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)

Chlorella sorokiniana possesses ammonium-inducible, chloroplastic, NADP-specific glutamate dehydrogenase (NADP-GDH) homo- or heterohexamers composed of alpha- and/or beta-subunits which were previously shown to derive from precursor protein(s) of identical size. From the present studies, data are consistent with these two subunits being encoded by a single nuclear gene. The NADP-GDH gene is greater than 7 kb in length due to the presence of at least 21 introns, an unusually large number for a eukaryotic microorganism. The exons, identified by comparison with sequences of NADP-GDH cDNA clones, include a region which is highly conserved among NADP-GDH genes. This region in the C. sorokiniana gene is 77% and 73% identical to the corresponding regions in the Escherichia coli and Neurospora crassa NADP-GDH genes, respectively. Seventeen independent NADP-GDH cDNA clones were analyzed by restriction mapping and partial sequencing, and no differences were detected among them. The longest cDNA was fused in frame with lacZ in a Bluescript vector and was expressed in E. coli as NADP-GDH antigen. During a 240 min induction period, under conditions in which both types of subunits were synthesized, only a single (2.2 kb) NADP-GDH mRNA band was detected on northern blots using cDNA probes from the highly conserved and 3'-untranslated regions. Collectively, these results are consistent with a single mRNA encoding a precursor-protein which is differentially processed to yield either an alpha- or beta-subunit.
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PMID:A nuclear gene with many introns encoding ammonium-inducible chloroplastic NADP-specific glutamate dehydrogenase(s) in Chlorella sorokiniana. 171 78

As the result of two mutually compensating frameshift mutations, three successive codons with third-position A were generated in the Neurospora crassa am (NADP-specific glutamate dehydrogenase: GDH) gene. These codons do not occur at all elsewhere in the gene and only infrequently in other highly expressed Neurospora genes. The double-frameshift strain produces only 25 to 35% of the normal level of GDH, whether measured as enzyme activity or as immunoprecipitable protein, but its level of GDH mRNA is normal. Although the modified enzyme is somewhat more heat-sensitive than the wild-type in vitro, its stability in vivo was found to be indistinguishable from that of the wild-type. It is concluded that the introduction of consecutive rare codons reduces the efficiency of translation of the mRNA. The possible mechanisms of such an effect are discussed.
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PMID:An apparent rare-codon effect on the rate of translation of a Neurospora gene. 183 52

To study the effects of ethanol on the hepatotoxicity of N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), 5 mg NDMA/kg body weight was injected intraperitoneally 3 times a week for 6 weeks into rats pair-fed liquid diets containing 36% of energy either as ethanol or as additional carbohydrates. Another group of rats was pair-fed with the same diets but injected with saline instead of NDMA. Co-administration of ethanol and NDMA produced much higher elevations of serum alanine and aspartate aminotransferase and glutamic dehydrogenase activities than the administration of either agent alone. The combined treatment also slightly increased focal necrosis, whereas other liver lesions (steatosis and fibrosis) and the functional impairment of mitochondrial respiration were not affected significantly. Microsomal low Km NDMA demethylation, as well as NDMA denitrosation, were inhibited markedly by incubation with an antibody against P450IIE1, suggesting the involvement of this alcohol-inducible P450 in both NDMA bioactivation reactions. The addition of ethanol inhibited P450-dependent demethylation and denitrosation of NDMA in liver microsomes, whereas both activities were enhanced markedly by chronic ethanol administration. At ethanol concentrations similar to those prevailing in the blood of alcohol-fed animals at the time of NDMA administration, hepatic microsomal demethylation and denitrosation remained significantly higher in ethanol-fed rats given NDMA than in controls. Our results suggest that bioactivation plays a critical role in the hepatotoxicity of NDMA and its aggravation by chronic alcohol consumption.
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PMID:Effects of ethanol consumption on bioactivation and hepatotoxicity of N-nitrosodimethylamine in rats. 185 64

The vinylogue of NAD, 3-pyridylacryloamide adenine dinucleotide, was prepared from NAD and 3-pyridylacryloamide through the snake venom NADase-catalyzed transglycosidation reaction. The analog, purified by ion-exchange chromatography, was obtained in a 55% yield. The cyanide adduct and reduced form of the analog exhibited absorbance maxima at 358 nm and 378 nm, respectively, with extinction coefficients in each case being 2.3-times higher than those reported for the corresponding NAD derivatives. 3-Pyridylacryloamide adenine dinucleotide served as a coenzyme with bovine liver glutamic dehydrogenase and to a lesser extent with malate and lactate dehydrogenases. The analog was not reduced in reactions catalyzed by yeast and horse liver alcohol dehydrogenases, sheep liver sorbitol dehydrogenase, and rabbit muscle glycerophosphate dehydrogenase. Substitution of the pyridylacryloamide analogs for NAD and NADH in the assay of substrates for glutamic dehydrogenase was demonstrated.
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PMID:Preparation and characterization of the NAD vinylogue, 3-pyridylacryloamide adenine dinucleotide. 188 17

The expression patterns of the mRNAs for the ammonia-metabolizing enzymes carbamoylphosphate synthetase (CPS), glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) were studied in developing pre- and neonatal rat liver by in situ hybridization. In the period of 11 to 14 embryonic days (ED) the concentrations of GS and GDH mRNA increases rapidly in the liver, whereas a substantial rise of CPS mRNA in the liver does not occur until ED 18. Hepatocyte heterogeneity related to the vascular architecture can first be observed at ED 18 for GS mRNA, at ED 20 for GDH mRNA and three days after birth for CPS mRNA. The adult phenotype is gradually established during the second neonatal week, i.e. GS mRNA becomes confined to a pericentral compartment of one to two hepatocytes thickness, CPS mRNA to a large periportal compartment being no longer expressed in the pericentral compartment and GDH mRNA is expressed over the entire porto-central distance, decreasing in concentration going from central to portal. Comparison of the observed mRNA distribution patterns in the perinatal liver, with published data on the distribution of the respective proteins, points to the occurrence of posttranslational, in addition to pretranslational control mechanisms in the period of ontogenesis of hepatocyte heterogeneity. Interestingly, during development all three mRNAS are expressed outside the liver to a considerable extent and in a highly specific way, indicating that several organs are involved in the developmentally regulated expression of the mRNAs for the ammonia-metabolizing enzymes, that were hitherto not recognized as such.
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PMID:Expression patterns of mRNAs for ammonia-metabolizing enzymes in the developing rat: the ontogenesis of hepatocyte heterogeneity. 197 81

In a previous study we demonstrated thirteen amino acids to be essential and two to be partially essential for lymphocyte proliferation. Arginine is one of the essential amino acids, and the highly purified arginase strongly inhibited lymphocyte proliferation. The modulation of lymphocyte growth by various amino acid-degrading enzymes was studied. Peripheral lymphocytes were cultured in RPMI 1640 with or without amino acid-degrading enzyme for 72 h. A total of 17 commercial L-amino acid-degrading enzymes were studied. At 10 micrograms/ml, both lysine decarboxylase and asparaginase completely inhibited lymphocyte proliferation, arginase resulted in 78% inhibition and tyrosinase 57% inhibition. Other enzymes inhibited less than 20% lymphocyte proliferation; they included alanine dehydrogenase, arginine decarboxylase, aspartase, glutamic decarboxylase, glutamic dehydrogenase, glutaminase, histidase, histidine decarboxylase, leucine dehydrogenase, phenylalanine decarboxylase, phenylalanine hydroxylase, tryptophanase, and tyrosine decarboxylase. All four enzymes that strongly inhibited lymphocyte proliferation degraded amino acids that are essential for lymphocyte growth.
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PMID:Modulation of lymphocyte proliferation by enzymes that degrade amino acids. 212 55

The gene (GDH1) coding for the NADP-linked glutamate dehydrogenase system (NADP-GDH) has been cloned from Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain. Cells being transformed by the NADP-GDH gene on a 2 micron bared vector (pCYG4) plasmid confering 11-fold higher level on expressed GDH activity over the wild-type cells. The behavior of these cells was investigated under chemostatic growth with a carbon rate-limiting nutrient. Specific growth rates of cells carrying plasmid pCYG4 were found to be slightly slower than wild type cells. Furthermore, the NADP-GDH activity increases proportionally with the dilution rate. In addition, oscillations in the NADP-GDH activity, especially at a dilution rate up to 0.15/h, are probably consequential on the appearance of a changing mixed population (cells with and without plasmids).
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PMID:Studies on Saccharomyces cerevisiae under carbon-limiting growth transformed with plasmid pCYG4 that carries the gene for NADP-GDH. 215 63

Chronic ethanol consumption by baboons (50% of energy from a liquid diet) for 18 to 36 mo resulted in significant depletion of hepatic S-adenosyl-L-methionine concentration: 74.6 +/- 2.4 nmol/gm vs. 108.9 +/- 8.2 nmol/gm liver in controls (p less than 0.005). The depletion was corrected with S-adenosyl-L-methionine (0.4 mg/kcal) administration (102.1 +/- 15.4 nmol/gm after S-adenosyl-L-methionine-ethanol, with 121.4 +/- 11.9 nmol/gm in controls). Ethanol also induced a depletion of glutathione (2.63 +/- 0.13 mumol/gm after ethanol vs. 4.87 +/- 0.36 mumol/gm in controls) that was attenuated by S-adenosyl-L-methionine (3.89 +/- 0.51 mumol/gm in S-adenosyl-L-methionine-methanol vs. 5.22 +/- 0.53 mumol/gm in S-adenosyl-L-methionine controls). There was a significant correlation between hepatic S-adenosyl-L-methionine and glutathione level (r = 0.497; p less than 0.01). After the baboons received ethanol, we observed the expected increase in circulating levels of the mitochondrial enzyme glutamic dehydrogenase: 95.1 +/- 21.4 IU/L vs. 13.4 +/- 1.8 IU/L; p less than 0.001, whereas in a corresponding group of animals given S-adenosyl-L-methionine with ethanol, the values were only 30.3 +/- 7.1 IU/L (vs. 9.6 +/- 0.7 IU/L in the S-adenosyl-L-methionine controls). This attenuation by S-adenosyl-L-methionine of the ethanol-induced increase in plasma glutamic dehydrogenase (p less than 0.005) was associated with a decrease in the number of giant mitochondria (assessed in percutaneous liver biopsy specimens), with a corresponding change in the activity of succinate dehydrogenase, a mitochondrial marker enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:S-adenosyl-L-methionine attenuates alcohol-induced liver injury in the baboon. 230 95

We describe a bioluminescence method for measuring adenosine deaminase activity in serum. The method involves use of batchwise enzyme reaction containing adenosine, alpha-ketoglutarate, glutamic dehydrogenase and NADH. The resulting solution is injected to the continuous-flow bioluminescence system. In the system, a bacterial luciferase and NAD(P)H:FMN oxidoreductase are covalently co-immobilized on Sepharose 4B. Carrier solution (pH 6.8) for bioluminescence reaction contains FMN and decanal. The continuous-flow light-emitting system, in which the reactor (flow cell packed with immobilized enzyme) is placed in front of a photomultiplier tube inside a photon counter, is versatile and simple. Concentration and response are linearly related from 1.2 to 92.5 pmol per injection of ammonia. The precision of the method is satisfactory (coefficient of variation 3.9-6.8%). We validated the technique by comparing results with conventional assay method (UV method). Normal values for adenosine deaminase activity of serum ranged from 7.0 to 22.0 U/l in agreement with those obtained by other method. The Sepharose 4B-immobilized enzymes are stable for more than one year. This assay system could be used as a routine clinical laboratory test in the diagnosis of liver damage.
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PMID:Bioluminescent assay for serum adenosine deaminase with immobilized bacterial luciferase. 262 Apr 50

The role of oxygenation in the pathogenesis of alcoholic liver injury was investigated in six baboons fed alcohol chronically and in six pair-fed controls. All animals fed alcohol developed fatty liver with, in addition, fibrosis in three. No evidence for hypoxia was found, both in the basal state and after ethanol at moderate (30 mM) or high (55 mM) levels, as shown by unchanged or even increased hepatic venous partial pressure of O2 and O2 saturation of hemoglobin in the tissue. In controls, ethanol administration resulted in enhanced O2 consumption (offset by a commitant increase in splanchnic blood flow), whereas in alcohol fed animals, there was no increase. At the moderate ethanol dose, the flow-independent O2 extraction, measured by reflectance spectroscopy on the liver surface, tended to increase in control animals only, whereas a significant decrease was observed after the high ethanol dose in the alcohol-treated baboons. This was associated with a marked shift in the mitochondrial redox level in the alcohol-fed (but not in control) baboons, with striking rises in splanchnic output of glutamic dehydrogenase and acetaldehyde, reflecting mitochondrial injury. Increased acetaldehyde, in turn, may aggravate the mitochondrial damage and exacerbate defective O2 utilization. Thus impaired O2 consumption rather than lack of O2 supply characterizes liver injury produced by high ethanol levels in baboons fed alcohol chronically.
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PMID:Impaired oxygen utilization. A new mechanism for the hepatotoxicity of ethanol in sub-human primates. 270 29


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