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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)

Cytosol PEP carboxykinase has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from bullfrog liver homogenate. The enzyme is a single polypeptide chain with a molecular weight of approximately 72,000-75,000. The purified enzyme catalyzed oxaloacetate decarboxylation (nucleoside triphosphate-supported), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylation, and an exchange reaction between oxaloacetate and [14C]HCO3-in the presence of ITP or CTP. Manganese is absolutely required for the enzyme-catalyzed phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylation, whereas it can be replaced by Mg2+ for the oxaloacetate decarboxylation and the exchange reaction. The optimal pH of each reaction is dependent on the divalent metal ion used. The dependence of the enzyme activity on Mn2+ is markedly different in the phosphoenolpyuvate carboxylation and the oxaloacetate decarboxylation reactions.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of cytosol phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase from bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) liver. 31 46

Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (orthophosphate:oxaloacetate carboxylase (phosphorylating), EC 4.1.1.31) from plant cells of soybean nodules was studied to assess its role in providing carbon skeletons for aspartate and asparagine synthesis. The enzyme was purified 119-fold by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation and DEAE-cellulose, BioGel A-1.5m, and hydroxyapatite chromatography. Five activity bands were resolved with discontinuous polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A small quantity of enzyme from the most active band was separated from the others by preparative electrophoresis. The apparent Michaelis constants of this enzyme for phosphoenolpyruvate and HCO3- were 9.4.10(-2) and 4.1.10(-1) mM, respectively. A series of metabolite tested at 1 mM had no significant effect on enzyme activity. These experiments indicate that the major factors directly controlling phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity in vivo are phosphoenolpypyruvate and HCO3- concentrations.
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PMID:Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from soybean nodule cytosol. Evidence for isoenzymes and kinetics of the most active component. 57 39

In addition to the normal carboxylation reaction, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Zea mays catalyzes a HCO3(-)-dependent hydrolysis of phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate and Pi. Two independent methods were used to establish this reaction. First, the formation of pyruvate was coupled to lactate dehydrogenase in assay solutions containing high concentrations of L-glutamate and aspartate aminotransferase. Under these conditions, oxalacetic acid produced in the carboxylation reaction was efficiently transaminated, and decarboxylation to form spurious pyruvate was negligible. Second, sequential reduction of oxalacetate and pyruvate was achieved by initially running the reaction in the presence of malate dehydrogenase with NADH in excess over phosphoenolpyruvate. After the reaction was complete, lactate dehydrogenase was added, thus giving a measure of pyruvate concentration. At pH 8.0 in the presence of Mg2+, the rate of phosphoenolpyruvate hydrolysis was 3-7% of the total reaction rate. The hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase was strongly metal dependent, with rates decreasing in the order Ni2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Mn2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Ca2+. These results suggest that the active site metal ion binds to the enolate oxygen, thus stabilizing the proposed enolate intermediate. The more stable the enolate, the less reactive it is toward carboxylation and the greater the opportunity for hydrolysis.
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PMID:Hydrolysis of phosphoenolpyruvate catalyzed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from Zea mays. 163 56

An enzymatic method for measuring total carbon dioxide content in freeze-clamped animal tissues is described. Total carbon dioxide content [TCO2] was defined as the sum of the dissolved CO2, the bicarbonate concentration, and the carbonate concentration. Tissue was extracted in 80% methanol, 20 mM 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol, pH 9.5 at 25 degrees C and homogenized in a 1.5-ml Sardstat screw-top test tube containing 0.5-mm glass beads and a minibead beater. Total CO2 was determined as bicarbonate/carbonate by monitoring the oxidation of NADH at 340 nm using the coupled assay of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) and malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37). In the coupled assay system, 1 mumol of bicarbonate/carbonate consumed is equivalent to the oxidation of 1 mumol NADH at 340 nm. The assay medium comprised 50 mM 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol, pH 9.0 at 25 degrees C, 5 mM phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), 0.25 mM NADH, 5 mM MgCl2, 5 mM mercaptoethanol, 0.02% bovine serum albumin, 10 mM oxamate, PEP carboxylase (0.5 units/ml), and malate dehydrogenase (0.5 units/ml). The total CO2 content measured in freeze-clamped rat heart, liver, brain, and skeletal muscle was 20.53 +/- 0.64, 17.34 +/- 0.67, 17.00 +/- 0.48, 16.06 +/- 0.53 mumol/g wet wt tissue, respectively (n = 5). The total CO2 in the crusher muscle of the lobster was found to be 5.0 +/- 0.33 mumol/g wet wt. Total CO2 was also enzymatically measured in arterial plasma from four chronically cannulated male wistar rats and was 24.65 +/- 1.81 mumol/ml plasma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Enzymatic determination of total CO2 in freeze-clamped animal tissues and plasma. 175 Jun 72

13C-NMR spectroscopy was used to determine the level of cytoplasmic malate in maize root tips that exhibited different rates of malate synthesis. Intracellular malate was 13C-labeled at carbons 1 and 4 by perfusing root tips with 5 nM H13CO3-. This labeling reflects the activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and malate dehydrogenase (production of [4-13C]malate), and fumarase (scrambling of 13C-label between C1 and C4 of malate). In vivo 13C-NMR spectra contained a clearly resolved resonance from cytoplasmic [4-13C]malate, while the resonance from cytoplasmic [1-13C]malate overlapped with others. After 90 min of H13CO3- treatment, 13C-labeling of organic acid pools had reached steady-state. Thereafter, the ratios [13C]malate/[12C + 13C]malate and [1-13C]malate/[4-13C]malate in tissue extracts remained constant; evidence is presented that these ratios were the same for both cytoplasmic and total cellular malate. Hence, the intensity of the cytoplasmic [4-13C]malate signal was proportional to the amount of cytoplasmic malate in root tips. Potassium sulfate stimulate malate synthesis in maize root tips, relative to root tips perfused with HCO3- alone; total cellular malate doubled after approx. 1 h of 5 mM K2SO4-treatment. Cytoplasmic malate increased from approx. 3.5 mM to approx. 7.5 mM within 45 min of the onset of K2SO4-treatment, declining slightly thereafter. The possible effects of these changing cytoplasmic malate concentration on the enzymes involved in malate metabolism are discussed.
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PMID:Cytoplasmic malate levels in maize root tips during K+ ion uptake determined by 13C-NMR spectroscopy. 200 9

(1) Rabbit liver mitochondria can convert exogenous phosphoenolpyruvate to malate. (2) Malate production is dependent on phosphoenolpyruvate and HCO3- and is stimulated by CN- or malonate alone and especially in combination. (3) Malate production is inhibited 70% by 3-mercaptopicolinate, a specific inhibitor of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, and 50-60% by 1,2,3-benzenetricarboxylate, an inhibitor of the tricarboxylate transporter. (4) Rat liver mitochondria incubated with phosphoenolpyruvate under identical conditions do not produce malate. (5) Malate production from phosphoenolpyruvate is stimulated by exogenous GDP or IDP but not by ADP. (6) Data support the conclusion that malate is being produced from oxalacetate generated by reversal of mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. A possible role for this enzyme in hepatic lipogenesis is suggested.
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PMID:Synthesis of malate from phosphoenolpyruvate by rabbit liver mitochondria: implications for lipogenesis. 283 92

When we incubated biotin carboxylase from Escherichia coli with ATP in absence of biotin we observed HCO3- -dependent ATP hydrolysis, which was activated by 10% ethanol in the same proportion as the activity of D-biotin carboxylation assayed in the presence of biotin. The two activities exhibited identical heat stability and were protected equally by glycerol; both required Mg2+ and K+ and showed similar dependency on the concentration of ATP. Biotin assay excluded potential contamination by traces of biotin as a cause of the observed ATP hydrolysis, and this was confirmed by the findings that carboxybiotin did not accumulate and that avidin was uninhibitory. Therefore we concluded that this HCO3- -dependent ATPase was genuinely a partial activity of biotin carboxylase. This partial activity supports a sequential mechanism for enzymatic carboxylation of biotin in which HCO3- is activated by ATP in a first step. It is consistent with the initial formation of the carbonic-phosphoric anhydride (HOCO2PO3(2-)), and it does not agree with models where biotin is phosphorylated by ATP prior to reaction with HCO3-. It appears that enzymes that use HCO3- for carboxylation, including biotin-dependent carboxylases, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, and carbamoyl phosphate synthetase, activate HCO3- by a common mechanism involving the initial formation of the carbonic-phosphoric anhydride.
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PMID:ATPase activity of biotin carboxylase provides evidence for initial activation of HCO3- by ATP in the carboxylation of biotin. 294 46

Acetyl phosphate produced an increase in the maximum velocity (Vmax. for the carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate catalysed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. The limiting Vmax. was 22.2 mumol X min-1 X mg-1 (185% of the value without acetyl phosphate). This compound also decreased the Km for phosphoenolpyruvate to 0.18 mM. The apparent activation constants for acetyl phosphate were 1.6 mM and 0.62 mM in the presence of 0.5 and 4 mM-phosphoenolpyruvate respectively. Carbamyl phosphate produced an increase in Vmax. and Km for phosphoenolpyruvate. The variation of Vmax./Km with carbamyl phosphate concentration could be described by a model in which this compound interacts with the carboxylase at two different types of sites: an allosteric activator site(s) and the substrate-binding site(s). Carbamyl phosphate was hydrolysed by the action of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. The hydrolysis produced Pi and NH4+ in a 1:1 relationship. Values of Vmax. and Km were 0.11 +/- 0.01 mumol of Pi X min-1 X mg-1 and 1.4 +/- 0.1 mM, respectively, in the presence of 10 mM-NaHCO3. If HCO3- was not added, these values were 0.075 +/- 0.014 mumol of Pi X min-1 X mg-1 and 0.76 +/- 0.06 mM. Vmax./Km showed no variation between pH 6.5 and 8.5. The reaction required Mg2+; the activation constants were 0.77 and 0.31 mM at pH 6.5 and 8.5 respectively. Presumably, carbamyl phosphate is hydrolysed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase by a reaction the mechanism of which is related to that of the carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate.
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PMID:Interaction of acetyl phosphate and carbamyl phosphate with plant phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. 303 67

Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was purified 100-fold from the cyanobacterium Coccochloris peniocystis with a yield of 10%. A single isozyme was found at all stages of purification, and activity of other beta-carboxylase enzymes was not detected. The apparent molecular weight of the native enzyme was 560,000. Optimal activity was observed at pH 8.0 and 40 degrees C, yielding a Vmax of 8.84 mumol/mg of protein per min. The enzyme was not protected from heat inactivation by aspartate, malate, or oxalacetate. Michaelis-Menten reaction kinetics were observed for various concentrations of PEP, Mg2+, and HCO3-, yielding Km values of 0.6, 0.27, and 0.8 mM, respectively. Enzyme activity was inhibited by aspartate and tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates and noncompetitively inhibited by oxalacetate, while activation by any compound was not observed. However, the enzyme was sensitive to metabolic control at subsaturating substrate concentrations at neutral pH. These data indicate that cyanobacterial PEP carboxylase resembles the enzyme isolated from C3 plants (plants which initially incorporate CO2 into C3 sugars) and suggest that PEP carboxylase functions anapleurotically in cyanobacteria.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from a cyanobacterium. 309 61

Determination of whether CO2 or HCO3- is the substrate for an enzymatic carboxylation has generally been accomplished by taking advantage of the fact that equilibration of these two compounds requires more than a minute at temperatures below 15 degrees C; thus different kinetics of carboxylation are obtained depending on whether CO2 or HCO3- is used to initiate the reaction. We report a new method using 13C18O2 as substrate for determining the CO2/HCO3- specificity of carboxylases. If CO2 is the substrate, then the 18O content of the 13C-containing product is the same as that of the 13CO2 used, whereas if HCO3- is the substrate, the 18O content is 2/3 that of the starting material. The method is independent of the detailed kinetics of the CO2/HCO3- interconversion and independent of the presence of contaminating unlabeled CO2 or HCO3-. Isotopic analysis is accomplished by 13C NMR. The method has been used to confirm that HCO3- is the substrate for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. Studies of oxygen-18 isotope shifts in phosphorus NMR spectra have permitted confirmation of the observation that label is transferred from HC18O3- into Pi during the carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate.
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PMID:Determination of substrate specificity of carboxylases by nuclear magnetic resonance. 311 Dec 98


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