Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:6.2.1.1 (
ACS
)
78,556
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Day-old male, broiler type chicks were used to study the effect of 100 ppm dietary vanadium on fatty acid and cholesterol synthesis and turnover in vivo. After feeding the experimental diets for 4 weeks body weight and liver weight of chicks fed 100 ppm vanadium were significantly less than those of the control chicks and liver total lipid and cholesterol tended to be slightly higher than the levels of the control chicks. [1-14C]
Acetate
was administered intravenously and the specific activities of plasma and liver total lipid, cholesterol and fatty acid were determined at 0.25, 0.50, 1.0, 4.0, 8.0 and 15.0 hours after the injection. Plasma total lipid and cholesterol were significantly higher than the levels in the control chicks. The rate of incorporation of [1-14C]acetate into plasma and liver total lipid, cholesterol and fatty acid was higher in chicks fed vanadium than the control group at any of the time being tested after the injection. There was a significant increase in the hepatic citrate cleavage enzyme activity among chicks fed 100 ppm vanadium, whereas, there was no significant change in
acetate thiokinase
activity. Turnover rate of plasma total lipid and fatty acid in vanadium fed chicks was lower than the control. The turnover rate of plasma cholesterol determined by administering [4-14C]cholesterol and periodically measuring the specific activity of plasma cholesterol was higher in chicks fed vanadium than in those fed the basal diet.
...
PMID:The effect of dietary vanadium on fatty acid and cholesterol synthesis and turnover in the chick. 0 54
Growth tests and enzyme determinations strongly suggest that the acetamidase of Aspergillus nidulans is induced by a product of acetate metabolism rather than the substrate, acetamide. The cis-dominant mutation, amdI9, which is closely linked to amdS, the structural gene for the acetamidase, results in greatly increased sensitivity to induction by acetate metabolism. Propionate, L-threonine, and ethanol also result in acetamidase induction. Mutations in the facA, facB, and facC genes, which lead to low levels of
acetyl-coenzyme A synthase
, are epistatic to the amdI9 mutation for strong growth on acetamide medium and abolish acetamide and propionamide induction of the acetamidase and isocitrate lyase enzymes.
Acetate
, L-threonine, and ethanol, however, can induce these enzymes in strains containing facA and facC lesions but not in strains containing a facB lesion. The evidence suggests that acetamidase and isocitrate lyase may be induced by a similar mechanism.
...
PMID:Induction of the acetamidase of Aspergillus nidulans by acetate metabolism. 1 18
1. Homogenates of rat epididymal fat pad, heart, kidney, lactating mammary gland, liver, skeletal muscle and small intestinal mucosa have been partitioned into a particulate and supernatant fraction. With reliable marker enzymes for the mitochondrial matrix and the cytosol: propionyl-CoA carboxylase and pyruvate kinase, the distributions of the acyl-CoA synthetase activities measured at 1 and 10 mM C2, C3 and C4 over mitochondria and cytosol have been calculated. From these values an estimate was made of the K0.5 of the fatty acids. 2. A distinct fatty acid-activating enzyme was assumed to be present in one of the compartments when that fatty acid was activated with a K0.5 less than or equal to 1.5 mM in an amount of greater than 13% of the total cellular activity. Adipose tissue, gut, liver and mammary gland, all organs of a high lipogenetic capacity, contained a cytosolic
acetyl-CoA synthetase
. At 1 mM acetate 60, 31, 77 and 83% of the total cellular activities in these organs were cytosolic in nature, with activities of 0.021, 0.32, 0.37 and 1.16 mumol C2 activated per min per g wet weight, respectively. 3. Mitochondrial acetyl-CoA and butyryl-CoA synthetases were found in adipose tissue, gut, heart, kidney, mammary gland and muscle. They were absent in liver. Adipose tissue and liver contained a mitochondrial propionyl-CoA synthetase with activities at 1 mM C3 of 0.014 and 1.50 mumol C3 activated per min per g wet weight, respectively. 4. At 1 mM, C2 was activated with decreasing rates by kidney, heart, mammary gland and gut (7.6-1.0 mumol C2 activated per min per g wet weight). C3 (1 mM) activation was about equal (1.6-1.9 mumol C3 activated per min per g wet weight) in liver, kidney and heart. C4 (1 mM) was activated with decreasing rates by heart, liver, kidney and gut (4.0-0.5 mumol C4 activated per min per g wet weight) in the order given. 5. The influence of the isolation method and the diet on fatty acid activation in small intestinal mucosal scrapings have been studied. To demonstrate the existence of cytosolic
acetyl-CoA synthetase
in fed animals a pre-treatment of everted intestine by low amplitude vibration has been found essential. Also C16 activation was highly (95%) decreased in a non-pre-vibrated preparation. 24 h starvation lowered cytosolic C2 and total C16 activation by 90 and 80%, respectively. Refeeding of starved rats with a balanced fat-free diet, and not with sucrose only, gave the same cytosolic C2 and total C16 activation as normally fed rats. 6. In guienea-pig heart, kidney, liver and muscle about the same partitions have been found as in the respective rat organs. The acetate activation in liver was factor 6 lower.
Acetate
and butyrate activation in guinea-pig muscle was much higher (6 and 37 times, respectively).
...
PMID:Organ and intracellular localization of short-chain acyl-CoA synthetases in rat and guinea-pig. 120 46
The benzoyl-CoA ligase from an anaerobic syntrophic culture was purified to homogeneity. It had a molecular mass of around 420 kDa and consisted of seven or eight subunits of 58 kDa. The temperature optimum was 37-40 degrees C, the optimum pH around 8.0 and optimal activity required 50-100 mM TRIS-HCl buffer, pH 8.0 and 3-7 mM MgCl2; MgCl2 in excess of 10 mM was inhibitory. The activation energy for benzoate was 11.3 kcal/mol. Although growth occurred only with benzoate as a carbon source, the benzoyl-coenzyme A (CoA) ligase formed benzoyl-CoA esters with benzoate, 2-, 3- and 4-fluorobenzoate, picolinate, nicotinate and isonicotinate.
Acetate
was activated to acetyl-CoA by an
acetyl-CoA synthetase
. The Km values for benzoate, 2-, 3- and 4-fluorobenzoate were 0.04, 0.28, 1.48 and 0.32 mM, the Vmax values 1.05, 1.0, 0.7 and 0.98 units (U)/mg, respectively. For reduced CoA (CoA-SH) a Km of 0.07 mM and a Vmax of 1.05 U/mg and for ATP a Km of 0.16 mM and a Vmax of 1.08 U/mg was determined. Benzoate activation was inhibited by more than 6 mM ATP, presumably by pyrophosphate generation from ATP. The inhibition constant (Ki) for pyrophosphate was 5.7 mM. No homology of the N-terminal amino acid sequence with that of a 2-aminobenzoyl-CoA ligase of a denitrifying Pseudomonas sp. was found.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of benzoyl-CoA ligase from a syntrophic, benzoate-degrading, anaerobic mixed culture. 136 92
The physiology of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CBS 8066 was studied in anaerobic glucose-limited chemostat cultures in a mineral medium supplemented with ergosterol and Tween 80. The organism had a mu max of 0.31 h-1 and a Ks for glucose of 0.55 mM. At a dilution rate of 0.10 h-1, a maximal yield of 0.10 g biomass (g glucose)-1 was observed. The yield steadily declined with increasing dilution rates, so a maintenance coefficient for anaerobic growth could not be estimated At a dilution rate of 0.10 h-1, the yield of the S. cerevisiae strain H1022 was considerably higher than for CBS 8066, despite a similar cell composition. The major difference between the two yeast strains was that S. cerevisiae H1022 did not produce acetate, suggesting that the observed difference in cell yield may be ascribed to an uncoupling effect of
acetic acid
. The absence of acetate formation in H1022 correlated with a relatively high level of
acetyl-CoA synthetase
. The uncoupling effect of weak acids on anaerobic growth was confirmed in experiments in which a weak acid (acetate or propionate) was added to the medium feed. This resulted in a reduction in yield and an increase in specific ethanol production. Both yeasts required approximately 35 mg oleic acid (g biomass)-1 for optimal growth. Lower or higher concentrations of this fatty acid, supplied as Tween 80, resulted in uncoupling of dissimilatory and assimilatory processes.
...
PMID:Physiology of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in anaerobic glucose-limited chemostat cultures. 197 65
The physiology of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CBS 8066 was studied in glucose-limited chemostat cultures. Below a dilution rate of 0.30 h-1 glucose was completely respired, and biomass and CO2 were the only products formed. Above this dilution rate acetate and pyruvate appeared in the culture fluid, accompanied by disproportional increases in the rates of oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production. This enhanced respiratory activity was accompanied by a drop in cell yield from 0.50 to 0.47 g (dry weight) g of glucose-1. At a dilution rate of 0.38 h-1 the culture reached its maximal oxidation capacity of 12 mmol of O2 g (dry weight)-1 h-1. A further increase in the dilution rate resulted in aerobic alcoholic fermentation in addition to respiration, accompanied by an additional decrease in cell yield from 0.47 to 0.16 g (dry weight) g of glucose-1. Since the high respiratory activity of the yeast at intermediary dilution rates would allow for full respiratory metabolism of glucose up to dilution rates close to mumax, we conclude that the occurrence of alcoholic fermentation is not primarily due to a limited respiratory capacity. Rather, organic acids produced by the organism may have an uncoupling effect on its respiration. As a result the respiratory activity is enhanced and reaches its maximum at a dilution rate of 0.38 h-1. An attempt was made to interpret the dilution rate-dependent formation of ethanol and acetate in glucose-limited chemostat cultures of S. cerevisiae CBS 8066 as an effect of overflow metabolism at the pyruvate level. Therefore, the activities of pyruvate decarboxylase, NAD+- and NADP+-dependent acetaldehyde dehydrogenases, acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) synthetase, and alcohol dehydrogenase were determined in extracts of cells grown at various dilution rates. From the enzyme profiles, substrate affinities, and calculated intracellular pyruvate concentrations, the following conclusions were drawn with respect to product formation of cells growing under glucose limitation. (i) Pyruvate decarboxylase, the key enzyme of alcoholic fermentation, probably already is operative under conditions in which alcoholic fermentation is absent. The acetaldehyde produced by the enzyme is then oxidized via acetaldehyde dehydrogenases and
acetyl-CoA synthetase
. The acetyl-CoA thus formed is further oxidized in the mitochondria. (ii)
Acetate
formation results from insufficient activity of
acetyl-CoA synthetase
, required for the complete oxidation of acetate. Ethanol formation results from insufficient activity of acetaldehyde dehydrogenases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Enzymic analysis of the crabtree effect in glucose-limited chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 256 99
1. Comparative data are presented of the activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and
acetyl-CoA synthetase
and of the acetate content in homogenates from ventral grey matter in spinal cord from cows and two non-ruminant species, pigs and horses. The methods used in the study are evaluated and discussed. 2. The total pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity was 24.9-29.9 mU/mg protein and did not differ between the species. The part of the complex that was in active form at the sampling occasion was 60, 85 and 95% in cows, pigs and horses, respectively. 3. Acetyl-CoA synthetase activity differed significantly between the species and was 0.93, 1.28 and 2.61 mU/mg protein in pigs, cows and horses, respectively. The highest cytosolic activity was found in the horses.
Acetate
concentration at half maximal reaction velocity (at saturating CoA and ATP levels) was found to be 0.15-0.70 mM and did not differ between the species. 4.
Acetate
content was 63, 83 and 96 micrograms/g wet wt in cows, horses and pigs, respectively. 5. It is concluded that there seems to be no striking difference in acetyl-CoA synthesis in peripheral nerves between ruminants and non-ruminant species.
...
PMID:A comparative study on acetyl-CoA synthesising enzymes in spinal cord from cows, horses and pigs. 257 76
Acetyl coenzyme A synthetase (
EC 6.2.1.1
) has been examined for its ability to accept various carboxylic acids as substrates in place of
acetic acid
. The activity of the enzyme with these substrates was monitored using a coupled enzyme assay and high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis. Short chain carboxylic acids were found to be active including: propionic, acrylic, fluoroacetic, methacrylic, 3-chloropropionic, 3-bromopropionic, and propiolic. The kinetic parameters, Km and % Vmax of the carboxylic acid substrates, are reported and show that these acids are poorer substrates than
acetic acid
. Several of the acyl CoAs were synthesized on a preparative scale using enzyme catalysis, purified using preparative HPLC, and characterized using proton NMR spectroscopy. In the course of the NMR identification, a complete and fully resolved spectral assignment for all the protons of coenzyme A was made and is reported. The acyl-CoA analogs should be useful as substrate analogs and as potential affinity labels for enzymes that bind acetyl-CoA.
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of acetyl coenzyme A synthetase. 288 17
1. In an attempt to define the importance of acetate as a metabolic precursor, the activities of
acetyl-CoA synthetase
(
EC 6.2.1.1
) and acetyl-CoA hydrolase (Ec 3.1.2.1) were assayed in tissues from rats and sheep. In addition, the concentrations of acetate in blood and liver were measured, as well as the rates of acetate production by tissue slices and mitochondrial fractions of these tissues. 2. Acetyl-CoA synthetase occurs at high activities in heart and kidney cortex of both species as well as in rat liver and the sheep masseter muscle. The enzyme is mostly in the cytosol fraction of liver, whereas it is associated with the mitochondrial fraction in heart tissue. Both mitochondrial and cytosol activities have a K(m) for acetate of 0.3mm. Acetyl-CoA synthetase activity in liver was not altered by changes in diet, age or alloxan-diabetes. 3. Acetyl-CoA hydrolase is widely distributed in rat and sheep tissues, the highest activity being found in liver. Essentially all of the activity in liver and heart is localized in the mitochondrial fraction. Hepatic acetyl-CoA hydrolase activity is increased by starvation in rats and sheep and during the suckling period in young rats. 4. The concentrations of acetate in blood are decreased by starvation and increased by alloxan-diabetes in both species. The uptake of acetate by the sheep hind limb is proportional to the arterial concentration of acetate, except in alloxan-treated animals, where uptake is impaired. 5.
Acetate
is produced by liver and heart slices and also by heart mitochondrial fractions that are incubated with either pyruvate or palmitoyl-(-)-carnitine. Liver mitochondrial fractions do not form acetate from either substrate but instead convert acetate into acetoacetate. 6. We propose that acetate in the blood of rats or starved sheep is derived from the hydrolysis of acetyl-CoA. Release of acetate from tissues would occur under conditions when the function of the tricarboxylic acid cycle is restricted, so that the circulating acetate serves to redistribute oxidizable substrate throughout the body. This function is analogous to that served by ketone bodies.
...
PMID:Production and utilization of acetate in mammals. 444 81
1. Transient and steady-state changes caused by acetate utilization were studied in perfused rat heart. The transient period occupied 6min and steady-state changes were followed in a further 6min of perfusion. 2. In control perfusions glucose oxidation accounted for 75% of oxygen utilization; the remaining 25% was assumed to represent oxidation of glyceride fatty acids. With acetate in the steady state, acetate oxidation accounted for 80% of oxygen utilization, which increased by 20%; glucose oxidation was almost totally suppressed. The rate of tricarboxylate-cycle turnover increased by 67% with acetate perfusion. The net yield of ATP in the steady state was not altered by acetate. 3.
Acetate
oxidation increased muscle concentrations of acetyl-CoA, citrate, isocitrate, 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, alanine, AMP and glucose 6-phosphate, and lowered those of CoA and aspartate; the concentrations of pyruvate, ATP and ADP showed no detectable change. The times for maximum changes were 1min, acetyl-CoA, CoA, alanine and AMP; 6min, citrate, isocitrate, glutamate and aspartate; 2-4min, 2-oxoglutarate. Malate concentration fell in the first minute and rose to a value somewhat greater than in the control by 6min. There was a transient and rapid rise in glucose 6-phosphate concentration in the first minute superimposed on the slower rise over 6min. 4.
Acetate
perfusion decreased the output of lactate, the muscle concentration of lactate and the [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio in perfusion medium and muscle in the first minute; these returned to control values by 6min. 5. During the first minute acetate decreased oxygen consumption and lowered the net yield of ATP by 30% without any significant change in muscle ATP or ADP concentrations. 6. The specific radioactivities of cycle metabolites were measured during and after a 1min pulse of [1-(14)C]acetate delivered in the first and twelfth minutes of acetate perfusion. A model based on the known flow rates and concentrations of cycle metabolites was analysed by computer simulation. The model, which assumed single pools of cycle metabolites, fitted the data well with the inclusion of an isotope-exchange reaction between isocitrate and 2-oxoglutarate+bicarbonate. The exchange was verified by perfusions with [(14)C]bicarbonate. There was no evidence for isotope exchange between citrate and acetyl-CoA or between 2-oxoglutarate and malate. There was rapid isotope equilibration between 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate, but relatively poor isotope equilibration between malate and aspartate. 7. It is concluded that the citrate synthase reaction is displaced from equilibrium in rat heart, that isocitrate dehydrogenase and aconitate hydratase may approximate to equilibrium, that alanine aminotransferase is close to equilibrium, but that aspartate transamination is slow for reasons that have yet to be investigated. 8. The slow rise in citrate concentration as compared with the rapid rise in that of acetyl-CoA is attributed to the slow generation of oxaloacetate by aspartate aminotransferase. 9. It is proposed that the tricarboxylate cycle may operate as two spans: acetyl-CoA-->2-oxoglutarate, controlled by citrate synthase, and 2-oxoglutarate-->oxaloacetate, controlled by 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase; a scheme for cycle control during acetate oxidation is outlined. The initiating factors are considered to be changes in acetyl-CoA, CoA and AMP concentrations brought about by
acetyl-CoA synthetase
. 10. Evidence is presented for a transient inhibition of phosphofructokinase during the first minute of acetate perfusion that was not due to a rise in whole-tissue citrate concentration. The probable importance of metabolite compartmentation is stressed.
...
PMID:Control of the tricarboxylate cycle and its interactions with glycolysis during acetate utilization in rat heart. 544 22
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>