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 activities of 12 enzymes, many related to ornithine metabolism, were measured in rat submaxillary gland, submaxillary gland tumors and pancreas. In submaxillary gland, the activities of arginase, ornithine aminotransferase, pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase and glutamine synthetase were high, but no ornithine transcarbamylase or proline oxidase could be detected. In the fetal submaxillary gland, arginase was at almost adult levels while ornithine aminotransferase reached 50% of its adult value postnatally. Submaxillary tumors deviated from their cognate tissue by lower levels of amino acid metabolizing enzymes and by high concentrations of thymidine kinase. In pancreas, none of the pyrroline-5-carboxylate metabolizing enzymes were as high as in either liver or submaxillary gland. The outstanding activities were those of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and glutamate dehydrogenase. Although arginase activities in submaxillary gland and pancreas were quantitatively similar, they differed qualitatively: submaxillary gland contained the same variant as liver while the pancreatic isozymes resembled those of other nonhepatic tissues.
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PMID:Amino acid metabolizing enzymes in rat submaxillary gland, normal or neoplastic, and in pancreas. 0 9

In previous studies it was found that: (a) aspartate aminotransferase increases the aspartate dehydrogenase activity of glutamate dehydrogenase; (b) the pyridoxamine-P form of this aminotransferase can form an enzyme-enzyme complex with glutamate dehydrogenase; and (c) the pyridoxamine-P form can be dehydrogenated to the pyridoxal-P form by glutamate dehydrogenase. It was therefore concluded (Fahien, L.A., and Smith, S.E. (1974) J. Biol. Chem 249, 2696-2703) that in the aspartate dehydrogenase reaction, aspartate converts the aminotransferase into the pyridoxamine-P form which is then dehydrogenated by glutamate dehydrogenase. The present results support this mechanism and essentially exclude the possibility that aspartate actually reacts with glutamate dehydrogenase and the aminotransferase is an allosteric activator. Indeed, it was found that aspartate is actually an activator of the reaction between glutamate dehydrogenase and the pyridoxamine-P form of the aminotransferase. Aspartate also markedly activated the alanine dehydrogenase reaction catalyzed by glutamate dehydrogenase plus alanine aminotransferase and the ornithine dehydrogenase reaction catalyzed by ornithine aminotransferase plus glutamate dehydrogenase. In these latter two reactions, there is no significant conversion of aspartate to oxalecetate and other compounds tested (including oxalacetate) would not substitute for aspartate. Thus aspartate is apparently bound to glutamate dehydrogenase and this increases the reactivity of this enzyme with the pyridoxamine-P form of aminotransferases. This could be of physiological importance because aspartate enables the aspartate and ornithine dehydrogenase reactions to be catalyzed almost as rapidly by complexes between glutamate dehydrogenase and the appropriate mitochondrial aminotransferase in the absence of alpha-ketoglutarate as they are in the presence of this substrate. Furthermore, in the presence of aspartate, alpha-ketoglutarate can have little or no affect on these reactions. Consequently, in the mitochondria of some organs these reactions could be catalyzed exclusively by enzyme-enzyme complexes even in the presence of alpha-ketoglutarate. Rat liver glutamate dehydrogenase is essentially as active as thebovine liver enzyme with aminotransferases. Since the rat liver enzyme does not polymerize, this unambiguously demonstrates that monomeric forms of glutamate dehydrogenase can react with aminotransferases.
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PMID:Effect of aspartate on complexes between glutamate dehydrogenase and various aminotransferases. 1 47

1) A lysosomal protease, a new cathepsin that inactivates glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase [EC 1.1.1.49] and some other enzymes and differs from cathepsin B [EC 3.4.22.1] was purified about 2,200-fold from crude extracts of rat liver by cell-fractionation, freezing and thawing, acetone treatment, gel filtration, and DEAE Sephadex and CM-Sephadex column chromatographies. 2) The new cathepsin was markedly activated by the thiol-reagent, 2-mercaptoethanol and inhibited by monoiodoacetate. 3) The molecular weight of the new cathepsin was found by Sephadex G-75 column chromatography to be 22,000, which is smaller than that of cathepsin B. 4) The optimum pH of the enzyme for inactivation of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was pH 5.0--5.5. The enzyme was unstable in alkali and on heat treatment. 5) The rates of inactivation of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, apo-ornithine aminotransferase [EC 2.6.1.13], apo-tyrosine aminotransferase [EC 2.6.1.5], apo-cystathionase [EC 4.4.1.1], glucokinase [EC 2.7.1.2], glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase [EC 1.2.1.12], and malate dehydrogenase [EC 1.1.1.37] by the new cathepsin were higher than those by cathepsin B. However aldolase [EC 4.1.2.13] was inactivated more rapidly by cathepsin B than by the new cathepsin. Lactate dehydrogenase [EC 1.1.1.27], glutamate dehydrogenase [EC 1.4.1.2] and alcohol dehydrogenase [EC 1.1.1.1] were not inactivated by either cathepsin. Unlike cathepsin B, the new cathepsin scarcely hydrolyzes N-substituted derivatives of arginine.
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PMID:Purification and properties of a new cathepsin from rat liver. 3 59

The direction and capacity for the metabolism of delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate in a number of rat tissues ere investigated by measuring the activities of delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase, delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase and proline oxidase. Each of these enzymes catalyzed unidirectional reactions in which delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate was either the substrate or product. Delta1-Pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase activities that were much higher than any previously reported were obtained by avoiding its inactivation in the cold. delta1-Pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase, previously said to act on both D- and L-isomers of delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate, acted only on the L-isomer. Proline oxidase could not be measured in two adult tissues, in which an inhibitor appeared after birth. The activity of delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase significantly paralleled that of ornithine aminotransferase in 23 tissues, showing a widespread potential for proline synthesis from ornithine. An independently distributed potential in fewer tissues for proline degradation to alpha-oxoglutarate was shown by the significantly similar tissue distributions of proline oxidase. Delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase and glutamate dehydrogenase. Reverse metabolism of glutamate or proline to ornithine would be atypical in rat tissues with these distributions of unidirectional enzyme reactions.
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PMID:Enzymes metabolizing delta1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate in rat tissues. 90 23

A new spectrophotometric procedure is described for determining glutamate-dependent activities of aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and ornithine aminotransferase with NADPH-linked glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) from nitrate-grown Stichococcus bacillaris. The algal NADPH-GDH is highly specific for oxoglutarate and can catalyze the reduction of this keto acid in the presence of high glutamate concentrations, and thus is suitable for the measurement of oxoglutarate produced in glutamate-dependent amino-transferase reactions. The alga produces large amounts of NADPH-GDH which can be adequately purified in a few simple steps. The purified enzyme can be stored at 4 degrees C for several weeks without any detectable loss of activity. The algal NADPH-GDH can also be used for the estimation of small amounts of oxoglutarate in aqueous extracts.
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PMID:A spectrophotometric procedure for measuring oxoglutarate and determining aminotransferase activities using nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-linked glutamate dehydrogenase from algae. 255 50

A method for the quantitation of L-glutamic acid in the picomole range was developed by finding conditions which allowed the production of NADH by the action of the L-glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3) and its subsequent transformation to a highly fluorescent derivative. The method measures linearly glutamate from 250 pmol to 5 nmol. For its simplicity and low cost it is ideally suited to the assay of a large number of samples within a single working day. Its application to the determination of regional glutamate levels in the rat brain, as well as to the measurement of ornithine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.13) activity from several tissues is described. The results are similar to those obtained by different methodologies in several laboratories, but the present method offers additional advantages.
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PMID:A glutamate dehydrogenase-based method for the assay of L-glutamic acid: formation of pyridine nucleotide fluorescent derivatives. 257 90

The ontogenetic development of the enzymes phosphate activated glutaminase (PAG), glutamate dehydrogenase (GLDH), glutamic-oxaloacetic-transaminase (GOT), glutamine synthetase (GS), and ornithine-delta-aminotransferase (Orn-T) was followed in cerebellum in vivo and in cultured cerebellar granule cells. It was found that PAG, GLDH, and GOT exhibited similar developmental patterns in the cultured neurons compared to cerebellum. PAG showed, however, a more pronounced phosphate activation in the cultured granule cells compared to in vivo. The activity of GS remained low in the cultured neurons compared to the increasing activity of this enzyme found in vivo. On the other hand Orn-T exhibited an increase in its specific activity in the cultured cells as a function of time in culture in contrast to the non-changing activity of this enzyme in vivo. Compared to cerebellum the cultured neurons exhibited higher activities of GLDH, GOT, and Orn-T whereas the activity of PAG was only slightly higher in the cultured cells. The activity of GS in the cultured neurons was only 5-10% of the activity in cerebellum in vivo. It is concluded that cultured cerebellar granule cells represent a reliable model system by which the metabolism and function of glutamatergic neurons can be conveniently studied in a physiologically meaningful way.
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PMID:Ontogenetic development of glutamate metabolizing enzymes in cultured cerebellar granule cells and in cerebellum in vivo. 285 27

Livers of rats between the 16th gestational and 100th postnatal day of age were subjected to quantitative biochemical and electron microscope, morphometric analyses. The amount of total mitochondrial protein per gram of liver remained at 34% of the adult level throughout the last 4 days of gestation but this was the period of rapid rise in the levels of cytochrome c oxidase, aspartate aminotransferase, and glutamate dehydrogenase in mitochondria; the nuclear fraction also acquired some glutamate dehydrogenase but lost most of it during postnatal development. During early postnatal life the amount of mitochondrial protein rose in parallel with the levels of cytochrome c oxidase and glutamate dehydrogenase but the upsurges of glutaminase and, later, of ornithine aminotransferase were accompanied by relatively little change in total mitochondrial protein. The surface area of rough endoplasmic reticulum per unit volume of hepatocyte cytoplasm (S(v) (RER)) did not change significantly throughout the period of development studied. From the 16th day of gestation to term the surface area of smooth ER (S(v) (SER)), the volume occupied by mitochondria (V(v) (MT)) and their number (N(v) (MT)) remained at 30, 66, and 45% of their adult values, respectively. V(v) (MT) and N(v) (MT) attained their maximal levels by the 2nd postnatal day and S(v) (SER) between days 2 and 12. Mitochondria of adult liver are thus smaller and contain more protein per unit volume than do those of fetal liver. After the 12th postnatal day, hepatocytes treble their size; they acquire more cytoplasm with additional enzymes but without further change in organelle concentration. The data reveal several distinct phases in the differentiation of hepatocytes. Each phase can be characterized by the extent to which the quantity and composition of various subcellular compartments evolve.
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PMID:Subcellular morphometric and biochemical analysis of developing rat hepatocytes. 434 89

The effects of short- and long-term ethanol administration on the hepatic content of free proline and on the activity of hepatic enzymes that catalyze the formation and degradation of proline were determined in the rat. The short-term oral administration of ethanol in a dose of 5.5 gm/kg body weight resulted in no changes in hepatic free proline content or in hepatic proline oxidase activity. By contrast, the feeding of ethanol for a period of 1 month resulted in an increase in the total hepatic content of free proline. The hepatic activity of proline exidase was also increased by long-term ethanol feeding while the activities of arginase, ornithine aminotransferase, delta 1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase, delta 1-pyrroline-5-dehydrogenase, and glutamate dehydrogenase remained unchanged. The increase in the hepatic pool of free proline in association with an increase in proline oxidase activity suggests that long-term ethanol administration results in an increased turnover of proline in the liver, in which the increase in synthesis is greater than the increase in degradation. An effect of long-term ethanol feeding in increasing proline degradation mya be a cause for the increased oxygen consumption and urea production found in the liver after long-term ethanol ingestion.
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PMID:Effect of ethanol on hepatic proline-metabolizing enzymes in the rat. 729 45

Mitochondria isolated from systemic hearts of the squid Illex illecebrosus showed high respiratory control ratios, and, with appropriate substrates, the expected ADP/O ratios. Of amino acids tested, proline and ornithine were oxidized at highest rates; of carboxylates, malate, succinate and pyruvate gave the highest state-3 respiration rates. Pyruvate oxidation is enhanced with proline, ornithine, and 1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate (pyrroline carboxylate) all of which can serve to augment the Krebs cycle. However, proline, ornithine and pyrroline carboxylate oxidation is not similarly dependent upon pyruvate. Rotenone inhibited state-3 respiration of malate, proline, ornithine and pyrroline carboxylate. Neither intermediates of fatty acid oxidation nor glycerol 3-phosphate were utilized at significant rates. Key enzymes in proline and ornithine oxidation, i.e. proline dehydrogenase, pyrroline-carboxylate dehydrogenase, ornithine aminotransferase, and glutamate dehydrogenase were located in the mitochondria. The synthesis of proline is catalyzed by pyrroline-carboxylate reductase, which was found exclusively in the cytosol. The respiration, phosphorylation and enzyme data taken together suggest that the main carbon sources for heart mitochondria of Illex are pyruvate plus the proline and ornithine pool.
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PMID:Respiratory and enzymatic properties of squid heart mitochondria. 731 31


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