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Query: EC:4.2.1.22 (
cystathionine beta-synthase
)
965
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
ATP-sulfurylase,
cysteine synthase
, homocysteine synthase, arylsulfatase and
beta-cystathionase
in Saccharomycopsis lipolytica are repressed on the addition of methionine, homocysteine or cysteine to the growth medium. The use of appropriate mutants enabled us to demonstrate that the synthesis of these enzymes is regulated by the system involving at least two low-molecular weight effectors--most likely cysteine and methionine (or their close derivatives).
...
PMID:Regulation of s-amino acids biosynthesis in Saccharomycopsis lipolytica. 28 1
Theoretic and experimental arguments are surveyed which justify the setting up, within the family of pyridoxal-P-dependent lyases, of a special subgroup that comprizes several enzymes catalyzing exclusively beta-replacement reactions of alpha-aminoacids with electronegative substituents in the beta-position. The authors and their associates have studied the physico-chemical and catalytic properties of four high purity enzymes belonging to this subgroup, namely: cysteine lyase (EC 4.1.1.10) from embryonic chicken yolk-sac,
serine sulfhydrase
from chicken liver and the closely analogous or synonymic
cystathionine beta-synthase
(
EC 4.4.1.8
) from rat liver, and beta-cyanoalanine synthase (EC 4.4.1.9) from lupine seedlings, in comparison with some pyridoxal-P-requiring lyases differing in reaction specificity, for example, gamma-specific, alphabeta-eliminating or plurifunctional lyases such as gamma-cystathionase (EC 4.4.1.1) of animal tissues. The results of these studies, relating to subtrate and cosubstrate specificities of the enzymes mentioned, their interactions with some selective inhibitors, catalysis of isotopic exchange of hydrogen atoms in substrates and substrate analogs, etc., indicate that lyases of the exclusively beta-replacing type substantially differ in reaction mechanism from other subgroups of this enzyme family. Thus, it appears highly improbable that transient formation of an alphabeta-unsaturated, coenzyme-substrate imine, considered as an obligatory step in the action of lyases in the alphabeta-eliminating and other subgroups, should occur in the sequences of reaction intermediates in the case of beta-replacing lyases. Suggested features of the presumable catalytic mechanism of these lyases are discussed, such as : fixed conformation of the aminoacid substrate in the ES complex (protein-bound pyridoxal-P aldimine), with beta-substituent in orientation cis (rather than trans) to the Halpha atom ; role of the binding of appropriate cosubstrates (nucleophilic replacing agent, Cs) inducing essential electronic and/or steric transitions in the catalytic site of the ternanry CsES complexes, etc.
...
PMID:The pyridoxal-phosphate-dependent enzymes exclusively catalyzing reactions of beta-replacement. 78 60
Cystathionine gamma-lyase (EC 4.4.1.1) is widely distributed in actinomycetes, e.g. genera Streptomyces, Micromonospora, Micropolyspora, Mycobacterium, Nocardia, Streptosporangium, and Streptoverticillium. The enzyme was purified from Streptomyces phaeochromogenes (IFO 3105) in nine steps. After the last steps, the enzyme appeared to be homogenous by the criteria of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, analytical centrifugation, and double diffusion in agarose. The enzyme crystallized in the apo form with the addition of ammonium sulfate. The enzyme has a molecular weight of about 166,000 and consists of four subunits identical in molecular weight. The enzyme exhibits absorption maxima at 278 and 421 nm and contains 4 mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate/mol of enzyme. L-Cystathionine, L-homoserine, DL-lanthionine, L-djenkolic acid, and L-cystine are cleaved as preferred substrates by the Streptomyces enzyme. The alpha, beta-elimination reaction of L-cystathionine is also catalyzed by the enzyme at a ratio of about one-seventh of the alpha, gamma-elimination reaction.
Cystathionine beta-synthase
(
EC 4.2.1.22
) and cystathionine gamma-synthase (EC 4.2.99.9) activities were also detected in crude extracts of S. phaeochromogenes, but
cystathionine beta-lyase
(
EC 4.4.1.8
) was not. Consequently, the reverse transsulfuration pathway in actinomycetes may be similar to that in yeast and molds.
...
PMID:Cystathionine gamma-lyase of Streptomyces phaeochromogenes. The occurrence of cystathionine gamma-lyase in filamentous bacteria and its purification and characterization. 643 81
Pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes catalyze manifold reactions in the metabolism of amino acids. A comprehensive comparison of amino acid sequences has shown that most of these enzymes can be assigned to one of three different families of homologous proteins. The sequences of the enzymes of each family were aligned and their homology confirmed by profile analysis. Scrutiny of the reactions catalyzed by the enzymes showed that their affiliation with one of the three structurally defined families correlates in most cases with their regio-specificity. In the largest family, the covalency changes of the substrate occur at the same carbon atom that carries the amino group forming the imine linkage with the coenzyme. This family was thus named alpha family. It comprises glycine hydroxymethyltransferase, glycine C-acetyltransferase, 5-aminolevulinate synthase, 8-amino-7-oxononanoate synthase, all aminotransferases (with the possible exception of subgroup III), a number of other enzymes relatively closely related with the aminotransferases and very likely a certain group of amino acid decarboxylases as well as tryptophanase and tyrosine phenol-lyase which, however, catalyze beta-elimination reactions. The beta family includes L- and D-serine dehydratase, threonine dehydratase, the beta subunit of tryptophan synthase, threonine synthase and
cysteine synthase
. These enzymes catalyze beta-replacement or beta-elimination reactions. The gamma family incorporates O-succinylhomoserine (thiol-lyase, O-acetylhomoserine (thiol)-lyase, and cystathionine gamma-lyase, which catalyze gamma-replacement or gamma-elimination reactions, as well as
cystathionine beta-lyase
. The alpha and gamma family might be distantly related with one another, but are clearly not homologous with the beta family. Apparently, the primordial pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes were regio-specific catalysts, which first specialized for reaction specificity and then for substrate specificity. The following pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes seem to be unrelated with the alpha, beta or gamma family by the criterion of profile analysis:alanine racemase, selenocysteine synthase, and many amino acid decarboxylases. These enzymes may represent yet other families of B6 enzymes.
...
PMID:Evolutionary relationships among pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes. Regio-specific alpha, beta and gamma families. 811 47
Cysteine and methionine biosynthesis was studied in Pseudomonas putida S-313 and Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1. Both these organisms used direct sulfhydrylation of O-succinylhomoserine for the synthesis of methionine but also contained substantial levels of O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase (
cysteine synthase
) activity. The enzymes of the transsulfuration pathway (cystathionine gamma-synthase and
cystathionine beta-lyase
) were expressed at low levels in both pseudomonads but were strongly upregulated during growth with cysteine as the sole sulfur source. In P. aeruginosa, the reverse transsulfuration pathway between homocysteine and cysteine, with cystathionine as the intermediate, allows P. aeruginosa to grow rapidly with methionine as the sole sulfur source. P. putida S-313 also grew well with methionine as the sulfur source, but no cystathionine gamma-lyase, the key enzyme of the reverse transsulfuration pathway, was found in this species. In the absence of the reverse transsulfuration pathway, P. putida desulfurized methionine by the conversion of methionine to methanethiol, catalyzed by methionine gamma-lyase, which was upregulated under these conditions. A transposon mutant of P. putida that was defective in the alkanesulfonatase locus (ssuD) was unable to grow with either methanesulfonate or methionine as the sulfur source. We therefore propose that in P. putida methionine is converted to methanethiol and then oxidized to methanesulfonate. The sulfonate is then desulfonated by alkanesulfonatase to release sulfite for reassimilation into cysteine.
...
PMID:Pathways of assimilative sulfur metabolism in Pseudomonas putida. 1048 27
Transcription of the genes for sulfur assimilation and methionine biosynthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is regulated by the size of the intracellular pool of an organic sulfur compound. The identity of this compound is not clear, but suggestions include S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) and cysteine. By studying the repression of selected sulfur assimilation (MET) genes, we found that the ability to form cysteine from homocysteine is crucial for methionine-mediated repression to take place. The transcription of MET14 and MET25 could not be repressed by methionine in strains in which either STR4 (which encodes
cystathionine beta-synthase
) or STR1 (cystathionine gamma-lyase) was disrupted, whereas the repression was independent of GSH1 (which encodes the enzyme responsible for the first step in glutathione biosynthesis from cysteine). In contrast, cysteine could repress the MET genes in all of these strains. Two genes that presumably encode cystathionine gamma-synthase and
cystathionine beta-lyase
were identified by genetic disruption (ORFs YJR130c and YGL184c), yielding yeast strains that cannot convert cysteine into homocysteine. Repression by cysteine was possible in either disruptant, suggesting a role in repression for cysteine alone. While some repression of MET genes could be accomplished by homocysteine in a strain that cannot form SAM from methionine, a low intracellular level of SAM seems to be necessary for full cysteine-mediated repression to take place.
...
PMID:Cysteine is essential for transcriptional regulation of the sulfur assimilation genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1082 Nov 89
A cell extract of an extremely thermophilic bacterium, Thermus thermophilus HB8, cultured in a synthetic medium catalyzed cystathionine gamma-synthesis with O-acetyl-L-homoserine and L-cysteine as substrates but not beta-synthesis with DL-homocysteine and L-serine (or O-acetyl-L-serine). The amounts of synthesized enzymes metabolizing sulfur-containing amino acids were estimated by determining their catalytic activities in cell extracts. The syntheses of
cystathionine beta-lyase
(
EC 4.4.1.8
) and O-acetyl-L-serine sulfhydrylase (EC 4.2.99.8) were markedly repressed by L-methionine supplemented to the medium. L-Cysteine and glutathione, both at 0.5 mM, added to the medium as the sole sulfur source repressed the synthesis of O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase by 55 and 73%, respectively, confirming that this enzyme functions as a
cysteine synthase
. Methionine employed at 1 to 5 mM in the same way derepressed the synthesis of O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase 2.1- to 2.5-fold. A method for assaying a low concentration of sulfide (0.01 to 0.05 mM) liberated from homocysteine by determining cysteine synthesized with it in the presence of excess amounts of O-acetylserine and a purified preparation of the sulfhydrylase was established. The extract of cells catalyzed the homocysteine gamma-lyase reaction, with a specific activity of 5 to 7 nmol/min/mg of protein, but not the methionine gamma-lyase reaction. These results suggested that cysteine was also synthesized under the conditions employed by the catalysis of O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase using sulfur of homocysteine derived from methionine. Methionine inhibited O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase markedly. The effects of sulfur sources added to the medium on the synthesis of O-acetylhomoserine sulfhydrylase and the inhibition of the enzyme activity by methionine were mostly understood by assuming that the organism has two proteins having O-acetylhomoserine sulfhydrylase activity, one of which is cystathionine gamma-synthase. Although it has been reported that homocysteine is directly synthesized in T. thermophilus HB27 by the catalysis of O-acetylhomoserine sulfhydrylase on the basis of genetic studies (T. Kosuge, D. Gao, and T. Hoshino, J. Biosci. Bioeng. 90:271-279, 2000), the results obtained in this study for the behaviors of related enzymes indicate that sulfur is first incorporated into cysteine and then transferred to homocysteine via cystathionine in T. thermophilus HB8.
...
PMID:Occurrence of transsulfuration in synthesis of L-homocysteine in an extremely thermophilic bacterium, Thermus thermophilus HB8. 1122 9
Sulfur metabolism in gram-positive bacteria is poorly characterized. Information on the molecular mechanisms of regulation of genes involved in sulfur metabolism is limited, and no regulator genes have been identified. Here we describe the regulation of the lactococcal metC-cysK operon, encoding a
cystathionine beta-lyase
(metC) and
cysteine synthase
(cysK). Its expression was shown to be negatively affected by high concentrations of cysteine, methionine, and glutathione in the culture medium, while sulfur limitation resulted in a high level of expression. Other sulfur sources tested showed no significant effect on metC-cysK gene expression. In addition we found that O-acetyl-l-serine, the substrate of
cysteine synthase
, was an inducer of the metC-cysK operon. Using a random mutagenesis approach, we identified two genes, cmbR and cmbT, involved in regulation of metC-cysK expression. The cmbT gene is predicted to encode a transport protein, but its precise role in regulation remains unclear. Disruption of cmbT resulted in a two- to threefold reduction of metC-cysK transcription. A 5.7-kb region containing the cmbR gene was cloned and sequenced. The encoded CmbR protein is homologous to the LysR family of regulator proteins and is an activator of the metC-cysK operon. In analogy to CysB from Escherichia coli, we propose that CmbR requires acetylserine to be able to bind the activation sites and subsequently activate transcription of the metC-cysK operon.
...
PMID:Regulation of the metC-cysK operon, involved in sulfur metabolism in Lactococcus lactis. 1174 47
A 0.5 kb fragment of Streptomyces venezuelae ISP5230 genomic DNA was amplified by PCR using primers based on consensus sequences of
cysteine synthase
isozyme A from bacteria. The deduced amino acid sequence of the PCR product resembled not only
cysteine synthase
sequences from prokaryotes and eukaryotes but also eukaryotic
cystathionine beta-synthase
sequences. Probing an Str. venezuelae genomic library with the PCR product located a hybridizing colony from which pJV207 was isolated. Sequencing and analysis of the Str. venezuelae DNA insert in pJV207 detected two ORFs. The deduced amino acid sequence of ORF1 matched both
cysteine synthase
and
cystathionine beta-synthase
sequences in GenBank, but its size favoured assignment as a
cystathionine beta-synthase
. ORF2 in the pJV207 insert was unrelated in function to ORF1; in its sequence the deduced product resembled acetyl-CoA transferases, but disruption of the ORF did not cause a detectable phenotypic change. Disruption of ORF1 failed to elicit cysteine auxotrophy in wild-type Str. venezuelae, but in the cys-28 auxotroph VS263 it prevented restoration of prototrophy with homocysteine or methionine supplements. The change in phenotype implicated loss of the transsulfuration activity that in the wild-type converts these supplements to cysteine. This study concludes that disruption of ORF1 inactivates a cbs gene, the product of which participates in cysteine synthesis by transsulfuration. Enzyme assays of Str. venezuelae mycelial extracts confirmed the formation of cysteine by thiolation of O-acetylserine, providing the first unambiguous detection of this activity in a streptomycete. Enzyme assays also detected cystathionine gamma-synthase,
cystathionine beta-lyase
and cystathionine gamma-lyase activity in the extracts and showed that the substrate for cystathionine gamma-synthase was O-succinyl-homoserine. Based on assay results, the cys-28 mutation in Str. venezuelae VS263 does not inactivate the
cysteine synthase
gene but impairs expression in cultures grown in minimal medium.
...
PMID:Biosynthesis of sulfur-containing amino acids in Streptomyces venezuelae ISP5230: roles for cystathionine beta-synthase and transsulfuration. 1210 1
Cystathionine beta-synthase
(
CBS
) is a pyridoxal-phosphate-dependent enzyme that catalyzes a beta-replacement reaction in which the hydroxyl group of serine (L-Ser) is displaced by the thiol of homocysteine (L-Hcys) to form cystathionine (L-Cth) in the first step of the trans-sulfuration pathway. A new continuous assay for the forward reaction, employing
cystathionine beta-lyase
and L-lactate dehydrogenase as coupling enzymes, is described. It alleviates product inhibition by L-Cth and revealed that the values for (1.2 mM) and for substrate inhibition by L-Hcys ( = 2.0 mM) are lower than those previously reported. A continuous, 5,5'-dithio-bis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB)-based assay for the
CBS
-catalyzed hydrolysis of L-Cth to L-Ser and L-Hcys provides a tool for investigation of the reverse reaction (k(catR) = 0.56 s(-)(1), = 0.083 mM). The (catR)/ versus pH profile of ytCBS is bell-shaped with a pH optimum of 8.3, and the pK(a) values for the acidic and basic limbs are 8.05 and 8.63, respectively. The latter is assigned to the alpha-amino group of L-Cth (pK(a) = 8.54). The internal aldimine of ytCBS remains protonated at pH < 11; therefore, the acidic pK(a) is assigned to an enzyme functionality that is not associated with the internal aldimine. K(eq) was determined directly and from the kinetic parameters, and the values are 0.61 and 1.2 microM, respectively.
...
PMID:Kinetics of the yeast cystathionine beta-synthase forward and reverse reactions: continuous assays and the equilibrium constant for the reaction. 1252 86
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