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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 structural and functional domains of Escherichia coli
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(
CPS
) have been identified by limited proteolysis. Incubation of
CPS
with several proteases, including trypsin, chymotrypsin, subtilisin and endoproteinase Asp-N, under native conditions, causes a time-dependent loss of enzymatic activity and the generation of a common fragmentation pattern. Amino-terminal sequencing studies demonstrated that the initial cleavage event by trypsin occurred at the carboxy-terminal end of the large subunit. The ultimate fragments produced in most of the proteolysis studies, 35- and 45-kDa peptides, were derived from areas corresponding to the putative ATP binding regions. Substrate protection studies showed that the addition of ligands did not affect the final fragmentation pattern of the protein. However, ornithine and UMP were found to significantly reduce the rate of inactivation by inhibition of proteolytic cleavage. MgATP and IMP provided modest protection whereas bicarbonate and glutamine showed no overall effect on proteolysis. Limited proteolysis by endoproteinase Asp-N resulted in the production of a fragment (or multiple fragments) which contained enzymatic activity but had lost all regulation by the allosteric ligands, UMP and ornithine. The small subunit has been shown to be protected from proteolysis by the large subunit. Proteolysis of the isolated small subunit resulted in the generation of a stable 31-kDa species which contained 10% of the original glutaminase activity. These studies demonstrate that a portion of the C-terminal end of the large subunit can be excised without entirely destroying the ability of
CPS
to catalyze the formation of carbamoyl
phosphate
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mapping the structural domains of E. coli carbamoyl phosphate synthetase using limited proteolysis. 764 1
Carbamoyl-
phosphate
synthetase II (CPSase II), aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase), and dihydroorotase (DHOase) catalyze the first three steps of de novo pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis, respectively. In mammalian species, these three enzyme activities exist in the cytosol in liver and other tissues as a multifunctional complex on a single polypeptide called
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
-aspartate transcarbamoylase-dihydroorotase (CAD) in the order of NH2-CPSase II-DHOase-ATCase-COOH. Previous studies provided evidence that in Squalus acanthias (spiny dogfish) these enzymes are not expressed in liver and that they exist as separate entities in the cytosol of extra-hepatic tissues such as testes and spleen (Anderson, P. M. (1989) Biochem. J. 261, 523-529). Here we report that the genes for these three enzymes are expressed in testes as a single transcript analogous to CAD in mammalian species and that these genes are not expressed in liver at levels that can be detected by Northern blots or by the polymerase chain reaction. The absence of the pyrimidine pathway in the liver may be related to the exclusive localization of glutamine synthetase in the mitochondrial matrix which provides for efficient assimilation of ammonia as glutamine for urea synthesis in these ureoosmotic species; thus glutamine may not be available for CPSase II or other amidotransferase activities in the cytosol. The amino acid sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the shark CAD cDNA reported here is very similar to CAD from other species; alignment with the hamster CAD sequence shows 77% identical residues.
...
PMID:Nucleotide sequence and tissue-specific expression of the multifunctional protein carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase-aspartate transcarbamoylase-dihydroorotase (CAD) mRNA in Squalus acanthias. 777 74
The reactive cysteine residue within the small subunit of Escherichia coli
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
has been identified using the technique of site-directed mutagenesis. Three cysteine residues have previously been found to react with N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) under controlled reaction conditions. Two of these cysteine residues are found on the large subunit, while the third cysteine is located on the small subunit. In the present investigation, Cys-248 of the small subunit has been identified as the residue that reacts with NEM in the presence of MgATP and bicarbonate. Three cysteine residues of the small subunit at positions 131, 214, and 248 were individually mutated to serine residues. These site-specific changes, in addition to N-ethylmaleimide-labeling studies, demonstrated that Cys-248 is the amino acid that reacts with N-ethylmaleimide. Substitution of Cys-248 of the small subunit with larger residues (Asp, Phe, Arg, and Trp) was conducted in order to more closely mimic the observed properties of the NEM-labeled enzyme. The partial glutaminase activity of the C248D mutant increased 40-fold relative to the wild-type enzyme, while the formation of carbamoyl
phosphate
using glutamine as a nitrogen source was completely abolished. Similar, but less dramatic, effects were observed for the other mutants, C248S, C248R, C248F, and C248W. There was good correlation between the extent of enhancement of the partial glutaminase activity and an uncoupling of the phosphorylation reactions that occur on the large subunit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:A molecular wedge for triggering the amidotransferase activity of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 813 Feb 8
The synthesis of citrulline from glutamine was quantified in enterocytes from pre-weaning (14-21 days old) and post-weaning (29-58 days old) pigs. The cells were incubated at 37 degrees C for 30 min in Krebs-Henseleit bicarbonate buffer (pH 7.4) containing 0, 0.5, 2 and 5 mM glutamine. Oxygen consumption was linear during the 30 min incubation period. The rates of citrulline synthesis were low or negligible in enterocytes from 14-21-day-old pigs, but increased 10-20-fold in the cells from 29-58-day-old pigs. This marked elevation of citrulline synthesis coincided with an increase in the activity of pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthase with the animal's post-weaning growth. In contrast, decreases in the activities of phosphate-dependent glutaminase, ornithine aminotransferase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase and
carbamoyl-phosphate synthase
were observed as the age of the pigs increased. The concentrations of carbamoyl
phosphate
in enterocytes from pre-weaning pigs were higher than, or similar to, those in the cells from post-weaning pigs. It is possible that the low rate of citrulline synthesis from glutamine in enterocytes from pre-weaning pigs was due to a limited availability of ornithine, rather than that of carbamoyl
phosphate
. We suggest that this limited availability of ornithine in pre-weaning-pig enterocytes results from (i) the low rate of pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthesis from glutamate, due to the low activity of pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthase, and (ii) the competitive conversion of pyrroline-5-carboxylate into proline. Our present findings on the developmental aspect of citrulline synthesis in pig enterocytes may offer a biochemical mechanism for the previous observations that arginine is a nutritionally essential amino acid for suckling piglets, but not for adult pigs.
...
PMID:Synthesis of citrulline from glutamine in pig enterocytes. 816 28
1. Carbamoyl-
phosphate
synthetase (
EC 6.3.5.5
.) catalyses the synthesis of carbamoyl
phosphate
, the immediate precursor of arginine and pyrimidine biosynthesis, and is highly conserved throughout evolution. The large subunit of all carbamoyl-phosphate synthetases sequenced to date comprises two highly homologous halves, the product of a proposed ancestral gene duplication. The sequences of the enzymes of Escherichia coli, Drosophila melanogaster, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, rat and Syrian hamster all have duplications, suggesting that this event occurred in the progenote predating the separation of the major phylae. Until now, only limited data on
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
were available for the primitive eukaryote Dictyostelium discoideum and for the Archaea Methanosarcina barkeri MS. The DNA sequence of the D. discoideum carbamoyl-phosphate gene and additional sequence for the
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
gene of M. barkeri MS have been determined, and a duplicated structure for both is clearly demonstrated. 2. Genes with ancient duplications provide unique information on their evolution. A study of the intron/exon organization of the rat
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I gene and the
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
hamster II gene in the CAD multi-gene complex shows that at least some of their introns are very old. Evidence is provided that some introns must have been present in the ancestral precursor before its duplication. 3. The human
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I gene has been isolated and characterized. A human liver cDNA library was constructed and probed for
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I. A human genomic DNA cosmid library was also probed for the
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I gene. The cDNA sequence of the human
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I gene has been determined, and work has been initiated to confirm that at least part of this gene is contained within two cosmids spanning 46kb. This will enable future studies to be made on mutations in this gene in the rare autosomal recessive deficiency of
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I.
...
PMID:Molecular studies on an ancient gene encoding for carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase. 838 76
Three conserved histidine residues, His-243, His-781, and His-788, located within the large subunit of
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
from Escherichia coli were identified by sequence identity comparisons. These three histidine residues were individually mutated to asparagine residues. The H243N mutant enzyme was found to be critical for carbamoyl
phosphate
synthesis as the mutant protein was unable to synthesize carbamoyl
phosphate
at a significant rate (< 1/1500). By analysis of the effects of this mutation on the partial reactions catalyzed by
CPS
, it was determined that this mutation blocked the formation of the carbamate intermediate from carboxyphosphate and ammonia. The H781N mutant enzyme had an order of magnitude reduction for both the rate of carbamoyl
phosphate
formation and ATP synthesis which is consistent with the proposal that the carboxyl-terminal half of the large subunit is primarily involved in the phosphorylation of the putative carbamate intermediate. This mutation also reduced the effects of the allosteric activator ornithine on the Km parameters for ATP in the overall biosynthetic reaction and ADP in the ATP synthesis reaction. The H788N mutant enzyme is a functional protein which maintains the ability to synthesize carbamoyl
phosphate
at a rate comparable to that of the wild-type enzyme. The effects of this mutation are 10-fold reductions of the ATP synthetase and the bicarbonate-dependent ATPase activities with substantial increases in the Km values for ATP in the full biosynthetic reaction and for ADP in the ATP synthesis reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Differential roles for three conserved histidine residues within the large subunit of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 841 43
The arginine-specific
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a heterodimeric enzyme, with a 45-kDa CPA1 subunit binding and cleaving glutamine, and a 124-kDa CPA2 subunit accepting the ammonia moiety cleaved from glutamine, binding all of the remaining substrates and carrying out all of the other catalytic events. CPA2 is composed of two apparently duplicated amino acid sequences involved in binding the two ATP molecules needed for carbamoyl
phosphate
synthesis and a carboxyl-terminal domain which appears to be less tightly folded than the remainder of the protein. Using deletion mutagenesis, we have established that essentially all of the carboxyl-terminal domain of CPA2 is required for catalytic function and that even small truncations lead to significant changes in the CPA2 conformation. In addition, we have demonstrated that the C-terminal region of CPA2 can be expressed as an autonomously folded unit which is stabilized by specific interactions with the remainder of CPA2. We also made the unexpected finding that, even when ammonia is used as the substrate and there is no catalytic role for CPA1, interaction with CPA1 led to an increase in the Vmax of CPA2 in crude extracts.
...
PMID:Requirement for the carboxyl-terminal domain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase. 862 95
When catalyzing the formation of MgATP and carbamate from MgADP and carbamoyl
phosphate
, Escherichia coli
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(
CPS
) binds MgADP with a large negative change in heat capacity. The magnitude of this heat capacity change is not appreciably altered by the presence of a saturating concentration of either the allosteric activator ornithine or the inhibitor UMP despite the substantial and opposing effects these ligands have on the binding affinity for MgADP. By contrast, no detectable change in heat capacity is associated with the thermodynamic coupling between MgADP and either ornithine or UMP. The sign of the apparently constant enthalpic and entropic contributions to the coupling free energy for each of these ligands is opposite that of the coupling free energy, indicating that the observed allosteric phenomenology is in net opposed by the enthalpy of the interaction and instead arises from a change in entropy of the system. IMP produces only a very small allosteric effect as indicated by a near-zero value for the MgADP-IMP coupling free energy. However, the enthalpic and entropic contributions are individually larger in absolute value for the IMP coupling than for those pertaining to the other allosteric ligands, and entropy dominates the coupling free energy above 36 degrees C, causing IMP to become an activator at high temperature. In addition, the sign of the coupling enthalpy and entropy for IMP has the same sign as the coupling enthalpy and entropy produced by ornithine, suggesting that IMP and ornithine may similarly influence the enzyme at a molecular level despite binding to different allosteric sites on the enzyme. The data are consistent with a model in which the actions of the allosteric ligands arise primarily from changes in the conformational degeneracy introduced by each ligand. With this model, one can also rationalize the failure of these allosteric ligands to substantially influence kcat.
...
PMID:Allosteric effects of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli are entropy-driven. 879 75
Carbamoyl phosphate is the product of
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(
CPS
II) activity and the substrate of the aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) activity, each of which is found in CAD, a large 240-kDa multienzyme polypeptide in mammals that catalyses the first three steps in pyrimidine biosynthesis. In our study of the transfer of the labile intermediate between the two active sites, we have used assays that differentiate the synthesis of carbamoyl
phosphate
from the overall reaction of
CPS
II and ATCase that produces carbamoyl aspartate. We provided excess exogenous carbamoyl
phosphate
and monitored its access to the respective active sites through the production of carbamoyl
phosphate
and carbamoyl aspartate from radiolabelled bicarbonate. Three features indicate interactions between the folded
CPS
II and ATCase domains causing reciprocal conformational changes. First, even in the presence of approximately 1 mM unlabelled carbamoyl
phosphate
, when the aspartate concentration is high ATCase uses endogenous carbamoyl
phosphate
for the synthesis of radiolabelled carbamoyl aspartate. In contrast, the isolated
CPS
II forward reaction is inhibited by excess unlabelled carbamoyl
phosphate
. Secondly, the affinity of the ATCase for carbamoyl
phosphate
and aspartate is modulated when substrates bind to
CPS
II. Thirdly, the transition-state analogue phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate is a less efficient inhibitor of the ATCase when the substrates for
CPS
II are present. All these effects operate when
CPS
II is in the more active P state, which is induced by high concentrations of ATP and magnesium ions and when 5'-phosphoribosyl diphosphate (the allosteric activator) is present with low concentrations of ATP; these are conditions that would be met during active biosynthesis in the cell. We propose a phenomenon of reciprocal allostery that encourages the efficient transfer of the labile intermediate within the multienzyme polypeptide CAD. In this model, binding of aspartate to the active site of ATCase causes a conformational change at the active site of the liganded form of
CPS
II, which protects it from inhibition by its product, carbamoyl
phosphate
; reciprocally, the substrates for
CPS
II affect the active site of ATCase by increasing the affinity for its substrates, endogenous carbamoyl
phosphate
and aspartate, and thus impede access of exogenous carbamoyl
phosphate
or the transition-state analogue. Reciprocal allostery justifies the close association of the enzyme activities within the polypeptide and ensures that carbamoyl
phosphate
is efficiently synthesised and is dedicated to the second step of pyrimidine biosynthesis. These conditions fulfill those required for metabolic channeling in the cell.
...
PMID:A reciprocal allosteric mechanism for efficient transfer of labile intermediates between active sites in CAD, the mammalian pyrimidine-biosynthetic multienzyme polypeptide. 928 32
The subcellular localization and biochemical properties of the enzymes of carbamoyl
phosphate
and urea synthesis were examined in three representatives of fishes of the family Batrachoididae, the gulf toadfish (Opsanus beta), the oyster toadfish (Opsanus tau) and the plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus). The primary objective of the study was to compare the biochemical characteristics of these fishes, which represent a range between ammoniotelism and ureotelism (O. beta being facultatively ureotelic), with previous patterns observed for an ammoniotelic teleost (Micropterus salmoides, the largemouth bass) and an obligate ureogenic elasmobranch (Squalus acanthias, the dogfish shark). The present study documents the expression of mitochondrial
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(CPSase) III and cytosolic CPSase II (and its associated enzymes of pyrimidine synthesis, dihydro-orotase and aspartate carbamoyltransferase) in the livers of all three batrachoidid species. Both mitochondrial and cytosolic activities of arginase were present in the livers of all three species, as were cytosolic glutamine synthetase and argininosuccinate synthetase and lyase. However, O. beta also showed mitochondrial glutamine synthetase activity and higher total hepatic levels of glutamine synthetase than either O. tau or P. notatus. Taken together, these observations confirm that the arrangement of these enzymes in the batrachoidid fishes has greater similarity to that of M. salmoides than to that of S. acanthias. However, differences within the family appear to coincide with the different nitrogen excretion strategies. O. tau and P. notatus are primarily ammoniotelic and most closely resemble the ammoniotelic M. salmoides, whereas ureotelism in O. beta is correlated with the presence of a mitochondrial glutamine synthetase and the ability to induce higher total glutamine synthetase activities than O. tau or P. notatus. Additionally, isolated mitochondria from O. beta were able to generate citrulline from glutamine, whereas those from O. tau were not. Also in contrast to S. acanthias, glutamine synthetase activities in the mitochondria of O. beta are consistently lower than those of CPSase III. This and other kinetic observations lend support to the hypothesis that glutamine synthetase may be an important regulatory control point in determining rates of ureogenesis in O. beta.
...
PMID:Subcellular localization and biochemical properties of the enzymes of carbamoyl phosphate and urea synthesis in the batrachoidid fishes Opsanus beta, Opsanus tau and Porichthys notatus 931 21
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