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 effects of different substrates supporting respiration and glutamine-dependent citrulline synthesis from ornithine, ammonia, and bicarbonate by isolated hepatic mitochondria from Squalus acanthias (spiny dogfish) were determined. Highest rates of respiration were achieved with succinate, palmitoyl-CoA, and beta-hydroxybutyrate as oxidizable substrates. All acyl-CoAs tested (from C-2 to C-22) supported carnitine-dependent respiration at a substantial rate. Short-chain fatty acids did not support respiration. Ammonia required for citrulline synthesis could be formed from glutamate, or from leucine plus alpha-ketoglutarate which gives rise to glutamate by transamination, as the result of glutamate dehydrogenase activity, but the reaction was inhibited by succinate or other oxidizable substrates. Alanine or ornithine could not be substituted for leucine, suggesting that leucine may specifically activate glutamate dehydrogenase. Glutamate required for citrulline synthesis could be formed from alpha-ketoglutarate and ammonia as the result of glutamate dehydrogenase activity if succinate was present. Transamination of alpha-ketoglutarate with ornithine present in the reaction mixtures provided glutamate at a rapid rate whether or not succinate was present. These results are consistent with the view that hepatic dogfish mitochondria efficiently utilize acyl-CoAs derived from triglyceride stores in the liver to support respiration, glutamine-dependent citrulline synthesis from ammonia, and formation of ketone bodies as a major fuel for muscle.
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PMID:Support of respiration and citrulline synthesis by isolated hepatic mitochondria from Squalus acanthias by acyl-CoAs and other nitrogen-donating substrates. 381 53

l-Glutamate uptake, thiourea uptake, and methylammonium uptake and the intracellular ammonium concentration were measured in wild-type and mutant cells of Aspergillus nidulans held in various concentrations of ammonium and urea. The levels of l-glutamate uptake, thiourea uptake, nitrate reductase, and hypoxanthine dehydrogenase activity are determined by the extracellular ammonium concentration. The level of methylammonium uptake is determined by the intracellular ammonium concentration. The uptake and enzyme characteristics of the ammonium-derepressed mutants, meaA8, meaB6, DER3, amrA1, xprD1, and gdhA1, are described. The gdhA mutants lack normal nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-glutamate dehydrogenase (NADP-GDH) activity and are derepressed with respect to both external and internal ammonium. The other mutant classes are derepressed only with respect to external ammonium. The mutants meaA8, DER3, amrA1, and xprD1 have low levels of one or more of the l-glutamate, thiourea, and methylammonium uptake systems. A model for ammonium regulation in A. nidulans is put forward which suggests: (i) NADP-GDH located in the cell membrane complexes with extracellular ammonium. This first regulatory complex determines the level of l-glutamate uptake, thiourea uptake, nitrate reductase, and xanthine dehydrogenase by repression or inhibition, or both. (ii) NADP-GDH also complexes with intracellular ammonium. This second and different form of regulatory complex determines the level of methylammonium uptake by repression or inhibition, or both.
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PMID:Ammonium regulation in Aspergillus nidulans. 414 65

1. Glutamate dehydrogenase was inhibited by l-serine O-sulphate, beta-chloro-l-alanine, O-phospho-l-serine and beta-chloro-l-alanine methyl ester. With the exception of beta-chloro-l-alanine methyl ester which was an irreversible inhibitor, it was possible to reverse the inhibitory effects by dialysis. 2. Both NAD(+) and glutamate afford some protection against the inhibition due to the methyl ester. No change in the normal stimulatory effect exhibited by ADP was observed in the presence of beta-chloro-l-alanine methyl ester but the effect due to GTP was modified. 3. Irradiation of glutamate dehydrogenase in the presence of Rose Bengal produced rapid inactivation. Amino acid analysis of the inactivated enzyme showed that eight histidine residues had been destroyed in the process.
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PMID:The inhibition of glutamate dehydrogenase by L-serine O-sulphate and related compounds and by photo-oxidation in the presence of Rose Bengal. 433 Nov 81

1. Glutamate dehydrogenase was subject to rapid inactivation when irradiated in the presence of Rose Bengal or incubated in the presence of ethoxyformic anhydride. 2. Inactivation in the presence of Rose Bengal led to the photo-oxidation of four histidine residues. Oxidation of three histidine residues had little effect on enzyme activity, but oxidation of the fourth residue led to the almost total loss of activity. 3. Acylation of glutamate dehydrogenase with ethoxyformic anhydride at pH6.1 led to the modification of three histidine residues with a corresponding loss of half the original activity. Acylation at pH7.5 led to the modification of two histidine residues and a total loss of enzyme activity. 4. One of the histidine residues undergoing reaction at pH6.1 also undergoes reaction at pH7.5. 5. The presence of either glutamate or NAD(+) in the reaction mixtures at pH6.1 had no appreciable effect. At pH7.5 glutamate caused a marked decrease in both the degree of alkylation and degree of inactivation. NAD(+) had no effect on the degree of inactivation at pH7.5 but did modify the extent of acylation. 6. The normal response of the enzyme towards ADP was unaffected by acylation at pH6.1 or 7.5. 7. The normal response of the enzyme towards GTP was altered by treatment at both pH6.1 and 7.5.
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PMID:The role of histidine residues in glutamate dehydrogenase. 434 75

A reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH)-dependent glutamate synthase has been detected and partially purified from crude extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The enzyme is specific for NADH, glutamine, and alpha-ketoglutarate (K(m) values of 2.6 muM, 1.0 mM, and 140 muM, respectively) and has a pH optimum between 7.1 and 7.7. The stoichiometry of the reaction has been determined as 2 mol of glutamate synthesized per mol of glutamine consumed. Glutamate synthase can be distinguished from either of the glutamate dehydrogenases of yeast on the basis of its substrate requirements and behavior during agarose gel and ion exchange chromatography. Variations in the specific activity of glutamate synthase, which occur in response to changes in the growth medium, are similar in character to those observed with the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent (anabolic) glutamate dehydrogenase.
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PMID:Glutamate synthase: properties of the reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-dependent enzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 436 65

Nitrogen balances were measured in isolated perfused rat livers in the presence and absence of nitrogen donors. In all instances the balance apparently was incomplete. The expression [alanine][alpha-oxoglutarate]/[pyruvate][glutamate] remained fairly constant under the metabolic conditions studied, indicating that it may be at near-equilibrium. The source of the extra nitrogen seems to be derived from increased hepatic proteolysis. The addition of a nitrogen donor to the perfusate arrested proteolysis, as did the addition of pyruvate. The free mitochondrial [NAD(+)]/[NADH] ratio, calculated from the glutamate dehydrogenase and beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase reactants, showed similar values and exhibited parallel changes under most metabolic situations studied. These results suggest that, under the reported experimental conditions, both dehydrogenases share a common mitochondrial NAD pool. Glutamate dehydrogenase plays an important role in hepatic nitrogen metabolism in vivo.
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PMID:Nitrogen metabolism in the isolated perfused rat liver. Nitrogen balance, redox state and rates of proteolysis. 437 91

The metabolism of pyruvate and lactate by rat adipose tissue was studied. Pyruvate and lactate conversion to fatty acids is strongly concentration-dependent. Lactate can be used to an appreciable extent only by adipose tissue from fasted-refed rats. A number of compounds, including glucose, pyruvate, aspartate, propionate, and butyrate, stimulated lactate conversion to fatty acids. Based on studies of incorporation of lactate-2-(3)H and lactate-2-(14)C into fatty acids it was suggested that the transhydrogenation sequence of the "citrate-malate cycle"(1) was not providing all of the NADPH required for fatty acid synthesis from lactate. An alternative pathway for NADPH formation involving the conversion of isocitrate to alpha-ketoglutarate via cytosolic isocitrate dehydrogenase was proposed. Indirect support for this proposal was provided by the rapid labeling of glutamate from lactate-2-(14)C by adipose tissue incubated in vitro, as well as the demonstration that glutamate can be readily metabolized by adipose tissue via reactions localized largely in the cytosol. Furthermore, isolated adipose tissue mitochondria convert alpha-ketoglutarate to malate, or in the presence of added pyruvate, to citrate. Glutamate itself can not be metabolized by these mitochondria, a finding in keeping with the demonstration of negligible levels of NAD-glutamate dehydrogenase activity in adipose tissue mitochondria. Pyruvate stimulated alpha-ketoglutarate and malate conversion to citrate and reduced their oxidation to CO(2). It is proposed that under conditions of excess generation of NADH malate may act as a shuttle carrying reducing equivalents across the mitochondrial membrane. Malate at low concentrations increased pyruvate conversion $$Word$$ citrate and markedly decreased the formation of CO(2) by isolated adipose tissue mitochondria. Malate also stimulated citrate and isocitrate metabolism by these mitochondria, an effect that could be blocked by 2-n-butylmalonate. This potentially important role of malate in the regulation of carbon flow during lipogenesis is underlined by the observation that 2-n-butylmalonate inhibited fatty acid synthesis from pyruvate, but not from glucose and acetate, and decreased the stimulatory effect of pyruvate on acetate conversion to fatty acids.
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PMID:Pathway of carbon flow during fatty acid synthesis from lactate and pyruvate in rat adipose tissue. 439 62

1. Pyruvate strongly inhibited aspartate production by mitochondria isolated from Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells, and rat kidney and liver respiring in the presence of glutamine or glutamate; the production of (14)CO(2) from l-[U-(14)C]glutamine was not inhibited though that from l-[U-(14)C]glutamate was inhibited by more than 50%. 2. Inhibition of aspartate production during glutamine oxidation by intact Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells in the presence of glucose was not accompanied by inhibition of CO(2) production. 3. The addition of amino-oxyacetate, which almost completely suppressed aspartate production, did not inhibit the respiration of the mitochondria in the presence of glutamine, though the respiration in the presence of glutamate was inhibited. 4. Glutamate stimulated the respiration of kidney mitochondria in the presence of glutamine, but the production of aspartate was the same as that in the presence of glutamate alone. 5. The results suggest that the oxidation of glutamate produced by the activity of mitochondrial glutaminase can proceed almost completely through the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway if the transamination pathway is inhibited. This indicates that the oxidation of glutamate is not limited by a high [NADPH]/[NADP(+)] ratio. 6. It is suggested that under physiological conditions the transamination pathway is a less favourable route for the oxidation of glutamate (produced by hydrolysis of glutamine) in Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells, and perhaps also kidney, than the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway, as the production of acetyl-CoA strongly inhibits the first mechanism. The predominance of the transamination pathway in the oxidation of glutamate by isolated mitochondria can be explained by a restricted permeability of the inner mitochondrial membrane to glutamate and by a more favourable location of glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase compared with that of glutamate dehydrogenase.
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PMID:The pathway of glutamine and glutamate oxidation in isolated mitochondria from mammalian cells. 440 9

During growth of Aspergillus nidulans in medium containing ammonium the specific activities of most enzymes involved in catabolism of nitrogen sources are low (ammonium repression). The gdhA10 lesion, which results in loss of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-linked glutamate dehydrogenase activity, has been shown to lead to partial relief of ammonium repression of three amidase enzymes as well as histidase. The areA102 lesion led to altered levels of these enzymes but did not greatly affect ammonium repression. The double mutant areA102,gdhA10 was almost completely insensitive to ammonium repression of two of the amidase enzymes and histidase. This suggests that an interaction between the areA and gdhA genes in determining responses to ammonium occurs. Growth of mycelium in medium containing l-glutamate has been found to result in lowered levels of all four enzymes, and this occurs in strains insensitive to ammonium repression. Very strong repression in all strains occurred during growth in medium containing l-glutamine. Relief of these repressive effects of glutamate and glutamine was blocked by cycloheximide. Glutamate and glutamine had similar effects on the production of extracellular protease activity, and growth on glutamine led to low levels of urate oxidase. In contrast to the above enzymes, nitrate reductase was insensitive to the effects of glutamine and glutamate, even though this enzyme is very sensitive to ammonium repression. Although other possibilities exist, it is suggested that there may be mechanisms of general control of nitrogen-catabolic enzymes other than ammonium repression.
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PMID:Effects of ammonium, L-glutamate, and L-glutamine on nitrogen catabolism in Aspergillus nidulans. 461 4

Halpern, Yeheskel S. (Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel), and Meir Lupo. Glutamate transport in wild-type and mutant strains of Escherichia coli. J. Bacteriol. 90:1288-1295. 1965.-Mutants of Escherichia coli able to grow on glutamate as their source of carbon showed glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase activities similar to those possessed by the parent strain. The mutants took up glutamate at a much faster rate and showed a several-fold greater capacity for concentrating the amino acid than did the corresponding parent strains. Curvilinear double reciprocal plots of velocity of uptake versus glutamate concentration were obtained with the E. coli H strains. A break in the curve of glutamate uptake was observed with the E. coli K-12 strains when incubated in a glucose medium. It is suggested that these findings may be due to allosteric activation of glutamate permease by its substrate.
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PMID:Glutamate transport in wild-type and mutant strains of Escherichia coli. 532 83


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