Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.1.2.13 (aldolase)
3,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Aspergillus nidulans was completely devoid of fruit bodies when grown on manganese deficient cultures. This result was shown earlier to be due to a lack of alpha-1,3 glucan in the cell wall. Several enzymes of carbon and nitrogen metabolism were investigated in an attempt to explain the absence of this reserve material. Synthesis of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglucoisomerase and aldolase, were not strongly affected by manganese deficiency. However, phosphoglucomutase showed only 60% of the activity of the control cultures and it was argued that this was connected with the low amounts of alpha-1,3 glucan synthesized. Malate dehydrogenase was the enzyme the least affected by manganese deficiency and the two to threefold higher activity measured after glucose depletion might indicate the induction of the glyoxylate cycle. An impaired glutamine synthetase could explain the increase in activity observed for NAD-glutamine dehydrogenase.
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PMID:Sexual differentiation in Aspergillus nidulans: the requirement for manganese and the correlation between phosphoglucomutase and the synthesis of reserve material. 17 48

Three cell lines established from human gliomas were found to differ in the capacity to phosphorylate the glycolytic enzyme pyruvate kinase in vitro. Phosphorylation in the glioblastoma cell line U-138 was more pronounced than in the glioma cell line Hs 683 and in the glioblastoma cell line A-172. All 3 cell lines showed similar pyruvate kinase isozyme patterns and expressed about 90% K-type and 10% M-type subunits. So, differences in pyruvate kinase phosphorylation could not be explained by differences in the availability of the appropriate substrate, being pyruvate kinase type K. As in gliomas, phosphorylation could specifically and almost completely be inhibited by fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. In order to investigate a potential physiological significance of the phosphorylation of pyruvate kinase, we have characterized these cell lines for several glycolytic parameters. In U-138 cells, the production of lactate appeared to be 2 times higher as compared with A-172 and Hs 683 cells under normal growth conditions and even 4 times higher under low glucose culture regime. The efflux of lactate correlated with the pyruvate kinase phosphorylation pattern in the cell lines. In none of the cell lines could the lactate production be stimulated by glutamine as additional energy source under low glucose culture conditions. The higher glycolytic flux in U-138 cells was not accompanied by higher glycolytic enzyme activities. The isozyme patterns of hexokinase, pyruvate kinase, aldolase, enolase and lactate dehydrogenase in the cell lines were nearly identical and resembled the patterns previously described for solid gliomas. However, the isozyme composition of phosphofructokinase in the cell lines differed from the situation in gliomas. While in gliomas the expression of L-type phosphofructokinase is favored, in the glioma cell lines, we found an increase in the expression of C-type subunits.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of pyruvate kinase and glycolytic metabolism in three human glioma cell lines. 179 9

Energy metabolism in proliferating cultured rat thymocytes was compared with that of freshly prepared non-proliferating resting cells. Cultured rat thymocytes enter a proliferative cycle after stimulation by concanavalin A and Lymphocult T (interleukin-2), with maximal rates of DNA synthesis at 60 h. Compared with incubated resting thymocytes, glucose metabolism by incubated proliferating thymocytes was 53-fold increased; 90% of the amount of glucose utilized was converted into lactate, whereas resting cells metabolized only 56% to lactate. However, the latter oxidized 27% of glucose to CO2, as opposed to 1.1% by the proliferating cells. Activities of hexokinase, 6-phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase and aldolase in proliferating thymocytes were increased 12-, 17-, 30- and 24-fold respectively, whereas the rate of pyruvate oxidation was enhanced only 3-fold. The relatively low capacity of pyruvate degradation in proliferating thymocytes might be the reason for almost complete conversion of glucose into lactate by these cells. Glutamine utilization by rat thymocytes was 8-fold increased during proliferation. The major end products of glutamine metabolism are glutamate, aspartate, CO2 and ammonia. A complete recovery of glutamine carbon and nitrogen in the products was obtained. The amount of glutamate formed by phosphate-dependent glutaminase which entered the citric acid cycle was enhanced 5-fold in the proliferating cells: 76% was converted into 2-oxoglutarate by aspartate aminotransferase, present in high activity, and the remaining 24% by glutamate dehydrogenase. With resting cells the same percentages were obtained (75 and 25). Maximal activities of glutaminase, glutamate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase were increased 3-, 12- and 6-fold respectively in proliferating cells; 32% of the glutamate metabolized in the citric acid cycle was recovered in CO2 and 61% in aspartate. In resting cells this proportion was 41% and 59% and in mitogen-stimulated cells 39% and 65% respectively. Addition of glucose (4 mM) or malate (2 mM) strongly decreased the rates of glutamine utilization and glutamate conversion into 2-oxoglutarate by proliferating thymocytes and also affected the pathways of further glutamate metabolism. Addition of 2 mM-pyruvate did not alter the rate of glutamine utilization by proliferating thymocytes, but decreased the rate of metabolism beyond the stage of glutamate significantly. Formation of acetyl-CoA in the presence of pyruvate might explain the relatively enhanced oxidation of glutamate to CO2 (56%) by proliferating thymocytes.
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PMID:Glutamine and glucose metabolism during thymocyte proliferation. Pathways of glutamine and glutamate metabolism. 286 9

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

Phospho-2-keto-3-deoxy-heptonate aldolase (DAHP synthase) of Pseudomonas aureofaciens ATCC 15926 was inhibited by L-tyrosine. The inhibition was competitive with erythrose 4-phosphate as the varied substrate but non-competitive with respect to phosphoenolpyruvate. Anthranilate synthase was inhibited by L-tryptophan. The inhibition was competitive with respect to chorismate but non-competitive with L-glutamine or NH4+ as the varied substrate. DAHP synthase and anthranilate synthase were not repressed when aromatic amino acids were included in the growth medium. In bacteria grown in the presence of L-phenylalanine, the anthranilate synthase activity was enhanced about threefold compared with the control. Similar results were obtained with the mutant strain P. aureofaciens ACN, which produces increased amounts of pyrrolnitrin.
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PMID:Regulation of phospho-2-keto-3-deoxy-heptonate aldolase (DAHP synthase) and anthranilate synthase of Pseudomonas aureofaciens. 611 83

Some experimental and clinical studies were done from the metabolic viewpoint to elucidate the characteristics of myonephropathic-metabolic syndrome. In experimental dogs with their femoral arteries ligated and two third of femoral muscles divided, aldolase and myoglobin showed remarkable increase without significant changes in electrolytes. Slight increase of GPT and GOT was observed. Amino acids showed elevation in urea, taurin, leucin, isoleucin, valine, threonine, 3-methylhistidine, phenylalanine, histidine, lysine, methionine, tyrosine and anserin and decrease in glutamine, alanine, glycine, proline, carnosine, citrullin and arginine. In patients with acute arterial occlusion, potassium, GOT, LDH, CPK, lactate and pyruvate increased moderately and myoglobin showed remarkable increase and aldolase slight increase. Amino acids showed remarkable increase in 3-methylhistidine and beta-amino-isobutyric acid and moderate increase in phenylalanine and arginine. These results revealed that measurement of free amino acid concentration, especially that of methylhistidine as well as myoglobin, pyruvate, lactate and some other enzymes might be of great help to predict the prognosis of patients with acute arterial occlusion of the extremities.
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PMID:[Metabolic study on acute arterial occlusion of the extremities]. 667 89

The pathology and enzymology of the intestinal mucosae of lambs dosed daily with 2500 Trichostrongylus vitrinus larvae and killed at five, nine or 14 weeks were compared with worm-free animals. The proximal small intestines of the infected lambs exhibited extensive mucosal damage at five and nine weeks, but only isolated lesions were found at 14 weeks. Activities of the brush border enzymes alkaline phosphatase, leucine amino-peptidase, maltase and glycyl-L-leucine dipeptidase were all significantly depleted during infection, although the magnitude, time of onset and duration of the individual enzyme responses varied. Mucosal activities of the pancreatic enzymes, trypsin and to a lesser extent chymotrypsin were also markedly decreased particularly during the first nine weeks of infection. Specific acetylcholinesterase activity was significantly increased throughout the study, maximal levels being observed at five weeks. In contrast 'pseudo'-cholinesterase levels were consistently within the control range. During the early stages of infection (five weeks) glutamine-oxaloacetate transaminase activity was significantly decreased, while aldolase and creatine phosphokinase levels were significantly elevated. At nine weeks low glutamine-oxaloacetate transaminase activities were again detected and lactate dehydrogenase activity was also markedly reduced. At 14 weeks the mean activities of all four enzymes were within the normal range as were superoxide dismutase levels throughout. Significant correlations were found between alkaline phosphatase, trypsin, chymotrypsin, aldolase and glutamine-oxaloacetate transaminase activities and the degree of mucosal damage within the individual lambs.
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PMID:Changes in the intestinal enzyme activity of lambs during chronic infection with Trichostrongylus vitrinus. 710 Jun 47

1. With fumarate as the terminal electron acceptor and either H2 or formate as donor, Vibrio succinogenes could grow anaerobically in a mineral medium using fumarate as the sole carbon source. Both the growth rate and the cell yield were increased when glutamate was also present in the medium. 2. Glutamate was incorporated only into the amino acids of the glutamate family (glutamate, glutamine, proline and arginine) of the protein. The residual cell constituents were synthesized from fumarate. 3. Pyruvate and phosphoenolpyruvate, as the central intermediates of most of the cell constituents, were formed through the action of malic enzyme and phosphoenolpyruvate synthetase. Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolase was present in the bacterium suggesting that this enzyme is involved in carbohydrate synthesis. 4. In the absence of added glutamate the amino acids of the glutamate family were synthesized from fumarate via citrate. The enzymes involved in glutamate synthesis were present. 5. During growth in the presence of glutamate, net reducing equivalents were needed for cell synthesis. Glutamate and not H2 or formate was used as the source of these reducing equivalents. For this purpose part of the glutamate was oxidized to yield succinate and CO2. 6. The alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase involved in this reaction was found to use ferredoxin as the electron acceptor. The ferredoxin of the bacterium was reoxidized by means of a NADP-ferredoxin oxidoreductase. Enzymes catalyzing the reduction of NAD, NADP or ferredoxin by H2 or formate were not detected in the bacterium.
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PMID:Biosynthetic Pathways of Vibrio succinogenes growing with fumarate as terminal electron acceptor and sole carbon source. 710 60

Lysine-146 of rabbit muscle aldolase (D-fructose-1,6-biphosphate aldolase, EC 4.1.2.13) is absolutely conserved in class I (Schiff base) aldolases and has been implicated previously in catalysis by protein modification. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to change lysine-146 to alanine, glutamine, leucine, or histidine, creating the mutant enzymes K146A, K146Q, K146L, and K146H, respectively. These mutant proteins were expressed at high levels in bacteria and were purified by substrate affinity elution from CM-Sepharose, the same method that is used for the wild-type enzyme. The mutants K146A, K146Q, and K146L had substrate cleavage rates below standard detection levels. Modified cleavage assays indicated that these enzymes were (0.5-2) x 10(6)-fold decreased in the rate of catalysis of fructose 1,6-bis(phosphate) (Fru-1,6-Pa)cleavage. The K146H enzyme, however, was approximately 2000-fold slower than wild type in the rates of both cleavage and condensation of Fru-1,6-P2. In assays for the presence of enzymatic intermediates, all of the mutant enzymes were able to catalyze formation of the carbanion intermediate with dihydroxyacetone phosphate, whereas this intermediate was below the level of detection with Fru-1,6-P2. Single-turnover experiments with these enzymes in excess over radiolabeled Fru-1,6-P2 were used to measure the rates of Schiff base and product formation. The rate of Schiff base formation was decreased in each of the mutant enzymes, yet the magnitude of this decrease was less than the reduction in the respective kcat. These mutations had a much larger effect, however, on the rate of C3-C4 bond breaking, showing that Lys-146 is crucial at this step of the catalytic cycle.
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PMID:Lysine-146 of rabbit muscle aldolase is essential for cleavage and condensation of the C3-C4 bond of fructose 1,6-bis(phosphate). 791 50

Structural relationships between the myofibrillar contractile apparatus and the enzymes that generate ATP for muscle contraction are not well understood. We explored whether glycolytic enzymes are localized in Drosophila flight muscle and whether localization is required for function. We find that glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) is localized at Z-discs and M-lines. The glycolytic enzymes aldolase and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) are also localized along the sarcomere with a periodic pattern that is indistinguishable from that of GPDH localization. Furthermore, localization of aldolase and GAPDH requires simultaneous localization of GPDH, because aldolase and GAPDH are not localized along the sarcomere in muscles of strains that carry Gpdh null alleles. In an attempt to understand the process of glycolytic enzyme colocalization, we have explored in more detail the mechanism of GPDH localization. In flight muscle, there is only one GPDH isoform, GPDH-1, which is distinguished from isoforms found in other tissues by having three C-terminal amino acids: glutamine, asparagine, and leucine. Transgenic flies that can produce only GPDH-1 display enzyme colocalization similar to wild-type flies. However, transgenic flies that synthesize only GPDH-3, lacking the C-terminal tripeptide, do not show the periodic banding pattern of localization at Z-discs and M-lines for GPDH. In addition, neither GAPDH nor aldolase colocalize at Z-discs and M-lines in the sarcomeres of muscles from GPDH-3 transgenic flies. Failure of the glycolytic enzymes to colocalize in the sarcomere results in the inability to fly, even though the full complement of active glycolytic enzymes is present in flight muscles. Therefore, the presence of active enzymes in the cell is not sufficient for muscle function; colocalization of the enzymes is required. These results indicate that the mechanisms by which ATP is supplied to the myosin ATPase, for muscle contraction, requires a highly organized cellular system.
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PMID:Flight muscle function in Drosophila requires colocalization of glycolytic enzymes. 930 64


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