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Query: EC:1.4.1.4 (glutamate dehydrogenase)
4,358 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The pH dependence of the initial transient velocity of NADPH production during the burst phase of the oxidative deamination of L-glutamate by L-glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate : NAD(P)+ oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.1.3) and NADP+ has been measured by stopped-flow spectrophotometry. These studies provide evidence that the entire pH dependence below pH 8.26 arises from reaction steps contributing to V of the burst with an apparent pKa of 8.1 +/- 0.1. The data are consistent with a model in which the formation of the first enzyme-coenzyme-substrate ternary complex on the reaction path equilibrates rapidly and in which the pH-dependent steps are mechanistically close to and may include the catalytic hydrogen transfer itself. At pH 8.87, there is evidence that L-glutamate binds less tightly to the enzyme and to the enzyme-NADP+ complex than at lower pH values.
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PMID:The transient-state kinetics of L-glutamate dehydrogenase. pH-dependence of the burst rate parameters. 1 5

A total of 26 different purine nucleotides with specific modifications in the base moiety and/or in the polyphosphate chain as well as various combinations of nucleotides were tested as allosteric effectors of beef liver glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate : NAD(P)+ oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.1.3). The capacity of these nucleotide analogs to activate or to inhibit the glutamate dehydrogenase activity is expressed quantitatively and scaled between the extreme effects of ADP and GTP, respectively. The significance of distinct structural elements for the enzyme-effector interaction is discussed. While the inhibitory GTP site is less specific, accepting many natural and most modified nucleoside triphosphates as inhibitors, the activating ADP site shows a much higher specificity for nucleotides as activators.
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PMID:Regulatory effects of purine nucleotide analogs with liver glutamate dehydrogenase. 1 80

Active soluble cross-linked L-glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate: NAD(P)+ oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.1.3) albumin polymers were produced. Electron microscopic studies and kinetic properties were studied with the polymer in solution and compared with previous published data about the enzyme immobilized inside proteic films (Barbotin, J.N. and Breuil, M. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 525, 18--27). The glutaraldehyde effect on activity yield, ADP and beta-NAD+ protection, stability and pH rate profile were studied and discussed. Apparent Michaelis constants were determined with soluble polymers produced with or without ADP during the grafting process. Experiments were performed on the regulatory properties of immobilized glutamate dehydrogeanse showing the decrease of ADP activation and GTP inhibition as compared to the free form. In other respects, electron microscopy observations showed morphological differences between the two populations of soluble polymers produced in presence of ADP, obtained after gel filtration on Sepharose 6B. Linear aggregates of high molecular weight and classical soluble polymers were obtained. Similar Km values and regulatory properties were exhibited by the two forms, demonstrating the absence of interdependence between the allosteric control and the polymerization of enzyme monomers.
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PMID:Immobilization of L-glutamate dehydrogenase into soluble cross-linked polymers. ADP effect and electron microscopy studies. 11 24

Parts of the primary structure of the NAD-specific glutamate dehydrogenase [L-glutamate:NAD oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.1.2] from Neurospora crassa are presented. Segments of the sequence representing 886 unique amino-acid residues have been determined; the largest contains 267 residues. There are only short regions of possible homology between this enzyme and the glutamate dehydrogenases of bovine liver or the NADP-specific enzyme of Neurospora. The large size of the subunit (116,000 molecular weight) of the NAD-specific glutamate dehydrogenase is unusual when compared to other known dehydrogenases.
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PMID:Partial amino-acid sequence of NAD-specific glutamate dehydrogenase of Neurospora crassa. 17 80

Oxidoreductases were studied histochemically in 162 cases of neuroectodermal tumors. In order of decreasing activity in the cytoplasma these enzymes could be arranged as follows: NADH diaphorase, lactate dehydrogenase, NADPH diaphorase, glutamate dehydrogenase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase. The weak activity of Krebs cycle enzymes and the relatively strong activity of other oxidoreductases, particularly of lactate dehydrogenase, permits to conclude that glycolysis prevails over oxidative processes in neuroectodermal tumor cells. But this should not be interpreted as a decrease of the Krebs cycle enzymes in astrocytoma and oligodendroglioma cells as compared with their parent cells because the latter themselves display a weak activity of these enzymes. A real decrease of Krebs cycle enzyme activity was established only for tumors, the parent cells of which are characterized by a strong (in choroid-papillomas) or moderate (in ependymomas) activity of these enzymes. Many neuroectodermal tumors, in particular those of astrocytic origin, demonstrate a certain correlation between the amount of cytoplasm and oxidoreductase activity. This results in enzymatic polymorphism of the tumor tissue. A certain similarity was established of the oxidoreductase activity in tumor cells and in reactive hypertophic astrocytes. This indicates that both tumor cells and reactive astrocytes may in certain conditions utilize similar mechanisms of increased metabolism. The oxidoreductase activity correlates not with the grade of anaplasia but with different directions of anaplasia reflected in different variants of neuroectodermal tumors. The concept "anaplasia" includes not only certain degrees of dedifferentiation of tumor cells but, as it has been shown histochemically, also an increase of metabolic processes in the tumor cell cytoplasma.
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PMID:Histochemistry of oxidoreductases, enzymatic polymorphism and anaplasia of neuroectodermal tumors. 18 68

Methods are described in which liberation of ammonia from amino acid substrates by the D- and L-amino acid oxidases may be coupled with the NADH-dependent reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate catalysed by exogenous glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate: NAD oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.1.2). The inhibition of D-amino acid oxidase (D-amino acid:O2 oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.3.3) by ADP needed to activate and stabilise glutamate dehydrogenase was relieved by FAD, and the substrate was D-alanine at approximately 6-fold Km concentration. Neither FAD or FMN were required in the L-amino acid oxidase (L-amino acid:O2 oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.3.2) assay; this utilised L-leucine as substrate in a concentration approximately 7-fold the Km value. The methods were reasonably sensitive and precise, and a linear relationship between activity and enzyme concentration prevailed up to an absorbance change of 0.050 per min. They have the advantage of being amenable to automation and to employment of fluorescence techniques should greater sensitivity be required.
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PMID:Coupled optical rate determinations of amino acid oxidase activity. 23 96

When Escherichia coli was grown in a minimum medium with glucose as sole carbon source and a proper level of ammonia, NADP+ specific glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (deaminating), ED 1.4.1.4) was induced. The enzyme was solubilized by French press treatment and purified to homogeneity by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, heat treatment followed by DEAE-cellulose, hydroxylapatite and Bio-Gel chromatography with an overall yield of 30%. The enzyme proved to be heat stable and relatively resistant to protein denaturants. The optimum of enzymic activity for the reductive amination is at pH 8 and at pH 9 for the oxidative deamination. The activity is affected by adenine nucleotides. The molecular weight (about 250 000 for the native form and 46 000 for the inactive subunit) and amino acid composition, suggest strict similarities with the NADP+ enzyme from fungal origin.
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PMID:Glutamate dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli: induction, purification and properties of the enzyme. 23 98

The activities of the following enzymes were studied in connection with dinitrogen fixation in pea bacteroids: glutamine synthetase(L-glutamate: ammonia ligase (ADP-forming)(EC 6.3.1.2)(GS); glutamate dehydrogenase (NADP+)(L-glutamate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (deaminating)(EC 1.4.1.4)(GDH); glutamate synthase (L-glutamine: 2-exeglutarate aminotransferase (NADPH-oxidizing))(EC 2.6.1.53)(GOGAT). GS activity was high throughout the growth of the plant and GOGAT activity was always low. It is unlikely that GDH or the GS-GOGAT pathway can account for the incorporation of ammonia from dinitrogen fixation in the pea bacteroid,
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PMID:Enzymes of ammonia assimilation in Rhizobium leguminosarum bacteroids. 23 31

A nonionic detergent was found to bind to the enzyme L-glutamic acid dehydrogenase [L-glutamate:nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidoreductase (deaminating) EC 1.4.1.3]. The amount bound was 17 moles of detergent/mole of enzyme, which, however, was not sufficient for the enzyme to be included in a detergent micelle.
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PMID:Lipid-protein interactions: detergent binding to L-glutamic acid dehydrogenase. 87 94

Five nonionic detergents enhanced the activity of L-glutamic acid dehydrogenase [L-glutamate:nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidoreductase (deaminating) (EC 1.4.1.3)]. These detergents activated the enzyme toward alpha-ketoglutaric acid reduction, causing a decrease in the sensitivity of the enzyme to allosteric regulation by guanosine 5-triphosphate. There was also a diminution of the enhancing effect of the modifier adenosine 5-diphosphate on the enzyme's L-glutamic acid dehydrogenase activity. These detergents may cause a conformational change in the enzyme, and this change could lead to an increase in the binding of the substrates for the alpha-ketoglutaric acid reduction. Accompanied with this conformational change would be a decrease in the binding of the modifier guanosine 5'-triphosphate, with no concomitant change in the binding of the adenosine 5'-diphosphate modifier.
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PMID:Lipid-protein interactions: enhancement of enzyme activity of L-glutamic acid dehydrogenase by nonionic detergents. 103 65


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