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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 metabolism of a 13C-labelled substrate, [3-13C]citrate, was monitored in rabbit renal proximal-tubule cells by 13C n.m.r. The relative enrichments of label in glutamate,
glutamine
and alpha beta-glucose allowed a calculation of the rate of the
glutamate dehydrogenase
flux relative to the flux via phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. A ratio of 1.2 +/- 0.05 was found. Under steady-state conditions of active gluconeogenesis, the ratio of flux through pyruvate kinase to the gluconeogenic rate was 0.97 +/- 0.03.
...
PMID:13C-n.m.r. study of citrate metabolism in rabbit renal proximal-tubule cells. 259 43
Effects of stretching on muscle amino acids were tested in unloaded soleus by casting the foot in dorsiflexion on one limb of tail-casted, hindquarter-suspended rats. For comparison with unloading, amino acids also were measured in shortened extensor digitorum longus (EDL) in the same casted limb and in denervated leg muscles. Concentrations of tyrosine and glutamate were lower, while aspartate, ammonia, and the ratio of
glutamine
to glutamate were greater in the stretched than in the freely moving, unloaded soleus, but stretched did not differ from weight-bearing, control muscle. Therefore, stretching the soleus muscle prevented changes in certain amino acids due to unloading. Aspartate, ammonia,
glutamine
, and the ratio of
glutamine
to glutamate were lower in the shortened EDL than in the freely moving muscle of the contralateral limb, or in the control muscle. When denervated, these leg muscles also showed lower aspartate, ammonia, and ratio of
glutamine
to glutamate relative to innervated muscles. Since muscle shortening or denervation produced amino acid changes that mimicked the effects of unloading on the soleus, these responses must reflect the effect of muscle disuse. These data suggested that lower ammonia might cause the lower ratio of
glutamine
to glutamate with disuse. Because the fresh muscle energy charge, one factor which controls AMP deaminase, generally was not affected by disuse, altered deamination of glutamate via
glutamate dehydrogenase
may explain the variations in muscle ammonia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of stretching and disuse on amino acids in muscles of rat hind limbs. 256 86
It has been shown previously that the inhibition of autophagic proteolysis in liver by a physiological mixture of amino acids can be mimicked completely by addition of leucine in combination with alanine [Leverve, X. M., Caro, L. H. P., Plomp, P. J. A. M. and Meijer, A. J. (1987) FEBS Lett. 219, 455-458]. We have now further defined conditions which lead to this inhibition. Isolated rat hepatocytes were incubated in the perifusion system in which the cells can be maintained at a steady state in the presence of low amino acid concentrations. Combinations of leucine (0.5 mM) with either alanine,
glutamine
, asparagine or proline (2 mM) inhibited proteolysis by 40-50%. Under these conditions, both in the absence and presence of the transaminase inhibitor, aminooxyacetate, a correlation was found between the extent of inhibition of proteolysis and the sum of the total intracellular amounts of aspartate and glutamate. Inhibition of proteolysis by leucine and leucine analogues did not correlate with their ability to activate
glutamate dehydrogenase
.
...
PMID:A combination of intracellular leucine with either glutamate or aspartate inhibits autophagic proteolysis in isolated rat hepatocytes. 256 37
Pathways of
glutamine
metabolism in resting and proliferating rat thymocytes and established human T- and B-lymphoblastoid cell lines were evaluated by in vitro incubations of freshly prepared or cultured cells for one to two hours with [U14C]
glutamine
. Complete recovery of
glutamine
carbons utilized in products allowed quantification of the pathways of
glutamine
metabolism under the experimental conditions. Partial oxidation of
glutamine
via 2-oxoglutarate in a truncated citric acid cycle to CO2 and oxaloacetate, which then was converted to aspartate, accounted for 76% and 69%, respectively, of the
glutamine
metabolized beyond the stage of glutamate by resting and proliferating thymocytes. Similar results were obtained with the lymphoblastoid T- and B-cell lines. Complete oxidation to CO2 in the citric acid cycle via 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and isocitrate dehydrogenase accounted for only 25% and 7%, respectively. In proliferating cells a substantial amount of
glutamine
carbons was also recovered in pyruvate, alanine, and especially lactate. The main route of
glutamine
and glutamate entrance into the citric acid cycle via 2-oxoglutarate in lymphocytes appears to be transamination by aspartate aminotransferase rather than oxidative deamination by
glutamate dehydrogenase
. In the presence of glucose as a second substrate,
glutamine
utilization and aspartate formation markedly decreased, but complete oxidation of
glutamine
carbons to CO2 increased to 37% and 23%, respectively, in resting and proliferating cells. The dipeptide, glycyl-
L-glutamine
, which is more stable than free
glutamine
, can substitute for
glutamine
in thymocyte cultures at higher concentrations.
...
PMID:Metabolism of glutamine in lymphocytes. 256 63
LLC-PK1 kidney epithelial cells grown under the condition of continuous rocking exhibit a variety of differentiated functions of proximal tubular epithelium, including pH-modulated ammoniagenesis. To further determine their value as a model system, we investigated the pathways of ammoniagenesis under both normal conditions and acid-base manipulations. Pulse-chase studies with carbon 14-labeled
glutamine
demonstrated a marked delay in
glutamine
conversion to glutamate, indicating that
glutamine
deamidation is a critical rate-limiting step, and also provided evidence for metabolism of the
glutamine
carbon skeleton by the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Ammonia and alanine were the predominant nitrogen metabolites of
glutamine
at all pH conditions, and the stoichiometry suggested that glutamate is metabolized through both
glutamate dehydrogenase
and glutamate transaminase at pH 7.4. Increased ammonia production in response to a low pH was associated with increased flux through phosphate-dependent glutaminase and the glutamate transamination pathway and was accompanied by a fall in intracellular glutamate and alpha-ketoglutarate concentrations, which was similar to events in the intact kidney. Studies with the inhibitors acivicin and amino oxyacetate suggested that the gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase and
glutamine
transamination pathways are inconsequential in LLC-PK1 cells. The phosphate-dependent glutaminase pathway appears to play a predominant role in the regulation of ammoniagenesis. The similarity in ammonia metabolism with other in vitro and in vivo models suggests that LLC-PK1 cells will be a useful system for investigating renal ammoniagenesis and the intracellular signals that modulate this process.
...
PMID:Pathways and regulation of ammoniagenesis by the LLC-PK1 cells in culture. 257 Jan 15
Assay systems for ammonia assimilating enzymes in cyanobacteria are reported. Glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase, and
glutamate dehydrogenase
can be easily assayed in situ, after the cells are made permeable to the reagents, or in vitro. The method is based upon the quantitation of
glutamine
or glutamate after the separation, when needed, of their o-phthaldialdehyde derivatives by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography on a C18 column. The isocratic elution and the fluorometric detection of the amino acid derivatives make the method fast, simple, sensitive, and free of the assay artifacts which can be produced in coupled assays or when spectrophotometric measurements are carried out in the turbid samples employed for in situ assays.
...
PMID:Ammonia assimilating enzymes from cyanobacteria: in situ and in vitro assay using high-performance liquid chromatography. 257 89
The effects of sodium valproate, a widely used antiepileptic drug and an hyperammonemic agent, on
glutamine
and glutamate metabolism were studied in isolated dog kidney tubules. Valproate markedly stimulated
glutamine
removal as well as the formation of ammonia, aspartate, pyruvate, lactate, alanine and glucose; the increase in ammonia formation was explained by a stimulation by valproate of flux not only through glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2) but also through
glutamate dehydrogenase
(EC 1.4.1.3). By contrast, valproate did not stimulate glutamate removal or ammonia, aspartate and glucose formation from glutamate; this suggests that the increase in flux through
glutamate dehydrogenase
with
glutamine
as substrate was secondary to the increase in flux through glutaminase. Accumulation of pyruvate, alanine and lactate in the presence of valproate was much less from glutamate than from
glutamine
. Inhibition by amino-oxyacetate of accumulation of aspartate and alanine from
glutamine
caused by valproate did not prevent the acceleration of
glutamine
utilization and the subsequent stimulation of ammonia formation. These data are consistent with a stimulatory effect of valproate primarily exerted at the level of glutaminase in dog kidney tubules. However, the fact that assayed activity of glutaminase remained unchanged in the presence of valproate suggests that this compound accelerates flux through the latter enzyme by an indirect mechanism probably related to the renal metabolism of this compound.
...
PMID:Stimulation of glutamine metabolism by the antiepileptic drug, sodium valproate, in isolated dog kidney tubules. 257 76
15N kinetic labelling studies were done on liquid cultures of wild-type Aspergillus nidulans. The labelling pattern of major amino acids under 'steady state' conditions suggests that glutamate and
glutamine
-amide are the early products of ammonia assimilation in A. nidulans. In the presence of phosphinothricin, an inhibitor or glutamine synthetase, 15N labelling of glutamate, alanine and aspartate was maintained whereas the labelling of
glutamine
was low. This pattern of labelling is consistent with ammonia assimilation into glutamate via the
glutamate dehydrogenase
pathway. In the presence of azaserine, an inhibitor of glutamate synthase, glutamate was initially more highly labelled than any other amino acid, whereas its concentration declined. Isotope also accumulated in
glutamine
. Observations with these two inhibitors suggest that ammonia assimilation can occur concurrently via the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase and the
glutamate dehydrogenase
pathways in low-ammonia-grown A. nidulans. From a simple model it was estimated that about half of the glutamate was synthesized via the
glutamate dehydrogenase
pathway; the other half was formed from
glutamine
via the glutamate synthase pathway. The transfer coefficients of nine other amino acids were also determined.
...
PMID:Ammonia assimilation by Aspergillus nidulans: [15N]ammonia study. 257 37
Activities and properties of the ammonium assimilation enzymes NADP+-dependent
glutamate dehydrogenase
(
GDH
), glutamate synthase (GOGAT) and glutamine synthetase (GS) were determined in batch and continuous cultures of Candida albicans. NADP+-dependent
GDH
activity showed allosteric kinetics, with an S0.5 for 2-oxoglutarate of 7.5 mM and an apparent Km for ammonium of 5.0 mM. GOGAT activity was affected by the buffer used for extraction and assay, but in phosphate buffer, kinetics were hyperbolic, yielding Km values for
glutamine
of 750 microM and for 2-oxoglutarate of 65 microM. The enzymes GOGAT and NADP+-dependent
GDH
were also assayed in batch cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and three other pathogenic Candida spp.: Candida tropicalis, Candida pseudotropicalis and Candida parapsilosis. Evidence is presented that GS/GOGAT is a major pathway for ammonium assimilation in Candida albicans and that this pathway is also significant in other Candida species.
...
PMID:Ammonium assimilation by Candida albicans and other yeasts: evidence for activity of glutamate synthase. 257 53
Neurospora crassa wild-type is almost unable to grow on
glutamine
as sole nitrogen and carbon source but a GDH-; GS +/- double mutant strain, lacking NADP-dependent
glutamate dehydrogenase
and partially lacking glutamine synthetase did grow. Under these conditions, the double mutant had a higher chemical energy content than the wild-type. Enzyme assays and labelling experiments with
glutamine
indicated that in the double mutant
glutamine
was degraded to ammonium and to carbon skeletons by glutamate synthase, the catabolic (NADH-dependent)
glutamate dehydrogenase
and the
glutamine
transaminase-omega-amidase pathway.
...
PMID:Glutamine assimilation pathways in Neurospora crassa growing on glutamine as sole nitrogen and carbon source. 257 59
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