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 metabolism of 0.25 mM-[15N]glutamic acid in cultured astrocytes was studied with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Almost all 15N was found as [2-15N]glutamine, [2-15N]glutamine, [5-15N]glutamine and [15N]alanine after 210 min of incubation. Some incorporation of 15N into aspartate and the 6-amino position of the adenine nucleotides also was observed, the latter reflecting activity of the purine nucleotide cycle. After the addition of [15N]glutamate the ammonia concentration in the medium declined, but the intracellular ATP concentration was unchanged despite concomitant ATP consumption in the glutamine synthetase reaction. Some potential sources of glutamate nitrogen were identified by incubating the astrocytes for 24 h with [5-15N]glutamine, [2-15N]glutamine or [15N]alanine. Significant labelling of glutamate was noted with addition of glutamine labelled on either the amino or the amide moiety, reflecting both glutaminase activity and reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate in the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction. Alanine nitrogen also is an important source of glutamate nitrogen in this system.
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PMID:Utilization of [15N]glutamate by cultured astrocytes. 287 31

The relationship between nitrogen assimilation, metabolism and aflatoxin formation has been investigated in a toxigenic and a non-toxigenic strain of Aspergillus parasiticus. Ammonia from the medium is mainly assimilated via NADP-requiring glutamate dehydrogenase. During growth NAD-requiring glutamate dehydrogenase followed an inverse pattern of activity with respect to NADP glutamate dehydrogenase. Alpha-ketoglutarate, the product of NAD glutamate dehydrogenase, stimulated acetate incorporation into aflatoxins. Glutamine synthetase, ornithine transcarbamylase, both utilizing glutamate as substrate were assayed under different growth conditions. An important regulatory role for glutamine synthetase is suggested. The metabolic route of asparagine utilization was also investigated. Both the known pathways, glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase and glutamate pyruvate transaminase are operative simultaneously.
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PMID:Nitrogen metabolism in Aspergillus parasiticus NRRL 3240 and A. flavus NRRL 3537 in relation to aflatoxin production. 287 96

The short-term metabolic fate of [13N]ammonia in the livers of adult male, anesthetized rats was determined. Following a bolus injection of tracer quantities of [13N]ammonia into the portal vein, the single pass extraction was approximately 93%, in good agreement with the portal-hepatic vein difference of approximately 90%. High performance liquid chromatographic analysis of deproteinized liver samples indicated that labeled nitrogen is exchanged rapidly among components of: mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase reactions and cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase reactions (t1/2 for the exchange of label toward equilibrium is on the order of seconds). Comparison of specific activities of glutamate and ammonia suggests that at 5 s most labeled glutamate was mitochondrial, whereas at 60 s approximately 93% was cytosolic; this change is presumably brought about by the combined action of the mitochondrial and cytosolic aspartate aminotransferases and the aspartate carrier of the malate-aspartate shuttle. Specific activity measurements of glutamate, alanine, and aspartate are in accord with the proposal by Williamson et al. (Williamson, D.H., Lopes-Vieira, O., and Walker, B. (1967) Biochem. J. 104, 497-502) that the components of the aspartate aminotransferase reaction are in thermodynamic equilibrium, whereas the components of the alanine aminotransferase reaction are in equilibrium but compartmented in the rat liver. Despite considerable label in citrulline at early time points, no radioactivity (less than or equal to 0.25% of the total) was detected in carbamyl phosphate, suggesting very efficient conversion to citrulline with little free carbamyl phosphate accumulating in the mitochondria. Our data also show that some portal vein-derived ammonia is metabolized to glutamine in the rat liver, but the amount is small (approximately 7% of that metabolized to urea) in part because liver glutamine synthetase is located in a small population of perivenous cells "downstream" from the urea cycle-containing periportal cells. Finally, no tracer evidence could be found for the participation of the purine nucleotide cycle in ammonia production from aspartate. The present work continues to emphasize the usefulness of [13N]ammonia for short-term metabolic studies under truly tracer conditions, particularly when turnover times are on the order of seconds.
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PMID:Short-term metabolic fate of [13N]ammonia in rat liver in vivo. 287 38

A glutamate auxotroph was obtained in Nostoc muscorum by induced mutagenesis with nitrosoguanidine. The metabolic pathway leading to glutamate synthesis was traced by selecting several enzymes. The strain was found to be lacking glutamate dehydrogenase. Other enzymes, however, were normal in their activity including isocitric dehydrogenase, glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase. Nitrogen metabolism of the auxotroph and wild type was compared. The strain released exceedingly high amounts of ammonium in the medium.
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PMID:Regulation of glutamate dehydrogenase activity and ammonia production in a nitrogen fixing cyanobacterium. 288 Apr 48

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.
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PMID:Ammonia assimilation in Bacillus polymyxa. 15N NMR and enzymatic studies. 288 2

The specific activities of glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate synthase (GOGAT) were 4.2- and 2.2-fold higher, respectively, in cells of Azospirillum brasilense grown with N2 than with 43 mM NH4+ as the source of nitrogen. Conversely, the specific activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) was 2.7-fold higher in 43 mM NH4+-grown cells than in N2-grown cells. These results indicate that NH4+ could be assimilated and that glutamate could be formed by either the GS-GOGAT or GDH pathway or both, depending on the cellular concentration of NH4+. The routes of in vivo synthesis of glutamate were identified by using 13N as a metabolic tracer. The products of assimilation of 13NH4+ were, in order of decreasing radioactivity, glutamine, glutamate, and alanine. The formation of [13N]glutamine and [13N]glutamate by NH4+-grown cells was inhibited in the additional presence of methionine sulfoximine (an inhibitor of GS) and diazooxonorleucine (an inhibitor of GOGAT). Incorporation of 13N into glutamine, glutamate, and alanine decreased in parallel in the presence of carrier NH4+. These results imply that the GS-GOGAT pathway is the primary route of NH4+ assimilation by A. brasilense grown with excess or limiting nitrogen and that GDH has, at best, a minor role in the synthesis of glutamate.
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PMID:Assimilation of 13NH4+ by Azospirillum brasilense grown under nitrogen limitation and excess. 288 45

Pathways of ammonia assimilation into glutamic acid in Bacillus macerans were investigated by measurements of the specific activities of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), glutamine synthetase, and glutamate synthase. In ammonia-rich medium, GDH was the predominant pathway of ammonia assimilation. In nitrogen-fixing cells in which the intracellular NH4+ concentration was 1.4 +/- 0.5 mM, the activity of GDH with a Km of 2.2 mM for NH4+ was found to be severalfold higher than that of glutamate synthase. The result suggests that GDH plays a significant role in the assimilation of NH4+ in N2-fixing B. macerans.
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PMID:Role of glutamate dehydrogenase in ammonia assimilation in nitrogen-fixing Bacillus macerans. 288 50

Wild-type Aspergillus nidulans grew equally well on NH4Cl, KNO3 or glutamine as the only nitrogen source. NADP+-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.4) and glutamine synthetase (GS; EC 6.3.1.2) activities varied with the type and concentration of nitrogen source supplied. Glutamate synthase (GOGAT) activity (EC 1.4.7.1) was detected but it was almost unaffected by the type and concentration of nitrogen source supplied. Ion exchange chromatography showed that the GOGAT activity was due to a distinct enzyme. Azaserine, an inhibitor of the GOGAT reaction, reduced the glutamate pool by 60%, indicating that GOGAT is involved in ammonia assimilation by metabolizing the glutamine formed by GS.
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PMID:The involvement of glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase in ammonia assimilation by Aspergillus nidulans. 288 38

Glutamate dehydrogenase (aminating) and glutamine synthetase activities were assayed in Mycobacterium smegmatis following growth on various carbon and nitrogen sources. The activities (expressed as nmoles product formed/min/mg crude extract protein) of these two enzymes were higher in crude extracts from glucose-grown cells than in glycerol- or fructose-grown cells. In the presence of succinate, pyruvate, fumarate or acetate in the growth medium, both these enzyme activities were lower than those in citrate-grown cells. The glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) activity was the same in asparagine and glutamine-grown cells. Ammonium chloride, alanine or glutamic acid, when used as nitrogen source, resulted in low GDH activity as compared to asparagine-grown cells. Glutamine synthetase activity was considerably lower (2-4 fold) when the cells were grown on alanine, glutamine, glutamic acid or ammonium chloride as the nitrogen source than those in asparagine-grown cells. Glutamate and ammonium chloride, when present in the growth medium, repressed both glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase, though the degree of repression was small. The results suggest that only a weak transcriptional control operates for these enzyme activities in M. smegmatis.
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PMID:Changes in the enzyme activities involved in nitrogen assimilation in Mycobacterium smegmatis under various growth conditions. 289 60

In experiments on 18 sheep with a differentiated nitrogen intake (3.7, 6.2 and 21 g N/day), it was found that different enzyme activities--glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) (NADH- and NADPH-dependent) and glutamine synthetase (GS)--of bacteria adhering to the rumen wall and to food particles and the rumen fluid bacteria altered in correlation to the nitrogen intake. With a nitrogen intake of 3.7-6.2 g/day there was a significant increase, and of 6.2-21 g/day a decrease, in NADH- and NADPH-dependent GDH activity in the three given bacterial fractions, with the exception of NADPH-dependent GDH activity of the rumen fluid bacteria of sheep given 3.7-6.2 g N/day, in which the difference was nonsignificant. GS activity was significantly higher only in adherent rumen wall bacteria in the presence of a nitrogen intake of 3.7-6.2-21 g/day. The results show that the effect of the nitrogen intake on the given enzyme activities is strongest in the case of bacteria adhering to the rumen wall. The high GS activity and low GDH activities in these bacteria during lower nitrogen intakes (3.7 g/day) as well as lower rumen ammonia concentration (2.39 +/- 0.98 mmol.l-1) indicate that bacteria adhering to the rumen wall utilize ammonia at an increased rate by means of CS catalyzed reactions. Reduced GDH activity in the presence of a high nitrogen intake (21 g/day) and the relatively high rumen ammonia concentration (36.63 +/- 5.28 mmol.l-1) indicate that ammonia inhibits this enzyme in the rumen bacteria in question.
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PMID:Glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamine synthetase activity of the bacteria of the sheep's rumen after different nitrogen intake. 289 17


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