Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.3.3.1 (citrate synthase)
4,488 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study considers differential sensitivity of citrate synthase (citrate oxaloacetatelyase [CoA acetylating]) EC 4.1.3.7. from an osmoconforming animal (sea anemone) and an osmoregulating animal (the pig) to salt. Attention is drawn to the fact that the osmoconforming sea anemone is in essence a sessile creature while the pig is readily mobile and able to change its ionic environment at will. It had been shown earlier that citrate synthase from another osmoconformer (oyster) is also not sensitive to ionic strength while citrate synthase from osmoregulating white shrimp is sensitive to increasing levels of salt. However, these enzymes are characteristically regulated by ATP and alpha-ketoglutarate. Both forms of citrate synthase are denatured by 6 M guanidine hydrochloride and are aided by salt levels in their refolding but the rate and extent of refolding of the osmoconformer citrate synthase are greater than those of the osmoregulator citrate synthase. Catalytic activity of both forms of citrate synthase is inhibited by incubation in distilled water; osmoconformer citrate synthase was inhibited completely in 7 h while osmoregulator citrate synthase was inhibited only 60% in this time and 80% after 22 h in distilled water. The eco-adaptive and evolutionary implications of these findings are discussed.
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PMID:Interactions of citrate synthases from osmoconforming and osmoregulating animals with salt: possible signs of molecular eco-adaptation? 1 42

Kinetics of utilization of acetyl coenzyme A by citrate synthase of a sea anemone, an osmoconformer, were compared with those of citrate synthases of various osmoregulators. The Kms of the latter enzymes were substantially increased by higher concentrations of salt and the enzyme exhibited hyperbolic substrate saturation curves. Citrate synthase from sea anemone, on the other hand, exhibited allosteric kinetics and minimal effects of salt on its Km. We suggest that the adaptive advantage of this enzymic property to a sedentary osmoconforming organism such as sea anemone is obvious since the osmoregulating creatures are apparently unable to maintain an appropriate low ionic environment in situ and thus probably the Km of their citrate synthases at a low level.
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PMID:Influence of possible in situ ionic environment on kinetics of purified citrate synthase from an osmoconformer sea anemone, Bunedosoma cavernata. 23 4

We describe a mutant of Escherichia coli citrate synthase, CS R319L, in which the arginine residue at position 319 of the sequence has been replaced by leucine. In this mutant, saturation by the substrate acetyl-CoA is changed from sigmoid (Hill parameter = 1.75 +/- 0.2) to hyperbolic (Hill parameter = 1.0 +/- 0.1) and dependence on the activator KCl is greatly reduced. Further mutations at this site and at position 343 (which model building predicts is close enough to allow a side-chain interaction with position 319) are also described. In the wild-type enzyme, the model suggests the possibility of a salt-bridge interaction between Arg-319 (located on the P helix in the small domain) and Glu-343 (in the Q helix in the same domain), but mutation of Glu-343 to Ala (CS E343A) produced a much smaller difference in the kinetic properties than the ARg-319 to Leu mutation did. Small changes in kinetic properties were also obtained with an Arg-319----Glu (CS R319E) mutation. In CS R319L, oxaloacetate, the first substrate to bind, induces an ultraviolet difference spectrum which is obtained with wild-type enzyme only in the presence of KCl. To account for these observations we postulate that wild-type E. coli citrate synthase exists in two conformational states, T and R, which are equilibrium; T state binds NADH, the allosteric inhibitor, while R state binds substrates and can be converted to another substrate-binding state, R', by KCl.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:A mutant of Escherichia coli citrate synthase that affects the allosteric equilibrium. 167 60

The isocitrate lyase from a thermophilic Bacillus is activated about threefold by a variety of salts. Such strong stimulation of activity is not seen with isocitrate lyase from the mesophiles, Bacillus licheniformis, Bacillus megaterium, Escherichia coli, and Aspergillus nidulans. The salt activation is markedly pH-dependent. At pH values above 8.6, salt (KCl) indeed inhibits the enzyme activity. Potassium chloride also causes a significant shift of the pH optimum of the enzyme towards the acid side. As the temperature of the enzyme reaction is raised, activation becomes progressively weaker. Potassium chloride also affords considerable protection against enzyme denaturation at 55 C. The activation and the stabilization, however, appear to be independent effects. Of six other enzymes in the thermophile that were examined, isocitrate dehydrogenase was equally strongly activated by KCl and malate synthase was less strongly, but significantly, activated; citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase, and lactate dehydrogenase were unaffected or slightly inhibited by KCl. The property of being strongly activated by salt appears to be a peculiar characteristic of the thermophile isocitrate lyase and possibly evolved concomitantly with its thermostability.
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PMID:Isocitrate lyase from a thermophilic Bacillus: effect of salts on enzyme activity. 458

This study examines the structural relationship of mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum in liver. Livers of rat and Japanese quail were homogenized and fractionated in media of 0.25 M-sucrose, either 5mM or 50 mM in sodium Hepes [4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazine-ethanesulphonic acid], pH 7.4 (2.2 mM or 22 mM in Na respectively), designated here as low- and high-salt media. Three particulate fractions were prepared by sequential centrifugation. A nuclear pellet sedimenting at 300 g was obtained as described by Shore & Tata [(1977) J. Cell Biol. 72, 714-725], and from the resulting supernatant thereof a low-speed pellet (1100-1500 g) and a high-speed pellet (8000-10 000 g) were prepared. In the low-salt medium the yields of mitochondrial matrix enzymes (citrate synthase, glutamate dehydrogenase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase) and their specific activities in the low-speed pellet were over twice those in the high-speed pellet. In the high-salt medium the yield of matrix enzymes was 4-5 times, and the specific activities were up to 3 times, higher in the low-speed pellet than in the high-speed pellet. Oxygen uptake and respiratory control ratio were also much higher in the low-speed pellets in both media. Some 50-65% of the microsomal marker enzyme glucose 6-phosphatase was in the supernatant from the high-speed pellet, and the rest sedimented with the mitochondria. Repeated washing with the high-salt medium removes only a limited amount of reticulum. Washing with salt-free sucrose removes most of the reticulum, but a fraction remains strongly bound to mitochondria. Homogenates from quail and rat liver were fractioned isopycnically on Percoll gradients in either 0.25 M-sucrose or 0.25 M-sucrose/50 mM-sodium Hepes. Up to five particulate bands were separated and assayed. Mitochondria were present in two to three bands and were associated with endoplasmic reticulum. As seen in the phase-contrast microscope the mitochondria prepared in the low-salt medium consist of separate organelles. In the high-salt medium the mitochondria appear as chains of from three to ten organelles not touching each other. On addition of univalent ions at concentrations above 20 mM, the mitochondria aggregate into chains, and at higher ionic strength larger multidimensional aggregates are formed. The dispersion and aggregation of mitochondria are reversible. Negatively stained electron micrographs reveal a branched mitochondrial structure, with mitochondria held together by strands of reticulum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Mitochondrial-reticular cytostructure in liver cells. 635 78

A new, weakly hydrophobic, high-performance liquid chromatography column has been developed for the separation of native proteins based on their relative hydrophobicities. Starting with a covalently bound, hydrophilic polyamine matrix, packing materials were synthesized through acylation with anhydrides and acid chlorides of increasing chain length to obtain increasingly hydrophobic surfaces. Proteins in aqueous buffers were induced to bind hydrophobically to the columns by the use of high salt concentrations in the mobile phase. Elution was achieved by decreasing the ionic strength of the solvent in a linear gradient. A mixture of cytochrome c, conalbumin, and beta-glucosidase was used as a standard to test the resolving power of newly synthesized columns. On a 4-cm butyrate column, baseline resolution was achieved in 20 min with a gradient of 3.0 mu sodium sulfate in 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, to water. The static loading capacity for each column was determined using a hemoglobin binding assay. Capacities normally ranged between 150 and 180 mg of hemoglobin per gram of support. Since proteins are not denatured in hydrophobic interaction chromatography, enzymes eluted from the column retained enzymatic activity. Samples of alpha-amylase and beta-glucosidase ranging in size from 10 to 200 micrograms were recovered from the butyrate column with greater than 92% enzymatic activity in all cases. In a single trial, the enzyme citrate synthase was recovered from the benzoate column with 92% retention of enzymatic activity.
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PMID:High-performance hydrophobic interaction chromatography of proteins. 642 67

The first step in the overall catalytic mechanism of citrate synthase is the binding and polarization of oxaloacetate. Active-site residues Arg-314, Asp-312 and His-264 in Escherichia coli citrate synthase, which are involved in oxaloacetate binding, were converted by site-directed mutagenesis to Gln-314, Asn-312 and Asn-264 respectively. The R314Q and D312N mutants expressed negligible overall catalytic activity at pH 8.0, the normal assay pH, but substantial activities for the partial reactions that reflect the cleavage and hydrolysis of the substrate intermediate citryl-CoA. However, when the pH was lowered to 7.0, the overall reaction of the mutants became significant, in contrast to the wild-type enzyme, whereas the two mutants exhibited reduced activities for the partial reactions. This result is consistent with the existence of a rate-limiting step between the two partial reactions for these mutants that is pH-dependent. The Km for oxaloacetate for the two mutants was increased 10-fold and was paralleled by an increase in the Km for citryl-CoA, whereas the Km for acetyl-CoA was increased only 2-fold. Overall, there was a striking parallel between the results obtained for these two mutants, which suggests that they are functionally linked in the E. coli enzyme. The equivalent of these two residues form a salt bridge in the pig heart citrate synthase crystal structure. The H264N mutant, in which the amide nitrogen of asparagine should mimic the delta-nitrogen of histidine, showed negligible activity in terms of both overall and partial catalysis, which may result from a hindrance of conformational change upon oxaloacetate binding. The affinity of this mutant for oxaloacetate appeared to be greatly reduced when investigated using indirect fluorescence and chemical modification techniques.
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PMID:The effect of replacing the conserved active-site residues His-264, Asp-312 and Arg-314 on the binding and catalytic properties of Escherichia coli citrate synthase. 801 Sep 58

Recent studies have suggested that modifications in mitochondrial F1-adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase) activity may play an important role in the regulation of myocardial oxidative phosphorylation. The goal of the present study was to develop and characterize an assay of F1-ATPase activity that could be performed repeatedly on an intact heart under various physiological states. With the use of submitochondrial particles prepared from biopsy samples of canine myocardium, we found reproducible F1-ATPase activity when normalized to the activity of the intramitochondrial enzyme citrate synthase. The oligomycin-sensitive component of the ATPase activity was found to be mainly F1-ATPase. F1-ATPase activity of normal myocardium increased by incubation in high salt-pH buffer, suggesting baseline inhibition. Five minutes after global ischemia, F1-ATPase activity decreased to 60% of baseline. Hypoxia for 10 min resulted in no significant change in F1-ATPase activity. With phenylephrine infusion, myocardial oxygen consumption more than doubled, whereas F1-ATPase activity increased by approximately 30%. Both returned to baseline levels after discontinuation of the drug. With the use of an assay developed to measure F1-ATPase activity of intact myocardium, changes of the enzyme activity were found during both ischemia and at increased work loads. These data suggest that alterations of F1-ATPase activity may contribute to the regulation of myocardial oxidative phosphorylation.
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PMID:Mitochondrial F1-ATPase activity of canine myocardium: effects of hypoxia and stimulation. 802 1

Dahl salt-sensitive (S) rats develop hypertension in response to a high-salt diet, whereas Dahl salt-resistant (R) rats do not. There is good evidence that the Dahl S kidneys have diminished natriuretic capacity. We studied the rate of Na+ transport by primary cultures of the inner medullary collecting duct from these two strains to determine whether there were intrinsic differences. Monolayers obtained from prehypertensive S rats transported Na+ at twice the rate as monolayers from age-matched R rats. Mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid hormones increased Na+ transport from both strains; the S rat monolayers always displayed higher transport rates than R rat monolayers with the same treatment. The Na+ entry pathway in both S and R rat monolayers was via an Na+ channel. The difference in Na+ transport was not explained by a difference in the metabolism of corticosterone, ATP content, citrate synthase activity, ultrastructural appearance, or rate of maturation. Monolayers from S rats tended to have higher protein and DNA content, but these differences could not account for the difference in Na+ transport. Anion secretion in response to adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate agonists was similar. These results demonstrate intrinsic differences in renal tubular cells that may play an important role in the pathogenesis of salt-sensitive hypertension.
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PMID:IMCD cells cultured from Dahl S rats absorb more Na+ than Dahl R rats. 894 97

Wistar-Furth rats (WF) do not develop hypertension when treated with salt and mineralocorticoids and therefore may be useful for investigating the mechanisms of mineralocorticoid action and hypertension. In the present studies, we determined vascular and renal responses of WF to mineralocorticoids. Control Wistar rats (W) developed deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-NaCl and dexamethasone hypertension, whereas WF rats developed dexamethasone hypertension only. Aldosterone treatment of vascular smooth muscle cells cultured from WF resulted in 82% less upregulation of angiotensin II radioligand binding, 50% less induction of angiotensin II AT1a receptor mRNA, and 76% less potentiation of angiotensin II-stimulated inositol phosphates than did aldosterone treatment of cells from W. Similarly, DOCA-NaCl potentiated angiotensin II- and phenylephrine-stimulated contractions in aortic rings from W but not from WF. Although DOCA-NaCl treatment affected hypokalemia to an equal degree in WF and W, increases in renal citrate synthase activity (a specific renal mineralocorticoid response) were greater in W than in WF. WF manifest a partial defect in mineralocorticoid responsiveness in vascular smooth muscle and, possibly, in the kidney.
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PMID:Resistance to mineralocorticoids in Wistar-Furth rats. 908 24


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