Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.5.1.4 (
deaminase
)
5,113
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Incubation of African green monkey kidney (BS-
C-1
) cells and mouse fibroblasts (3T6) in the presence of adenosine for 4 hours resulted in increases in the nuclear compartment pools of adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) and nuclear ATP/adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP) ratios. Adenine and inosine, which yield increases in total cellular ATP pools and ATP/ADP ratios similar to those promoted by adenosine, do not produce similar increases in the nuclear compartment. Adenosine-promoted increases in nuclear ATP pools were higher in the untransformed, serially propagated, BS-
C-1
cells than in the spontaneously transformed 3T6 cells. Adenosine-promoted compartmentalized ATP pools in primary chick embryo fibroblasts were reduced upon transformation of these cells with Rous sarcoma virus, resulting in free mixing of all of the ATP pools synthesized from various salvage precursors. The growth regulatory properties of the nuclear compartment pools of adenine nucleotides is suggested by the big increases in nuclear ATPase and adenosine 5'-monophosphate (AMP)
deaminase
activities upon the entry of 3T6 cells into the S phase of their cycle. These enzymatic activities would tend to lower the nuclear ATP/ADP ratios and reduce the total adenine nucleotide pools in these nuclei respectively--conditions which were shown by earlier in vitro studies to be favorable to DNA replication.
...
PMID:Compartmentalized ATP pools produced from adenosine are nuclear pools. 645 Jul 72
Two specific fatty acyl amidases that hydrolyze lipopolysaccharide have been isolated from the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum. Esterases as well as phosphatases acting on lipid A derivatives were also observed. The first
amidase
(I) hydrolyzes the fatty amide adjacent to the
C-1
phosphate on the disaccharide backbone of lipid A. Amidase II cleaves the distal amide, but only after deacylation of the first site. The range of specificity and the structural determinants important to specificity of the amidases were evaluated in studies of specifically modified derivatives of lipid A. In light of the effects of lipopolysaccharide on the biology of D. discoideum, a role for the amidases and other lipopolysaccharide-specific catabolic enzymes is discussed.
...
PMID:Lipases specifically degrading lipopolysaccharide: fatty acyl amidases from Dictyostelium discoideum. 647 5
1. Chloroacetone (I) was shown to be an active-site-directed inhibitor of the aliphatic
amidase
(
EC 3.5.1.4
) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PAC142.2. This inhibitor reacted with the enzyme in two stages: the first involving the reversible formation of an enzymically inactive species, EI, and the second the formation of a species, EX, from which enzymic activity could not be recovered. 3. Different types of kinetic experiment were conducted to test conformity of the reaction to the scheme: E + I k+1 Equilibrium k-1 EI Leads to K+2 EX A computer-based analysis of the results was carried out and values of the individual rate constants were determined. 4. No direct evidence for a binding step before the formation of EI could be obtained, as with [E]0 Less Than [I]0 the observed first-order rate constant for the formation of EI was directly proportional to the concentration of chloroacetone up to 1.2 mM (above this concentration the reaction became too rapid to follow even by the stopped-flow method developed to investigate fast inhibition). 5. The value of k+1 exhibited a bell-shaped pH-dependency with a maximum value of about 3 X 10(3) M-1. S-1 at pH6 and apparent pKa values of 7.8 and about 4.8.6. The values of k-1 and K+2 were similar and changed with the time of reaction from values of about 3 X 10(-3) S-1 (pH8.6) at short times to about one-sixth this value for longer periods of incubation. In this respect the simple reaction scheme is insufficient to describe the inhibition process. 7. The overall inhibition reaction is rapid, whether it is considered in relation to the expected chemical reactivity of chloroacetone, the rate of reaction of other enzymes with substrate analogues containing the chloromethyl group, or the rate of the
amidase
-catalysed hydrolysis of N-methylacetamide, a substrate that is nearly isosteric with chloroacetone. 8. Acetamide protected the
amidase
from inhibition by chloroacetone, and the concentration-dependence of the protection gave a value of an apparent dissociation constant similar to the Km value for this substrate. 9. Addition of acetamide to solutions of the species EI led to a slow recovery of activity. Recovery of active enzyme was also observed after dilution of a solution of EI in the absence of substrate. 10. The species EI is considered not to be a simple adsorption complex, and the possibilities are discussed that it may be a tetrahedral carbonyl adduct, a Schiff base (azomethine) or a complex in which the enzyme has undergone a structural change. The species EX is probably a derivative in which there is a covalent bond between a group in the enzyme and the
C-1
atom of the inhibitor.
...
PMID:Chloroacetone as an active-site-directed inhibitor of the aliphatic amidase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 679 36
The substrate specificities of two fatty acyl amidases partially purified from the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum have been studied. The
amidase
act on lipopolysaccharide derivatives, such as (4'-O-phosphoryl-N-beta-hydroxymyristyl-D-glucosaminyl)-beta-(1 leads to 6)-N-beta-hydroxymyristyl-D-glucosamine-1-phosphate (III) in a sequential manner. Amidase-I removes the beta-hydroxymyristyl residue present on the amino group adjacent to the 1-phosphate and the product formed is a substrate for
amidase
-II; the latter removes the remaining beta-hydroxymyristyl residue from the distal amino group. Compound III itself is resistant to
amidase
-II. Removal of the
C-1
or C-4 phosphate groups does not influence recognition by the amidases or their sequential action. Both amidases are specific for long chain fatty amide linkages. Thus, a formyl group on the glucosamine amino group adjacent to the
C-1
phosphate is not hydrolyzed by
amidase
-I; however, this substituent does not hinder the action of
amidase
-II on the distal fatty acyl amide. The presence of the beta-hydroxyl group in myristyl-amide residues is not required for hydrolysis. Further, while
amidase
-I requires disaccharide structures for its action,
amidase
-II acts on monosaccharides as well. Finally, the effects of a variety of substrate analogs and divalent ions on the activity of the enzymes are reported.
...
PMID:Fatty acyl amidases from Dictyostelium discoideum that act on lipopolysaccharide and derivatives. II. Aspects of substrate specificity. 710 3
Cell-free extracts of Brevibacterium sp. L5 grown on DL-erythro-3,5-diaminohexanoate were found to contain a 3-keto-5-aminohexanoate cleavage enzyme that converts 3-keto-5-aminohexanoate and acetyl-coenzyme A (CokA) to 3-aminobutyryl-CoA and acetoacetate and a
deaminase
that coverts L-3-aminobutyryl-CoA to crotonyl-CoA. The cleavage enzyme has been purified extensively, and some of its properties have been determined for comparison with the 3-keto-6-acetamido-hexanoate cleavage enzyme of Pseudomonas sp. B4. The
deaminase
has been partially purified and characterized. Both the cleavage enzyme and the
deaminase
are induced by growth on 3,5-diaminohexanoate. The presence of these and other accessory enzymes in Brevibacterium sp. extracts accounts for the results of earlier tracer experiments which showed that
C-1
and C-2 of 3-keto-5-aminohexanoate are converted mainly to acetoacetate and acetate, whereas C-3 to C-6 are converted mainly to 3-hydroxybutyrate or its coenzyme A thiolester. The enzymes observed in extracts of Brevibacterium sp. can account for the conversion of 3,5-diaminohexanoate to acetyl-CoA.
...
PMID:Enzymes involved in 3,5-diaminohexanoate degradation by Brevibacterium sp. 741 Mar 15
This study aimed to construct an acetonitrile-containing waste treatment process by using nitrile-degrading microorganisms. To degrade high concentrations of acetonitrile, the microorganisms were newly acquired from soil and water samples. Although no nitrilase-producing microorganisms were found to be capable of degrading high concentrations of acetonitrile, the resting cells of Rhodococcus pyridinivorans S85-2 containing nitrile hydratase could degrade acetonitrile at concentrations as high as 6 M. In addition, an
amidase
-producing bacterium, Brevundimonas diminuta AM10-
C-1
, of which the resting cells degraded 6 M acetamide, was isolated. The combination of R. pyridinivorans S85-2 and B. diminuta AM10-
C-1
was tested for the conversion of acetonitrile into acetic acid. The resting cells of B. diminuta AM10-
C-1
were added after the first conversion involving R. pyridinivorans S85-2. Through this tandem process, 6 M acetonitrile was converted to acetic acid at a conversion rate of >90% in 10 h. This concise procedure will be suitable for practical use in the treatment of acetonitrile-containing wastes on-site.
...
PMID:Convenient treatment of acetonitrile-containing wastes using the tandem combination of nitrile hydratase and amidase-producing microorganisms. 1640 66
Uronate isomerase (URI) catalyzes the reversible isomerization of D-glucuronate to D-fructuronate and of D-galacturonate to D-tagaturonate. URI is a member of the
amidohydrolase
superfamily (AHS), a highly divergent group of enzymes that catalyze primarily hydrolytic reactions. The chemical mechanism and active site structure of URI were investigated in an attempt to improve our understanding of how an active site template that apparently evolved to catalyze hydrolytic reactions has been reforged to catalyze an isomerization reaction. The pH-rate profiles for k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) for URI from Escherichia coli are bell-shaped and indicate that one group must be unprotonated and another residue must be protonated for catalytic activity. Primary isotope effects on the kinetic constants with [2-2H]-D-glucuronate and the effects of changes in solvent viscosity are consistent with product release being the rate-limiting step. The X-ray structure of Bh0493, a URI from Bacillus halodurans, was determined in the presence of the substrate D-glucuronate. The bound complex showed that the mononuclear metal center in the active site is ligated to the C-6 carboxylate and the C-5 hydroxyl group of the substrate. This hydroxyl group is also hydrogen bonded to Asp-355 in the same orientation as the hydroxide or water is bound in those members of the AHS that catalyze hydrolytic reactions. In addition, the C-2 and C-3 hydroxyl groups of the substrate are hydrogen bonded to Arg-357 and the carbonyl group at
C-1
is hydrogen bonded to Tyr-50. A chemical mechanism is proposed that utilizes a proton transfer from C-2 of D-glucuronate to
C-1
that is initiated by the combined actions of Asp-355 from the end of beta-strand 8 and the C-5 hydroxyl of the substrate that is bound to the metal ion. The formation of the proposed cis-enediol intermediate is further facilitated by the shuttling of the proton between the C-2 and
C-1
oxygens by the conserved Tyr-50 and/or Arg-355.
...
PMID:The mechanism of the reaction catalyzed by uronate isomerase illustrates how an isomerase may have evolved from a hydrolase within the amidohydrolase superfamily. 1967 10