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 possibility of control of the activity of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase (ammonia) (EC 2.7.2.5) in rat-liver mitochondria by variation in the intramitochondrial free Mg2+ concentration has been investigated. Carbamoyl-phosphate synthase activity was measured by coupling the formation of carbamoylphosphate to the synthesis of citrulline in a reaction mixture containing ammonia, bicarbonate, a source of ATP, and ornithine. The synthesis of citrulline was inhibited by lowering the concentration of intramitochondrial free Mg2+. This could be achieved not only by depleting the mitochondria of Mg2+ (by adding the ionophore A23187), but also by increasing the intramitochondrial concentration of citrate. Under various conditions an inverse relationship between the rate of citrulline synthesis and the magnitude of the intramitochondrial concentration of citrate was observed. Inhibition of citrulline synthesis by intramitochondrial citrate could be partly reversed by addition of Mg2+ in the presence of A23187. Possible implications of the regulation of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase (ammonia) activity by intramitochondrial citrate for nitrogen metabolism in the liver are discussed.
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PMID:Relationship between intramitochondrial citrate and the activity of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase (ammonia). 2 2

This paper demonstrates, by pulse-chase techniques, the binding to rat liver mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate synthetase of the ATP molecule (ATPB) which transfers its gamma-phosphoryl group to carbamoyl phosphate. This bound APTB can react with NH3, HCO-3 and ATP (see below) to produce carbamoyl phosphate before it exchanges with free ATP. Mg2+ and N-acetylglutamate, but not NH3 or HCO-3, are required for this binding; the amount bound depends on the concentration of ATP (Kapp = 10--30 microns ATP) and the amount of enzyme. At saturation at least one ATPB molecule binds per enzyme dimer. Binding of ATPB follows a slow exponential time course (t1/2 8--16 s, 22 degrees C), independent of ATP concentration and little affected by NH3, NCO-3 or by incubation of the enzyme with unlabelled ATP prior to the pulse of [gamma-32P]ATP. Formation of carbamoyl phosphate from traces of NH3 and HCO-3 when the enzyme is incubated with ATP follows the kinetics expected if it were generated from the bound ATPB, indicating that the latter is a precursor of carbamoyl phosphate ('Cbm-P precursor') in the normal enzyme reaction. This indicates that the site for ATPB is usually inaccessible to ATP in solution but becomes accessible when the enzyme undergoes a periodical conformational change. Bound ATP becomes Cbm-P precursor when the enzyme reverts to the inaccessible conformation. Pulse-chase experiments in the absence of NH3 and HCO-3 (less than 0.2 mM) also demonstrate binding of ATPA (the molecule which yields Pi in the normal enzyme reaction), as shown by a 'burst' in 32Pi production. Therefore, (in accordance with our previous findings) both ATPA and ATPB can bind simultaneously to the enzyme and react with NH3 and HCO-3 in the chase solution before they can exchange with free ATP. However, at low ATP concentration (18 micron) in the pulse incubation, only ATPB binds since ATP is required in the chase (see above). Despite the presence of two ATP binding sites, the bifunctional inhibitor adenosine(5')pentaphospho(5')adenosine(Ap5A) fails to inhibit the enzyme significantly. A more detailed modification of the scheme previously published [Rubio, V. & Grisolia, S. (1977) Biochemistry, 16, 321--329] is proposed; it is suggested that ATPB gains access to the active centre when the products leave the enzyme and the active centre is in an accessible configuration. The transformation from accessible to inaccessible configuration appears to be part of the normal enzyme reaction and may represent to conformational change postulated by others from steady-state kinetics. The properties of the intermediates also indicate that hydrolysis of ATPA must be largely responsible for the HCO-3-dependent ATPase activity of the enzyme. The lack of inhibition of the enzyme by Ap5A indicates substantial differences between the Escherichia coli and the rat liver synthetase.
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PMID:Mechanism of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase. Binding of ATP by the rat-liver mitochondrial enzyme. 21 11

Acetylglutamate and ATP accelerate the oxidative inactivation of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I by mixtures of Fe3+, ascorbate, and O2, but the mechanism of the inactivation differs with each ligand. In the presence of acetylglutamate, MgATP prevents, Mg2+, Mn2+, and catalase have no effect, and EDTA increases the inactivation, and the two phosphorylation steps of the enzyme reaction are lost simultaneously. The inactivation appears to be mediated by dehydroascorbate and is associated with the reversible oxidation of the highly reactive cysteines 1327 and 1337 and with oxidation of non-thiolic groups in the second 40-kDa domain (the enzyme consists of 4 domains of 40, 40, 60, and 20 kDa, from the amino terminus). The data are consistent with oxidation of groups at or near the site for ATPA (ATPA yields Pi; ATPB yields carbamoyl phosphate), and with the location of this site at the interphase between the second 40-kDa and the COOH-terminal domains. The oxidative inactivation promoted by ATP is inhibited by Mg2+, Mn2+, catalase, and EDTA, is not mediated by dehydroascorbate, and is not associated with oxidation of cysteines 1327 and 1337. Groups in the 60-kDa domain are oxidized. The phosphorylation step involving ATPB is lost preferentially, and the inactivation and the binding of ATPB exhibit the same dependency on the concentration of ATP. The results indicate that the oxidation is catalyzed by FeATP bound at the site for ATPB and support the binding of ATPB in the 60-kDa domain. We also demonstrate that mercaptoethanol, reducing impurities in glycerol, and dithioerythritol, in the presence of EDTA, replace ascorbate in the oxidative system. In addition, we study the influence of the oxidation on the degradation of the enzyme by rat liver lysosomes, mitochondria, and cytosol.
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PMID:Oxidative inactivation of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (ammonia). Mechanism and sites of oxidation, degradation of the oxidized enzyme, and inactivation by glycerol, EDTA, and thiol protecting agents. 153 38

Rat liver carbamoyl phosphate synthetase is shown to be inhibited by anions competitively with acetylglutamate (the allosteric activator of the enzyme) with a potency decreasing in the order NO3- greater than SO4(2-) greater than Cl- approximately HCO3-. Inhibition by chloride accounts for most of the inhibition reported [Lund, P., and Wiggins, D. (1987) Biochem. J. 243, 273-276] in Tris buffer. Mes, acetate, and isethionate give little or no inhibition and phosphate inhibits noncompetitively. Plots of the KA value for acetylglutamate versus the concentration of chloride or nitrate are curved upward and binding assays demonstrate that the inhibitory anions displace acetylglutamate from the enzyme. Thus, the anions may compete with the carboxyls of acetylglutamate for positive charges at the binding site. Of the organic anions found in the mitochondrial matrix, alpha-ketoglutarate, malate, succinate, and citrate increase substantially the KA for acetylglutamate. Changes in the concentrations of ATP, HCO3-, NH4+, and Mg2+, and high concentrations of protein (60 mg/ml serum albumin) influence the KA value. Changes in the concentration of the enzyme have no effect. Under assay conditions approaching the ionic, buffer, and substrate concentrations expected to occur in the mitochondrial matrix, the KA value for acetylglutamate is 27 microM and the Vmax is decreased about 50%. These results indicate that physiological changes in the level of acetylglutamate significantly influence the degree of activation of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase in vivo.
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PMID:Influence of anions on the activation of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (ammonia) by acetylglutamate: implications for the activation of the enzyme in the mitochondria. 189 38

A selective interaction of rat liver carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I with cardiolipin, and other anionic phospholipids, has been demonstrated. The enzymatic activity of the synthetase is inhibited by cardiolipin and, to a lesser extent, by phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylinositol, and phosphatidylserine. This group of anionic phospholipids also induced a conformational change in the synthetase, yielding a species with increased exposure of the linkages between independently folded domains of the enzyme, as determined by limited proteolysis under nondenaturing conditions. The interaction of cardiolipin with carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I was a fairly slow process, with complex kinetics, and was apparently irreversible. The inclusion of Mg2+ or of MgATP in the incubation mixture prevented the cardiolipin effects. The zwitterionic phospholipids phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine had negligible effects on the structure and activity of the synthetase. This interaction between cardiolipin and carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I potentially constitutes one of the mechanisms by which the synthetase forms its loose association with the inner mitochondrial membrane. Multiple mechanisms, including synthetase conformational changes, cardiolipin phase changes, and ATP/ADP binding site involvement, are possibly involved in the phospholipid/synthetase interaction and the resulting potential regulatory mechanism(s) for urea cycle activity.
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PMID:The interaction of cardiolipin with rat liver carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I. 189 84

1. At the lowered concentrations of 0.5 mM ATP and 1.5 mM MgCl2, 2.0 mM UTP, UDP and UMP inhibited the activity of Crithidia fasciculata carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase II by about 65, 80 and 40% respectively. 2. The result suggests that feedback inhibition of the activity by uridine nucleotides is a mechanism of regulation of the de novo pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway in C. fasciculata. 3. ADP, AMP and CDP inhibited the activity (about 70, 40 and 40%). 4. Excess Mg2+ at around 1 mM, relative to the ATP concentration, was required for the maximum activity. 5. 5-Phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate had no significant effect on the activity under various conditions examined.
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PMID:Regulatory properties of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase II from the parasitic protozoan Crithidia fasciculata. 244 85

The arcABC operon of Pseudomonas aeruginosa encodes arginine deiminase, catabolic ornithine carbamoyltransferase and carbamate kinase, respectively. We have determined the nucleotide sequences of the arcA and arcC genes. The arcA open reading frame specifies a polypeptide of 46.3 kDa. The same molecular mass was obtained for the subunit of purified arginine deiminase after electrophoresis under denaturing conditions. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of arginine deiminase was in agreement with the corresponding nucleotide sequence. The native arginine deiminase had an estimated molecular mass of 175-180 kDa, suggesting a tetrametric structure. The enzyme was activated by Mg2+ or Mn2+ and strongly inhibited by Zn2+. The apparent Km for L-arginine was 0.04 mM in the presence of Mg2+ and 0.47 mM without Mg2+. The arcC open reading frame codes for a 33-kDa protein, confirming the molecular mass previously reported for the subunit of carbamate kinase. The translation-initiation site of arcC was determined by deletion mapping. Two regions of dyad symmetry found between arcA and arcC might stabilize the putative arcABC transcript in the upstream (arcA) region; this might contribute to the high level of arcA expression as compared to the moderate level of arcC expression. Carbamate kinase had 37% sequence similarity (and 13.5% identity) with the C-terminal part of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (large subunit) from Escherichia coli. Arginine deiminase had no apparent similarity with argininosuccinate lyase. Thus, the arcA and arcC genes do not appear to be closely related to arginine biosynthetic genes, whereas it had previously been shown that the arcB gene has a high degree of identity with the arginine biosynthetic argF genes of P. aeruginosa and E. coli.
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PMID:Sequence analysis and expression of the arginine-deiminase and carbamate-kinase genes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 253 2

Carbamoyl-phosphate synthase I (pig liver) is modified at the cysteine residues 1327 and 1337 (numbered according to the rat sequence) in the presence of 5 mM-N-acetyl-L-glutamate with enhanced rate. ATP/Mg2+ (greater than or equal to 5 mM) protects against alkylation of these two cysteines and loss of activity. According to the results obtained by limited proteolysis of monobromobimane-modified carbamoyl-phosphate synthase I, the accessible cysteines 1327 and 1337 are located in the C-terminal 20 kDa domain D of the enzyme. N-Bromoacetyl-L-glutamate is an allosteric activator and inactivates carbamoyl-phosphate synthase in a slow reaction.
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PMID:Identification of cysteine residues in carbamoyl-phosphate synthase I with reactivity enhanced by N-acetyl-L-glutamate. 278 9

Ammonia assimilation for urea synthesis by liver mitochondria in marine elasmobranchs involves, initially, formation of glutamine which is subsequently utilized for mitochondrial carbamoyl phosphate synthesis [P. M. Anderson and C. A. Casey (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 456-462]. The purpose of this study was to determine if the glutamine synthetase catalyzing this first step in urea synthesis has properties uniquely related to this function. Glutamine synthetase has been highly purified from isolated liver mitochondria of Squalus acanthias, a representative elasmobranch. The purified enzyme has a molecular weight of approximately 400,000 in the presence of Mg2+, MgATP, and L-glutamate, but dissociates reversibly to a species with a molecular weight of approximately 200,000 in the absence of MgATP and L-glutamate. Association with the glutamine- and acetylglutamate-dependent carbamoyl phosphate synthetase, also located in the mitochondria, could not be demonstrated. The subunit molecular weight is approximately 46,000. The pH optimum of the biosynthesis reaction is 7.1-7.4. The purified enzyme is stabilized by MgATP and glutamate and by ethylene glycol, and is activated by 5-10% ethylene glycol. The apparent Km values for MgATP, L-glutamate, and ammonia (NH4+-NH3) are 0.7, 11.0, and 0.015 mM, respectively. Mg2+ in excess of that required to complex ATP as MgATP is required for maximal activity; Mn2+ cannot replace Mg2+. The enzyme is activated by low concentrations of chloride, bromide, or iodide; this effect appears to be related to decreases in the apparent Km for glutamate. The enzyme is inhibited by physiological concentrations of urea, but is not significantly affected by physiological concentrations of trimethylamine-N-oxide. Except for activation by halogen anions and the very low apparent Km for ammonia, this elasmobranch glutamine synthetase has properties similar to those reported for mammalian and avian glutamine synthetases. The very low apparent Km for ammonia may be specifically related to the unique role of this glutamine synthetase in mitochondrial assimilation of ammonia for urea synthesis.
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PMID:Purification and properties of glutamine synthetase from liver of Squalus acanthias. 286 Aug 71

When we incubated biotin carboxylase from Escherichia coli with ATP in absence of biotin we observed HCO3- -dependent ATP hydrolysis, which was activated by 10% ethanol in the same proportion as the activity of D-biotin carboxylation assayed in the presence of biotin. The two activities exhibited identical heat stability and were protected equally by glycerol; both required Mg2+ and K+ and showed similar dependency on the concentration of ATP. Biotin assay excluded potential contamination by traces of biotin as a cause of the observed ATP hydrolysis, and this was confirmed by the findings that carboxybiotin did not accumulate and that avidin was uninhibitory. Therefore we concluded that this HCO3- -dependent ATPase was genuinely a partial activity of biotin carboxylase. This partial activity supports a sequential mechanism for enzymatic carboxylation of biotin in which HCO3- is activated by ATP in a first step. It is consistent with the initial formation of the carbonic-phosphoric anhydride (HOCO2PO3(2-)), and it does not agree with models where biotin is phosphorylated by ATP prior to reaction with HCO3-. It appears that enzymes that use HCO3- for carboxylation, including biotin-dependent carboxylases, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, and carbamoyl phosphate synthetase, activate HCO3- by a common mechanism involving the initial formation of the carbonic-phosphoric anhydride.
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PMID:ATPase activity of biotin carboxylase provides evidence for initial activation of HCO3- by ATP in the carboxylation of biotin. 294 46


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