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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)
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 was cleaved into 2-ketobutyric acid, cysteine and ammonia by cystathionase. 2-Ketobutyric acid was converted into 3-ethyl-2-hydroxy-6,7-dimethoxyquinoxaline (EHDQ) by reaction with 1,2-diamino-4,5-dimethoxybenzene. When EHDQ was measured in a mobile phase of pH 2.1 using high-performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection, 250 pmol of L-cystathionine in 250 microliters of the reaction mixture could be determined. Because EHDQ has a strong fluorescence in a mobile phase of pH 6.5 at 447 nm, on excitation at 365 nm, as little as 2.5 pmol of cystathionine in 250 microliters of the reaction mixture could be determined by high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorimetric detection.
Cystathionase
activity was assayed on the basis of the same principle by determining cystathionine in as little as 63 ng of rat liver by fluorimetric detection.
Cystathionine beta-synthase
activity was measured by the same method by determining cystathionine formed in only 113 ng of wet weight of rat liver. Using these methods, both cystathionine beta- and gamma-lyase activities in Saccharomyces cerevisiae were determined, because quinoxaline derivatives from pyruvate and 2-ketobutyrate could be measured simultaneously by high-performance liquid chromatography.
...
PMID:Sensitive determination of cystathionine and assays for cystathionine beta- and gamma-lyase, as well as cystathionine beta-synthase, using high-performance liquid chromatography. 162 86
Glutathione-deficient mutants (gshA) of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, impaired in the first step of glutathione (GSH) biosynthesis were studied with respect to the regulation of enzymes involved in GSH catabolism and cysteine biosynthesis. Striking differences were observed in the content of the sulphur amino acids when gshA mutants were compared to wild-type strains growing on the same minimal medium. Furthermore, all mutants examined showed a derepression of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (gamm-GT), the enzyme initiating GSH degradation. However,
gamma-cystathionase
and
cysteine synthase
were unaffected by the GSH deficiency as long as the nutrient sulphate source was not exhausted. The results suggest that the mutants are probably not impaired in the sulphate assimilation pathway, but that the gamma-glutamyl cycle could play a leading role in the regulation of the sulphur fluxes. Studies of enzyme regulation showed that the derepression of gamma-GT observed in the gshA strains was most probably due to an alteration of the thiol status. The effectors governing the biosynthesis of
cysteine synthase
and
gamma-cystathionase
seemed different from those playing a role in gamma-GT regulation and it was only under conditions of total sulphate deprivation that all these enzymes were derepressed. As a consequence the endogenous pool of GSH was used in the synthesis of cysteine. GSH might, therefore, fulfil the role of a storage compound.
...
PMID:Glutathione as an endogenous sulphur source in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 167 26
Eight classes of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzymes have been investigated in Nippostrongylus brasiliensis in parallel with rat tissues. The range of decarboxylases detected in N. brasiliensis was limited in comparison with rat tissues. N. brasiliensis possessed a highly active L-serine hydroxymethyltransferase, but in contrast with rat liver, 5-aminolevulinic acid synthetase was absent. Similar levels of L-serine and L-threonine dehydratase activities were detected in N. brasiliensis and rat liver, and both organisms lacked L-alanine racemase, L-tryptophan synthetase and L-methionine gamma-lyase. The demonstration of
cystathionine beta-synthase
and
gamma-cystathionase
in N. brasiliensis suggests the presence of a functional trans-sulphuration sequence. The substrate specificities of the nematode
cystathionine beta-synthase
and
gamma-cystathionase
varied significantly from those of the corresponding mammalian enzymes. Particularly striking was the ability of N. brasiliensis
cystathionine beta-synthase
to catalyse the non-mammalian 'activated L-serine sulphydrase' reaction (L-cysteine + R-SH----cysteine thioether + H2S). N. brasiliensis and rat liver exhibited comparable abilities to transaminate amino acids via the 2-oxoglutarate: glutamate system.
...
PMID:Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzymes in the nematode Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. 175 92
The activities of
gamma-cystathionase
and
cystathionine beta-synthase
were investigated in a range of gastrointestinal, free-living and entomophagous nematodes. Although nematode
gamma-cystathionase
used the same range of substrates as the mammalian hepatic enzyme, its activity was extremely low and there were significant interspecies variations with respect to the relative order of active substrates. Like the mammalian liver enzyme, nematode
cystathionine beta-synthase
showed activity in the directions of both cystathionine synthesis and the forward and reverse "L-serine sulphhydrase" reactions. However, the most important feature of the survey was the widespread ability of nematode
cystathionine beta-synthase
to catalyse the non-mammalian "activated L-serine sulphhydrase" reaction (L-cysteine + R-SH----cysteine thioether + H2S). Additional survey work revealed that the ability to catalyse the activated L-serine sulphhydrase reaction was almost universal amongst nematodes. Activated L-serine sulphhydrase activity was also demonstrated in the acanthocephalan Pomphorhynchus laevis but was absent from cestodes and digeneans.
...
PMID:Cystathionine beta-synthase and gamma-cystathionase in helminths. 180 16
To assess the extent to which low hepatic
gamma-cystathionase
levels affect methionine flux to cysteine in hepatocytes, the effect of inhibition of
gamma-cystathionase
activity with propargylglycine on the metabolism of L-[35S]methionine was determined in studies with freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. gamma-
Cystathionase
activity was inhibited 25%, 42%, 63% and 76% (maximal inhibition) by treatment with 2.5 mumol/L, 0.01 mmol/L, 0.02 mmol/L and 2 mmol/l propargylglycine, respectively. Inhibition of
gamma-cystathionase
activity with up to 0.02 mmol/L propargylglycine had no statistically significant effect on [35S]glutathione, [35S]sulfate or [35S]cysteine formation from [35S]methionine. However, treatment of cells with 2 mmol/L propargylglycine markedly inhibited the metabolism of [35S]methionine to [35S]glutathione by 93%, to [35S]sulfate by 88% and to [35S]cysteine by 89%; [35S]cystathionine accumulation in these incubation systems was 60 times control. Hepatic
gamma-cystathionase
activity in premature infants has been reported to be about 23% of mature levels (Zlotkin and Anderson, 1982; Pediatr. Res. 16: 65-68); this level of
gamma-cystathionase
activity may limit cysteine synthesis by the methionine transsulfuration pathway. No evidence for cysteine synthesis from serine and sulfide, which can be catalyzed by
cystathionine beta-synthase
, or for methionine metabolism by an S-adenosylmethionine-independent pathway was obtained.
...
PMID:Role of the transsulfuration pathway and of gamma-cystathionase activity in the formation of cysteine and sulfate from methionine in rat hepatocytes. 211 6
The addition of L-cysteine to hepatic cytosols causes inactivation of tyrosine aminotransferase. We have studied the mechanism of inactivation and the effect of streptozotocin-induced diabetes in the rat on the inactivation of tyrosine aminotransferase in the presence of fractions prepared from livers and kidneys. Diabetes increased the rate at which tyrosine aminotransferase was inactivated after addition of cysteine to hepatic cytosols. The inactivation was due to the production of thiocysteine (which contains sulfane sulfur) from cystine as a result of desulfuration catalyzed by
gamma-cystathionase
. Diabetes increased the content of
cystathionine beta-synthase
and
gamma-cystathionase
in liver. As a result, cytosols from diabetic animals converted homocysteine, cystathionine, cysteine and cystine to sulfane at an elevated rate, with resulting inactivation of tyrosine aminotransferase. In contrast, inactivation in kidney fractions was not affected by diabetes. Incubation with an inhibitor of
gamma-cystathionase
(propargylglycine) prevented inactivation of tyrosine aminotransferase. These results show that the potential for the formation of sulfane sulfur by the enzymes of the transsulfuration pathway is enhanced by chronic diabetes.
...
PMID:Experimental diabetes increases the formation of sulfane by transsulfuration and inactivation of tyrosine aminotransferase in cytosols from rat liver. 256 58
Cystathionine beta-synthase
and
gamma-cystathionase
, the two major enzymes of the transsulfuration pathway of methionine metabolism, are described. These enzymes are responsible for inborn errors, e.g., homocystinuria and cystathioninuria. The interaction of
gamma-cystathionase
with the cofactor, substrates and inhibitors of the general formula RONH2 containing structural fragments of substrates has been studied. A non-radioactive avidin-biotin system for the microdetection of
gamma-cystathionase
in dot blots has been developed. This system was applied for immunoscreening of a rat liver cDNA library in the prokaryotic expression vector lambda gt 11.
...
PMID:[Pyridoxal phosphate-dependent enzymes of sulfur amino acid metabolism]. 275 77
Cystathionine accumulated in several tissues of dams and fetuses by a single intraperitoneal administration of L-proparglyglycine to pregnant rats. Cystathionine in the liver of dams reached its maximal level at about 15 hrs after L-proparglyglycine injection (10 mg/300g), while that in the kidney and brain of dams, and in the liver, kidney, and brain of fetuses reached a maximum at about 21 hrs. The content of cystine in the liver of fetuses decreased gradually in proportion to the amount of L-proparglyglycine administered.
Cystathionine gamma-lyase
activity in the liver of dams and fetuses decreased to about 2-4% of that of control rats at 15 hrs after L-proparglyglycine injection, and that in the kidney and pancreas of dams to about 10-20% of that of control rats. On the other hand,
cystathionine beta-synthase
activity did not show significant changes from that of control rats.
...
PMID:Effect of L-propargylglycine on metabolism of sulfur-containing amino acids in pregnant rats and their fetuses. 399 31
Several sul-reg mutants of Aspergillus nidulans isolated as constitutive for arylsulphatase were studied with respect to the regulation of enzymes involved in cysteine and homocysteine synthesis and to the pool of sulphur amino acids. All mutants examined showed a decreased concentration of glutathione as compared with the wild type, and all mutants, with one exception, had a decreased total pool of sulphur amino acids. The results suggest that the mutants are leaky in the sulphate assimilation pathway. They show derepression of
cysteine synthase
, homocysteine synthase,
cystathionine beta-synthase
and
gamma-cystathionase
. In spite of having derepressed homocysteine synthase, the enzyme which constitutes an alternative pathway for homocysteine synthesis, the sul-reg mutations do not suppress lesions in genes required for the main homocysteine-synthesizing pathway. This indicates that the derepression of homocysteine synthase is not in itself sufficient for physiological functioning of this enzyme, but seems to depend also on the effectiveness of cysteine synthesis and sulphide formation.
...
PMID:Mutations affecting the sulphur assimilation pathway in Aspergillus nidulans: their effect on sulphur amino acid metabolism. 638 43
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