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Query: EC:2.6.1.1 (
aspartate aminotransferase
)
21,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The short-term metabolic fate of blood-borne [13N]ammonia was determined in the brains of chronically (8- or 14-week portacaval-shunted rats) or acutely (urease-treated) hyperammonemic rats. Using a "freeze-blowing" technique it was shown that the overwhelming route for metabolism of blood-borne [13N]ammonia in normal, chronically hyperammonemic and acutely hyperammonemic rat brain was incorporation into
glutamine
(amide). However, the rate of turnover of [13N]ammonia to L-[amide-13N]
glutamine
was slower in the hyperammonemic rat brain than in the normal rat brain. The activities of several enzymes involved in cerebral ammonia and glutamate metabolism were also measured in the brains of 14-week portacaval-shunted rats. The rat brain appears to have little capacity to adapt to chronic hyperammonemia because there were no differences in activity compared with those of weight-matched controls for the following brain enzymes involved in glutamate/ammonia metabolism: glutamine synthetase, glutamate dehydrogenase,
aspartate aminotransferase
,
glutamine
transaminase, glutaminase, and glutamate decarboxylase. The present findings are discussed in the context of the known deleterious effects on the CNS of high ammonia levels in a variety of diseases.
...
PMID:Cerebral ammonia metabolism in hyperammonemic rats. 285 53
Energy metabolism in proliferating cultured rat thymocytes was compared with that of freshly prepared non-proliferating resting cells. Cultured rat thymocytes enter a proliferative cycle after stimulation by concanavalin A and Lymphocult T (interleukin-2), with maximal rates of DNA synthesis at 60 h. Compared with incubated resting thymocytes, glucose metabolism by incubated proliferating thymocytes was 53-fold increased; 90% of the amount of glucose utilized was converted into lactate, whereas resting cells metabolized only 56% to lactate. However, the latter oxidized 27% of glucose to CO2, as opposed to 1.1% by the proliferating cells. Activities of hexokinase, 6-phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase and aldolase in proliferating thymocytes were increased 12-, 17-, 30- and 24-fold respectively, whereas the rate of pyruvate oxidation was enhanced only 3-fold. The relatively low capacity of pyruvate degradation in proliferating thymocytes might be the reason for almost complete conversion of glucose into lactate by these cells.
Glutamine
utilization by rat thymocytes was 8-fold increased during proliferation. The major end products of
glutamine
metabolism are glutamate, aspartate, CO2 and ammonia. A complete recovery of
glutamine
carbon and nitrogen in the products was obtained. The amount of glutamate formed by phosphate-dependent glutaminase which entered the citric acid cycle was enhanced 5-fold in the proliferating cells: 76% was converted into 2-oxoglutarate by
aspartate aminotransferase
, present in high activity, and the remaining 24% by glutamate dehydrogenase. With resting cells the same percentages were obtained (75 and 25). Maximal activities of glutaminase, glutamate dehydrogenase and
aspartate aminotransferase
were increased 3-, 12- and 6-fold respectively in proliferating cells; 32% of the glutamate metabolized in the citric acid cycle was recovered in CO2 and 61% in aspartate. In resting cells this proportion was 41% and 59% and in mitogen-stimulated cells 39% and 65% respectively. Addition of glucose (4 mM) or malate (2 mM) strongly decreased the rates of
glutamine
utilization and glutamate conversion into 2-oxoglutarate by proliferating thymocytes and also affected the pathways of further glutamate metabolism. Addition of 2 mM-pyruvate did not alter the rate of
glutamine
utilization by proliferating thymocytes, but decreased the rate of metabolism beyond the stage of glutamate significantly. Formation of acetyl-CoA in the presence of pyruvate might explain the relatively enhanced oxidation of glutamate to CO2 (56%) by proliferating thymocytes.
...
PMID:Glutamine and glucose metabolism during thymocyte proliferation. Pathways of glutamine and glutamate metabolism. 286 9
The isolated perfused rat kidney was shown to synthesize serine from aspartate or glutamate, both of which are also precursors of glucose. The major products of aspartate metabolism were ammonia, serine, glutamate, glucose,
glutamine
and CO2. Perfusion of kidneys with aspartate in the presence of amino-oxyacetate resulted in a near-complete inhibition of aspartate metabolism, illustrating the essential role of
aspartate aminotransferase
in the metabolism of this substrate. Radioactivity from 14C-labelled aspartate and from 14C-labelled glycerol was incorporated into serine and glucose. Production of both glucose and serine from aspartate was suppressed in the presence of 3-mercaptopicolinic acid. These data provide evidence for the operation of the phosphorylated and/or non-phosphorylated pathway for serine production to the presence of 3-mercaptopicolinic acid. This is explained by simultaneous glycolysis. The rate of glucose production, but not that of serine, was greater in kidneys perfused with glutamate or with aspartate plus glycerol than the rates obtained by perfusion with aspartate alone. These data are taken to suggest that serine synthesis occurred at a near-maximal rate, and that the capacity of the kidney for serine synthesis from glucose precursors is lower than that for glucose synthesis.
...
PMID:Serine synthesis by an isolated perfused rat kidney preparation. 286 20
Using analytical subcellular fractionation techniques, 12% of the total L-alanine aminotransferase activity and 26% of the total L-
aspartate aminotransferase
activity was localized in enterocyte mitochondria. Alanine and aspartate were products from the oxidation of
glutamine
and glutamate by enterocyte mitochondria. At low concentrations, malate stimulated aspartate synthesis but was inhibitory at higher concentrations. The malate inhibition of aspartate synthesis, which increased in the presence of pyruvate, was accompanied by an increase in alanine synthesis. With
glutamine
as substrate in the presence of pyruvate and malate, alanine synthesis was increased by 127% on addition of purified L-alanine aminotransferase, in spite of large amounts of glutamate generated. It was concluded that when pyruvate is available the important route for
glutamine
or glutamate oxidation by transamination was via L-alanine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase and not via
L-aspartate:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase
. Results suggested that mitochondria may account for 50% of alanine production from
glutamine
in the enterocyte despite the relatively low activity of L-alanine aminotransferase therein.
...
PMID:Transamination pathways influencing L-glutamine and L-glutamate oxidation by rat enterocyte mitochondria and the subcellular localization of L-alanine aminotransferase and L-aspartate aminotransferase. 286 79
In experiments on 6 sheep the authors found the following enzyme activities in bacteria in the rumen fluid, bacteria adhering to the epithelium of the rumen wall and bacteria adhering to food particles in the rumen (given in nkat X g-1 bacterial dry weight): GDH (NADH): 725 +/- 165, 558 +/- 127, 661 +/- 153; GDH (NADPH): 558 +/- 338, 255 +/- 88, 565 +/- 139; GOAT (NADH): 46 +/- 23, 67 +/- 31, 66 +/- 14; GOGAT/NADPH: 58 +/- 27, 56 +/- 15, 65 +/- 29; GS: 153 +/- 65, 69 +/- 35, 71 +/- 32; ALT: 71 +/- 25, 43 +/- 20, 52 +/- 11;
AST
: 52 +/- 12, 33 +/- 16, 28 +/- 15. The results show that, except for GDH (NADPH), there were no significant differences between the given enzyme activities in the rumen fluid and in bacteria adhering to the rumen wall and to food. Adherent rumen bacteria have the same potential possibilities as the rumen fluid bacteria for the utilization of ammonia, particularly for the synthesis of glutamic acid,
glutamine
, alanine and aspartic acid, with the above enzymes as catalysts. By means of the GS/GOGAT system, adherent rumen bacteria can probably synthesize glutamic acid in the presence of a limited NH3 concentration in the rumen.
...
PMID:Ammonia-utilizing enzymes of adherent bacteria in the sheep's rumen. 286 70
Amino acids of the glutamate family, viz. glutamic acid, aspartic acid,
glutamine
, gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA) and alanine, along with the activities of glutamic acid dehydrogenase (GDH),
aspartic acid aminotransferase
(
AST
), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), glutamine synthetase (GS), glutaminase, glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) and GABA-aminotransferase (GABA-T) were estimated in cerebral cortex, cerebellum and brain stem of rats treated with a single dose of lithium or with seven daily doses of lithium (3 m-equiv./kg body wt). The levels of GABA were found to increase in cerebral cortex and brain stem following the administration of a single dose and also were found to be increased in cerebral cortex and cerebellum after treatment for 7 days. The content of glutamic acid was increased in all three brain regions after treatment for 7 days.
Glutamine
was increased in both cerebral cortex and brain stem after treatment for 7 days, whereas aspartic acid was increased in brain stem after both the administration of single dose and treatment for 7 days. A significant increase (P less than 0.05) in the activity of GS was observed in brain stem after 7 days of treatment. Similarly, a significant increase (P less than 0.01) in the activity of
AST
was observed in all three regions of the brain following the treatment for 7 days. The above results are discussed in relation to the known effects of lithium on brain cation metabolism and a suggestion is made that an imbalance in the functional activities of glutamic acid and GABA as a result of quantitative changes in these amino acids, brought about by lithium, may play a role in the therapeutic efficacy of lithium in bipolar disorders.
...
PMID:Acute and short-term effects of lithium on glutamate metabolism in rat brain. 286 24
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.
...
PMID:Short-term metabolic fate of [13N]ammonia in rat liver in vivo. 287 38
Pathways of
glutamine
metabolism in resting and proliferating rat thymocytes were evaluated by in vitro incubations of freshly prepared or 60-h cultured cells for 1-2 h with [U14C]
glutamine
. Complete recovery of
glutamine
carbons utilized in products allowed quantification of the pathways of
glutamine
metabolism under the experimental conditions. Partial oxidation of
glutamine
via 2-oxoglutarate in a truncated citric acid cycle to CO2 and oxaloacetate, which then was converted to aspartate, accounted for 76 and 69%, respectively, of the
glutamine
metabolized beyond the stage of glutamate by resting and proliferating thymocytes. Complete oxidation to CO2 in the citric acid cycle via 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and isocitrate dehydrogenase accounted for 25 and 7%, respectively. In proliferating cells a substantial amount of
glutamine
carbons was also recovered in pyruvate, alanine, and especially lactate. The main route of
glutamine
and glutamate entrance into the citric acid cycle via 2-oxoglutarate in both cells is transamination by
aspartate aminotransferase
rather than oxidative deamination by glutamate dehydrogenase. In the presence of glucose as second substrate,
glutamine
utilization and aspartate formation markedly decreased, but complete oxidation of
glutamine
carbons to CO2 increased to 37 and 23%, respectively, in resting and proliferating cells. The dipeptide, glycyl-
L-glutamine
, which is more stable than free
glutamine
, can substitute for
glutamine
in thymocyte cultures at higher concentrations.
...
PMID:Pathways of glutamine and glutamate metabolism in resting and proliferating rat thymocytes: comparison between free and peptide-bound glutamine. 288 73
Based on the selective inhibition of glutamate release in cerebellar granule cells in primary cultures by the
aspartate aminotransferase
inhibitor, aminooxyacetic acid, and by the ketodicarboxylate carrier inhibitor, phenylsuccinate, a novel model for synthesis of transmitter glutamate is suggested: Glutamate is formed from
glutamine
in the mitochondrial intramembrane space by phosphate-activated glutaminase, transported across the inner membrane in exchange with aspartate, transaminated in the matrix to alpha-ketoglutarate, which via the ketodicarboxylate carrier is transferred to the cytoplasm, and transaminated to form transmitter glutamate. Such a mechanism would explain the functional role of
aspartate aminotransferase
in glutamatergic neurons.
...
PMID:Evidence that aspartate aminotransferase activity and ketodicarboxylate carrier function are essential for biosynthesis of transmitter glutamate. 289 6
The metabolism of [15N]glutamate was studied with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in rat brain synaptosomes incubated with and without glucose. [15N]Glutamate was taken up rapidly by the preparation, reaching a steady-state level in less than 5 min. 15N was incorporated predominantly into aspartate and, to a much lesser extent, into gamma-aminobutyrate. The amount of [15N]ammonia formed was very small, and the enrichment of 15N in alanine and
glutamine
was below the level of detection. Omission of glucose substantially increased the rate and amount of [15N]aspartate generated. It is proposed that in synaptosomes (a) the predominant route of glutamate nitrogen disposal is through the
aspartate aminotransferase
reaction; (b) the
aspartate aminotransferase
pathway generates 2-oxoglutarate, which then serves as the metabolic fuel needed to produce ATP; (c) utilization of glutamate via transamination to aspartate is greatly accelerated when flux through the tricarboxylic acid cycle is diminished by the omission of glucose; (d) the metabolism of glutamate via glutamate dehydrogenase in intact synaptosomes is slow, most likely reflecting restriction of enzyme activity by some unknown factor(s), which suggests that the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction may not be near equilibrium in neurons; and (e) the activities of alanine aminotransferase and glutamine synthetase in synaptosomes are very low.
...
PMID:Glucose and synaptosomal glutamate metabolism: studies with [15N]glutamate. 290 Aug 79
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