Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The relative significance of the flux through the glutamine aminotransferase (glutaminase II) pathway to renal ammoniagenesis is poorly understood. A basic and unresolved question is whether 2-oxoglutaramate (2-OGM), a product of the glutaminase II reaction, is deamidated to yield 2-oxoglutarate and NH3, or whether 2-OGM accumulates as an unreactive lactam, depending on the environmental pH. In the current studies we utilized 13C n.m.r. as well as 15N n.m.r. as well as 15N n.m.r. to demonstrate that 2-OGM occurs as a lactam, i.e. 5-hydroxypyroglutamate, regardless of the environmental pH. Our additional aims were to determine whether human kidney cells (HK cells) in culture can produce 2-OGM and to ascertain a pH-dependent relationship between NH3 and 2-OGM production from glutamine. We therefore developed an isotope dilution assay for 2-OGM utilizing 5-hydroxy[4-13C,1-15N]pyroglutamate as the labelled species. Incubations of HK cells in minimal essential medium supplemented with 1 mM-[2-15N]glutamine demonstrated significantly higher production of 2-OGM at pH 6.8 and lower production at pH 7.6 compared with pH 7.4. Similarly both 15NH3 and [15N]alanine formation were significantly higher in acute acidosis (pH 6.8) and lower in acute alkalosis (pH 7.6) compared with that at physiological pH. Addition of 1 mM-amino-oxyacetate to the incubation medium at pH 7.4 significantly diminished [15N]alanine and 2-OGM production, but the production of 15NH3 via the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway was significantly stimulated. The current observations indicate that the glutaminase II pathway plays a minor role and that flux through glutamate dehydrogenase is the predominant site for regulation of ammoniagenesis in human kidney.
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PMID:Analysis and physiological implications of renal 2-oxoglutaramate metabolism. 185 45

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 enzymes of the assimilation pathways in cultures of S. hygroscopicus grown in the presence of various nitrogen sources were investigated. No assimilation activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) was observed. Activities of alanine dehydrogenase (ADH), GDH, glutamine: 2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (GOGAT) and glutamate synthetase (GS) were studied. High concentrations of ammonium and alanine induced ADH formation. The levels of GS remained low in media with NH4Cl. Various nitrogen sources had no impact on the activity of GOGAT which suggested the involvement of constitutive synthesis. ADH was likely to play an alternative role. Determination of the quantitative and qualitative composition of the free amino acids confirmed the involvement of the GS-GOGAT pathway in nitrogen assimilation. The concentration of ammonium ions in the media with one amino acid or in the presence of several amino acids lowered the antibiotic activity while in the media with alanine and the other nitrogen compounds it increased the antibiotic activity.
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PMID:[Impact of nitrogen assimilation on regulation of antibiotic production in Streptomyces hygroscopicus 155]. 187 81

The present study utilized [15N]glutamine labeled at amide (5-N) and amino (2-N) groups to analyze the metabolic fate of glutamine nitrogen in basal and in acute pH regulation of ammoniagenesis. One-hour incubation of LLC-PK1 cultures in a media of pH 7.4, 7.0, or 7.6 containing either [5-15N]glutamine or [2-15N]glutamine resulted in parallel alterations in glutamine consumption in response to acute acid-base maneuvers. Incubation with [5-15N]glutamine resulted in substantial enrichment and production of ammonia at pH 7.4, which was unaffected by the changes in media pH, and in no significant enrichment of alanine, aspartate, and glutamate. In contrast, significant enrichment and production of 15N-labeled ammonia, alanine, aspartate, and glutamate were detected from cultures incubated with [2-15N]glutamine. Ammonia formation, from incubation with [2-15N]glutamine, was stimulated significantly by a low pH and inhibited by high pH. Alanine production was altered in a fashion similar to ammonia formation, whereas aspartate production was unaltered and glutamate formation significantly decreased by a low pH. Furthermore, a low pH significantly increased the production of alpha-ketoglutaramate in a fashion qualitatively similar to alanine production. In contrast to our prior conclusions based on total metabolite production, these studies indicate that although ammonia formation at pH 7.4 is predominantly generated from the mitochondrial phosphate-dependent glutaminase pathway, the increased ammonia formation in acute acidosis is a result of increased flux through glutamate dehydrogenase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pathways of acute pH regulation of ammoniagenesis in LLC-PK1 cells: study with [15N]glutamine. 188 9

Changes in hepatopancreas, muscle and gill tissue nitrogen metabolic profiles were studied in a penaeid prawn, Penaeus indicus, following its exposure to sublethal concentrations of methylparathion, carbaryl and aldrin. In all the insecticide exposed prawn tissues, Ammonia levels were significantly increased and a shift in the nitrogen metabolism towards the synthesis of urea and glutamine was observed. Inhibition of glutamate oxidation to ammonia and alpha-ketoglutarate by glutamate dehydrogenase suggests a mechanism whereby hyperammonemia is reduced by minimizing the addition of further ammonia to the already existing elevated ammonia pool. Increased alanine and aspartate aminotransferases demonstrates the onset of gluconeogenesis. Mechanisms to detoxify the ammonia by enhancing the synthesis of urea and glutamine at the cellular level was observed in the selected tissues pave way for the survivability of prawns in insecticide polluted environs.
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PMID:Methylparathion, carbaryl and aldrin impact on nitrogen metabolism of prawn, Penaeus indicus. 190 40

The amino acid sequence is reported for CNBr and tryptic peptide fragments of the NAD(+)-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase of Clostridium symbiosum. Together with the N-terminal sequence, these make up about 75% of the total sequence. The sequence shows extensive similarity with that of the NADP(+)-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase of Escherichia coli (52% identical residues out of the 332 compared) allowing confident placing of the peptide fragments within the overall sequence. This demonstrated sequence similarity with the E. coli enzyme, despite different coenzyme specificity, is much greater than the similarity (31% identities) between the GDH's of C. symbiosum and Peptostreptococcus asaccharolyticus, both NAD(+)-linked. The evolutionary implications are discussed. In the 'fingerprint' region of the nucleotide binding fold the sequence Gly X Gly X X Ala is found, rather than Gly X Gly X X Gly. The sequence found here has previously been associated with NADP+ specificity and its finding in a strictly NAD(+)-dependent enzyme requires closer examination of the function of this structural motif.
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PMID:The partial amino acid sequence of the NAD(+)-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase of Clostridium symbiosum: implications for the evolution and structural basis of coenzyme specificity. 195 26

We utilized gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to study the transfer of 15N from [2-15N]glutamine, [15N]leucine, [15N]alanine, or 15NH4Cl to [15N]glutamate and [15N]aspartate in cultured cerebrocortical GABA-ergic neurons from the mouse. Initial rates of 15N appearance (atom % excess) were somewhat higher with 2mM [2-15N]glutamine as a precursor than with 1mM [15N]leucine or 1mM [15N]alanine, but initial net formation (nmol [15N]glutamate/mg protein.min-1) was roughly comparable with all precursors. At steady-state 15N labeling was about two times greater with 2mM [2-15N]glutamine as precursor. The subsequent transfer of 15N from glutamate to aspartate was extremely rapid, the labelling pattern of these two amino acid pools being virtually indistinguishable. We observed little reductive amination of 2-oxo-glutarate to yield [15N]glutamate in the presence of 0.3mM 15NH4Cl. Reductive amination through glutamate dehydrogenase was much more prominent at a concentration of 3.0mM 15NH4Cl. Glutamate formation via reductive amination was unaffected by inclusion of 1mM 2-oxo-glutarate in the incubation medium. These results indicate that glutamate synthesis in cultured GABA-ergic neurons is derived not only from the glutaminase reaction, but also from transamination reactions in which both leucine and alanine are efficient N donors. Reductive amination of 2-oxo-glutarate in the glutamate dehydrogenase pathway plays a relatively minor role at lower concentrations of extracellular ammonia but becomes quite active at 3mM ammonia.
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PMID:Precursors of glutamic acid nitrogen in primary neuronal cultures: studies with 15N. 209 13

We studied the effects of sodium valproate, a widely used antiepileptic drug and a hyperammonemic agent, on L-[1-14C]glutamine and L-[1-14C]glutamate metabolism in isolated human kidney-cortex tubules. Valproate markedly stimulated glutamine removal as well as the formation of ammonia, 14CO2, pyruvate, lactate and alanine, but it inhibited glucose synthesis; the increase in ammonia formation was explained by a stimulation by valproate mainly of flux through glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2) and to a much lesser extent of flux through glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3). By contrast, valproate did not stimulate glutamate removal or ammonia formation, suggesting that the increase in flux through glutamate dehydrogenase observed with glutamine as substrate was secondary to the increase in flux through glutaminase. Accumulation of pyruvate, alanine and lactate in the presence of valproate was less from glutamate than from glutamine. Inhibition by aminooxyacetate of accumulation of alanine from glutamine caused by valproate did not prevent the acceleration of glutamine utilization and the subsequent stimulation of ammonia formation. It is concluded from these data, which are the first concerning the in vitro metabolism of glutamine and glutamate in human kidney-cortex tubules, that the stimulatory effect of valproate is primarily exerted at the level of glutaminase in human renal cortex.
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PMID:Effect of the antiepileptic drug sodium valproate on glutamine and glutamate metabolism in isolated human kidney tubules. 210 74

Tissue culture for one or seven days of pancreatic islets isolated from 21-day old fetal rats was found to be associated with a marked increase in the oxidation of L-(U-14C) glutamine by intact islets and in the activity of both alanine-glutamate and aspartate-glutamate transaminases as well as glutamate dehydrogenase in islet homogenates. This coincided with an increase in the relative amount of mitochondrial DNA. The activities of glucose-phosphorylating enzymes (hexokinase and glucokinase), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and lactate dehydrogenase were less markedly increased during the culture period than those of enzymes involved in amino acid catabolism and located, in part at least, in mitochondria. The combined data suggest that the functional maturation of fetal islets during the culture period is associated with and may be attributable to a preferential maturation of their mitochondria.
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PMID:Maturation of fetal rat islet cells in vitro during tissue culture is associated with increased mitochondrial function. 213 6

Administration of enflurane (EF), a widely-used anesthetic agent, sometimes results in occult liver injury. As hepatic cytochromes P450 oxidize EF to a reactive intermediate, we assessed whether one such microsomal enzyme, ethanol-inducible P450IIE1, plays an obligatory role in EF metabolic activation and hepatotoxicity. Liver microsomes from rats fed ethanol (36% of total calories for 14 days) oxidized 1 mM EF (measured by its defluorination) at rates nearly 10-fold greater than those from control rats, reflecting the markedly enhanced content of immunoreactive microsomal P450IIE1 in the former animals. P450IIE1 involvement in hepatic EF oxidation was further suggested by the pronounced inhibition of microsomal defluorination noted with P450IIE1 antibodies and with ethanol, a specific substrate for this enzyme. EF administration to rats treated chronically with ethanol caused significant elevations in plasma levels of aspartate and alanine aminotransferases and glutamate dehydrogenase, indicative of hepatic injury, whereas concurrent treatment of naive rats with EF and ethanol failed to produce the same effect. Our results imply that ethanol-inducible P450IIE1 is the primary catalyst of hepatic EF bioactivation and that the increased bioactivation occurring in vivo secondary to chronic ethanol consumption is attendant with an increased incidence of EF hepatotoxicity.
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PMID:Interaction of ethanol with enflurane metabolism and toxicity: role of P450IIE1. 219 Apr 81


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