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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (
alanine aminotransferase
)
26,722
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Muscle proteins turn over slowly and there are minimal diurnal changes in the size of the muscle protein pool in response to feeding and fasting. Nitrogen balance and tracer studies indicate that protein oxidation and net protein breakdown (degradation--synthesis) is not increased during dynamic exercise at intensities of < or = 70% VO2max. An imbalance between muscle protein synthesis and degradation does exist during one leg knee extensor exercise and during two legged cycling in patients with glycogen phosphorylase deficiency. In these latter cases amino acids liberated from the protein pool are used for synthesis of TCA-cycle intermediates and
glutamine
. Six amino acids are metabolized in resting muscle: leucine, isoleucine, valine, asparagine, aspartate and glutamate. Only leucine and part of the isoleucine molecule can be converted to acetylCoA and oxidized. The carbon skeleton of the other amino acids is used for synthesis of TCA-cycle intermediates and
glutamine
. The six amino acids provide the amino groups and the ammonia for synthesis of
glutamine
and alanine, which are released by muscle in excessive amounts. About half of the
glutamine
release from muscle originates from glutamate taken up from the blood.
Glutamine
produced by muscle is an important fuel and regulator of DNA and RNA synthesis in mucosal cells and immune system cells and fulfils several other important functions in human metabolism. The
alanine aminotransferase
reaction functions to establish and maintain high concentrations of TCA-cycle intermediates and a high TCA cycle flux in the first minutes of exercise. A gradual increase in leucine oxidation subsequently leads to a carbon drain on the TCA-cycle in glycogen depleted muscles and may thus reduce the maximal flux in the TCA-cycle and lead to fatigue. Deamination of amino acids and
glutamine
synthesis present alternative anaplerotic mechanisms in glycogen depleted muscles but only allow exercise at 40-50% of Wmax. It is proposed that the maximal flux in the TCA-cycle is reduced in glycogen depleted muscles due to insufficient TCA-cycle anaplerosis and that this presents a limitation for the maximal rate of fatty acid oxidation. Interactions between the amino acid pool and the TCA-cycle thus seem to play a central role in the energy metabolism of the exercising muscle.
...
PMID:Protein and amino acid metabolism in human muscle. 978 36
The effect of 2-aminobicyclo[2.2.1]heptan-2-carboxylic acid (BCH), an L-leucine nonmetabolizable analogue and an allosteric activator of glutamate dehydrogenase, on glucose and
glutamine
synthesis was studied in rabbit renal tubules incubated with alanine, aspartate or proline in the presence of glycerol and octanoate, i.e. under conditions of efficient glucose formation. With alanine+glycerol+octanoate the addition of BCH resulted in a stimulation of alanine and glycerol consumption, accompanied by an increased glucose, lactate and
glutamine
synthesis. In contrast, when alanine was substituted by either aspartate or proline, BCH altered neither glucose formation nor
glutamine
and glutamate synthesis, while an accelerated glycerol utilization was accompanied by a small increase in lactate production. In view of the BCH-induced changes in intracellular metabolite levels the acceleration of gluconeogenesis by BCH in the presence of alanine+glycerol+octanoate is probably due to (i) increased uptake of alanine via
alanine aminotransferase
, (ii) stimulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, a key-enzyme of gluconeogenesis, (iii) rise of glucose-6-phosphatase activity, as well as (iv) activation of the malate-aspartate shuttle resulting in an augmented glycerol utilization for lactate and glucose synthesis.
...
PMID:Importance of glutamate dehydrogenase stimulation for glucose and glutamine synthesis in rabbit renal tubules incubated with various amino acids. 991 11
The protective effects of various kinds of dietary amino acids against the hepatotoxic action of D-galactosamine (GalN) were examined. Male Wistar rats fed with 20% casein diets containing 10% or 5% amino acid for one week were injected with GalN (800 mg/kg body weight), and the serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST),
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activities, the hepatic glycogen concentration, and the serum glucose-level were examined 20 hours after the injection. In the groups with the 10% amino acid diets, activities of AST,
ALT
, and LDH in serum of 10%
L-glutamine
(Gln), 10% L-asparagine (Asn), and 10% L-serine (Ser) groups were significantly lower than those of the control group, and in the groups with the 5% amino acid diets, those activities of 5% L-histidine (His), 5% L-tyrosine (Tyr), 5% L-lysine (Lys), and 5% L-glycine (Gly) groups were also lower than those of the control group. The concentration of liver glycogen of 10% Gln-, 10% Asn-, and 10% Ser- groups and those levels of 5% His-, 5% Tyr-, 5% Lys-, and 5% Gly-groups were also significantly higher than that of the control group. As a result, it was found that some kinds of dietary amino acid such as L-Ser, L-Asn, L-His, L-Lys, L-Tyr, and L-Gly, in addition to L-Gln were effective to protect the rats from GalN-induced injury.
...
PMID:Effects of various kinds of dietary amino acids on the hepatotoxic action of D-galactosamine in rats. 1019 13
Although
glutamine
is a major carbon source for mammalian cells in culture, its chemical decomposition or cellular metabolism leads to an undesirable excess of ammonia. This limits the shelf-life of
glutamine
-supplemented media and may reduce the cell yield under certain conditions. We have attempted to develop a less ammoniagenic medium for the growth of BHK-21 cells by a mole-to-mole substitution of
glutamine
by glutamate. This results in a medium that is thermally stable but unable to support an equivalent growth yield. However, supplementation of the glutamate-based medium with asparagine (3 mM) and a minimal level of
glutamine
(0.5 mM) restored the original growth capacity of the cultures. Substitution of the low level of
glutamine
with the
glutamine
dipeptides, ala-gln (1 mM), or gly-gln (3 mM) resulted in an equivalent cell yield and in a thermally stable medium. The ammonia accumulation in cultures with glutamate-based medium was reduced significantly (>60%). Factors mediating growth and adaptation in medium substituted with glutamate were also investigated. The maximum growth capacity of the BHK-21 cells in glutamate-based medium (without
glutamine
) was achieved after a period of adaptation of 5 culture passages from growth in
glutamine
-based cultures. Adaptation was not influenced by increases in glutamate uptake which was constitutively high in BHK cells. Adaptation was associated with changes in the activities of enzymes involved in glutamate or
glutamine
metabolism. The activities of glutamine synthetase (GS) and
alanine aminotransferase
(
ALT
) increased significantly and the activity of phosphate-activated glutaminase (PAG) decreased significantly. The activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) showed no significant change after adaptation to glutamate. These changes resulted in an altered metabolic profile which included a reduced ammonia production but an increased alanine production. Alanine production is suspected of being an alternative route for removal of excess nitrogen.
...
PMID:The adaptation of BHK cells to a non-ammoniagenic glutamate-based culture medium. 1039 67
Exposure to hyperoxia (500-600 torr) or low pH (4.5) for 72 h or NaHCO(3) infusion for 48 h were used to create chronic respiratory (RA) or metabolic acidosis (MA) or metabolic alkalosis in freshwater rainbow trout. During alkalosis, urine pH increased, and [titratable acidity (TA) - HCO(-)(3)] and net H(+) excretion became negative (net base excretion) with unchanged NH(+)(4) efflux. During RA, urine pH did not change, but net H(+) excretion increased as a result of a modest rise in NH(+)(4) and substantial elevation in [TA - HCO(-)(3)] efflux accompanied by a large increase in inorganic phosphate excretion. However, during MA, urine pH fell, and net H(+) excretion was 3.3-fold greater than during RA, reflecting a similar increase in [TA - HCO(-)(3)] and a smaller elevation in phosphate but a sevenfold greater increase in NH(+)(4) efflux. In urine samples of the same pH, [TA - HCO(-)(3)] was greater during RA (reflecting phosphate secretion), and [NH(+)(4)] was greater during MA (reflecting renal ammoniagenesis). Renal activities of potential ammoniagenic enzymes (phosphate-dependent glutaminase, glutamate dehydrogenase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase,
alanine aminotransferase
, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase) and plasma levels of cortisol, phosphate, ammonia, and most amino acids (including
glutamine
and alanine) increased during MA but not during RA, when only
alanine aminotransferase
increased. The differential responses to RA vs. MA parallel those in mammals; in fish they may be keyed to activation of phosphate secretion by RA and cortisol mobilization by MA.
...
PMID:Renal responses of trout to chronic respiratory and metabolic acidoses and metabolic alkalosis. 1044 55
Changes in the activity of enzymes involved in oxidative metabolism of
glutamine
, and in protein content, in the epithelial tissue along the gastrointestinal (GI) tract of growing pigs exposed to nivalenol (NIV) in the diet were investigated. The epithelial tissue was taken from the stomach, small intestine and colon of three groups of animals fed diets without NIV (control), with inclusion of 2.5 mg NIV/kg diet (low dose) and with inclusion of 5.0 mg NIV/kg diet (high dose). The activities of glutaminase, glutamate dehydrogenase, oxoglutarate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase and
alanine aminotransferase
were determined. In the control pigs the activities of oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and
alanine aminotransferase
were higher (P < 0.05) in the epithelium of the small intestine as compared with the stomach and colon, while there were no differences in the activities of glutaminase, glutamate dehydrogenase and isocitrate dehydrogenase. With increasing inclusion of NIV in the diet the activity of oxoglutarate dehydrogenase decreased (P < 0.05) in the epithelium of the small intestine and colon, and the activity of
alanine aminotransferase
tended (P = 0.07) to increase in the epithelium of the small intestine. The activities of glutaminase, glutamate dehydrogenase and isocitrate dehydrogenase remained unaffected by the inclusion of NIV in the diet. In the control pigs the protein content in the epithelium of the small intestine was higher (P < 0.05) than in the stomach and colon, while there were no effects of NIV inclusion in the diet on the protein content. It can be concluded from the present study that the epithelial tissue of the small intestine and colon of pigs exposed to a diet containing NIV will have a reduced enzymatic capacity to utilise alpha-ketoglutarate in the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA-cycle), suggesting an impaired energy supply to these organs.
...
PMID:Effect of exposure to dietary nivalenol on activity of enzymes involved in glutamine catabolism in the epithelium along the gastrointestinal tract of growing pigs. 1055 90
Axenic mycelia of the ectomycorrhizal basidiomycete, Suillus bovinus, were grown in liquid media under continuous aeration with compressed air at 25 degrees C in darkness. Provided with glucose as the only carbohydrate source, they produced similar amounts of dry weight with ammonia, with nitrate or with alanine, 60-80% more with glutamate or
glutamine
, but about 35% less with urea as the respectively only exogenous nitrogen source. In crude extracts of cells from NH4(+)-cultures, NADH-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase exhibited high aminating (688 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)) and low deaminating (21 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)) activities. Its Km-values for 2-oxoglutarate and for glutamate were 1.43 mM and 23.99 mM, respectively. pH-optimum for amination was about 7.2, that for deamination about 9.3. Glutamine synthetase activity was comparatively low (59 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)). Its affinity for glutamate was poor (Km = 23.7 mM), while that for the NH4+ replacing NH2OH was high (Km = 0.19 mM). pH-optimum was found at 7.0. Glutamate synthase (= GOGAT) revealed similar low activity (62 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)), Km-values for
glutamine
and for 2-oxoglutarate of 2.82 mM and 0.28 mM, respectively, and pH-optimum around 8.0. Aspartate transaminase (= GOT) exhibited similar affinities for aspartate (Km = 2.55 mM) and for glutamate (Km = 3.13 mM), but clearly different Km-values for 2-oxoglutarate (1.46 mM) and for oxaloacetate (0.13 mM). Activity at optimum pH of about 8.0 was 506 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1) for aspartate conversion, but only 39 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1) at optimum pH of about 7.0 for glutamate conversion. Activity (599 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)), substrate affinities (Km for alanine = 6.30 mM, for 2-oxoglutarate = 0.45 mM) and pH-optimum (6.5-7.5) proved
alanine transaminase
(=
GPT
) also important in distribution of intracellular nitrogen. There was comparatively low activity of the obviously constitutive enzyme, urease, (42 nmol x mg protein(-1) x min(-1)) whose substrate affinity was rather high (Km = 0.56 mM). Nitrate reductase proved substrate induced; activity could only be measured after exposure of the mycelia to exogenous nitrate. Routes of entry of exogenous nitrogen and tentative significance of the various enzymes in cell metabolism are discussed.
...
PMID:Investigations into enzymes of nitrogen metabolism of the ectomycorrhizal basidiomycete, Suillus bovinus. 1081 9
After incubation of glial cells with both (13)C-labeled and unlabeled glucose and alanine, (13)C isotopomer analysis indicates two cytosolic pyruvate compartments in astrocytes. One pyruvate pool is in an exchange equilibrium with exogenous alanine and preferentially synthesizes releasable lactate. The second pyruvate pool, which is of glycolytic origin, is more closely related to mitochondrial pyruvate, which is oxidized via tri carbonic acid (TCA) cycle activity. In order to provide 2-oxoglutarate as a substrate for cytosolic
alanine aminotransferase
, glycolytic activity is increased in the presence of exogenous alanine. Furthermore, in the presence of alanine, glutamate is accumulated in astrocytes without subsequent
glutamine
synthesis. We suggest that the conversion of alanine to releasable lactate proceeds at the expense of flux of glycolytic pyruvate through lactate dehydrogenase, which is used for ammonia fixation by alanine synthesis in the cytosol and for mitochondrial TCA cycle activity. In addition, an intracellular trafficking occurs between cytosol and mitochondria, by which these two cytosolic pyruvate pools are partly connected. Thus, exogenous alanine modifies astrocytic glucose metabolism for the synthesis of releasable lactate disconnected from glycolysis. The data are discussed in terms of astrocytic energy metabolism and the metabolic trafficking via a putative alanine-lactate shuttle between astrocytes and neurons.
...
PMID:13C isotopomer analysis of glucose and alanine metabolism reveals cytosolic pyruvate compartmentation as part of energy metabolism in astrocytes. 1132 82
Both
glutamine
and glucose are highly utilized by the small intestine in various animal species. They are, however, very partially oxidized, the major known fate of glucose being lactate and alanine, and that of
glutamine
being citrulline or proline. At variance with the current view that only the liver and kidney are gluconeogenic organs, because both are the only tissues to express the glucose-6 phosphatase gene, this gene is also expressed in the small intestine in rats and humans, and is strongly induced in insulinopenic states, such as fasting and diabetes. Under the latter conditions, the small intestine contributes 20-25% of whole-body endogenous glucose production. The main small intestine gluconeogenic substrate is
glutamine
and, to a lesser extent, glycerol. Accounting for these fluxes, the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase gene is strongly induced in insulinopenia and, although up to now it had been considered absent from this tissue, the glycerokinase gene is expressed in the small intestine. The production of glucose by the small intestine may be acutely blunted upon insulin infusion. These new data also emphasize the central role of
alanine aminotransferase
in the coupling of
glutamine
and glucose metabolisms in the small intestine.
...
PMID:New data and concepts on glutamine and glucose metabolism in the gut. 1145 19
Troglitazone is a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma agonist that has been shown to halt mesangium expansion in experimental models of type 2 diabetes mellitus and to act directly on rat mesangial cells. Because
glutamine
serves as the precursor for cellular biosynthetic processes, we asked whether troglitazone would inhibit mesangial cell
glutamine
metabolism under these conditions. Confluent monolayers of rat mesangial cells were incubated in RPMI medium in the presence of troglitazone or vehicle (DMSO). Troglitazone effected a dose-dependent reduction in
glutamine
utilization and in alanine formation, associated with a decrease in monolayer collagen-glycosaminoglycan content. Despite the reduced
glutamine
uptake, ammonium formation did not decrease, consistent with increased glutamate flux through the deamination pathway. Assayable activity of the
alanine aminotransferase
decreased by 63%, whereas assayable glutamate dehydrogenase remained unchanged. In control monolayers, the sum of ammonium plus alanine plus glutamate nitrogen released accounted for <75% of the
glutamine
nitrogen uptake. In troglitazone-treated monolayers, all of the
glutamine
nitrogen taken up could be accounted for as ammonium nitrogen released into the medium. These results are consonant with troglitazone reducing
glutamine
metabolism and specifically the transamination pathway in rat mesangial cells associated with a reduction in collagen-glycosaminoglycan content.
...
PMID:Troglitazone inhibits glutamine metabolism in rat mesangial cells. 1173 5
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