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Query: EC:6.3.2.3 (
glutathione synthetase
)
678
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The glutamate analog, alpha-aminomethylglutaric acid, was synthetized by Michael addition of ammonia to 2-methylene glutaronitrile followed by hydrolysis of the intermediate alpha-aminomethylglutaryl nitrile; the analog cyclizes readily on heating to 2-piperidone-5-carboxylic acid. Sheep brain glutamine synthetase utilizes one isomer of DL-alpha-aminomethylglutarate at about 10% of the rate with L-glutamate. gamma-Glutamylcysteine synthetase uses both isomers of DL-alpha-aminomethylglutarate, preferentially acting on the same isomer used by glutamine synthetase. gamma-(alpha-Aminomethyl)glutaryl-alpha-aminobutyrate, prepared enzymatically with gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase, was found to be a substrate and an inhibitor of
glutathione synthetase
. alpha-Aminomethylglutarate does not inhibit gamma-glutamyl cyclotransferase and
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
appreciably. When alpha-aminomethylglutarate was administered to mice, there were substantial decreases in the levels of glutamine, glutathione, glutamate, and glycine in the kidney, and of glutamine and glutamate in the liver, indicating that this glutamate analog is effective as an inhibitor of glutamine and glutathione synthesis in vivo, and suggesting that it may also inhibit other enzymes.
...
PMID:alpha-Aminomethylglutarate, a beta-amino analog of glutamate that interacts with glutamine synthetase and the enzymes that catalyze glutathione synthesis. 0 41
GAMMA-Glutamyl transpeptidase, gamma-glutamyl cyclotransferase, L-pyrrolidone carboxylate hydrolase, gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase and
glutathione synthetase
, the enzymes of the gamma-glutamyl cycle, were found in mouse brain, liver and kidney. The activity of L-pyrrolidone carboxylate hydrolase was many times lower than the activities of the other enzymes, and thus the conversion of L-pyrrolidone carboxylate to L-glutamate is likely to be the rate-limiting step of the cycle. The specificity of gamma-glutamyl cyclotransferase from mouse tissues was similar to that from rat tissues. The concentration of pyrrolidone carboxylate and gamma-glutamyl amino acids, intermediates of the gamma-glutamyl cycle, was determined by a gas chromatographic procedure coupled with electron capture detection. Administration of L-2-aminobutyrate, an amino acid that is utilized as substrate in the reaction catalyzed by gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase, led to a large accumulation of gamma-glutamyl-2-aminobutyrate and pyrrolidone carboxylate in mouse tissues. L-Methionine-RS-sulfoximine, an inhibitor of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase, abolished the increase in concentration of pyrrolidone carboxylate. No accumulation of pyrrolidone carboxylate was observed after L-cysteine. The separate administration of several protein amino acids had little effect on the concentration of pyrrolidone carboxylate; however formation of small amounts of the corresponding gamma-glutamyl derivatives (e.g. gamma-glutamylmethionine and gamma-glutamylphenylalanine) was detected. These intermediates are probably formed by transpeptidation between glutathione and the corresponding amino acid, catalyzed by
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
. The concentration of pyrrolidone carboxylate increased significantly after administration of a mixture containing all protein amino acids, the highest increase occurring in the kidney. The results suggest that two separate pathways for the formation of gamma-glutamyl amino acids and pyrrolidone carboxylate exist in vivo. One of these results from the function of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase in glutathione synthesis. The other pathway involves the amino-acid-dependent degradation of glutathione, mediatedby
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
. Only very small amounts of free intermediates are apparently derived from the latter pathway, suggesting that the gamma-glutamyl amino acids formed in this pathway are either enzyme-bound or are directly hydrolyzed to glutamate and free amino acid.
...
PMID:Intermediates of the gamma-glutamyl cycle in mouse tissues. Influence of administration of amino acids on pyrrolidone carboxylate and gamma-glutamyl amino acids. 23 63
Exposure of human ovarian tumor cell lines to cisplatin led to development of cell lines that exhibited increasing degrees of drug resistance, which were closely correlated with increase of the levels of cellular glutathione. Cell lines were obtained that showed 30- to 1000-fold increases in resistance; these cells also had strikingly increased (13- to 50-fold) levels of glutathione as compared with the drug-sensitive cells of origin. These levels of resistance to cisplatin and the cellular glutathione levels are substantially greater than previously reported. Very high cisplatin resistance was associated with enhanced expression of mRNAs for gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase and
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
; immunoblots showed increase of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase but not of
glutathione synthetase
. Glutathione S-transferase activity was unaffected, as determined with chlorodinitrobenzene as a substrate. These studies suggest the potential value of examining regulation of glutathione synthesis as an indicator of clinical prognosis. The highly resistant cell lines are proving useful for studying the multiple mechanisms by which tumor cells acquire drug- and radiation-resistance.
...
PMID:High resistance to cisplatin in human ovarian cancer cell lines is associated with marked increase of glutathione synthesis. 134 64
We reported that glucagon and phenylephrine decrease hepatocyte GSH by inhibiting gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (GCS), the rate-limiting enzyme in GSH synthesis (Lu, S.C., J. Kuhlenkamp, C. Garcia-Ruiz, and N. Kaplowitz. 1991. J. Clin. Invest. 88:260-269). In contrast, we have found that insulin (In, 1 microgram/ml) and hydrocortisone (HC, 50 nM) increased GSH of cultured hepatocytes up to 50-70% (earliest significant change at 6 h) with either methionine or cystine alone as the sole sulfur amino acid in the medium. The effect of In occurred independent of glucose concentration in the medium. Changes in steady-state cellular cysteine levels, cell volume, GSH efflux, or expression of
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
were excluded as possible mechanisms. Both hormones are known to induce cystine/glutamate transport, but this was excluded as the predominant mechanism since the induction in cystine uptake required a lag period of greater than 6 h, and the increase in cell GSH still occurred when cystine uptake was blocked. Assay of GSH synthesis in extracts of detergent-treated cells revealed that In and HC increased the activity of GCS by 45-65% (earliest significant change at 4 h) but not
GSH synthetase
. In and HC treatment increased the Vmax of GCS by 31-43% with no change in Km. Both the hormone-mediated increase in cell GSH and GCS activity were blocked with either cycloheximide or actinomycin D. Finally, when studied in vivo, streptozotocin-treated diabetic and adrenalectomized rats exhibited lower hepatic GSH levels and GCS activities than respective controls. Both of these abnormalities were prevented with hormone replacement. Thus, both in vitro and in vivo, In and glucocorticoids are required for normal expression of GCS.
...
PMID:Insulin and glucocorticoid dependence of hepatic gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase and glutathione synthesis in the rat. Studies in cultured hepatocytes and in vivo. 135 65
Sertoli cells play a major role in the regulation of spermatogenic cell energy metabolism and differentiation. This study demonstrates that Sertoli cells are essential for the maintenance of spermatogenic cell glutathione (GSH), an important intracellular reductant and detoxicant. Primary spermatocytes and round spermatids isolated from Xenopus laevis contained 1.5 +/- 0.1 mM GSH, but sperm lacked detectable GSH. During a 5-day culture period, isolated spermatocytes and spermatids lost 80% of the initial GSH (t 1/2 = 55 h). The levels of GSH were unaffected by L-buthionine-SR-sulfoximine (BSO), a selective inhibitor of GSH synthesis. Cultures of testicular lobules and spermatocysts (composed of germ cells and Sertoli cells) depleted of interstitial tissue lost only 30% of their initial GSH in 4.5 days; the GSH levels decreased during treatment with BSO. Spermatogenic cells in cultured testes maintained their GSH levels for 7 days by a BSO-sensitive mechanism. These results demonstrate that the intracellular GSH levels of spermatogenic cells are dependent upon germ cell-somatic cell interactions. Spermatogenic cells were shown to possess
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
,
glutathione synthetase
, 5-oxoprolinase, and gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase activities. [35S] Cysteine incorporation and distribution as analyzed by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) showed that isolated spermatogenic cells are capable of GSH synthesis. The rate of GSH synthesis, however, was insufficient to compensate for GSH turnover. These results demonstrate that production of spermatogenic cell GSH is dependent upon Sertoli cells. To our knowledge, this is the first evidence that interactions between different cell types may be of significance in GSH metabolism.
...
PMID:Spermatogenic cell-somatic cell interactions are required for maintenance of spermatogenic cell glutathione. 272 29
Intracellular concentrations of glutathione and activities of the enzymes gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase,
glutathione synthetase
, and
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
were measured in confluent cultured human fibroblasts cell lines from 14 normal cell lines and four cystinotic cell lines. gamma-Glutamyl transpeptidase had a wide range of variability while the glutathione synthetic enzymes, gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase and
glutathione synthetase
, had narrower variations and also exhibited no apparent relationship to glutathione content. No differences in the activities of these enzymes were found between normal and cystinotic cells in confluent cell cultures. The activities of the above enzymes and the cell number and content of glutathione, cystine, DNA, and total protein in two normal and two cystinotic fibroblast cell lines were measured during growth. The following growth-dependency patterns were observed: (1) gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase activity increased markedly in lag and early log phases in both normal and cystinotic cells and decreased rapidly to low confluent levels thereafter. (2) gamma-Glutamyl transpeptidase showed the same wide range of activity noted at confluency but activities decreased in the log phase of growth, a pattern also seen in cystinotic cells. (3) Glutathione synthetase activity remained relatively constant during growth of normal cells but exhibited a peak of activity during lag and early growth of cystinotic cells. (4) Comparative glutathione levels of normal and cystinotic cells were not significantly different and exhibited similar fluctuations with time. (5) The cystine content of normal and cystinotic cells unexpectedly rose to high levels in the lag phase, then decreased to 0.1 nmol 1/2 cystine/mg protein in normal cells and to 0.3 to 1.2 nmol 1/2 cystine/mg protein in cystinotic cells during the log phase. As confluency was approached, normal cell cystine remained at low levels while cystinotic cell cystine rose to characteristically high levels of 50- to 100-fold greater than normal cells at late confluency. These studies extend our understanding of the regulation of glutathione and cystine content in cultured fibroblasts and suggest that glutathione content is closely controlled throughout the cell cycle in the face of varying activities of its anabolic and catabolic enzymes.
...
PMID:Glutathione metabolism in normal and cystinotic fibroblasts. 288 73
The zonal distribution of GSH metabolism was investigated by comparing hepatocytes obtained from the periportal (zone 1) or perivenous (zone 3) region by digitonin/collagenase perfusion. Freshly isolated periportal and perivenous cells had similar viability (dye exclusion, lactate dehydrogenase leakage and ATP content) and GSH content (2.4 and 2.7 mumol/g respectively). During incubation, periportal cells slowly accumulated GSH (0.35 mumol/h per g), whereas in perivenous cells a decrease occurred (-0.14 mumol/h per g). Also, in the presence of either L-methionine or L-cysteine (0.5 mM) periportal hepatocytes accumulated GSH much faster (3.5 mumol/h per g) than did perivenous cells (1.9 mumol/h per g). These periportal-perivenous differences were also found in cells from fasted rats. Efflux of GSH was faster from perivenous cells than from periportal cells, but this difference only explained 10-20% of the periportal-perivenous difference in accumulation. Furthermore, periportal cells accumulated GSH to a plateau 26-40% higher than in perivenous cells. There was no significant difference in gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase or
glutathione synthetase
activity between the periportal and perivenous cell preparations. The periportal-perivenous difference in GSH accumulation was unaffected by inhibition of
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
or by 5 mM-glutamate or -glutamine, but was slightly diminished by 2 mM-L-methionine. This suggests differences between periportal and perivenous cells in their metabolism and/or transport of (sulphur) amino acids. Our results suggest that a lower GSH replenishment capacity of the hepatocytes from the perivenous region may contribute to the greater vulnerability of this region to xenobiotic damage.
...
PMID:Glutathione replenishment capacity is lower in isolated perivenous than in periportal hepatocytes. 290 50
A single acute dose of carbon disulfide (CS2, 5 mmol/kg ip) caused hepatic damage in rats pretreated with phenobarbital. Rats pretreated with phenobarbital and cobaltous chloride (CoCl2, 250 mumol/kg sc) were protected against CS2 induced hepatotoxicity. When single acute doses of CS2 and CoCl2 were given at the same time, however, rats developed a much more severe hepatic lesion than that seen following CS2 alone. Similar cotreatment of CoCl2 with bromobenzene, carbon tetrachloride or thioacetamide did not enhance the hepatotoxicity of these well-studied hepatotoxins. Additionally, other divalent metal salts (CuSO4 and ZnCl2) did not enhance CS2 hepatotoxicity. Hence, the interaction between CS2 and CoCl2 (that results in enhanced CS2 induced hepatic damage) appears to be relatively specific for these two agents. CS2 caused an approximate 50% decrease in hepatic cytochrome P-450 when given alone, but an approximate 85% decrease when given with CoCl2. This observation supports the hypothesis that the breakdown products of cytochrome P-450 heme are responsible for CS2 induced hepatotoxicity. In addition, single doses of CS2 or CoCl2 caused increases of 30 to 60% in hepatic glutathione (GSH), but additive responses were not obtained when the two agents were given at the same time.
GSH synthetase
and
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
activity were inconsistently changed by these treatments, and did not provide a consistent explanation for the increases in GSH. The enhanced hepatotoxicity of CS2 + CoCl2 is not due to changes in hepatic glutathione metabolism.
...
PMID:Paradoxical effect of cobaltous chloride on carbon disulfide induced hepatotoxicity in rats. 317 44
Perchloric acid extracts of LLC-PK1/Cl4 cells, a renal epithelial cell line, incubated with either [2-13C]glycine L-[3-13C]alanine, or D,L-[3-13C]aspartic acid were investigated by 13C-NMR spectroscopy. All amino acids, except labelled glycine, gave rise to glycolytic products and tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) intermediates. For the first time we also observed activity of
gamma-glutamyltransferase
activity and
glutathione synthetase
activity in LLC-PK1 cells, as is evident from enrichment of reduced glutathione. Time courses showed that only 6% of the labelled glycine was utilized in 30 min, whereas 31% of L-alanine and 60% of L-aspartic acid was utilized during the same period. 13C-NMR was also shown to be a useful tool for the determination of amino acid uptake in LLC-PK1 cells. These uptake experiments indicated that glycine, alanine and aspartic acid are transported into Cl4 cells via a sodium-dependent process. From the relative enrichment of the glutamate carbons, we calculated the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase to be about 61% when labelled L-alanine was the only carbon source for LLC-PK1/Cl4 cells. Experiments with labelled D,L-aspartic, however, showed that about 40% of C-3-enriched oxaloacetate (arising from a de-amination of aspartic acid) reached the pyruvate pool.
...
PMID:A 13C-NMR study on the influxes into the tricarboxylic acid cycle of a renal epithelial cell line, LLC-PK1/Cl4: the metabolism of [2-13C]glycine, L-[3-13C]alanine and L-[3-13C]aspartic acid in renal epithelial cells. 340 8
Murine L1210 leukemia cells resistant to the antineoplastic agent L-phenylalanine mustard have a 1.5-2.0-fold elevation in their cellular GSH and GSSG content as compared to drug-sensitive cells. Cellular uptake of L-[U-14C]cystine and its incorporation into GSH of the resistant tumor are correspondingly elevated. Synthesis of gamma-glutamylcysteine, GSH, and GSSG is elevated 1.5-2.0-fold in cell-free preparations of the resistant tumor. This increased synthesis of GSH is attributed to increased cellular content (1.6-fold) of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase.
GSH synthetase
activity is equivalent in both drug-sensitive and -resistant cells. Investigation into the hydrolysis of selected peptides by cell-free preparations of both sensitive and resistant tumors suggest that aminopeptidase M participates in the formation of L-cysteine from L-Cys-Gly. This is supported by the observation that these preparations readily degrade L-Leu-p-nitroanilide and L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Ala, known substrates for aminopeptidase M, but not dipeptidase. The failure of the tumors to degrade Gly-D-Ala, a dipeptidase substrate, and the marked inhibition of L-Ala-Gly, L-Cys-Gly, and L-Ala-L-Ala-L-Ala hydrolysis by Bestatin further support a role for aminopeptidase M in the generation of L-cysteine from L-Cys-Gly. These results suggest that the drug-resistant tumor cell has developed an efficient mechanism for maintenance of elevated GSH which involves both
gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase
-initiated catabolism of GSH to cysteine and its reutilization by gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase.
...
PMID:Elevation of glutathione in phenylalanine mustard-resistant murine L1210 leukemia cells. 366 23
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