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:6.3.2.3 (
glutathione synthetase
)
678
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glutathione (GSH) synthetase [L-gamma-glutamyl-L-cysteinyl:glycine ligase (ADP-forming),
EC 6.3.2.3
] catalyzes the final step in GSH biosynthesis. Mammalian
glutathione synthetase
is a homodimer with each subunit containing an active site. We report the detailed kinetic data for purified recombinant rat
glutathione synthetase
. It has the highest specific activity (11 micromol/min/mg) reported for any mammalian
glutathione synthetase
. The apparent K(m) values for
ATP
and glycine are 37 and 913 microM, respectively. The Lineweaver-Burk double reciprocal plot for gamma-glutamyl substrate binding revealed a departure from linearity indicating cooperative binding. Quantitative analysis of the kinetic results for gamma-glutamyl substrate binding gives a Hill coefficient (h) of 0. 576, which shows the negative cooperativity. Neither
ATP
, the other substrate involved in forming the enzyme-bound gamma-glutamyl phosphate intermediate, nor glycine, which attacks this intermediate to form GSH, exhibit any cooperativity. The cooperative binding of gamma-glutamyl substrate is not affected by
ATP
concentration. Thus, mammalian
glutathione synthetase
is an allosteric enzyme.
...
PMID:Novel kinetics of mammalian glutathione synthetase: characterization of gamma-glutamyl substrate cooperative binding. 1096 6
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase catalyzes the first committed step in fatty acid synthesis in all plants, animals, and bacteria. The Escherichia coli form is a multimeric protein complex consisting of three distinct and separate components: biotin carboxylase, carboxyltransferase, and the biotin carboxyl carrier protein. The biotin carboxylase component catalyzes the
ATP
-dependent carboxylation of biotin using bicarbonate as the carboxylate source and has a distinct architecture that is characteristic of the
ATP
-grasp superfamily of enzymes. Included in this superfamily are d-Ala d-Ala ligase,
glutathione synthetase
, carbamyl phosphate synthetase, N(5)-carboxyaminoimidazole ribonucleotide synthetase, and glycinamide ribonucleotide transformylase, all of which have known three-dimensional structures and contain a number of highly conserved residues between them. Four of these residues of biotin carboxylase, Lys-116, Lys-159, His-209, and Glu-276, were selected for site-directed mutagenesis studies based on their structural homology with conserved residues of other
ATP
-grasp enzymes. These mutants were subjected to kinetic analysis to characterize their roles in substrate binding and catalysis. In all four mutants, the K(m) value for
ATP
was significantly increased, implicating these residues in the binding of
ATP
. This result is consistent with the crystal structures of several other
ATP
-grasp enzymes, which have shown specific interactions between the corresponding homologous residues and cocrystallized ADP or nucleotide analogs. In addition, the maximal velocity of the reaction was significantly reduced (between 30- and 260-fold) in the 4 mutants relative to wild type. The data suggest that the mutations have misaligned the reactants for optimal catalysis.
...
PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of ATP binding residues of biotin carboxylase. Insight into the mechanism of catalysis. 1134 47
The present study examined how the multidrug resistance protein (MRP1), which is an
ATP
-dependent anionic conjugate transporter, also mediates the transport of reduced glutathione (GSH) and the co-transport of the cationic drug, daunorubicin, with GSH in living GLC4/Adr cells. To obtain information on the affinity of GSH for the multidrug resistance protein in GLC4/Adr cells, we investigated the GSH concentration dependence of the
ATP
-dependent GSH efflux. The intracellular GSH concentration was modulated by preincubation of the cells with 25 microM buthionine sulfoximine, an inhibitor of
GSH synthetase
, for 0-24 h. The transport of GSH was related to the intracellular GSH concentration up to approximately 5 mM and then plateaued. Fitting of the obtained data according to the Michaelis-Menten equation revealed a Km of 3.4+/-1.4 mM and a Vmax of 1.5+/-0.2x10(-18) mol/cell/s. The
ATP
-dependent transport of GSH was inhibited by 3-([[3-(2-[7-chloro-2-quinolinyl]ethenyl)phenyl]-[(3-dimethylamino-3-oxopropyl)-thio]-methyl]thio)propanoic acid (MK571), with 50% inhibition being obtained with 1.4 microM MK571. We investigated the GSH concentration dependence of the MRP1-mediated
ATP
-dependent transport of daunorubicin under conditions where the transport of daunorubicin became saturated. The daunorubicin transport was related to the intracellular GSH concentration up to approximately 5 mM and then plateaued. We were therefore in the situation where GSH acted as an activator: its presence was necessary for the binding and transport of daunorubicin by MRP1. However, GSH was also transported by the multidrug resistance protein. The concentration of GSH that gave half the maximal rate of daunorubicin efflux was 2.1+/-0.8 mM, very similar to the Km value obtained for GSH. In conclusion, the rate of daunorubicin efflux, under conditions where the transport of daunorubicin became saturated, and the rate of GSH efflux determined at any intracellular concentration of GSH were very similar, yielding a 1:1 stoichiometry with respect to GSH and daunorubicin transport. These results support a model in which daunorubicin is co-transported with GSH.
...
PMID:Kinetics of glutathione and daunorubicin efflux from multidrug resistance protein overexpressing small-cell lung cancer cells. 1140 43
Human
glutathione synthetase
is responsible for catalyzing the final step in glutathione biosynthesis. It is a homodimer with a monomer subunit MW of 52 kDa. Kinetic analysis reveals a departure from linearity of the Lineweaver-Burk double reciprocal plot for the binding of gamma-glutamyl substrate, indicating cooperative binding. The measured apparent K(m) values for gamma-glutamyl-alpha-aminobutyrate (an analog of gamma-glutamyl-alpha-aminobutyrate) are 63 and 164 microM, respectively. Neither
ATP
(K(m) of 248 microM) nor glycine (K(m) of 452 microM) exhibits such cooperative binding behavior. Although
ATP
is proposed to play a key role in the sequential binding of gamma-glutamyl substrate to the enzyme, the cooperative binding of the gamma-glutamyl substrate is not affected by alterations of
ATP
concentration. Quantitative analysis of the kinetic results for gamma-glutamyl substrate binding gives a Hill coefficient (h) of 0.75, indicating negative cooperativity. Our studies, for the first time, show that human
glutathione synthetase
is an allosteric enzyme with cooperative binding for gamma-glutamyl substrate.
...
PMID:Cooperative binding of gamma-glutamyl substrate to human glutathione synthetase. 1170 80
In the present study we investigated the effects of L-pyroglutamic acid (PGA), which predominantly accumulates in the inherited metabolic diseases
glutathione synthetase
deficiency (GSD) and gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase deficiency (GCSD), on some in vitro parameters of energy metabolism and lipid biosynthesis. We evaluated the rates of CO2 production and lipid synthesis from [U-14C]acetate, as well as
ATP
levels and the activities of creatine kinase and of the respiratory chain complexes I-IV in cerebral cortex of young rats in the presence of PGA at final concentrations ranging from 0.5 to 3 mM. PGA significantly reduced brain CO2 production by 50% at the concentrations of 0.5 to 3 mM, lipid biosynthesis by 20% at concentrations of 0.5 to 3 mM and
ATP
levels by 52% at the concentration of 3 mM. Regarding the enzyme activities, PGA significantly decreased NADH:cytochrome c oxireductase (complex I plus CoQ plus complex III) by 40% at concentrations of 0.5-3.0 mM and cytochrome c oxidase activity by 22-30% at the concentration of 3.0 mM, without affecting the activities of succinate dehydrogenase, succinate:DCPIP oxireductase (complex II), succinate:cytochrome c oxireductase (complex II plus CoQ plus complex III) or creatine kinase. The results strongly indicate that PGA impairs brain energy production. If these effects also occur in humans, it is possible that they may contribute to the neuropathology of patients affected by these diseases.
...
PMID:L-pyroglutamic acid inhibits energy production and lipid synthesis in cerebral cortex of young rats in vitro. 1188 78
GSH is the major low-molecular-mass thiol in most organisms. The tripeptide maintains a reduced intracellular environment and protects cellular components from damaging oxidation. GSH is synthesized by the action of two
ATP
-dependent enzymic steps, in which gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (gamma-GCS) catalyses the ligation of glutamate and cysteine and subsequently
glutathione synthetase
(GS) adds glycine to the dipeptide. Recently it was shown that the synthesis of gamma-glutamylcysteine is crucial for the survival of the erythrocytic stages of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum by using the specific gamma-GCS inhibitor buthionine sulphoximine. In order to investigate further the synthetic pathway of the tripeptide in the parasite, GS was cloned and expressed recombinantly. The deduced amino acid sequence of P. falciparum GS shares only a moderate degree of identity with other known GSs, but the residues responsible for substrate and co-factor binding are almost all conserved, with the exception of the ones involved in gamma-glutamylcysteine binding. The protein is active as a dimer, with a subunit molecular mass of 77 kDa, and the addition of reducing reagents such as dithiothreitol is essential in maintaining enzymic activity, indicating that thiol groups are important for stability and enzymic activity. The K(app)(m) values for gamma-glutamyl-alpha-aminobutyrate,
ATP
and glycine were determined to be 107.1 microM, 59.1 microM and 5.04 mM, respectively, and the V(max) of 5.24 +/- 0.7 micromol.min(-1).mg(-1) was in the same range as that of the mammalian enzymes. However, the negative co-operativity observed for gamma-glutamylcysteine binding to the rat enzyme was not found for the parasite protein. This may be due to the alteration of several amino acids in the gamma-glutamylcysteine-binding site.
...
PMID:Glutathione synthetase from Plasmodium falciparum. 1196 86
Glutathione synthase
catalyzes the final
ATP
-dependent step in glutathione biosynthesis, the formation of glutathione from gamma-glutamylcysteine and glycine. We have determined structures of yeast
glutathione synthase
in two forms: unbound (2.3 A resolution) and bound to its substrate gamma-glutamylcysteine, the
ATP
analog AMP-PNP, and two magnesium ions (1.8 A resolution). These structures reveal that upon substrate binding, large domain motions convert the enzyme from an open unliganded form to a closed conformation in which protein domains completely surround the substrate in the active site.
...
PMID:Large conformational changes in the catalytic cycle of glutathione synthase. 1246 74
A recombinant strain E. coli II-1, which exhibited high glutathione (GSH) biosynthetic activity and high stability, was constructed by transforming plasmid pGH501 which contains gene gsh I and gsh II into a wild type strain E. coli II. 4 g/L GSH accumulated extracellularly by using toluene-treated cell. In GSH biosynthetic system, GSH production was improved by increasing the concentration of L-glutamate, while inhibited by L-cysteine if it's concentration was beyond 20 mmol/L. In GSH biosynthetic reaction, the apparent little consumption of L-glutamate and glycine was concluded experimentally to be that toluene-treated E. coli II-1 cells still contained high concentration of L-glutamate and glycine. According to the change of energy cofactor in the GSH biosynthetic process, a possible GSH biosynthetic mechanism controlled by E. coli II-1, was proposed: the energy donator of reaction catalyzed by
glutathione synthetase
(GSH-II) was ADP but not
ATP
, the reaction was rate-limited step within the whole GSH biosynthetic process, high concentration of ADP might inhibit the activity of GSH-II. Further degradation of GSH was prevented by the addition of 100 mmol/L L-serine and potassium borate mixture. In such case, 23.0 mmol/L (about 7.1 g/L) GSH accumulated at 3 h.
...
PMID:[Construction of recombinant E. coli with high glutathione biosynthetic activity and the biosynthetic process]. 1254 83
Proteins in the
ATP
-grasp superfamily of amide bond-forming ligases have evolved to function in a number of unrelated biosynthetic pathways. Previously identified homologs encoding
glutathione synthetase
, d-alanine:d-alanine ligase and the bacterial ribosomal protein S6:glutamate ligase have been vertically inherited within certain organismal lineages. Although members of this specificity-diverse superfamily share a common reaction mechanism, the nonoverlapping set of amino acid and peptide substrates recognized by each family provided few clues as to their evolutionary history. Two members of this family have been identified in the hyperthermophilic marine archaeon Methanococcus jannaschii and shown to catalyze the final reactions in two coenzyme biosynthetic pathways. The MJ0620 (mptN) locus encodes a tetrahydromethanopterin:alpha-l-glutamate ligase that forms tetrahydrosarcinapterin, a single carbon-carrying coenzyme. The MJ1001 (cofF) locus encodes a gamma-F420-2:alpha-l-glutamate ligase, which caps the gamma-glutamyl tail of the hydride carrier coenzyme F420. These two genes share a common ancestor with the ribosomal protein S6:glutamate ligase and a putative alpha-aminoadipate ligase, defining the first group of
ATP
-grasp enzymes with a shared amino acid substrate specificity. As in glutathione biosynthesis, two unrelated amino acid ligases catalyze sequential reactions in coenzyme F420 polyglutamate formation: a gamma-glutamyl ligase adds 1-3 l-glutamate residues and the
ATP
-grasp-type ligase described here caps the chain with a single alpha-linked l-glutamate residue. The analogous pathways for glutathione, F420, folate, and murein peptide biosyntheses illustrate convergent evolution of nonribosomal peptide biosynthesis through the recruitment of single-step amino acid ligases.
...
PMID:Glutathione synthetase homologs encode alpha-L-glutamate ligases for methanogenic coenzyme F420 and tetrahydrosarcinapterin biosyntheses. 1290 15
The thermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus synthesizes lysine through the alpha-aminoadipate pathway, which uses alpha-aminoadipate as a biosynthetic intermediate of lysine. LysX is the essential enzyme in this pathway, and is believed to catalyze the acylation of alpha-aminoadipate. We have determined the crystal structures of LysX and its complex with ADP at 2.0A and 2.38A resolutions, respectively. LysX is composed of three alpha+beta domains, each composed of a four to five-stranded beta-sheet core flanked by alpha-helices. The C-terminal and central domains form an
ATP
-grasp fold, which is responsible for
ATP
binding. LysX has two flexible loop regions, which are expected to play an important role in substrate binding and protection. In spite of the low level of sequence identity, the overall fold of LysX is surprisingly similar to that of other
ATP
-grasp fold proteins, such as D-Ala:D-Ala ligase, PurT-encoded glycinamide ribonucleotide transformylase,
glutathione synthetase
, and synapsin I. In particular, they share a similar spatial arrangement of the amino acid residues around the
ATP
-binding site. This observation strongly suggests that LysX is an
ATP
-utilizing enzyme that shares a common evolutionary ancestor with other
ATP
-grasp fold proteins possessing a carboxylate-amine/thiol ligase activity.
...
PMID:Crystal structure of a lysine biosynthesis enzyme, LysX, from Thermus thermophilus HB8. 1296 79
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>