultured cerebellar granule cells represent a reliable model system by which the metabolism and function of glutamatergic neurons can be conveniently studied in a physiologically meaningful way.
...
PMID:Ontogenetic development of glutamate metabolizing enzymes in cultured cerebellar granule cells and in cerebellum in vivo. 285 27
The short-term metabolic fate of blood-borne [13N]ammonia was determined in the brains of chronically (8- or 14-week portacaval-shunted rats) or acutely (urease-treated) hyperammonemic rats. Using a "freeze-blowing" technique it was shown that the overwhelming route for metabolism of blood-borne [13N]ammonia in normal, chronically hyperammonemic and acutely hyperammonemic rat brain was incorporation into glutamine (amide). However, the rate of turnover of [13N]ammonia to L-[amide-13N]glutamine was slower in the hyperammonemic rat brain than in the normal rat brain. The activities of several enzymes involved in cerebral ammonia and glutamate metabolism were also measured in the brains of 14-week portacaval-shunted rats. The rat brain appears to have little capacity to adapt to chronic hyperammonemia because there were no differences in activity compared with those of weight-matched controls for the following brain enzymes involved in glutamate/ammonia metabolism: glutamine synthetase,
glutamate dehydrogenase
, aspartate aminotransferase, glutamine transaminase,
glutaminase
, and glutamate decarboxylase. The present findings are discussed in the context of the known deleterious effects on the CNS of high ammonia levels in a variety of diseases.
...
PMID:Cerebral ammonia metabolism in hyperammonemic rats. 285 53
A simplified method was developed for the bulk separation of neuronal perikarya and astroglial cells from adult rat brain without the involvement of density gradients. Activities of various enzymes involved in glutamate metabolism were estimated and compared with those of synaptosomes. The activities of
glutamate dehydrogenase
and aspartate aminotransferase were higher in synaptosomes than in neuronal perikarya or glia. Glutamine synthetase was distributed in all the three fractions while
glutaminase
activity was higher in astrocytes than in synaptosomes and was not detectable in neuronal perikarya. The significance of these results in relation to metabolic compartmentation was discussed.
...
PMID:Isolation of astrocytes, neurons, and synaptosomes of rat brain cortex: distribution of enzymes of glutamate metabolism. 285 36
Energy metabolism in proliferating cultured rat thymocytes was compared with that of freshly prepared non-proliferating resting cells. Cultured rat thymocytes enter a proliferative cycle after stimulation by concanavalin A and Lymphocult T (interleukin-2), with maximal rates of DNA synthesis at 60 h. Compared with incubated resting thymocytes, glucose metabolism by incubated proliferating thymocytes was 53-fold increased; 90% of the amount of glucose utilized was converted into lactate, whereas resting cells metabolized only 56% to lactate. However, the latter oxidized 27% of glucose to CO2, as opposed to 1.1% by the proliferating cells. Activities of hexokinase, 6-phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase and aldolase in proliferating thymocytes were increased 12-, 17-, 30- and 24-fold respectively, whereas the rate of pyruvate oxidation was enhanced only 3-fold. The relatively low capacity of pyruvate degradation in proliferating thymocytes might be the reason for almost complete conversion of glucose into lactate by these cells. Glutamine utilization by rat thymocytes was 8-fold increased during proliferation. The major end products of glutamine metabolism are glutamate, aspartate, CO2 and ammonia. A complete recovery of glutamine carbon and nitrogen in the products was obtained. The amount of glutamate formed by phosphate-dependent glutaminase which entered the citric acid cycle was enhanced 5-fold in the proliferating cells: 76% was converted into 2-oxoglutarate by aspartate aminotransferase, present in high activity, and the remaining 24% by
glutamate dehydrogenase
. With resting cells the same percentages were obtained (75 and 25). Maximal activities of
glutaminase
,
glutamate dehydrogenase
and aspartate aminotransferase were increased 3-, 12- and 6-fold respectively in proliferating cells; 32% of the glutamate metabolized in the citric acid cycle was recovered in CO2 and 61% in aspartate. In resting cells this proportion was 41% and 59% and in mitogen-stimulated cells 39% and 65% respectively. Addition of glucose (4 mM) or malate (2 mM) strongly decreased the rates of glutamine utilization and glutamate conversion into 2-oxoglutarate by proliferating thymocytes and also affected the pathways of further glutamate metabolism. Addition of 2 mM-pyruvate did not alter the rate of glutamine utilization by proliferating thymocytes, but decreased the rate of metabolism beyond the stage of glutamate significantly. Formation of acetyl-CoA in the presence of pyruvate might explain the relatively enhanced oxidation of glutamate to CO2 (56%) by proliferating thymocytes.
...
PMID:Glutamine and glucose metabolism during thymocyte proliferation. Pathways of glutamine and glutamate metabolism. 286 9
The developmental change of endogenous glutamate, as correlated to that of gamma-glutamyl transferase and other glutamate metabolizing enzymes such as phosphate activated
glutaminase
,
glutamate dehydrogenase
and aspartate, GABA and ornithine aminotransferases, has been investigated in cultured cerebral cortex interneurons and cerebellar granule cells. These cells are considered to be GABAergic and glutamatergic, respectively. Similar studies have also been performed in cerebral cortex and cerebellum in vivo. The developmental profiles of endogenous glutamate in cultured cerebral cortex interneurons and cerebellar granule cells corresponded rather closely with that of gamma-glutamyl transferase and not with other glutamate metabolizing enzymes. In cerebral cortex and cerebellum in vivo the developmental profiles of endogenous glutamate, gamma-glutamyl transferase and phosphate activated
glutaminase
corresponded with each other during the first 14 days in cerebellum, but this correspondence was less good in cerebral cortex. During the time period from 14 to 28 days post partum the endogenous glutamate concentration showed no close correspondence with any particular enzyme. It is suggested that gamma-glutamyltransferase regulates the endogenous glutamate concentration in cultured neurons. The enzyme may also be important for regulation of endogenous glutamate in brain in vivo and particularly in cerebellum during the first 14 days post partum. Gamma-glutamyl transferase in cultured neurons and brain tissue in vivo appears to be devoid of maleate activated
glutaminase
.
...
PMID:Developmental change of endogenous glutamate and gamma-glutamyl transferase in cultured cerebral cortical interneurons and cerebellar granule cells, and in mouse cerebral cortex and cerebellum in vivo. 286 47
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>