Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.6.99.3 (diaphorase)
5,903 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Microsome fractions from hypocotyls of dark-grown soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merrill) seedlings incorporated myo-inositol into phosphatidylinositol by an exchange reaction stimulated by Mn(2+) (optimum at 10 mm) and cytidine nucleotides (CMP = CDP approximately CTP) but not by Mg(2+) or nucleotides other than cytidine nucleotides. The activity was membrane associated, with an optimum pH of 8, stimulated by auxin, and inhibited by certain thiol reagents or by heating above 40 degrees C. With radioactive inositol, phosphatidylinositol was the only radioactive product. That turnover was by myo-inositol exchange was verified from experiments where unlabeled inositol replaced already incorporated inositol with approximately the same kinetics as for the incorporation of label. Both the incorporation and the displacement reactions were stimulated by Mn(2+) and CMP and both were responsive to auxin with comparable dose dependency. Corresponding exchange activities with choline or ethanolamine were not observed. The phosphatidylinositol-myo-inositol exchange activity was low or absent from plasma membrane, tonoplast, and mitochondria enriched fractions. The activity co-localized on free-flow electrophoresis and aqueous two-phase partition with NADPH cytochrome c reductase and latent IDPase, markers for endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus, respectively. With microsomes incubated with both ATP and inositol, polyphosphoinositides were unlabeled demonstrating separate locations for the inositol exchange and phosphatidylinositol kinase reactions. Thus, the auxin-responsive inositol turnover activity of soybean membranes is distinct from the usual de novo biosynthetic pathway. It is not the result of a traditional D-type phospholipase and appears not to involve plasma membrane-associated polyphosphoinositide metabolism. It most closely resembles previously described phosphatidylinositol-myo-inositol exchange activities of plant and animal endoplasmic reticulum.
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PMID:Characteristics of a phosphatidylinositol exchange activity of soybean microsomes. 1666 55

Glycosyltransferases catalyze transfer of sugar moieties from activated donor molecules to specific acceptor molecules, forming glycosidic bonds. Identification of selective modulators of glycosyltransferases is important both to provide new tools for investigating pathophysiological roles of glycosylation reactions in cells and tissues, and as new leads in drug discovery. Here we describe a universal enzyme-coupled fluorescence assay for glycosyltransferases, based on quantification of nucleotides produced in the glycosyl transfer reaction. GDP, UDP, and CMP are phosphorylated with nucleotide kinase in the presence of excess ATP, generating ADP. Via coupled enzyme reactions involving ADP-hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and diaphorase, the ADP is utilized for conversion of resazurin to resorufin, which is determined by fluorescence measurement. The method was validated by comparison with an HPLC method, and employed to screen the LOPAC1280 library for inhibitors in a 384-well plate format. The assay performed well, with a Z'-factor of 0.80. We identified 12 hits for human galactosyltransferase B4GALT1 after elimination of false positives that inhibited the enzyme-coupled assay system. The assay components are all commercially available and the reagent cost is only 2 to 10 US cents per well. This method is suitable for low-cost, high-throughput assay of various glycosyltransferases and screening of glycosyltransferase modulators.
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PMID:Development of a highly sensitive, high-throughput assay for glycosyltransferases using enzyme-coupled fluorescence detection. 2429 89