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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)
It has been proposed that key enzymes of ureagenesis and the alanine aminotransferase activity predominate in periportal hepatocytes. However, ureagenesis from alanine, when measured in the perfused liver, did not show periportal predominance and even the release of the direct products of alanine transformation, lactate and pyruvate, was higher in perivenous cells. An alternative way of analyzing the functional distributions of alanine aminotransferase and the urea cycle along the hepatic acini would be to measure alanine and urea production from precursors such as lactate or pyruvate plus ammonia. In the present work these aspects were investigated in the bivascularly perfused rat liver. The results of the present study confirm that gluconeogenesis and the associated oxygen uptake tend to predominate in the periportal region.
Alanine
synthesis from lactate and pyruvate plus ammonia, however, predominated in the perivenous region. Furthermore, no predominance of ureagenesis in the periportal region was found, except for conditions of high ammonia concentrations plus oxidizing conditions induced by pyruvate. These observations corroborate the view that data on enzyme activity or expression alone cannot be extrapolated unconditionally to the living cell. The current view of the hepatic ammonia-detoxifying system proposes that the small perivenous fraction of glutamine synthesizing perivenous cells removes a minor fraction of ammonia that escapes from ureagenesis in periportal cells. However, since urea synthesis occurs at high rates in all hepatocytes with the possible exclusion of those cells not possessing
carbamoyl-phosphate synthase
, it is probable that ureagenesis is equally important as an ammonia-detoxifying mechanism in the perivenous region.
...
PMID:Flexibility of the hepatic zonation of carbon and nitrogen fluxes linked to lactate and pyruvate transformations in the presence of ammonia. 1769 Jan 75
Evolutionarily conserved triad glutamine amidotransferase (GAT) domains catalyze the cleavage of glutamine to yield ammonia and sequester the ammonia in a tunnel until delivery to a variety of acceptor substrates in synthetase domains of variable structure. Whereas a conserved hydrolytic triad (Cys/His/Glu) is observed in the solved GAT structures, the specificity pocket for glutamine is not apparent, presumably because its formation is dependent on the conformational change that couples acceptor availability to a greatly increased rate of glutamine cleavage. In Escherichia coli
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
(eCPS), one of the best characterized triad GAT members, the Cys269 and His353 triad residues are essential for glutamine hydrolysis, whereas Glu355 is not critical for eCPS activity. To further define the glutamine-binding pocket and possibly identify an alternative member of the catalytic triad that is situated for this role in the coupled conformation, we have analyzed mutations at Gln310, Asn311, Asp334, and Gln351, four conserved, but not yet analyzed residues that might potentially function as the third triad member.
Alanine
substitution of Gln351, Asn311, and Gln310 yielded respective K(m) increases of 145, 27, and 15, suggesting that Gln351 plays a key role in glutamine binding in the coupled conformation, and that Asn311 and Gln310 make less significant contributions. None of the mutant k (cat) values varied significantly from those for wild-type eCPS. Combined with previously reported data on other conserved eCPS residues, these results strongly suggest that Cys269 and His353 function as a catalytic dyad in the GAT site of eCPS.
...
PMID:Mutation analysis of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase: does the structurally conserved glutamine amidotransferase triad act as a functional dyad? 1845 50