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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 activity of the aspartate-, alanine-,
tyrosine
-, phenylalanine- and tryptophane aminotransferases in the rat organes in development have been investigated by quantitative histochemical methods. The isoenzymes have also been examined. The variable increase of the aminotransferase activity has been observed in the liver, brain, heart, skeletal muscle and kidney. In spite of the differences of the
aspartate aminotransferase
activity in the organs, the increase up to the 7th postnatal day, the reduction after that and the repeated increase after the 14th day reaching the level of the adult animals is evident as a common trend. A considerable increase of the alanine aminotransferase activity has been observed in the late postnatal period. While the difference in the activity of the aromatic aminotransferases in the embryonic organs is small, the changes of the 3 enzymes are different in the postnatal development. The number and the intensity of the isoenzymes of the aspartate- and alanine aminotransferases increase in the development. The isoenzyme spectrum of aromatic aminotransferases in the embryo proves an equal in number and intensity of fractions. In the development this similarity is preserved only with regard to cathode isoenzymes, while with anode once some differences appear.
...
PMID:Histochemical evidence of aminotransferases. 82 67
The pyridoxal form of both cytosolic and mitochondrial
aspartate aminotransferase
is irreversibly inactivated consequent to its interaction with the beta,gamma-unsaturated substrate analogue vinylglycine. Per catalytic cycle, 90% of the enzyme molecules are inactivated while 10% escape inactivation by transamination to the pyridoxamine form. In the presence of vinylglycine plus 2-oxoglutarate, inactivation is complete because of retransamination of the pyridoxamine form to the susceptible pyridoxal form. Peptide analyses after inactivation with [1-14C]vinylglycine showed that vinylglycine alkylates the active-site lysine residue 258 which forms the internal aldimine with the coenzyme pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The coenzyme itself is left intact; resolution of the inactivated enzyme by base or trichloroacetic acid yields pyridoxal-5'-P. The absorption spectrum of the inactivated enzyme (lambdamax 335 nm) suggests that the cofactor is bound as a substituted aldimine. The proposed pathway of alkylation of Lys-258 involves abstraction of the alpha proton from vinylglycine, isomerization to the alpha,beta-unsaturated enamine, and subsequent nucleophilic attack of the epsilon-amino group of the lysyl residue at the beta carbon of the inhibitor. The determination of the amino acid sequence around the coenzyme-binding lysyl residue in the mitochondrial isoenzyme from chicken gave Ala-(epsilon-Pxy)Lys-Asn-Met-(Gly,Leu,
Tyr
) which is identical with the other mitochondrial transaminases examined so far.
...
PMID:Active-site labeling of aspartate aminotransferases by the beta,gamma-unsaturated amino acid vinylglycine. 91 93
Holo and apoenzyme of
aspartate aminotransferase
from beef kidney are 80% inactivated by photoxidation in the presence of 2 X 10(-6) M tetraiodofluroescein with the modification of two histidine residues per enzyme protomer. At a higher concentration (1 X 10(-5) M) a
tyrosine
residue is also modified. The keto substrates, ketoglutarate and oxalacetate, protect the enzyme from photoxidation. Diethylpyrocarbonate modifies three histidine residues per enzyme protomer and reduces the activity only 10%. These results suggest that the two histidine residues photoxidized through the sensitizer, are located in the active site of the enzyme, at least one of these appears to be involved in ketosubstrate binding. The other three histidines modified by diethylpyrocarbonate are likely located on the enzyme surface and are not involved in the catalytic activity of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Chemical modifications of histidine residues in cytoplasmic asparate aminotransferase from beef kidney. 94 May 48
Mitochondrial
aspartate aminotransferase
from beef kidney is 50% inhibited after 2 hr treatment with 2.5 mM tetranitromethane at pH 8. Two
tyrosine
residues per enzyme protomer (46,000 daltons) are modified by the reagent either in the holoenzyme or in the apoenzyme. In both cases the five SH groups titratable with p-mercuribenzoate are not modified by the reagent. However, with a tetranitromethane concentration higher than 2.5 mM and 10 mM mercaptoethanol, an additional
tyrosine
residue is nitrated in both holo- and apoenzymes. These results are not affected by the presence in the incubation mixture of the substrates alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate both at ten times their Km values. Mercaptoethanol does not impair the recombination of native or nitrated apoenzyme with the coenzyme and does not reduce the coenzyme moiety of native or nitrated holoenzyme, but promotes a conformational change in the nitrated holoenzyme which causes inactivation. Hydrosulfite promotes the reduction of the coenzyme moiety of native and nitro holoenzyme resulting in their inactivation, largely in the nitrated form. The recombination of the coenzyme with native or nitrated apoenzyme is not influenced by hydrosulfite.
...
PMID:Role of tyrosine residues in mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase from beef kidney. 117 45
Glutamate
aspartate transaminase
(
EC 2.6.1.1
) is a dimeric enzyme with identical subunits with each active site containing pyridoxal 5'-phosphate linked via an internal Shiff's base to a lysine residue. It is not known if these sites interact during catalysis but negative cooperativity has been reported for binding of the coenzyme (Arrio-Dupont, M. (1972), Eur. J. Biochem. 30, 307). Also nonequivalence of its subunits in binding 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulfonate (Harris, H.E., and Bayley, P. M. (1975), Biochem. J. 145, 125), in modification of only a single
tyrosine
with full loss of activity (Christen, P., and Riordan, J.F. (1970), Biochemistry 9, 3025), and following modification with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (Cournil, I., and Arrio-Dupont, M. (1973), Biochemie 55, 103) has been reported. However, steady-state and transient kinetic methods as well as direct titration of the active site chromophore with substrates and substrate analogs have not revealed any cooperative phenomena (Braunstein, A. E. (1973), Enzymes, 3rd Ed. 9, 379). It was therefore decided that a more direct approach should be used to clarify the quistion of subunit interaction during the covalent phase of catalysis. To this end a hybrid method was devised in which a hybrid transaminase was prepared which contained one subunit with a functional active site while the other subunit has the internal Shiff's base reduced with NaBH4. The specific activities and amount of "actively bound" pyridoxal 5'-phosphate are both in a 2:1 ratio for the native and hybrid forms. Comparison of the steady-state kinetic properties of the hybrid and native enzyme forms shows that both forms gave parallel double reciprocal plots which is characteristic of the Ping-Pong Bi-Bi mechanism of transamination. The Km values for the substrates L-aspartic acid and alpha-ketoglutaric acid are nearly identical while the Vmax value for the hybrid is one-half the value of the native transaminase. It therefore appears that the active sites of glutamate
aspartate transaminase
function independently and a compulsory flip-flop mechanism is not involved.
...
PMID:Hybridization of glutamate aspartate transaminase. Investigation of subunit interaction. 117 14
The sequences of the coenzyme-binding peptide of both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferases from sheep liver were determined. The holoenzymes were treated with NaBH4 and digested with chymotrypsin; peptides containing bound pyridoxal phosphate were then isolated. One phosphopyridoxyl peptide was obtained from sheep liver cytoplasmic
aspartate aminotransferase
. Its sequence was Ser-Ne-(phosphopyridoxyl)-Lys-Asn-Phe. This sequence is identical with that reported for the homologous peptide from pig heart cytoplasmic
aspartate aminotransferase
. Two phosphopyridoxyl peptides with different RF values were isolated from the sheep liver mitochondrial isoenzyme. They had the same N-terminal amino acid and similar amino acid composition. The mitochondrial phosphopyridoxyl peptide of highest yield and purity had the sequence Ala-Ne-(phosphopyridoxyl)-Lys-Asx-Met-Gly-Leu-
Tyr
. The sequence of the first four amino acids is identical with that already reported for the phosphopyridoxyl tetrapeptide from the pig heart mitochondrial isoenzyme. The heptapeptide found for the sheep liver mitochondrial isoenzyme closely resembles the corresponding sequence taken from the primary structure of the pig heart cytoplasmic
aspartate aminotransferase
.
...
PMID:The sequences of the coenzyme-binding peptide in the cytoplasmic and the mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferases from sheep liver. 118 Aug 94
Cytoplasmic
aspartate aminotransferase
from beef kidney loses 25% of its activity on nitration with tetranitromethane while the apoenzyme about 95%. In the holoenzyme 0.5
tyrosine
residue and 1.0
tyrosine
residue in the apoenzyme are nitrated per enzyme protomer. In addition 1 cysteine residue per protomer is oxidized in both. The presence of substrates, alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate, both at ten times their Km values, does not change these results. Mercaptoethanol does not affect the residual activity of either the nitrated holo or apoenzyme. Dithionite abolishes the activity of the nitrated holoenzyme by reducing tha coenzyme moiety. It has no effect on the native holoenzyme or on either the native or nitroapoenzyme.
...
PMID:Role of tyrosine residues in cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase from beef kidney. 127 58
In four abnormal fibrinogens with a point mutation in the gamma chain, all characterized by impaired fibrin polymerization, we identified single base exchanges in the respective mutant gamma chain genes by polymerase chain reaction followed by DNA sequence analysis. These base exchanges accounted for the amino acid substitutions previously reported from our laboratory. They were exchanges of C to T (CGC for gamma Arg-275 to TGC for Cys) in fibrinogen Osaka II, T to G (
AAT
for gamma Asn-308 to AAG for Lys) in fibrinogen Kyoto I, T to C (ATG for gamma Met-310 to ACG for Thr) in fibrinogen Asahi, and G to T (GAT for gamma Asp-330 to TAT for
Tyr
) in fibrinogen Kyoto III. These base exchanges were found to reside in exon VIII of the gamma chain gene. Since many abnormal molecules are associated with polymerization defects, unless associated with the impaired release of fibrinopeptides A and/or B, exon VIII of the gamma chain gene may deserve careful study to define the structural alterations.
...
PMID:Gene analyses of abnormal fibrinogens with a mutation in the gamma chain. 142 Nov 74
We determined the molar ratio of branched-chain amino acids to
tyrosine
(BTR) in plasma and in serum by enzymatic method and compared it with Fischer ratio (the molar ratio of branched-chain amino acids to
tyrosine
and phenylalanine) in plasma obtained by conventional HPLC method. BTR in plasma and in serum was well correlated with plasma Fischer ratio. The normal range (mean +/- 2SD) of BTR was determined to be 4.41-10.05 in 210 normal subjects. In addition, we investigated the distribution of BTR values in patients with various liver diseases. BTR value decreased according to the severity of liver disease. We evaluated the clinical usefulness of BTR in patients with chronic liver diseases by cumulative distribution analysis (CDA) graph and receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC) analysis. The area under the curve for BTR analyzed by ROC for CH versus LC.HCC group was the highest (86.3%) of any for various concurrently-measured liver function tests, and was significantly higher than
AST
/ALT, ALT,
AST
, gamma-GT (each, p less than 0.001) and ALB (p less than 0.05). These diagnostic results showed that BTR is a superior indicator in discriminating between liver cirrhosis and chronic hepatitis.
...
PMID:[The clinical usefulness of the molar ratio of branched-chain amino acids to tyrosine (BTR) in discriminating stage of chronic liver diseases]. 151 41
The distribution of amino acids between plasma, liver and brain was studied in adult male rats, fed a diet containing 8.7, 17 (control animals), 32 and 51% of protein during 15 days. The caloric intake was nearly equal in all groups. The highest food intake was observed in the animals on the low protein diet. Changes in plasma amino acids were variable. In contrast to the behavior of most amino acids in plasma, the branched chain amino acids were highest in the animals fed the 51% protein diet. Despite the low protein intake in the animals fed a 8.7% protein diet, the concentration of serine, glutamic acid, glutamine, glycine, alanine, methionine, isoleucine, leucine, phenylalanine and ornithine were significantly higher compared to control animals, whereas in those receiving a high protein diet, valine, leucine,
tyrosine
, tryptophan and histidine increased in relation to the increased protein and amino acid intake. The plasma amino acid patterns are not greatly influenced by the amino acid distribution in the food and the amount ingested. Alanine aminotransferase,
aspartate aminotransferase
, glutamate dehydrogenase and cholinesterase showed a two- to fivefold increased activity in the liver of animals consuming a high protein diet. In the brain, the concentration of valine, leucine, isoleucine, phenylalanine and
tyrosine
in animals receiving the low protein diet was higher than in controls and increased further with increasing protein content of the diet. Glutamine was increased in all dietary groups. The predicted influx of amino acids showed increasing influx rates in dependence of the plasma amino acid concentration. The entry of
tyrosine
and tryptophan and their brain concentration was inversely proportional to the protein content of the diet. In the present study which considers long-term adaptation to an increasing protein and amino acid intake in comparison to a balanced control protein diet, the levels of the indispensable amino acids were maintained within narrow limits in the brain and liver. The results indicate that inspite of a variable protein intake, the body tends to keep organ amino acids in relatively narrow limits favoring in this way amino acid homeostasis.
...
PMID:Effect of different protein diets on the distribution of amino acids in plasma, liver and brain in the rat. 159 Jun 69
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