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Query: EC:4.1.1.49 (phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase)
4,654 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1-Anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonate (ANS) binds to phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase with subsequent rapid inactivation. Kinetics are saturating, with an enzyme half-life of 0.29 min at 4 x 10(-4) M ANS. IDP, GDP, and phosphoenolpyruvate protect against the inactivation. The enzyme is not covalently modified and it retains an affinity for protecting substrates and substrate analogs, with the exception of oxalate. Binding of ANS occurs in a hydrophobic environment, as suggested by the changes in fluorescence emission, and is markedly pH-dependent, leading to more rapid inactivation at acid pH. Inactivation by ANS differs in this respect from inactivation by N-(iodoacetylaminoethyl)-5-naphthylamine-1-sulfonate which affinity labels the enzyme (Silverstein, R., Rawitch, A.B., and Grainger, D.A. (1979) Biochem. Biophys. Res Commun. 87, 911-918). Though the mechanism by which ANS inactivates the enzyme is unclear, the effect is atypical in that ANS binding does not normally lead to irreversible inactivation.
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PMID:Evidence for an essential hydrophobic domain in the maintenance of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase activity. Site-specific binding and inactivation by 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonate. 735 33

Enzymatic activities involved in glucose fermentation of Actinomyces naeslundii were studied with glucose-grown cells from batch cultures. Glucose could be phosphorylated to glucose 6-phosphate by a glucokinase that utilized polyphosphate and GTP instead of ATP as a phosphoryl donor. Glucose 6-phosphate was further metabolized to the end products lactate, formate, acetate, and succinate through the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway. The phosphoryl donor for phosphofructokinase was only PPi. Phosphoglycerate kinase, pyruvate kinase, and acetate kinase coupled GDP as well as ADP, but P(i) compounds were not their phosphoryl acceptor. Cell extracts showed GDP-dependent activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, which assimilates bicarbonate and phosphoenolpyruvate into oxaloacetate, a precursor of succinate. Considerable amounts of GTP, polyphosphate, and PPi were found in glucose-fermenting cells, indicating that these compounds may serve as phosphoryl donors or acceptors in Actinomyces cells. PPi could be generated from UTP and glucose 1-phosphate through catalysis of UDP-glucose synthase, which provides UDP-glucose, a precursor of glycogen.
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PMID:Phosphorylating enzymes involved in glucose fermentation of Actinomyces naeslundii. 759 27

Two members of the ATP-dependent class of phospho enol pyruvate (PEP) carboxykinases (Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli PEP carboxykinase), and one member of the GTP-dependent class (the cytosolic rat liver enzyme) have been comparatively analyzed by taking advantage of their intrinsic fluorescence. The S. cerevisiae and the rat liver enzymes show intrinsic fluorescence with a maximum emission characteristic of moderately buried tryptophan residues, while the E. coli carboxykinase shows somewhat more average exposure for these fluorophores. The fluorescence of the three proteins was similarly quenched by the polar compound acrylamide, but differences were observed for the ionic quencher iodide. For the ATP-dependent enzymes, these last experiments indicate more exposure to the aqueous media of the tryptophan population of the E. coli than of the S. cerevisiae enzyme. The effect of nucleotides on the emission intensities and quenching efficiencies revealed substrate-induced conformational changes in the E. coli and cytosolic rat liver PEP carboxykinases. The addition of Mn2+ or of the adenosine nucleotides in the presence of Mg2+ induced an enhancement in the fluorescence of the E. coli enzyme. The addition of guanosine or inosine nucleotides to the rat liver enzyme quenched its fluorescence. From the ligand-induced fluorescence changes, dissociation constants of 40 +/- 6 microM, 10 +/- 0.8 microM, and 15 +/- 1 microM were obtained for Mn2+, MgATP and MgADP binding to the E. coli enzyme, respectively. For the cytosolic rat liver PEP carboxykinase, the respective values for GDP, IDP and ITP binding are 6 +/- 0.5 microM, 6.7 +/- 0.4 microM and 10.1 +/- 1.7 microM. A comparison of the dissociation constants obtained in this work with those reported for other PEP carboxykinases is presented.
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PMID:Comparative steady-state fluorescence studies of cytosolic rat liver (GTP), Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ATP) and Escherichia coli (ATP) phospho enol pyruvate carboxykinases. 844 84

Rabbit, pigeon and rat liver mitochondria convert exogenous phosphoenolpyruvate and acetylcarnitine to citrate at rates of 14, 74 and 8 nmol/15 min/mg protein. Citrate formation is dependent on exogenous HCO3-, is increased consistently by exogenous nucleotides (GDP, IDP, GTP, ADP, ATP) and inhibited strongly by 3-mercaptopicolinate and 1,2,3-benzenetricarboxylate. Citrate is not made from pyruvate alone or combined with acetylcarnitine. Pigeon and rat liver mitochondria make large amounts of citrate from exogenous succinate, suggesting the presence of an endogenous source of acetyl units or means of converting oxalacetate to acetyl units. Citrate synthesis from succinate by pigeon and rabbit mitochondria is increased significantly by exogenous acetylcarnitine. Pigeon and rat liver contain 80 and 15 times, respectively, more ATP:citrate lyase activity than does rabbit liver. Data suggest that mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in vivo could convert glycolysis-derived phosphoenolpyruvate to oxalacetate that, with acetyl CoA, could form citrate for export to support cytosolic lipogenesis as an activator of acetyl CoA carboxylase, a carbon source via ATP:citrate lyase and NADPH via NADP:malate dehydrogenase or NADP:isocitrate dehydrogenase.
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PMID:Synthesis of citrate from phosphoenolpyruvate and acetylcarnitine by mitochondria from rabbit, pigeon and rat liver: implications for lipogenesis. 884 May 17

Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase was purified 42-fold with a 25% yield from cell extracts of Ruminococcus flavefaciens by ammonium sulfate precipitation, preparative isoelectric focusing, and removal of carrier ampholytes by chromatography. The enzyme had a subunit molecular mass of approximately 66.3 kDa (determined by mass spectrometry), but was retained by a filter having a 100-kDa nominal molecular mass cutoff. Optimal activity required activation of the enzyme by Mn2+ and stabilization of the nucleotide substrate by Mg2+. GDP was a more effective phosphoryl acceptor than ADP, while IDP was not utilized. Under optimal conditions the measured activity in the direction of PEP carboxylation was 17.2 micromol min-1 (mg enzyme)-1. The apparent Km values for PEP (0.3 mM) and GDP (2.0 mM) were 9- and 14-fold lower than the apparent Km values for the substrates of the back reaction (oxaloacetate and GTP, respectively). The data are consistent with the involvement of PEP carboxykinase as the primary carboxylation enzyme in the fermentation of cellulose to succinate by this bacterium.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase from the anaerobic ruminal bacterium Ruminococcus flavefaciens. 909 26

Chicken liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) was rapidly inactivated by micromolar concentrations of ferrous sulfate in the presence of ascorbate at pH 7.4. Omitting ascorbate or replacing the Fe2+ with Mn2+ or Mg2+ gives no inactivation. Mn2+, Mg2+, or Co2+ at 100-fold molar excess over Fe2+ offered complete protection from Fe2+/ascorbate-induced inactivation. The substrates PEP and GTP, but not OAA, GDP, or CO2, offered full protection from inactivation. The addition of 5 mM EDTA stopped further inactivation of the enzyme. Thermodynamic studies indicate that the inactive enzyme no longer binds Mn2+ but still had high affinity for GTP indicating that the inactivation process was specific for the metal site. A decrease in cysteine content was observed over time following PEPCK treatment with Fe2+ and ascorbate. The apparent first-order rate constant for free sulfhydryl loss (0.085 +/- 0.005 min-1) is similar to the apparent first-order rate constant for inactivation (0.067 +/- 0.005 min-1). Amino acid composition analysis revealed that cysteic acid was generated upon Fe2+/ascorbate addition to PEPCK. Native chicken liver PEPCK has an Mr of 67 kDa. SDS-PAGE of the inactivated enzyme showed the presence of two new bands at 31.7 and 35.3 kDa indicating that PEPCK was specifically cleaved at a single site. The rate of cleavage was slower than the rate of inactivation and fully inactivated enzyme was only 50% cleaved. The Fe2+/ascorbate-catalyzed inactivation was not solely due to protein cleavage. The protein fragments generated by cleavage were separated by C4 reverse phase HPLC. The cleavage exposed a new N-terminus which was identified to be the 35.3 kDa C-terminal half of PEPCK. Sequencing of the fragments indicated that the site of cleavage was between Asp296 and Ile297. These results indicate that Asp296 is involved in metal chelation. This agrees with previous studies [Hlavaty, J. J., & Nowak, T. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 3389-3403] that suggested that Asp295 and Asp296 are involved in metal binding.
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PMID:Affinity cleavage at the metal-binding site of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. 939 80

Enterocytes from fasted rabbits make glucose from exogenous fructose and dihydroxyacetone at rates of 180 and 91 nmol/min/10(8) cells but do not make glucose from glycerol, aspartate, malate, lactate, alpha-ketoglutarate, glutamate or glutamine. Total activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase and glucose 6-phosphatase in isolated enterocytes are 0.44, 0.60 and 1.90 mumol/min/10(8) cells, and > or = 95% of carboxykinase activity is intramitochondrial. Enterocytes contain marginal glycerol kinase (0.05 mumol/ min/10(8) cells) and essentially no pyruvate carboxylase activities. Enterocyte mitochondria synthesize citrate from exogenous phosphoenolpyruvate and acetylcarnitine at a rate of 2.40 nmol/min/mg protein. Citrate formation is highly dependent on exogenous HCO3 and inhibited strongly by 3-mercaptopicolinate and 1,2,3-benzenetricarboxylate. Citrate synthesis is stimulated consistently by GDP and significantly so by GTP. Citrate production is unaffected by ADP or ATP. Enterocytes from fasted-refed rabbits contain activities of 0.05, 0.12, 0.39 and 0.56 mumol/min/mg cytosolic protein of ATP:citrate lyase, NADP:malate dehydrogenase, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and NADP:isocitrate dehydrogenase. Activities of NADP:malate dehydrogenase, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and NADP:isocitrate dehydrogenase are significantly higher in enterocytes from fasted-refed rabbits than those from fasted rabbits. Mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in enterocytes in vivo could convert glycolysis-derived phosphoenolpyruvate to oxaloacetate that, with acetyl CoA, could form citrate for export to support cytosolic lipogenesis as an activator of acetyl CoA carboxylase, a source of carbon via ATP:citrate lyase and of NADPH via NADP:malate dehydrogenase or NADP:isocitrate dehydrogenase.
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PMID:Synthesis of citrate from phosphoenolpyruvate and acetylcarnitine by mitochondria from rabbit enterocytes: implications for lipogenesis. 946 72

Actinomyces are among the predominant bacteria in the oral microflora. This review discusses the glucose and lactate metabolism of Actinomyces naeslundii and its ecological significance in dental plaque. This bacterium has the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas (EMP) pathway as the main route to degrade glucose. The EMP pathway-derived metabolic intermediates, phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and pyruvate, are further converted into different end-products, depending on the environment. Under anaerobic conditions in the absence of bicarbonate, the pyruvate is converted into lactate by a lactate dehydrogenase. In the presence of bicarbonate, the PEP is combined with bicarbonate and then converted into succinate through the succinate pathway, while the pyruvate is converted into formate and acetate through the pyruvate formate-lyase pathway. Under aerobic conditions, the pyruvate liberates acetate and CO2 through a pathway initiated by a pyruvate dehydrogenase. A. naeslundii strains also degrade lactate, aerobically, to acetate and CO2 through the conversion of lactate into pyruvate by a NAD-independent lactate dehydrogenase. These strains also synthesize glycogen from a glycolytic intermediate, glucose 6-phosphate. Besides atmospheric conditions and bicarbonate, the intracellular reduction-oxidation potential, carbohydrate concentration, and environmental pH also modulate the metabolism of A. naeslundii. Some of the phosphorylating enzymes involved in A. naeslundii metabolism--e.g., GTP/polyphosphate (PPn)-dependent glucokinase, pyrophosphate (PPi)-dependent phosphofructokinase, UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, and GDP/IDP-dependent PEP carboxykinase--are unique to A. naeslundii and have not been found in other oral bacteria. The utilization of PPn and PPi as phosphoryl donors, together with glycogen synthesis and lactate utilization, could contribute to the efficient energy metabolism found in A. naeslundii. Through this flexible and efficient metabolic capacity, A. naeslundii can adapt to fluctuating environments and compete with other bacteria in dental plaque. Further, this bacterium may modify the dental plaque environment and promote the microbial population shifts in dental plaque.
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PMID:Glucose and lactate metabolism by Actinomyces naeslundii. 1063 85

Chicken liver phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) requires two divalent cations for activity. One cation activates the enzyme through a direct interaction with the protein at site n(1). The second cation, at site n(2), acts in the cation-nucleotide complex that serves as a substrate. The Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK and Cr(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK complexes were used to examine the kinetic, mechanistic, and binding properties of the n(2) metal. EPR studies performed on the Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK-GTP complex yielded a stoichiometry of 1 mol of Mn(2+) bound per mole of Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK-GTP with a K(D) of 5 microM. PRR studies show a significant enhancement for the Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK-Mn(2+)(n(2))-GDP complex. A change in enhancement in the presence of PEP suggests that PEP interacts with the second metal ion. The distance between Mn(2+) at site n(2) on PEPCK and the cis and trans protons and the (31)P of PEP are 7.0, 7.5, and 4.8 A, respectively, as measured by high-resolution NMR. PRR studies of the Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK-Mn(2+)(n(2))-GTP and Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK-Mn(2+)(n(2))-GDP complexes as a function of frequency (omega(I)) were used to estimate the hydration number of the n(2) metal to be between 0.5 and 0.7. The metal-metal distance for the M(n(1))-PEPCK-M(n(2))-GTP complex is approximately 8.3 A, and the distance for the M(n(1))-PEPCK-M(n(2))-GDP complex is 9.2 A. The change in the metal-metal distance suggests a conformational change at the active site of PEPCK occurs during catalysis. The Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK complex was incubated with Co(2+), GTP, and H(2)O(2) to create a doubly labeled and inactive Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK-Co(3+)(n(2))-GTP complex. The Co(3+)(n(1))-PEPCK-Co(3+)(n(2))-GTP complex was digested by LysC, and two cobalt-containing peptides were purified using RP-HPLC. Amino acid sequencing of the second cobalt-containing peptide points to the region of Tyr57-Lys76 of PEPCK. Asp66, Asp69, and Glu74 are all feasible ligands to the site n(2) metal.
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PMID:Characterization of the second metal site on avian phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. 1068 18

Cytosolic pyruvate kinase (PK(c)) from ripened banana (Musa cavendishii L.) fruits has been purified 543-fold to electrophoretic homogeneity and a final specific activity of 59.7 micromol of pyruvate produced/min per mg of protein. SDS/PAGE and gel-filtration FPLC of the final preparation indicated that this enzyme exists as a 240 kDa homotetramer composed of subunits of 57 kDa. Although the enzyme displayed a pH optimum of 6.9, optimal efficiency in substrate utilization [in terms of V(max)/K(m) for phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) or ADP] was equivalent at pH 6.9 and 7.5. PK(c) activity was absolutely dependent upon the presence of a bivalent and a univalent cation, with Mg(2+) and K(+) respectively fulfilling this requirement. Hyperbolic saturation kinetics were observed for the binding of PEP, ADP, Mg(2+) and K(+) (K(m) values of 0.098, 0.12, 0.27 and 0.91 mM respectively). Although the enzyme utilized UDP, IDP, GDP and CDP as alternative nucleotides, ADP was the preferred substrate. L-Glutamate and MgATP were the most effective inhibitors, whereas L-aspartate functioned as an activator by reversing the inhibition of PK(c) by L-glutamate. The allosteric features of banana PK(c) are compared with those of banana PEP carboxylase [Law and Plaxton (1995) Biochem. J. 307, 807-816]. A model is presented which highlights the roles of cytosolic pH, MgATP, L-glutamate and L-aspartate in the co-ordinate control of the PEP branchpoint in ripening bananas.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of cytosolic pyruvate kinase from banana fruit. 1110 98


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