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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)
Neurospora
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP-specific) is rapidly inactivated upon reaction with tetranitromethane. This inactivation is completely prevented by the presence of coenzyme (NADP) or
nicotinamide
mononucleotide (NMN) but not by substrate. NADH, or 2'-monophosphoadenosine-5'-diphosphoribose. Amino acid analysis indicates that the primary effect of modification is nitration of a single residue of tyrosine per polypeptide chain. We have identified the reactive tyrosine by isolation of a single, uniquely labeled peptide after hydrolysis with trypsin followed by cleavage with cyanogen bromide. The modified residue proved to be tyrosine-168 in the linear sequence. This residue is not present in the part of the sequence that had been previously implicated as involved in the binding of the adenylate portion of the coenzyme. Both NMN and 2-monophosphoadenosine-5'-diphosphoribose act as competitive inhibitors of NADP in the oxidation of glutamate with Ki values of 4.65 x 10(-4) M and 4.30 x 10(-4) M, respectively. Thus, the specific protection afforded by NADP and NMN, but not by 2'-monophosphoadenosine-5'-diphosphoribose, indicates that tyrosine-168 is involved in binding the
nicotinamide
portion of the coenzyme.
...
PMID:Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-specific glutamate dehydrogenase of Neurospora. III. Inactivation by nitration of a tyrosine residue involved in coenzyme binding. 23 46
The rate of transport of L-amino acids by Saccharomyces cerevisiae epsilon 1278b increased with time in response to nitrogen starvation. This increase could be prevented by the addition of ammonium sulfate or cycloheximide. A slow time-dependent loss of transport activity was observed when ammonium sulfate (or ammonium sulfate plus cycloheximide) was added to cells after 3 h of nitrogen starvation. This loss of activity was not observed in the presence of cycloheximide alone. In a mutant yeast strain which lacks the
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent (anabolic)
glutamate dehydrogenase
, no significant decrease in amino acid transport was observed when ammonium sulfate was added to nitrogen-starved cells. A double mutant, which lacks the
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent enzyme and in addition has a depressed level of the
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide-dependent (catabolic)
glutamate dehydrogenase
, shows the same sensitivity to ammonium ion as the wild-type strain. These data suggest that the inhibition of amino acid transport by ammonium ion results from the uptake of this metabolite into the cell and its subsequent incorporation into the alpha-amino groups of glutamate and other amino acids.
...
PMID:Inhibition of amino acid transport by ammonium ion in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 24 Aug 6
Glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate:NADP+ oxidoreductase [deaminating], EC 1.4.1.4) has been purified from Escherichia coli B/r. The purity of the enzyme preparation has been established by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, ultracentrifugation, and gel filtration. A molecular weight of 300,000 +/- 20,000 has been calculated for the enzyme from sedimentation equilibrium measurements. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate and sedimentation equilibrium measurements in guanidine hydrochloride have revealed that
glutamate dehydrogenase
consists of polypeptide chains with the identical molecular weight of 50,000 +/- 5,000. The results of molecular weight determination lead us to propose that
glutamate dehydrogenase
is a hexamer of subunits with identical molecular weight. We also have studied the stability and kinetics of purified
glutamate dehydrogenase
. The enzyme remains active when heat treated or when left at room temperature for several months but is inactivated by freezing. The Michaelis constants of
glutamate dehydrogenase
are 1,100,640, and 40 muM for ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate, and reduced
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide phosphate, respectively.
...
PMID:Glutamate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli: purification and properties. 24 44
The metabolism of proline was studied in liver cells isolated from starved rats. The following observations were made. 1. Consumption of proline could be largely accounted for by production of glucose, urea, glutamate and glutamine. 2. At least 50% of the total consumption of oxygen was used for proline catabolism. 3. Ureogenesis and gluconeogenesis from proline could be stimulated by partial uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation. 4. Addition of ethanol had little effect on either proline uptake or oxygen consumption, but strongly inhibited the production of both urea and glucose and caused further accumulation of glutamate and lactate. Accumulation of glutamine was not affected by ethanol. 5. The effects of ethanol could be overcome by partial uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation. 6. The apparent K(m) values of argininosuccinate synthetase (EC 6.3.4.5) for aspartate and citrulline in the intact hepatocyte are higher than those reported for the isolated enzyme. 7. 3-Mercaptopicolinate, an inhibitor of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.32), greatly enhanced cytosolic aspartate accumulation during proline metabolism, but inhibited urea synthesis. 8. It is concluded that when proline is provided as a source of nitrogen to liver cells, production of ammonia by oxidative deamination of glutamate is inhibited by the highly reduced state of the
nicotinamide
nucleotides within the mitochondria. 9. Conversion of proline into glucose and urea is a net-energy-yielding process, and the high state of reduction of the
nicotinamide
nucleotides is presumably maintained by a high phosphorylation potential. Thus when proline is present as sole substrate, the further oxidation of glutamate by
glutamate dehydrogenase
(EC 1.4.1.3) is limited by the rate of energy expenditure of the cell.
...
PMID:Prolone metabolism in isolated rat liver cells. 64 9
Dicarboxylic amino acids constitute the most numerous residues of insoluble elastin in which are potentially ionizable in the physiological range of pH. These residues are essential in facilitating productive electrostatic interaction between elastase and elastin. The present study has investigated the possibility that the glutamic and aspartic acid residues of elastin are amidated. Acid-labile amide-bound ammonia of elastin was quantitated after hydrolysis of the insoluble protein with 2 M HC1 by incubating aliquots of microdistilled hydrolysates with
glutamate dehydrogenase
, excess alpha-ketoglutarate, and reduced
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide and measuring the resultant decrease in A340 due to oxidation of the dinucleotide cofactor. It was found that ligament elastin purified by repeated autoclaving contains approximately 2.29 mumol of acid-labile amide nitrogen per 10 mg of protein, a value equivalent to approximately 70% of the total number of dicarboxylic amino acid residues. Independent analysis of the amide content was obtained by amino acid analysis of an esterified and reduced elastin sample in which the free dicarboxylic amino acid residues had been converted to the corresponding alcohol derivatives. This analysis indicated that autoclaved ligament elastin contains approximately 18 glutamine, 3 asparagine, 4 glutamic acid and 5 aspartic acid residues per 1000 residues, in good agreement with the analysis of total acid-labile ammonia. The esterified and reduced elastin derivative was nearly inert as an elastase substrate, consistent with a lack of free dicarboxylic amino acid residues. However, addition of sodium dodecyl sulfate to this elastin derivative restores enzyme-substrate charge complementarity, and the elastin-ligand complex was readily hydrolyzed by elastase at the fully stimulated rate, emphasizing the control such ligands can exert in elastolysis. The amide bonds of elastin were found to be significantly more resistant to hydrolysis by 0.1 M NaOH at 98 degrees C than were those of lysozyme or free amidated amino acids. The finding that most of dicarboxylic amino acid residues of elastin exist at neutral amides further emphasizes the apolar character of elastin and has bearing upon the metabolic susceptibility, ligand-binding ability and structural aspects of this connective tissue protein.
...
PMID:Amidated carboxyl groups in elastin. 93 66
Conditions for the accurate measure of
glutamic dehydrogenase
(
GDH
) from Cephalosporium acremonium were determined. K(m) values for alpha-ketoglutarate and ammonium ion were 7 and 15 mM, respectively. The half-saturation for reduced
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide phosphate was 5 muM. Reduced
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide did not serve as a cofactor for the enzyme. The specific activity of
GDH
was measured in six mutants of C. acremonium which varied in their ability to synthesize cephalosporin C. The mutants represented two separately derived lines, A and B. The four mutants in line B were characterized by a derepression of the
GDH
upon entry into stationary phase. The two mutants in line A were characterized by repressed levels of
GDH
during the same period. Both lines exhibited high
GDH
activity early in their fermentations, but activity decreased during the period of active cell growth. Cytochrome c concentrations followed the same pattern as total soluble intracellular protein. Line A mutants were low in cephalosporin C productivity and line B encompassed low, intermediate, and high productivity mutants. The relative frequency of yield improvements in line A and B indicate that the altered regulation pattern for
GDH
in line B may have removed a nitrogen limitation for cephalosporin C synthesis.
...
PMID:Glutamate dehydrogenase specific activity and cephalosporin C synthesis in the M8650 series of Cephalosporium acremonium mutants. 117 Aug 8
In vitro alterations induced by a 10 micrograms/ml and 50 micrograms/ml dose each of thiophenate and fenbendazole on the absorptive surfaces of Haemonchus contortus (Nematoda: Trichostrongylidae) were studied. The most significant changes were induced in the gut epithelium. Alkaline phosphatase and adenosine triphosphatase activities were decreased, succinic dehydrogenase activity was increased, while acid phosphatase and glucose-6-phosphatase were completely lost from the intestinal epithelium after treatment with either of the drugs. A stimulatory effect of these two anthelmintics was observe on lactic dehydrogenase and reduced
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide diaphorase distribution. Thiophenate caused an increase in the activities of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(
GDH
), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD) and nonspecific esterases and a decrease in reduced
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide phosphate diaphorase (NADPH-D) activity. Fenbendazole treatment led to the inhibition of
GDH
, while G-6-PD, NADPH-D, cytochrome oxidase, monoamine oxidase and nonspecific esterase activity remained unaltered in the epithelium.
...
PMID:Histoenzymic effects of thiophenate and fenbendazole on the absorptive surfaces of Haemonchus contortus. 133 82
Response characteristics are presented for a dual-enzyme fiber-optic biosensor for glutamate. An enzyme layer composed of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(
GDH
) and glutamate-pyruvate transaminase (GPT) is used to produce reduced
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide (NADH) at the tip of a fiber-optic probe. NADH luminescence is monitored through this probe and the measured fluorescence intensity is related to the concentration of glutamate.
GDH
catalyzes the formation of NADH, and GPT drives the
GDH
reaction by removing a reaction product and regenerating glutamate. Optimal response is obtained in a pH 7.4 Tris-HCl buffer maintained at 25 degrees C in the presence of 4 mM NAD+ and 10 mM L-alanine. The temperature profile reveals a strong negative temperature effect which is attributed to the temperature dependency of NADH luminescence. Under optimal conditions, the sensor sensitivity is 0.127 nA/microM over the 1-10 microM concentration range, the detection limit is 0.13 microM, and response times range from 4 to 8 min. The sensor response is stable for 12 days when stored at 4 degrees C. Selectivity for glutamate is excellent over most of the common amino acids as well as ascorbic acid, uric acid, taurine, and GABA. Only slight responses were observed for glutamine and lysine. The effect of ammonia on the glutamate response was found to be minimal at total ammonia nitrogen concentrations as high as 200 microM.
...
PMID:Dual-enzyme fiber-optic biosensor for glutamate based on reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide luminescence. 135 Apr 33
A
nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide-specific
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NAD-GluDH; EC 1.4.1.3) inactivated by incubation at low temperatures was detected in several species of the genus Bacillus, including strains of B. cereus, B. laterosporus, B. lentus, B. panthotenicus, B. pasteurii, B. sphaericus, B. stearothermophilus, B. subtilis and B. thuringiensis. Incubation of cell-free extracts of these strains at 0 degrees C resulted in an 80-100% inactivation of NAD-GluDH activity within 120 min. The addition of 20% glycerol protected the enzyme from this inactivation in the cold. Strains of B. fastidiosus, B. licheniformis, B. macerans, B. megaterium and B. pumilus were found to lack NAD-GluDH activity.
...
PMID:Occurrence of cold-labile NAD-specific glutamate dehydrogenase in Bacillus species. 139 36
The three-dimensional crystal structure of the NAD(+)-linked
glutamate dehydrogenase
from Clostridium symbiosum has been solved to 1.96 A resolution by a combination of isomorphous replacement and molecular averaging and refined to a conventional crystallographic R factor of 0.227. Each subunit in this multimeric enzyme is organised into two domains separated by a deep cleft. One domain directs the self-assembly of the molecule into a hexameric oligomer with 32 symmetry. The other domain is structurally similar to the classical dinucleotide binding fold but with the direction of one of the strands reversed. Difference Fourier analysis on the binary complex of the enzyme with NAD+ shows that the dinucleotide is bound in an extended conformation with the
nicotinamide
moiety deep in the cleft between the two domains. Hydrogen bonds between the carboxyamide group of the
nicotinamide
ring and the side chains of T209 and N240, residues conserved in all hexameric GDH sequences, provide a positive selection for the syn conformer of this ring. This results in a molecular arrangement in which the A face of the
nicotinamide
ring is buried against the enzyme surface and the B face is exposed, adjacent to a striking cluster of conserved residues including K89, K113, and K125. Modeling studies, correlated with chemical modification data, have implicated this region as the glutamate/2-oxoglutarate binding site and provide an explanation at the molecular level for the B type stereospecificity of the hydride transfer of GDH during the catalytic cycle.
...
PMID:Subunit assembly and active site location in the structure of glutamate dehydrogenase. 155 82
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