Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:6.3.5.5 (CPS)
1,262 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of corticosteroids and pancreatic hormones on two mitochondrial enzymes of ureagenesis, carbamyl phosphate synthetase-I (CPS-I) and ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC), were investigated and compared in fetal rat liver. Supplementing hydrocortisone acetate (50 micrograms) to 18.5-day-old fetuses significantly increased CPS-I activity (by 36%) and decreased OTC activity (by 23%). An actinomycin D supply (2 micrograms) to 18.5-day-old fetuses prematurely increased OTC activity and decreased fetal insulin level (by 42%). This treatment had no effect on CPS-I activity. Glucagon supply (25 micrograms) during the late fetal period increased both activities within 2 h, while dibutyryl-cAMP enhanced OTC activity 17 h later. These results suggested that the fetal development of CPS-I activity was under the control of corticosteroids and glucagon. In contrast, corticosteroid hormones produced an inhibitory effect on OTC activity. This might be explained by the permissive effect of corticosteroids on insulin action, since insulin might act as a repressor in utero of enzyme development. Thus, the paradoxical effect of actinomycin D on OTC activity was probably due to the decrease in fetal insulinemia.
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PMID:Effects of corticosteroids and pancreatic hormones on carbamyl phosphate synthetase-I and ornithine transcarbamylase activities in fetal rat liver. 299 95

In virgin female rats thioacetamide administration (1 mg/100 g body wt) induced a 16-fold increase in liver ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity and a significant decrease (19%) in hepatic urea concentration. The ornithine-metabolizing enzymes, ornithine-oxo-acid aminotransferase and ornithine carbamoyltransferase, were not modified by the treatment; only carbamoyltransferase, were not modified by the treatment; only carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase I activity was significantly reduced. In 19-day pregnant rats DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine treatment inhibited the expression of enhanced ODC activity occurring normally at this stage of pregnancy. Concomitantly an inhibition of the usual decrease in hepatic urea was observed. This increase of ureagenesis occurred without any increase in liver N-acetylglutamate or ornithine concentrations, which remained as low as in normal pregnant rats.
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PMID:Urea concentration and ornithine decarboxylase in liver of female rats. 308 92

A partial carbamylphosphate synthetase (CPS: EC 6.3.4.16) deficiency (McKusick 23730) was found in a male child who presented with generalized convulsions, rickets and apnoeic attacks at six months of age. By his second year he showed serious developmental delay and a gut biopsy revealed an absence of CPS activity with an elevated ornithine transcarbamylase activity. Analysis of the gut biopsy sample on SDS-polyacrylamide gels, followed by electrophoretic transfer to a nitrocellulose filter probed with monospecific antibodies to CPS showed that the child had normal levels of immunoreactive enzyme, but instead of one band corresponding to normal CPS with a subunit size of 165,000 u, the patient had three immunoreactive bands, one larger and two smaller than that found in normal controls. The genetic defect in this child therefore results in an unusual form of CPS being made which has markedly reduced enzyme activity.
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PMID:Immunological evidence for a carbamylphosphate synthetase lesion resulting in the formation of enzyme with altered sub-unit size. 310 74

Foetal hepatocytes obtained from rats at different stages were cultured in order to investigate the inducibility of the five urea-cycle enzymes by glucagon and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (Bt2cAMP). When 18.5-day-old hepatocytes were cultured for 3 days with 10(-7) M glucagon, the activities of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS), argininosuccinase (ASL) and arginase were increased by 1.4-, 1.8- and 1.9-fold, respectively, as compared to controls. These effects were mimicked by 10(-4) M Bt2cAMP, but the activities of ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) and argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS) were never changed by the addition of these compounds. Hepatocytes cultured at earlier stages were not responsive to glucagon unless dexamethasone was added simultaneously, suggesting that this steroid might induce some steps necessary for glucagon action. Bt2cAMP was effective as early as day 16.5 without requiring the presence of steroids. In addition, the effect of the cyclic nucleotide appeared additive or synergistic with that of dexamethasone. The simultaneous addition of actinomycin D did not affect the glucagon-induced increase in enzyme levels, thus suggesting a post-transcriptional effect of the hormone on the foetal enzyme activities. Insulin itself did not have any effect on the basal level of the enzyme activities and had only a moderate inhibitory effect on glucagon-induced ASL activity. This slight effect of insulin is in contrast with the marked inhibitory effect of dexamethasone on this enzyme activity that we described previously.
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PMID:Induction of the five urea-cycle enzymes by glucagon in cultured foetal rat hepatocytes. 332 26

Hyperornithinemia, hyperammonemia and homocitrullinuria (HHH disorder) is an inherited metabolic disorder which shows peculiar amino acid changes in the serum and urine. The primary defect is considered to be the transport of ornithine across the mitochondrial membrane, but there is no direct evidence for this so far. We have analyzed ornithine transport activities in the liver mitochondria from three patients with HHH disorder. In coupled liver mitochondria we demonstrated low activities of citrulline synthesis and low rates of ornithine uptake. However, there were no abnormalities in carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase activity, ornithine carbamoyltransferase activity, N-acetylglutamate levels or O2 uptake with succinate. We also performed a kinetic study of citrulline synthesis as a function of ornithine concentration. We found increased Km values for ornithine and varied Vmax values of citrulline synthesis, which suggested the presence of a mutant transport protein. From these results we conclude that the defect of hyperornithinemia, hyperammonemia and homocitrullinuria lies in the transport of ornithine across the mitochondrial membrane.
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PMID:Biochemical analysis of decreased ornithine transport activity in the liver mitochondria from patients with hyperornithinemia, hyperammonemia and homocitrullinuria. 333 77

We investigated the distribution of the nuclear encoded mitochondrial enzymes, carbamylphosphate synthetase (CPS; EC 6.3.4.16) and ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC; EC 2.1.3.3) in liver by immunocytochemistry on ultrathin sections using the protein A-gold technique. Both enzymes were found to be present as aggregates in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes, in association with ER membranes adjacent to mitochondria. Clusters of the enzymes were also found inside the mitochondria. The aggregation of these enzymes was found only with antibodies to CPS and OTC and not with antibodies against albumin or with IgG from unimmunized serum, nor were aggregates found in cells other than hepatocytes. The results are suggestive of localized uptake of clusters of enzyme or co-translational uptake of enzyme at discrete localizations and that endoplasmic reticulum (ER) associations may be necessary for uptake of the percursor forms of CPS and OTC. The possible involvement is discussed of micropinosomes which are seen associated with inner membrane, intermembrane space and outer membrane in mitochondria obtained from a perinuclear pellet where ER and mitochondria are frequently found in close association.
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PMID:Import of carbamylphosphate synthetase and ornithine transcarbamylase into mitochondria of rat liver: detection of aggregates of enzyme in cytoplasm and mitochondria using immunoelectron microscopy with the protein A-gold method. 352 29

We have confirmed that arginine-deficient diets increase the liver activities (units per 100 g) of the first four arginine biosynthetic enzymes of the urea cycle in Wistar rats, but not the activity of arginase. In contrast, rat liver cells cultured in monolayers for 48, 72 or 96 h in arginine-free L-15 or minimum essential medium showed no changes in carbamoyl-phosphate synthase (EC 6.3.4.16), ornithine transcarbamylase (EC 2.1.3.3), argininosuccinate synthase (EC 6.3.4.5), argininosuccinase (EC 4.3.2.1) or arginase (EC 3.5.3.1) activities. The arginine content of the cells grown on deficient medium was 36% of that of cells grown on 2.9 mM arginine-sufficient L-15, yet the urea excretion rate into the medium was reduced to 7% of the rate in control cells and the excretion of orotic acid was 400% of that in control cells. A Morris rat hepatoma cell line, 7800C1, which maintains activities of all five urea cycle enzymes, showed no consistent increases in the activities of the first four enzymes when the arginine in the medium was varied between 0 and 2 mM. Thus, in spite of severe arginine deficiency, cultured rat liver cells and hepatoma cells do not show the derepression-like response seen by other investigators when nonliver cells were cultured in arginine-deficient media. The difference between in vivo and in vitro effects of arginine deficiency on urea cycle activities remains unexplained.
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PMID:Differing effects of arginine deficiency on the urea cycle enzymes of rat liver, cultured hepatocytes and hepatoma cells. 368 73

cDNA probes were employed to measure levels of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase I (CPS) and ornithine carbamoyltransferase (OCT) mRNAs in fetal and neonatal livers and intestines. In the fetal liver, significant levels of OCT mRNA were present at 15-days gestation while CPS mRNA could not be detected until day 17 of fetal development. Apart from a small decline just after birth, amounts of both mRNAs increased steadily to reach adult levels in postnatal life. In contrast to the situation in liver, CPS and OCT mRNA levels in the fetal intestine rose rapidly to peak at day 21 of gestation and then declined steadily in the first seven days after birth. Using the methyl-sensitive restriction isoschizomeric pair, MspI/HpaII, the 5' ends of both the CPS and OCT genes were shown to undergo demethylation during development. In the case of the OCT gene, however, the hypomethylation characteristic of the adult liver and intestinal mucosa was not observed in the 15-day-old fetal liver, where significant levels of gene expression had already been established. Levels of CPS and OCT mRNA in livers of adults responded to glucagon in normal animals (1.5-fold and 2.2-fold increases, respectively) and to dexamethasone in experimentally induced diabetic animals (3-fold increase in CPS mRNA with no change in OCT mRNA). These treatments were all without effect on the levels of CPS and OCT mRNA in intestinal mucosa.
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PMID:Rat liver and intestinal mucosa differ in the developmental pattern and hormonal regulation of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase I and ornithine carbamoyl transferase gene expression. 375 12

The relative half-life of ornithine transcarbamylase from rat liver has been determined using the double isotope technique and affinity chromatography. The calculated half-life (6-9 days) is similar to that of mitochondria and of the other mitochondrial enzyme of the urea cycle, carbamoyl-phosphate synthase. Therefore, both mitochondrial urea cycle enzymes are most probably degraded mainly via the lysosomal (autophagic) pathway of mitochondrial protein degradation.
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PMID:Turnover of rat liver ornithine transcarbamylase. 378 Sep 79

Biochemical studies of a female who died at 2 years of age from a possible genetic variant of ornithine carbamoyltransferase (OCTase) deficiency are reported. The patient had severe psychomotor retardation with plasma ammonia levels throughout life reaching as high as 500 mumole/liter. The average OCTase level in the patient's liver was 2% of that in normal livers. Preincubation with 0.05 M MgCl2 resulted in a 570% increase in OCTase activity (13% of control). Citrate synthase and carbamoyl-phosphate synthase I were present at essentially normal levels. Unusual Mg2+ requirements have not been recognized in previous reports of OCTase deficiency, suggesting a genetic variant in this patient.
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PMID:A fatal variant of human ornithine carbamoyltransferase is stimulated by Mg2+. 380 Dec 11


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