Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:4.1.1.32 (phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase)
4,204 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The metabolic response to the first fast experienced by all mammals has been studied in the newborn rat. Levels of fuels and hormones have been compared in the fetal and maternal circulations at term. Then, after cesarean section just before the normal time of birth, sequential changes in the same parameters were quantified during the first 16 h of the neonatal period. No caloric intake was permitted, and the newborns were maintained at 37 degrees C. Activities of three key hepatic enzymes involved in glucose production were estimated. Marked differences in maternal and fetal hormones and fuels were observed. Lower levels of glucose, free fatty acids, and glycerol but higher levels of lactate, alpha-amino nitrogen, alanine, and glutamine were present in the fetus. Pyruvate, glutamate, and ketone bodies were not significantly different. The combination of a strikingly higher fetal immunoreactive insulin and a slightly lower immunoreactive glucagon (pancreatic) resulted in a profound elevation in the insulin-to-glucagon ratio, a finding consistent with an organism in an anabolic state. The rat at birth presents a body composition with respect to fuels available for mobilization and conversion which is dominated by carbohydrate and protein, since little fat is present. However, at birth a transient period of hypoglycemia occurred, associated with a rapid fall in insulin and rise in glucagon, causing reversal of the insulin-to-glucagon relationship toward ratios such as were observed in the mother. After a lag period, hepatic activities of phosphorylase, glucose-6-phosphatase, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase increased. Concurrent with these enzyme changes, the blood glucose returned to levels at or above those of the fetus. Interestingly, the fall observed in levels of the gluconeogenic precursors, lactate and amino acids, preceded the rise in enzyme activities and restoration of blood glucose. After 4 h, however, hypoglycemia recurred, during a period of decreasing hepatic glycogen content and blood lactate, pyruvate, and glycerol levels but of stable or increasing amino acid concentrations. Hepatic gluconeogenesis in this phase of depleted glycogen stores was insufficient to maintain euglycemia. Substrates derived from fat showed early changes of smaller magnitude. The rise in free fatty acids which occurred was less than twofold the value at birth, though this rise persisted up to 6 h. Whereas glycerol rose transiently, acetoacetate did not change and beta-hydroxybutyrate concentration fell. Both ketone bodies showed a marked rise at 16 h. at a time of diminished free fatty acid levels. Plasma growth hormone, though higher in the fetal than the maternal circulation, showed no consistent change during the period of observation. The changes in levels of the endocrine pancreatic hormones at birth were appropriate in time, magnitude, and direction to be implicated as prime regulators of the metabolic response during the neonatal period in the rat.
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PMID:Fuels, hormones, and liver metabolism at term and during the early postnatal period in the rat. 475 Apr 49

1. The interrelationship of acidosis and Ca(2+) on the stimulation of gluconeogenesis by rat kidney-cortex slices was studied. 2. Ca(2+) stimulated gluconeogenesis from glutamine, glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, succinate, malate, pyruvate, lactate and fructose, but not from galactose. 3. The [Ca(2+)] needed for optimum gluconeogenesis was about 2mm, but at this concentration, acidosis, produced in vitro by a decrease of [HCO(3) (-)] in the medium at constant pCO(2) or by an increase in pCO(2) at constant [HCO(3) (-)], did not stimulate gluconeogenesis. 4. In the absence of Ca(2+), acidosis (low [HCO(3) (-)]) stimulated gluconeogenesis from glutamine, glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, succinate, malate, pyruvate and lactate but not from fructose or galactose. With succinate as substrate, the stimulatory effect of acidosis (low [HCO(3) (-)]) disappeared at Ca(2+) concentrations above 1.0mm. 5. The [HCO(3) (-)] was the most important determinant of the acidosis effect since a decrease of pH caused by an increase in pCO(2) did not uniformly stimulate gluconeogenesis, whereas a decrease in [HCO(3) (-)] without a change in pH consistently stimulated glucose formation in a way similar to the stimulation produced by acidosis (low [HCO(3) (-)]) in the absence of Ca(2+). 6. Acidosis in vitro inhibited the rate of decrease of activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in slices, and Ca(2+) caused an increase in the activity of fructose 1-phosphate aldolase. 7. Respiratory acidosis in vitro caused an increase in the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in kidney cortex and an increase in gluconeogenesis from glutamine. 8. Possible points of interaction between Ca(2+), H(+) and HCO(3) (-) with the gluconeogenic sequence are discussed.
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PMID:The interrelationship of the concentration of hydrogen ions, bicarbonate ions, carbon dioxide and calcium ions in the regulation of renal gluconeogenesis in the rat. 478 Jun 85

The early renal metabolic response was studied in rats made acidotic by oral feeding of ammonium chloride. 2 hr after feeding of ammonium chloride there was already significant acidosis. Urinary ammonia also increased after ammonium chloride ingestion and at 1(1/2) hr was significantly elevated. In vitro gluconeogenesis by renal cortical slices was increased at 2 hr and thereafter increased steadily. Ammonia production by the same slices was also increased at 2 hr, but thereafter fell and at 6 hr had decreased to levels which, although higher than those of the control, were lower than those obtained from the rats acidotic for only 2 hr. There was no correlation between in vitro gluconeogenesis and ammonia production by kidney slices from rats during the first 6 hr of acidosis, but after 48 hr of ammonium chloride feeding, these two processes were significantly correlated. The early increase in renal gluconeogenesis was demonstrable with both glutamine and succinate as substrates. The activity of the enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was increased after 4-6 hr of acidosis. During this time there was a decrease in renal RNA synthesis as shown by decreased uptake of orotic acid-(5)H into RNA. Metabolic intermediates were also measured in quick-frozen kidneys at varying times after induction of acidosis. There was an immediate rise in aspartate and a fall in alpha-ketoglutarate and malate levels. There was never any difference in pyruvate or lactate levels or lactate:pyruvate ratios between control and acidotic rats. Phosphoenolpyruvate rose significantly after 6 hr of acidosis. All the data indicate that increased gluconeogenesis is an early response to metabolic acidosis and will facilitate ammonia production by utilization of glutamate which inhibits the glutaminase I enzyme. The pattern of change in metabolic intermediates can also be interpreted as showing that there is not only enhanced gluconeogenesis, but also that there may be significant increase of activity of glutaminase II as part of the very early response to metabolic acidosis.
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PMID:Renal metabolic response to acid-base changes. II. The early effects of metabolic acidosis on renal metabolism in the rat. 544 47

Burton, Sheril D. (Institute of Marine Science, University of Alaska, College), Richard Y. Morita, and Wayne Miller. Utilization of acetate by Beggiatoa. J. Bacteriol. 91:1192-1200. 1966.-A proposed system which would permit acetate incorporation into four-carbon compounds without the presence of key enzymes of the citric acid cycle or glyoxylate cycle is described. In this system, acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) is condensed with glyoxylate to form malate, which, in turn, is converted to oxaloacetate. Oxaloacetate then reacts with glutamate to produce alpha-ketoglutarate, which is subsequently converted to isocitrate. Cleavage of isocitrate produces glyoxylate and succinate. Thus, the proposed system is similar to the glyoxylate bypass in that malate is produced from glyoxylate and acetyl-CoA, but differs from both the citric acid cycle and the glyoxylate bypass, since citrate and fumarate are not involved. Fumarase, aconitase, catalase, citritase, pyruvate kinase, enolase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, lactic dehydrogenase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, and condensing enzyme were not detectable in crude extracts of Beggiatoa. Succinate was oxidized by a soluble enzyme not associated with an electron-transport particle. Isocitrate was identified as the sole compound labeled when C(14)O(2) was added to a reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, CO(2) generating system (crystalline glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate) in the presence of alpha-ketoglutarate.
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PMID:Utilization of acetate by Beggiatoa. 592 51

1. The effects of 3-aminopicolinate, a known hyperglycaemic agent in the rat, on glutamine metabolism were studied in isolated dog kidney tubules. 2. 3-Aminopicolinate greatly stimulated glutamine (but not glutamate) removal and glutamate accumulation from glutamine as well as formation of ammonia, aspartate, lactate, alanine and glucose. 3. The increased accumulation of aspartate from glutamine and glutamate, and the inhibition of glucose synthesis from various non-nitrogenous gluconeogenic substrates, as well as the increased accumulation of malate from succinate, support the proposal that 3-aminopicolinate is an inhibitor rather than a stimulator of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.32) in dog kidney tubules. 4. With glutamine as substrate, the increase in flux through glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3) could not explain the large increase in glutamine removal caused by 3-aminopicolinate. 5. Inhibition by amino-oxyacetate of accumulation of aspartate and alanine from glutamine caused by 3-aminopicolinate did not prevent the acceleration of glutamine utilization. 6. These data are consistent with a direct stimulation of glutaminase (EC 3.5.1.2) by 3-aminopicolinate in dog kidney tubules.
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PMID:Stimulation of glutamine metabolism by 3-aminopicolinate in isolated dog kidney-cortex tubules. 613 24

The effect of 3-mercaptopicolinate, an inhibitor of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase [GTP:oxaloacetate carboxy-lyase (transphosphorylating), EC 4.1.1.32], was tested on NH3 formation via the purine nucleotide cycle and glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2). NH3 excretion in rats increased 70-fold after 48 h of NH4Cl feeding, from 12.2 +/- 4.5 to 862 +/- 190 mumol/mg of creatinine. At 4 h after a single intraperitoneal injection of 3-mercaptopicolinate into NH4Cl-fed rats, NH3 excretion was inhibited by 93%. Kidneys of NH4Cl-fed plus 3-mercaptopicolinate-treated rats, compared with those of NH4Cl-fed rats, showed a 3.5-fold increase in the content of IMP, 5-fold increase in adenylosuccinate, 4-fold increase in aspartate, and a 30% increase in AMP. 3-Mercaptopicolinate completely inhibited NH3 and glucose formation from glutamate in tubules from acidotic rats and NH3 formation from aspartate in kidney perfusion experiments. When transamination in tubules was prevented by 2-amino-4-methoxy-trans-but-3-enoic acid, formation of glucose, but not of NH3, from glutamate was inhibited. 3-Mercaptopicolinate completely inhibited NH3 formation from aspartate in the presence of the aminotransferase inhibitor in kidney tubules. The data show that NH3 can be formed via glutamate dehydrogenase and the purine nucleotide cycle at significant and approximately equal rates. 3-Mercaptopicolinate has no direct effect on NH3 formation via glutamate dehydrogenase, but inhibits that via the purine nucleotide cycle. We conclude that gluconeogenesis is not regulatory for NH3 formation in kidney.
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PMID:The relationship between glutamate deamination and gluconeogenesis in kidney. 613 15

Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase has been implicated by Rognstad (Rognstad, R. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 1875-1878) as the rate-limiting step for gluconeogenesis from lactate on the basis of a linear Dixon plot (reciprocal rate of gluconeogenesis versus concentration of inhibitor, mercaptopicolinate). We have confirmed this result with isolated hepatocytes incubated in the absence, but not the presence, of bovine serum albumin. Nonlinear plots are likely the result of mercaptopicolinate binding to the albumin. Both norepinephrine and dibutyryl cyclic AMP decreased the slopes and intercepts of the Dixon plots, but a linear relationship was still obtained. When aminooxyacetate inhibited transaminase reactions sufficiently to depress gluconeogenesis, the resulting mercaptopicolinate inhibition plot was still linear in the presence or absence of norepinephrine. Thus, linearity in the Dixon plot does not assure that the enzyme at the site of inhibition is the rate-limiting step for a pathway. Flux through phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase does not appear to be hormonally regulated by changes in oxalacetate concentration since this compound was unchanged by norepinephrine or dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Ca2+ enhanced norepinephrine stimulation of gluconeogenesis from asparagine and glutamine and of ureogenesis from glutamine, indicating both mitochondrial and cytosolic sites of action for this hormone. The effects of catecholamines and cyclic AMP were most clearly distinguished by their influence on glutamate concentration when glutamine was the substrate. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP increased, but norepinephrine decreased glutamate. It is possible that decreased glutamate concentration is a reflection of a catecholamine-directed oxidation of mitochondrial NADPH.
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PMID:Catecholamine stimulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis at the site between pyruvate and phosphoenolpyruvate. 630 90

Recently there has been an increased interest in the toxic effects from long term exposure of low levels of cadmium (Cd) in diet. Male, Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with 0, 25, 50, 75 ppm Cd mixed in diet continuously for 180 days. A significant decrease in body weight gain was observed in all Cd treated animals. Serum glucose, serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) and serum glutamate pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) were increased parallel to Cd concentration and treatment time. Measured hepatic and renal gluconeogenic enzymes, viz. glucose-6-phosphatase, fructose-1, 6-bisphosphatase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase were increased with higher Cd dose and time. Low concentration of Cd (25 ppm) had minimal effect with shorter treatment length. Fructose-1, 6-bisphosphatase was found to be very sensitive for assessing Cd-induced nephrotoxicity. Increased serum glucose level and gluconeogenic enzyme activities suggest that Cd might interfere in protein metabolism.
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PMID:Chronic hepatic and renal toxicity by cadmium in rats. 632 37

(1) Activation of rat liver mitochondrial functions following glucagon treatment was demonstrated in mitochondria that had not been isolated by the conventional technique of differential centrifugation and washing in sucrose solutions. Crude liver homogenates in 0.3 M-sucrose or 0.15 M-KCl prepared from rats treated with glucagon showed stimulation of State-3 and uncoupled respiration, carboxylation of pyruvate, and citrulline synthesis comparable with those previously reported in isolated mitochondria. (2) During the isolation procedure of mitochondria the hormonal stimulations of pyruvate carboxylation and citrulline formation were shown not to be enhanced by sequential washing. (3) Mitochondria isolated from glucagon-treated rats by differential centrifugation and washing in 0.3 M-mannitol/1 mM-EGTA, pH 7.0, exhibited a mean rate of citrulline synthesis that was greater than twice that of the control. Liver homogenates prepared in 0.3 M-sucrose or 0.3 M-mannitol showed identical rates of State-3 respiration and percentage stimulations of respiration by glucagon treatment. (4) Addition of glucagon led to a rapid accumulation of malate and aspartate and decreased the amounts of glutamate and citrate in isolated hepatocytes incubated with L-lactate. When gluconeogenesis was inhibited at the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.32) reaction these phenomena were accentuated, lending support to the interpretation that they are the direct result of stimulation of carboxylation and oxidation reactions in the mitochondria. These results do not support the proposal [Siess, Fahimi & Wieland (1981) Hoppe-Seyler's Z. Physiol. Chem. 362. 1643-1651] that the mitochondrial effects of glucagon treatment result from a stabilization of mitochondria to detrimental effects of sucrose during their isolation. (5) The mean hormonal stimulation of pyruvate carboxylation in mitochondria isolated in 0.3 M-sucrose was shown to be approx. 2.5-fold when assayed either at 37 degrees C or 25 degrees C. In contrast, on the basis of similar experiments, Siess et al. (1981) concluded that the effects of glucagon on hepatic mitochondria are not characteristic of a true hormonal stimulation. Our data indicate this conclusion to be unjustified.
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PMID:Stimulation of mitochondrial functions by glucagon treatment. Evidence that effects are not artifacts of mitochondrial isolation. 640 79

A crude preparation of PEP carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) from the yellow lupin roots exhibits the pH optimum of activity within the range of 7.4-8.6 and the temperature optimum at 32 - 40 degrees C. Its Km for PEP is 0.1 mM, and Km for HCO3- is 0.7 mM. The affinity of the enzyme towards Mg2+ diminishes with the metal ion concentration. At the concentration of Mg2+ below 0.5 mM Km for Mg2+ is 0.07 mM and at the Mg2+ concentration over 1.5 mM it rises to 0.47 mM. The Hill coefficients are 0.37 and 0.88, respectively. Among several compounds affecting the PEP carboxylase activity, such as organic acids, amino acids, and sugar phosphates, at physiological pH (7.0 and 7.8), malate shows the strongest inhibition of a competitive character, its Ki being 2 mM. Also acidic amino acids strongly inhibit the enzyme activity, aspartate being more effective than glutamate. Glucose 6-phosphate and fructose 1,6-diphosphate markedly activate the enzyme. Both the inhibition by malate, aspartate and glutamate, and the activation by sugar phosphates rises considerably when pH is decreased from 7.8 to 7.0. Malonate scarcely affects the enzyme.
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PMID:Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from the roots of yellow lupin (Lupinus luteus). 667 22


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