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)

To date, no attempt has been made to study alterations occurring in the amino acid profile in chronic models of thioacetamide-induced liver cirrhosis. In this work, changes in serum amino acids and proteins in rats with thioacetamide-induced liver cirrhosis are reported, together with changes in enzyme activities in the liver and serum. Seventeen female Wistar rats were used. Eight rats were given 300 mg thioacetamide/l in drinking water for 4 months and nine rats were given water ad libitum during the same time-period. Significant increases in glycine, alanine, serine, methionine, glutamate, ornithine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, histidine and proline were observed in rats with the resulting experimental liver cirrhosis. Threonine, taurine, glutamine, lysine and citrulline tended to increase while isoleucine, leucine, aspartate, arginine and tryptophan tended to decrease. Total and nonessential amino acids increased significantly in cirrhotic animals. Total essential and aromatic amino acids tended to increase in the thioacetamide-treated group, whereas branched chain amino acids tended to decrease in the same group. Regarding serum proteins, a decrease in albumin concentration in the thioacetamide-treated animals was the only change detected. The liver enzyme activities under observation (aspartate and alanine aminotransferases, glutamate dehydrogenase and threonine deaminase) were lower in the thioacetamide group. Decreases were significant for both transaminases and threonine deaminase. Results for serum activities showed that transaminases did not change in thioacetamide-treated rats in comparison with controls. In contrast, alkaline phosphatase rose dramatically in cirrhotic rats. We conclude that the serum amino acid pattern in this chronic model of liver cirrhosis resembles in part that of the corresponding human disease.
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PMID:Serum amino acid changes in rats with thioacetamide-induced liver cirrhosis. 857 92

Little information is available regarding the regulation of glutamate dehydrogenase in skeletal muscle. We investigated the regulation of glutamate dehydrogenase by branched-chain amino acids (BCAA) in skeletal muscles from rats and chicks and determined the effects of metabolic acidosis on the activity and regulation of this enzyme by BCAA in rat skeletal muscle. Skeletal muscle mitochondria were prepared from normal rats and chicks and acidotic rats. Mitochondrial glutamate dehydrogenase activity was measured in the presence or absence of BCAA. Metabolic acidosis was induced by feeding rats 1.5% NH4Cl as drinking water. Glutamate dehydrogenase activity was stimulated by leucine (P < 0.001) and isoleucine (P < 0.05) in rat muscles and by leucine (P < 0.05) in chick muscles in a concentration-dependent manner. Both leucine and isoleucine had their maximum effects at a concentration of 1 mM (45% by leucine and 27% by isoleucine in rat muscle; 36% by leucine in chick muscle). The maximum stimulatory effects of leucine and isoleucine in rat muscles were additive. Neither valine nor 2-oxoisocaproate had an effect on glutamate dehydrogenase activity in rat or chick muscles. In acidotic rats, the basal activity of skeletal muscle glutamate dehydrogenase was 1.8-fold (P < 0.01) greater than in control rats; leucine, isoleucine, and valine significantly increased glutamate dehydrogenase activity (maximally 86, 55 and 33%, respectively; P < 0.05). We conclude that glutamate dehydrogenase activity in skeletal muscle from rats and chicks is regulated by BCAA, and that a species difference exists between rats and chicks. Metabolic acidosis increases the activity of glutamate dehydrogenase and its sensitivity to BCAA.
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PMID:Regulation of glutamate dehydrogenase by branched-chain amino acids in skeletal muscle from rats and chicks. 892 9

We tested the hypothesis that nutritional state affects seawater acclimation by transferring either fed or food-deprived (2 weeks) male tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) from fresh water to full-strength sea water. Food-deprivation resulted in a significant increase in plasma concentrations of Na+, Cl-, cortisol, glucose, total amino acid, glutamate, serine and alanine, and in hepatic pyruvate kinase (PK) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activities, whereas the prolactin-188 to prolactin-177 ratio (tPRL188:tPRL177) and plasma prolactin-188 (tPRL188), lactate, arginine and hepatic glycogen content and hepatic alanine aminotransferase (AlaAT) and 3-hydroxyacyl-Coenzyme A dehydrogenase (HOAD) activities were lower than in the fed group. Seawater transfer significantly increased the tPRL188:tPRL177 ratio and plasma concentrations of Na+, Cl-, K+, growth hormone (GH), glucose, aspartate, tyrosine, alanine, methionine, phenylalanine, leucine, isoleucine and valine levels as well as gill Na+/K+-ATPase activity and hepatic PK and LDH activities, whereas plasma tPRL177, tPRL188, glycine and lysine concentrations were significantly lower than in fish retained in fresh water. There was a significant interaction between nutritional state and salinity that affected the tPRL188:tPRL177 ratio and plasma concentrations of Cl-, GH, glucose, aspartate, tyrosine, serine, alanine, glycine, arginine and hepatic PK, LDH, AlaAT, aspartate aminotransferase, glutamate dehydrogenase and HOAD activities. These results, taken together, indicate that food-deprived fish did not regulate their plasma Cl- levels, despite an enhancement of plasma hormonal and metabolic responses in sea water. Our study also suggests the possibility that plasma prolactin and essential amino acids may be playing an important role in the seawater acclimation process in tilapia.
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PMID:Food-deprivation affects seawater acclimation in tilapia: hormonal and metabolic changes 932 Mar 94

Homology-based modeling of phenylalanine dehydrogenases (PheDHs) from various sources, using the structures of homologous enzymes Clostridium symbiosum glutamate dehydrogenase and Bacillus sphaericus leucine dehydrogenase as a guide, revealed that an asparagine residue at position 145 of B. sphaericus PheDH was replaced by valine or alanine in PheDHs from other sources. This difference was proposed to be the basis for the poor discrimination by the B. sphaericus enzyme between the substrates L-phenylalanine and L-tyrosine. Residue 145 of this enzyme was altered, by site-specific mutagenesis, to hydrophobic residues alanine, valine, leucine, and isoleucine, respectively. The resultant mutants showed a high discrimination, above 50-fold, between L-phenylalanine and L-tyrosine. This higher specificity toward L-phenylalanine was due to K(m) values for L-phenylalanine lowered more than 20-fold compared to the values for L-tyrosine. The greater specificity for L-phenylalanine in the wild-type Bacillus badius enzyme, which has a valine residue in the corresponding position, was also found to be largely due to a lower K(m) for this substrate. Activities were also measured with a range of six amino acids with aliphatic, nonpolar side chains, and with the corresponding oxoacids, and in all cases the specificity constants for these substrates were increased in the mutant enzymes. As with phenylalanine, these increases are mainly attributable to large decreases in K(m) values.
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PMID:Single amino acid substitution in Bacillus sphaericus phenylalanine dehydrogenase dramatically increases its discrimination between phenylalanine and tyrosine substrates. 1223 81

A new, continuous 96-well plate spectrophotometric assay for the branched-chain amino acid aminotransferases is described. Transamination of L-leucine with alpha-ketoglutarate results in formation of alpha-ketoisocaproate, which is reductively aminated back to L-leucine by leucine dehydrogenase in the presence of ammonia and NADH. The disappearance of absorbance at 340 nm due to NADH oxidation is measured continuously. The specific activities obtained by this procedure for the highly purified human mitochondrial and cytosolic isoforms of BCAT compare favorably with those obtained by a commonly used radiochemical procedure, which measures transamination between alpha-ketoiso[1-14C]valerate and L-isoleucine. Due to the presence of glutamate dehydrogenase substrates (alpha-ketoglutarate, ammonia, and NADH) and L-leucine (an activator of glutamate dehydrogenase) in the standard assay mixture, interference with the measurement of BCAT activity in tissue homogenates by glutamate dehydrogenase is observed. However, by limiting the amount of ammonia and including the inhibitor GTP in the assay mixture, the interference from the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction is minimized. By comparing the rate of loss of absorbance at 340 nm in the modified spectrophotometric assay mixture containing leucine dehydrogenase to that obtained in the modified spectrophotometric assay mixture lacking leucine dehydrogenase, it is possible to measure BCAT activity in microliter amounts of rat tissue homogenates. The specific activities of BCAT in homogenates of selected rat tissues obtained by this method are comparable to those obtained previously by the radiochemical procedure.
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PMID:A continuous 96-well plate spectrophotometric assay for branched-chain amino acid aminotransferases. 1223 69

Net balances of amino acids were constructed for stages of development of a leaf of white lupin (Lupinus albus L.) using data on the N economy of the leaf, its exchanges of amino acids through xylem and phloem, and net changes in its soluble and protein-bound amino acids. Asparagine, aspartate, and gamma-aminobutyrate were delivered to the leaf in excess of amounts consumed in growth and/or phloem export. Glutamine was supplied in excess until full leaf expansion (20 days) but was later synthesized in large amounts in association with mobilization of N from the leaf. Net requirements for glutamate, threonine, serine, proline, glycine, alanine, valine, isoleucine, leucine, tyrosine, phenylalanine, histidine, lysine, and arginine were met mainly or entirely by synthesis within the leaf. Amides furnished the bulk of the N for amino acid synthesis, asparagine providing from 24 to 68%. In vitro activity of asparaginase (EC 3.5.1.1) exceeded that of asparagine:pyruvate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.14) during early leaf expansion, when in vivo estimates of asparagine metabolism were highest. Thereafter, aminotransferase activity greatly exceeded that of asparaginase. Rates of activity of one or both asparagine-utilizing enzymes exceeded estimated rates of asparagine catabolism throughout leaf development. In vitro activities of glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) and glutamate synthase (EC 1.4.7.1) were consistently much higher than that of glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3), and activities of the former two enzymes more than accounted for estimated rates of ammonia release in photorespiration and deamidation of asparagine.
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PMID:Amino Acid transport and metabolism in relation to the nitrogen economy of a legume leaf. 1666 17

When Lemna minor L. is supplied with the potent inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, methionine sulfoximine, rapid changes in free amino acid levels occur. Glutamine, glutamate, asparagine, aspartate, alanine, and serine levels decline concomitantly with ammonia accumulation. However, not all free amino acid pools deplete in response to this inhibitor. Several free amino acids including proline, valine, leucine, isoleucine, threonine, lysine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, histidine, and methionine exhibit severalfold accumulations within 24 hours of methionine sulfoximine treatment. To investigate whether these latter amino acid accumulations result from de novo synthesis via a methionine sulfoximine insensitive pathway of ammonia assimilation (e.g. glutamate dehydrogenase) or from protein turnover, fronds of Lemna minor were prelabeled with [(15)N]H(4) (+) prior to supplying the inhibitor. Analyses of the (15)N abundance of free amino acids suggest that protein turnover is the major source of these methionine sulfoximine induced amino acid accumulations. Thus, the pools of valine, leucine, isoleucine, proline, and threonine accumulated in response to the inhibitor in the presence of [(15)N]H(4) (+), are (14)N enriched and are not apparently derived from (15)N-labeled precursors. To account for the selective accumulation of amino acids, such as valine, leucine, isoleucine, proline, and threonine, it is necessary to envisage that these free amino acids are relatively poorly catabolized in vivo. The amino acids which deplete in response to methionine sulfoximine (i.e. glutamate, glutamine, alanine, aspartate, asparagine, and serine) are all presumably rapidly catabolized to ammonia, either in the photorespiratory pathway or by alternative routes.
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PMID:Amino Acid Metabolism of Lemna minor L. : I. Responses to Methionine Sulfoximine. 1666 34

Suspension cultured cells of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv VFNT Cherry) adapted to water stress induced with polyethylene glycol 6000 (PEG), exhibit marked alterations in free amino acid pools (Handa et al. 1983 Plant Physiol 73: 834-843). Using computer simulation models the in vivo rates of synthesis and utilization and compartmentation of free amino acid pools were determined from (15)N labeling kinetics after substituting [(15)N]ammonium and [(15)N]nitrate for the (14)N salts in the culture medium of cell lines adapted to 0% and 25% PEG. The 300-fold elevated proline pool in 25% PEG adapted cells is primarily the consequence of a 10-fold elevated rate of proline synthesis via the glutamate pathway. Ornithine was insufficiently labeled to serve as a major precursor for proline. Our calculations suggest that the rate of proline synthesis only slightly exceeds the rate required to sustain both protein synthesis and proline pool maintenance with growth. Mechanisms must operate to restrict proline oxidation in adapted cells. The kinetics of labeling of proline in 25% PEG adapted cells are consistent with a single, greatly enlarged metabolic pool of proline. The depletion of glutamine in adapted cells appears to be a consequence of a selective depletion of a large, metabolically inactive storage pool present in unadapted cultures. The labeling kinetics of the amino nitrogen groups of glutamine and glutamate are consistent with the operation of the glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthase cycle in both cell lines. However, we could not conclusively discriminate between the exclusive operation of the glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthase cycle and a 10 to 20% contribution of the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway of ammonia assimilation. Adaptation to water stress leads to increased nitrogen flux from glutamate into alanine and gamma-aminobutyrate, suggesting increased pyruvate availability and increased rates of glutamate decarboxylation. Both alanine and gamma-aminobutyrate are synthesized at rates greatly in excess of those simply required to maintain the free pools with growth, indicating that these amino acids are rapidly turned over. Thus, both synthesis and utilization rates for alanine and gamma-aminobutyrate are increased in adapted cells. Adaptation to stress leads to increased rates of synthesis of valine and leucine apparently at the expense of isoleucine. Remarkably low (15)N flux via the aspartate family amino acids was observed in these experiments. The rate of synthesis of threonine appeared too low to account for threonine utilization in protein synthesis, pool maintenance, and isoleucine biosynthesis. It is possible that isoleucine may be deriving carbon skeletons from sources other than threonine. Tentative models of the nitrogen flux of these two contrasting cell lines are discussed in relation to carbon metabolism, osmoregulation, and nitrogenous solute compartmentation.
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PMID:Metabolic changes associated with adaptation of plant cells to water stress. 1666 63

Cerebral hyperammonemia is a hallmark of hepatic encephalopathy, a debilitating condition arising secondary to liver disease. Pyruvate oxidation including tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle metabolism has been suggested to be inhibited by hyperammonemia at the pyruvate and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase steps. Catabolism of the branched-chain amino acid isoleucine provides both acetyl-CoA and succinyl-CoA, thus by-passing both the pyruvate dehydrogenase and the alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase steps. Potentially, this will enable the TCA cycle to work in the face of ammonium-induced inhibition. In addition, this will provide the alpha-ketoglutarate carbon skeleton for glutamate and glutamine synthesis by glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase (astrocytes only), respectively, both reactions fixing ammonium. Cultured cerebellar neurons (primarily glutamatergic) or astrocytes were incubated in the presence of either [U-13C]glucose (2.5 mM) and isoleucine (1 mM) or [U-13C]isoleucine and glucose. Cell cultures were treated with an acute ammonium chloride load of 2 (astrocytes) or 5 mM (neurons and astrocytes) and incorporation of 13C-label into glutamate, aspartate, glutamine and alanine was determined employing mass spectrometry. Labeling from [U-13C]glucose in glutamate and aspartate increased as a result of ammonium-treatment in both neurons and astrocytes, suggesting that the TCA cycle was not inhibited. Labeling in alanine increased in neurons but not in astrocytes, indicating elevated glycolysis in neurons. For both neurons and astrocytes, labeling from [U-13C]isoleucine entered glutamate and aspartate albeit to a lower extent than from [U-13C]glucose. Labeling in glutamate and aspartate from [U-13C]isoleucine was decreased by ammonium treatment in neurons but not in astrocytes, the former probably reflecting increased metabolism of unlabeled glucose. In astrocytes, ammonia treatment resulted in glutamine production and release to the medium, partially supported by catabolism of [U-13C]isoleucine. In conclusion, i) neuronal and astrocytic TCA cycle metabolism was not inhibited by ammonium and ii) isoleucine may provide the carbon skeleton for synthesis of glutamate/glutamine in the detoxification of ammonium.
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PMID:The metabolic role of isoleucine in detoxification of ammonia in cultured mouse neurons and astrocytes. 1734 54

The catabolic pathway for branched-chain amino acids includes deamination followed by oxidative decarboxylation of the deaminated product branched-chain alpha-keto acids, catalyzed by the mitochondrial branched-chain aminotransferase (BCATm) and branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase enzyme complex (BCKDC). We found that BCATm binds to the E1 decarboxylase of BCKDC, forming a metabolon that allows channeling of branched-chain alpha-keto acids from BCATm to E1. The protein complex also contains glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH1), 4-nitrophenylphosphatase domain and non-neuronal SNAP25-like protein homolog 1, pyruvate carboxylase, and BCKDC kinase. GDH1 binds to the pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate (PMP) form of BCATm (PMP-BCATm) but not to the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-BCATm and other metabolon proteins. Leucine activates GDH1, and oxidative deamination of glutamate is increased further by addition of PMP-BCATm. Isoleucine and valine are not allosteric activators of GDH1, but in the presence of 5'-phosphate-BCATm, they convert BCATm to PMP-BCATm, stimulating GDH1 activity. Sensitivity to ADP activation of GDH1 was unaffected by PMP-BCATm; however, addition of a 3 or higher molar ratio of PMP-BCATm to GDH1 protected GDH1 from GTP inhibition by 50%. Kinetic results suggest that GDH1 facilitates regeneration of the form of BCATm that binds to E1 decarboxylase of the BCKDC, promotes metabolon formation, branched-chain amino acid oxidation, and cycling of nitrogen through glutamate.
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PMID:Branched-chain amino acid metabolon: interaction of glutamate dehydrogenase with the mitochondrial branched-chain aminotransferase (BCATm). 1985 96


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