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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)
To elucidate the regulatory mechanism for propionate production in Selenomonas ruminantium, the molecular properties and gene expression of
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(Pck) and pyruvate kinase (Pyk) were investigated. The Pck was deduced to consist of 538 aa with a molecular mass of 59.6 kDa, and appeared to exist as a monomer. The Pyk was revealed to consist of four identical subunits consisting of 469 aa with a molecular mass of 51.3 kDa. Both Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) were required for the maximal activity of Pck, and Pck utilized ADP, not
GDP
or IDP, as a substrate. Either Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) was required for Pyk activity, and the enzyme was activated by phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP). Pyk activity was severely inhibited by P(i), but restored by the addition of FBP. The K:(m) value of Pck for PEP (0.55 mM) was nearly equal to the K:(m) value of Pyk for PEP, suggesting that the partition of the flow from PEP in the fermentation pathways is determined by the activity ratio of Pck to Pyk. Both pck and pyk genes were monocistronic, although two transcriptional start sites were found in pyk. The level of pyk mRNA was not different whether glucose or lactate was the energy substrate. However, the pck mRNA level was 12-fold higher when grown on lactate than on glucose. The level of pck mRNA was inversely related to the sufficiency of energy, suggesting that Pck synthesis is regulated at the transcriptional level when energy supply is altered. It was conceivable that the transcription of pck in S. ruminantium is triggered by PEP and suppressed by ATP.
...
PMID:Molecular characterization, enzyme properties and transcriptional regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and pyruvate kinase in a ruminal bacterium, Selenomonas ruminantium. 1123 75
This is the first report on a bacterial verterbrate-type GTP-dependent
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(PCK). The pck gene of Mycobacterium smegmatis was cloned. The recombinant PCK was overexpressed in Escherichia coli in a soluble form and with high activity. The purified enzyme was found to be monomeric (72 kDa), thermophilic (optimum temperature, 70 degrees C), very stable upon storage at 4 degrees C, stimulated by thiol-containing reducing agents, and inhibited by oxalate and by alpha-ketoglutarate. The requirement for a divalent cation for activity was fulfilled best by Mn(2+) and Co(2+) and poorly by Mg(2+). At 37 degrees C, the highest V(m) value (32.5 units/mg) was recorded with Mn(2+) and in the presence of 37 mm dithiothreitol (DTT). The presence of Mg(2+) (2 mm) greatly lowered the apparent K(m) values for Mn(2+) (by 144-fold in the presence of DTT and by 9.4-fold in the absence of DTT) and Co(2+) (by 230-fold). In the absence of DTT but in the presence of Mg(2+) (2 mm) as the co-divalent cation, Co(2+) was 21-fold more efficient than Mn(2+). For producing oxaloacetate, the enzyme utilized both
GDP
and IDP; ADP served very poorly. The apparent K(m) values for phosphoenolpyruvate,
GDP
, and bicarbonate were >100, 66, and 8300 micrometer, respectively, whereas those for GTP and oxaloacetate (for the phosphoenolpyruvate formation activity) were 13 and 12 microm, respectively. Thus, this enzyme preferred the gluconeogenesis/glycerogenesis direction. This property fits the suggestion that in M. smegmatis, pyruvate carboxylase is not anaplerotic but rather gluconeogenic (Mukhopadhyay, B., and Purwantini, E. (2000) Biochim. Biophys. Acta. 1475, 191-206). Both in primary structure and kinetic properties, the mycobacterial PCK was very similar to its vertebrate-liver counterparts and thus could serve as a model for these enzymes; examples for several immediate targets are presented.
...
PMID:A GTP-dependent vertebrate-type phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase from Mycobacterium smegmatis. 1127 51
The enzyme
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(
PEPCK
) catalyzes the reversible conversion of oxalacetate and GTP to phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP),
GDP
, and CO2.
PEPCK
from higher organisms is a monomer, specifically requires GTP or ITP, and uses Mn2+ as the activating cation. Currently, there is no crystal structure of GTP-utilizing PEPCKs. The conformation of the bound nucleotide was determined from transferred nuclear Overhauser effects (trnOe) experiments to determine internuclear proton distances. At 600 MHz in the presence of
PEPCK
, nOe effects were observed between nucleotide protons. Internuclear distances were calculated from the initial rate of the nOe buildup. These distance constraints were used in energy minimization calculations to determine the conformation of
PEPCK
-bound GTP. The bound nucleotide has the base oriented anti to the C2'-endo(2E) ribose ring conformation. Relaxation rate studies indicate that there is an additional relaxation effect on the C1' proton upon nucleotide binding to
PEPCK
. Nucleotide binding to
PEPCK
-Mn2+ was studied by 1H relaxation rate studies, but results were complicated by long dipole-dipole distances and the presence of competing complexes. Modification of
PEPCK
by iodoacetamido-TEMPO leads to an inactive enzyme that is spin-labeled at cys273. The interaction of TEMPO-
PEPCK
with GTP allows for the measurement of nuclear distances between GTP and the spin label. The results suggest that cys273 lies near the ribose ring of the bound nucleotide, but it is too far to be implicated in direct hydrogen bonding interactions consistent with previous results [Makinen, A. L., and Nowak, T. J. Biol. Chem. (1989) 264, 12148], suggesting that cys273 does not actively participate in catalysis. Modification of
PEPCK
with several cysteine specific modifying agents causes no change in the ability of the enzyme to bind nucleotide as monitored by fluorescence quenching. A correlation between the size of the modifying agent and the maximal observed quenching upon saturation of the enzyme with nucleotide is observed. This suggests a mechanism for inactivation of
PEPCK
by cysteine modification due to inhibition of a dynamic motion that may occur upon nucleotide binding.
...
PMID:Structural investigation of the binding of nucleotide to phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase by NMR. 1155 Dec
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase catalyzes the reversible decarboxylation of oxaloacetic acid with the concomitant transfer of the gamma-phosphate of GTP to form PEP and
GDP
as the first committed step of gluconeogenesis and glyceroneogenesis. The three structures of the mitochondrial isoform of
PEPCK
reported are complexed with Mn2+, Mn2+-PEP, or Mn2+-malonate-Mn2+
GDP
and provide the first observations of the structure of the mitochondrial isoform and insight into the mechanism of catalysis mediated by this enzyme. The structures show the involvement of the hyper-reactive cysteine (C307) in the coordination of the active site Mn2+. Upon formation of the
PEPCK
-Mn2+-PEP or
PEPCK
-Mn2+-malonate-Mn2+
GDP
complexes, C307 coordination is lost as the P-loop in which it resides adopts a different conformation. The structures suggest that stabilization of the cysteine-coordinated metal geometry holds the enzyme as a catalytically incompetent metal complex and may represent a previously unappreciated mechanism of regulation. A third conformation of the mobile P-loop in the
PEPCK
-Mn2+-malonate-Mn2+
GDP
complex demonstrates the participation of a previously unrecognized, conserved serine residue (S305) in mediating phosphoryl transfer. The ordering of the mobile active site lid in the
PEPCK
-Mn2+-malonate-Mn2+
GDP
complex yields the first observation of this structural feature and provides additional insight into the mechanism of phosphoryl transfer.
...
PMID:Structural insights into the mechanism of PEPCK catalysis. 1681 24
The roles of Asp(75), Asp(78), and Glu(83) of the (75)DPSDVARVE(83) element of Mycobacterium smegmatis GTP-dependent phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase (GTP-
PEPCK
) were investigated. Asp(78) and Glu(83) are fully conserved in GTP-PEP-CKs. The human
PEPCK
crystal structure suggests that Asp(78) influences Tyr(220); Tyr(220) helps to position bound PEP, and Glu(83) interacts with Arg(81). Experimental data on other PEPCKs indicate that Arg(81) binds PEP, and the phosphate of PEP interacts with Mn(2+) of metal site 1 for catalysis. We found that D78A and E83A replacements severely reduced activity. E83A substitution raised the apparent K(m) value for Mn(2+) 170-fold. In contrast, Asp(75) is highly but not fully conserved; natural substitutions are Ala, Asn, Gln, or Ser. Such substitutions, when engineered, in M. smegmatis enzyme caused the following. 1) For oxaloacetate synthesis, V(max) decreased 1.4-4-fold. K(m) values for PEP and Mn(2+) increased 3-9- and 1.2-10-fold, respectively. K(m) values for
GDP
and bicarbonate changed little. 2) For PEP formation, V(max) increased 1.5-2.7-fold. K(m) values for oxaloacetate increased 2-2.8-fold. The substitutions did not change the secondary structure of protein significantly. The kinetic effects are rationalized as follows. In E83A the loss of Glu(83)-Arg(81) interaction affected Arg(81)-PEP association. D78A change altered the Tyr(220)-PEP interaction. These events perturbed PEP-Mn(2+) interaction and consequently affected catalysis severely. In contrast, substitutions at Asp(75), a site far from bound PEP, brought subtle effects, lowering oxaloacetate formation rate but enhancing PEP formation rate. It is likely that Asp(75) substitutions affected PEP-Mn(2+) interaction by changing the positions of Asp(78), Arg(81), and Glu(83), which translated to differential effects on two directions.
...
PMID:Roles of Asp75, Asp78, and Glu83 of GTP-dependent phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase from Mycobacterium smegmatis. 1701 50
The structures of the rat cytosolic isoform of
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(
PEPCK
) reported in the
PEPCK
-Mn2+, -Mn2+-oxaloacetic acid (OAA), -Mn2+-OAA-Mn2+-
guanosine-5'-diphosphate
(
GDP
), and -Mn2+-Mn2+-guanosine-5'-tri-phosphate (GTP) complexes provide insight into the mechanism of phosphoryl transfer and decarboxylation mediated by this enzyme. OAA is observed to bind in a number of different orientations coordinating directly to the active site metal. The Mn2+-OAA and Mn2+-OAA-Mn2+GDP structures illustrate inner-sphere coordination of OAA to the manganese ion through the displacement of two of the three water molecules coordinated to the metal in the holo-enzyme by the C3 and C4 carbonyl oxygens. In the
PEPCK
-Mn2+-OAA complex, an alternate bound conformation of OAA is present. In this conformation, in addition to the previous interactions, the C1 carboxylate is directly coordinated to the active site Mn2+, displacing all of the waters coordinated to the metal in the holo-enzyme. In the
PEPCK
-Mn2+-GTP structure, the same water molecule displaced by the C1 carboxylate of OAA is displaced by one of the gamma-phosphate oxygens of the triphosphate nucleotide. The structures are consistent with a mechanism of direct in-line phosphoryl transfer, supported by the observed stereochemistry of the reaction. In the catalytically competent binding mode, the C1 carboxylate of OAA is sandwiched between R87 and R405 in an environment that would serve to facilitate decarboxylation. In the reverse reaction, these two arginines would form the CO2 binding site. Comparison of the Mn2+-OAA-Mn2+GDP and Mn2+-Mn2+GTP structures illustrates a marked difference in the bound conformations of the nucleotide substrates in which the GTP nucleotide is bound in a high-energy state resulting from the eclipsing of all three of the phosphoryl groups along the triphosphate chain. This contrasts a previously determined structure of
PEPCK
in complex with a triphosphate nucleotide analogue in which the analogue mirrors the conformation of
GDP
as opposed to GTP. Last, the structures illustrate a correlation between conformational changes in the P-loop, the nucleotide binding site, and the active site lid that are important for catalysis.
...
PMID:Structures of rat cytosolic PEPCK: insight into the mechanism of phosphorylation and decarboxylation of oxaloacetic acid. 1768 35
The PCK1 gene (Pck1 in rodents) encodes the cytosolic isozyme of
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(PEPCK-C), which is well-known for its function as a gluconeogenic enzyme in the liver and kidney. Mouse studies involving whole body and tissue-specific Pck1 knockouts as well as tissue-specific over-expression of PEPCK-C have resulted in type 2 diabetes as well as several surprising phenotypes including obesity, lipodystrophy, fatty liver, and death. These phenotypes arise from perturbations not only in gluconeogenesis but in two additional metabolic functions of PEPCK-C: (1) cataplerosis which maintains metabolic flux through the Krebs cycle by removing excess oxaloacetate, and (2) glyceroneogenesis which produces glycerol-3-phosphate as a precursor for fatty acid esterification into triglycerides. PEPCK-C catalyzes the conversion of oxaloacetate + GTP to phosphoenolpyruvate +
GDP
+ CO2. It is in part the tissue-specificity of this simple reaction that results in the variety of phenotypes listed above. Briefly: (1) A 7-fold over-expression of PEPCK-C in the livers of mice causes excessive glucose production. (2) Mice with a whole-body knockout of Pck1 die within 2-3 days of birth, not from hypoglycemia, but probably because the Krebs cycle slows to approximately 10% of normal in the absence of cataplerosis. (3) Mice with a liver-specific knockout have an inability to remove oxaloacetate from the Krebs cycle, which leads to a fatty liver following a fast. (4) An adipose-specific knockout of Pck1 results in a fraction of the mice developing lipodystrophy due to lost glyceroneogenesis and a consequent decrease in fatty acid re-esterification. (5) Finally, disregulated over-expression of PEPCK-C in adipose tissue increases fatty acid re-esterification leading to obesity. These varied experimental phenotypes in mice have led us to postulate that abnormal production of
PEPCK
isozymes encoded by two
PEPCK
genes, PCK1 and PCK2, in humans could have similar consequences (Beale, E. G. et al. (2004). Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism, 15, 129-135). The purpose of this review is to further explore these possibilities.
...
PMID:PCK1 and PCK2 as candidate diabetes and obesity genes. 1770 78
We report the first kinetic characterization of human liver cytosolic GTP-dependent
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(GTP-PEPCK), which plays a major role in the development of type 2 diabetes in human. In this work two recombinant forms of the enzyme were studied. One form had a His10-tag and the other was His-tag-free, and with one exception, both exhibited similar kinetic properties. When Mn2+ was used as the sole divalent cation, the His10-tagged enzyme, but not the His-tag-free enzyme, was increasingly inhibited at Mn2+ concentrations greater than 0.7 mM. This inhibition did not pose any problem in kinetic analysis, for within the relevant Mn2+ concentration range the His-tagged human
PEPCK
behaved almost identically to the tag-free enzyme. This property will bring simplicity and speed to purifying and studying multiple structural variants of this important enzyme. Apparent Km values of tag-free enzyme for phosphoenolpyruvate,
GDP
and bicarbonate were 450, 79 and 20,600 microM, respectively, while those for oxaloacetate and GTP were 4 and 23 microM, respectively, emphasizing the enzyme's gluconeogenic character. Bicarbonate (>100 mM) inhibited OAA-forming activity, which was a new observation with a GTP-
PEPCK
. The apparent Km for Mn2+ in the PEP-forming direction was 30-fold lower than that for the OAA-forming direction. Mn2+ and bicarbonate or CO2 might regulate the enzyme in vivo.
...
PMID:Kinetic characterization of recombinant human cytosolic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase with and without a His10-tag. 1788 79
Molecular properties and transcriptional control of
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(PCK; EC 4.1.1.32) in Ruminococcus albus were examined. The putative 537-amino acid PCK polypeptide has a predicted mass of 59.4 kDa and an isoelectric point of 4.82. RT-PCR and Northern blot analyses of pck mRNA suggest that the transcript is monocistronic and that pck transcription is not affected by changes in sugar sources present in growth medium. PCK enzymatic activity requires either Mg(2+) or Mn(2+) and an optimal pH of 7.0. R. albus PCK phosphorylated ADP more readily than
GDP
. Apparent K ( m ) values of PCK for PEP and ADP were considerably lower than those for OAA and ATP, suggesting that the reaction from PEP to OAA is favored in R. albus. The enzyme properties of PCK in R. albus appear to be more similar to Selenomonas ruminantium PCK than to Ruminococcus flavefacience, although R. albus and R. flavefacience belong to the same genus. The specific activity of PCK, representing the amount of enzyme per cell, in R. albus was much lower than that in S. ruminantium. The amount of succinate produced in R. albus from one unit of cellobiose was also much lower than the sum of succinate and propionate produced in S. ruminantium. Based on these results, we propose enhancement of PCK activity by stimulating PCK transcription as a method to decrease R. albus H(2) production without suppressing growth.
...
PMID:Molecular and biochemical characterization of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in the ruminal bacterium Ruminococcus albus. 1919 51
Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinases catalyse the reversible formation of oxaloacetate (OAA) and ATP (or GTP) from PEP, ADP (or
GDP
) and CO(2). They are activated by Mn(2+), a metal ion that coordinates to the protein through the epsilon-amino group of a lysine residue, the N(epsilon-2)-imidazole of a histidine residue, and the carboxylate from an aspartic acid residue. Neutrality in the epsilon-amino group of Lys213 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
PEP carboxykinase
is expected to be favoured by the vicinity of ionised Lys212. Glu272 and Glu284, located close to Lys212, should, in turn, electrostatically stabilise its positive charge and hence assist in keeping the epsilon-amino group of Lys213 in a neutral state. The mutations Glu272Gln, Glu284Gln, and Lys212Met increased the activation constant for Mn(2+) in the main reaction of the enzyme up to seven-fold. The control mutation Lys213Gln increased this constant by ten-fold, as opposed to control mutation Lys212Arg, which did not affect the Mn(2+) affinity of the enzyme. These observations indicate a role for Glu272, Glu284, and Lys212 in assisting Lys213 to properly bind Mn(2+). In an unexpected result, the mutations Glu284Gln, Lys212Met and Lys213Gln changed the nucleotide-independent OAA decarboxylase activity of S. cerevisiae
PEP carboxykinase
into an ADP-requiring activity, implying an effect on the OAA binding characteristics of
PEP carboxykinase
.
...
PMID:Electrostatic interactions play a significant role in the affinity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase for Mn2+. 2021 82
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