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Query: EC:1.4.3.11 (
glutamate dehydrogenase
)
4,437
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We examined freshly collected samples of the colonial planktonic cyanobacterium Trichodesmium thiebautii to determine the pathways of recently fixed N within and among trichomes. High concentrations of glutamate and glutamine were found in colonies. Glutamate and glutamine uptake rates and concentrations in cells were low in the early morning and increased in the late morning to reach maxima near midday; then uptake and concentration again fell to low values. This pattern followed that previously observed for T. thiebautii nitrogenase activity. Our results suggest that recently fixed nitrogen is incorporated into glutamine in the N2-fixing trichomes and may be passed as glutamate to non-N2-fixing trichomes. The high transport rates and concentrations of glutamate may explain the previously observed absence of appreciable uptake of NH4+,
NO3
-, or urea by Trichodesmium spp. Immunolocalization, Western blots (immunoblots), and enzymatic assays indicated that glutamine synthetase (GS) was present in all cells during both day and night. GS appeared to be primarily contained in cells of T. thiebautii rather than in associated bacteria or cyanobacteria. Double immunolabeling showed that cells with nitrogenase (Fe protein) contained levels of the GS protein that were twofold higher than those in cells with little or no nitrogenase. GS activity and the uptake of glutamine and glutamate dramatically decreased in the presence of the GS inhibitor methionine sulfoximine. Since no
glutamate dehydrogenase
activity was detected in this species, GS appears to be the primary enzyme responsible for NH3 incorporation.
...
PMID:Glutamine synthetase and nitrogen cycling in colonies of the marine diazotrophic cyanobacteria Trichodesmium spp. 135 37
Two pathways serve for assimilation of ammonia in Paracoccus denitrificans. Glutamate dehydrogenase (NADP+) catalyzes the assimilation at a high NH4+ concentration. If
nitrate
serves as the nitrogen source, glutamate is synthesized by glutamate-ammonia ligase and glutamate synthase (NADPH). At a very low NH4+ concentration, all three enzymes are synthesized simultaneously. No direct relationship exists between
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP+) and glutamate-ammonia ligase in P. denitrificans, while the glutamate synthase (NADPH) activity changes in parallel with that of the latter enzyme. Ammonia does not influence the induction or repression of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP+). The inner concentration of metabolites indicates a possible repression of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP+) by the high concentration of glutamine or its metabolic products as in the case when NH4+ is formed by assimilative
nitrate
reduction. No direct effect of the intermediates of
nitrate
assimilation on the synthesis of
glutamate dehydrogenase
(NADP+) was observed.
...
PMID:Assimilation of ammonia in Paracoccus denitrificans. 168 63
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.
...
PMID:A spectrophotometric procedure for measuring oxoglutarate and determining aminotransferase activities using nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-linked glutamate dehydrogenase from algae. 255 50
Two classes of ornithine-nonutilizing (oru) mutants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO were investigated. Strains carrying the oru-310 mutation were entirely unable to grow on L-ornithine as the only carbon and nitrogen source and were affected in the assimilation of a variety of nitrogen sources (e.g., amino acids,
nitrate
). The oru-310 mutation caused changes in the regulation of the catabolic NAD-dependent
glutamate dehydrogenase
; this enzyme was no longer inducible by glutamate but instead could be induced by ammonia. The oru-310 locus was cotransducible with car-9 and tolA in the 10 min region of the chromosome. An oru-314 mutant was severely handicapped in ornithine medium but could grow when a good carbon source was added; the mutant also showed pleiotropic growth effects related to nitrogen metabolism. The oru-314 mutation affected the regulation of the anabolic NADP-dependent
glutamate dehydrogenase
, which was no longer repressed by glutamate but showed normal derepression in the presence of ammonia. The oru-314 locus was mapped by transduction near met-9011 at 55 min. Both oru mutants could grow on L-glutamate, L-proline, or L-ornithine amended with 2-oxoglutarate, albeit slowly. We speculate that insufficient 2-oxoglutarate concentrations might account, at least in part, for the Oru- phenotype of the mutants.
...
PMID:Altered control of glutamate dehydrogenases in ornithine utilization mutants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 285 44
Pathways of ammonia assimilation into glutamic acid and alanine in Bacillus polymyxa were investigated by 15N NMR spectroscopy in combination with measurements of the specific activities of
glutamate dehydrogenase
, glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthetase, alanine dehydrogenase, and glutamic-alanine transaminase. Ammonia was found to be assimilated into glutamic acid predominantly by NADPH-dependent
glutamate dehydrogenase
with a Km of 2.9 mM for NH4+ not only in ammonia-grown cells but also in
nitrate
-grown and nitrogen-fixing cells in which the intracellular NH4+ concentrations were 11.2, 1.04, and 1.5 mM, respectively. In ammonia-grown cells, the specific activity of alanine dehydrogenase was higher than that of glutamic-alanine transaminase, but the
glutamate dehydrogenase
/glutamic-alanine transaminase pathway was found to be the major pathway of 15NH4+ assimilation into [15N]alanine. The in vitro specific activities of
glutamate dehydrogenase
and glutamine synthetase, which represent the rates of synthesis of glutamic acid and glutamine, respectively, in the presence of enzyme-saturating concentrations of substrates and coenzymes are compared with the in vivo rates of biosynthesis of [15N]glutamic acid and [alpha,gamma-15N]glutamine observed by NMR, and implications of the results for factors limiting the rates of their biosynthesis in ammonia- and
nitrate
-grown cells are discussed.
...
PMID:Ammonia assimilation in Bacillus polymyxa. 15N NMR and enzymatic studies. 288 2
Pathways of ammonia assimilation into glutamic acid in Bacillus azotofixans, a recently characterized nitrogen-fixing species of Bacillus, were investigated through observation by NMR spectroscopy of in vivo incorporation of 15N into glutamine and glutamic acid in the absence and presence of inhibitors of ammonia-assimilating enzymes, in combination with measurements of the specific activities of
glutamate dehydrogenase
, glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase, and alanine dehydrogenase. In ammonia-grown cells, both the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase and the
glutamate dehydrogenase
pathways contribute to the assimilation of ammonia into glutamic acid. In
nitrate
-grown and nitrogen-fixing cells, the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase pathway was found to be predominant. NADPH-dependent
glutamate dehydrogenase
activity was detectable at low levels only in ammonia-grown and glutamate-grown cells. Thus, B. azotofixans differs from Bacillus polymyxa and Bacillus macerans, but resembles other N2-fixing prokaryotes studied previously, as to the pathway of ammonia assimilation during ammonia limitation. Implications of the results for an emerging pattern of ammonia assimilation by alternative pathways among nitrogen-fixing prokaryotes are discussed, as well as the utility of 15N NMR for measuring in vivo glutamate synthase activity in the cell.
...
PMID:Glutamate biosynthesis in Bacillus azotofixans. 15N NMR and enzymatic studies. 289 94
The level of the NADPH-dependent
glutamate dehydrogenase
activity (EC 1.4.1.4) from
nitrate
-grown cells of the thermophilic non-N2-fixing cyanobacterium Phormidium laminosum OH-1-p.Cl1 could be significantly enhanced by the presence of ammonium or nitrite, as well as by L-methionine-DL-sulfoximine and other sources of organic nitrogen (L-Glu, L-Gln, and methylamine). The enzyme was purified more than 4,400-fold by ultracentrifugation, ion-exchange chromatography, and affinity chromatography, and at 30 degrees C it showed a specific activity of 32.9 mumol of NADPH oxidized per min per mg of protein. The purified enzyme showed no aminotransferase activity and catalyzed the amination of 2-oxoglutarate preferentially to the reverse catabolic reaction. The enzyme was very specific for its substrates 2-oxoglutarate (Km = 1.25 mM) and NADPH (Km = 64 microM), for which hyperbolic kinetics were obtained. However, negative cooperativity (Hill coefficient h = 0.89) and [S]0.5 of 18.2 mM were observed for ammonium. The mechanism of the aminating reaction was of a random type with independent sites. The purified enzyme showed its maximal activity at 60 degrees C (Ea = 5.1 kcal/mol [21.3 kJ/mol]) and optimal pH values of 8.0 and 7.5 when assayed in Tris hydrochloride and potassium phosphate buffers, respectively. The native molecular mass of the enzyme was about 280 kilodaltons. The possible physiological role of the enzyme in ammonia assimilation is discussed.
...
PMID:Induction, isolation, and some properties of the NADPH-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase from the nonheterocystous cyanobacterium Phormidium laminosum. 313 39
The reductase enzymes in Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter were studied under anaerobic conditions when the oxidase enzymes were inactive. The most effective electron-donor systems for nitrate reductase in Nitrobacter were reduced benzyl viologen alone, phenazine methosulphate with either NADH or NADPH, and FMN or FAD with NADH. Nitrite and hydroxylamine reductases were found in both nitrifying bacteria, and optimum activity for each enzyme was obtained with NADH or NADPH with either FMN or FAD. The product of both these enzymes was identified as ammonia. In extracts of Nitrosomonas the ammonia was further utilized by an NADPH-specific
glutamate dehydrogenase
. (15)N-labelled nitrite, hydroxylamine and ammonia were rapidly incorporated into cell protein by Nitrosomonas, and Nitrobacter in addition incorporated [(15)N]
nitrate
. Relatively gentle methods of cell disruption were compared with ultrasonic treatment, to enable a more exact study to be undertaken of the intracellular distribution of the oxidase and reductase enzymes. The functional relationship of these opposing enzyme systems in the nitrifying bacteria is considered.
...
PMID:Properties of some reductase enzymes in the nitrifying bacteria and their relationship to the oxidase systems. 438 32
1. Aspergillus nidulans, Neurospora crassa and Escherichia coli were grown on media containing a range of concentrations of
nitrate
, or ammonia, or urea, or l-glutamate, or l-glutamine as the sole source of nitrogen and the glutamate dehydrogenate and glutamine synthetase of the cells measured. 2. Aspergillus, Neurospora and Escherichia coli cells, grown on l-glutamate or on high concentrations of ammonia or on high concentrations of urea, possessed low
glutamate dehydrogenase
activity compared with cells grown on other nitrogen sources. 3. Aspergillus, Neurospora and Escherichia coli cells grown on l-glutamate possessed high glutamine synthetase activity compared with cells grown on other nitrogen sources. 4. The hypothesis is proposed that in Aspergillus, Neurospora and Escherichia colil-glutamate represses the synthesis of
glutamate dehydrogenase
and l-glutamine represses the synthesis of glutamine synthetase. 5. A comparison of the glutamine-synthesizing activity and the gamma-glutamyltransferase activity of glutamine synthetase in Aspergillus and Neurospora gave no indication that these fungi produce different forms of glutamine synthetase when grown on ammonia or l-glutamate as nitrogen sources.
...
PMID:Regulation of synthesis of glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase in micro-organisms. 490 26
In L. minor grown in sterile culture, the primary enzymes of
nitrate
assimilation, nitrate reductase (NR), nitrite reductase (NiR) and
glutamate dehydrogenase
(
GDH
) change in response to nitrogen source. NR and NiR levels are low when grown on amino acids (hydrolyzed casein) or ammonia; both enzymes are rapidly induced on addition of
nitrate
, while addition of nitrite induces NiR only. Ammonia represses the
nitrate
induced synthesis of both NR and NiR.NADH dependent
GDH
activity is low when grown on amino acids and high when grown on
nitrate
or ammonia, but the activities of NADPH dependent
GDH
and Alanine dehydro-genase (AIDH) are much less affected by nitrogen source. NADH-
GDH
and AIDH are induced by ammonia, and it is suggested that these enzymes are involved in primary nitrogen assimilation.
...
PMID:Nitrogen metabolis of Lemna minor. II. Enzymes of nitrate assimilation and some aspects of their regulation. 579 47
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