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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)
This paper demonstrates the formation of "active CO2" (CO2-P), a precursor of carbamoyl phosphate (CP), with frog liver
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
. Absence of
ammonia
is essential for the demonstration by pulse incubation with H14CO3- of CO2-P. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and acetylglutamate are required for the synthesis of CO2-P, which is highly unstable in aqueous solutions (t1/2 = 0.75 s at 24 degrees C at neutral pH). In the absence of
ammonia
, CO2-P attains rapidly a steady-state level, which depends on the concentration of ATP and HCO3-. The "apparent KM'S" are approximately equal to those found for the adenosine triphosphate (ATPase) activity of the enzyme. The maximum level of CO2-P is limited by the amount of enzyme, and approximates 4 mol of intermediate/mol of enzyme. The unprotonated form of
ammonia
seems to be the species reacting with CO2-P to produce CP. The reaction of CO2-P and
NH3
is very fast (rate constant kn = 8 x 10(4) M-1 S-1) and does not consume free ATP. Therefore, the 2 mol of ATP necessary for CP synthesis binds or reacts with the enzyme and/or CO2 prior to reaction with
NH3
. The reaction of CO2-P with
NH3
also takes place in acetone under conditions at which the enzyme is not active, suggesting little or no assistance from enzyme catalysis or that a part of the catalytic site is "frozen" by the solvent in the active conformation. In the light of these and other findings, a new scheme is proposed for the mechanism of frog liver
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
and some considerations are made on the chemical nature of the intermediate and on the possible evolutionary significance of the reaction of CO2-P with
NH3
in acetone.
...
PMID:Mechanism of mitochondrial carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase: synthesis and properties of active CO2, precursor of carbamoyl phosphate. 1 11
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.
...
PMID:Relationship between intramitochondrial citrate and the activity of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase (ammonia). 2 2
1. The influence of
ammonia
and ornithine on the oxygen uptake and the formation of citrulline was investigated with isolated rat liver mitochondria. The experiments were performed in a cytosol-like saline medium at 38 degrees C. 2. Under these conditions an increase of the respiration rate by
ammonia
and ornithine was observed, but a small response to external ADP, only. The missing stimulation by ADP was due to a partial inhibition of the respiratory chain by traces of zinc (approximately 1 microM) present in the medium. This inhibition was only detected at low concentrations of mitochondria. 3. For activation of respiration by
ammonia
plus ornithine two different processes were responsible: (i) chelation of the inhibiting zinc by ornithine, which could be prevented by EDTA; (ii) ADP production in the matrix space during formation of carbamoyl phosphate, which could be prevented by oligomycin but not by carboxyatractyloside. 4. This stimulus of the carbamoyl phosphate formation and of the equivalent citrulline synthesis on the mitochondrial respiration ran to 12% of that increase caused by phosphorylation of external ADP. The maximum rate of citrulline formation was limited by the activity of
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
. 5. Added ADP suppresses the production of citrulline probably by the exchange of extramitochondrial ADP versus intramitochondrial ATP. The data suggest a common adenine nucleotide pool delivering ATP to the adenine nucleotide translocase as well as to the
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
.
...
PMID:The stimulation of the mitochondrial respiration by citrulline synthesis. 11 92
The arginine-specific
carbamoyl-phosphate synthase
of yeast was stabilized sufficiently to allow partial purification of the enzyme (30- to 40-fold). The synthase (mol. wt 115000) comprised two unequal subunits: a heavy subunit (mol. wt 80000) capable of catalysing synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate with
ammonia
as a nitrogen donor and a light subunit conferring upon the holoenzyme the ability to utilize glutamine. The enzyme had unusually high affinity for ATP (Km = 0.2 mM) and atypical negative cooperativity for glutamine binding ([S]0.5 = 0.25 mM). Glutamine activity was not modulated by possible effectors such as arginine, ornithine or N-acetylglutamate. Thus, although the yeast arginine enzyme physically and functionally resembles the single enteric synthase, the systems differ substantially both in kinetic properties and in regulation of activity.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of the arginine-specific carbamoyl-phosphate synthase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 20 52
The kinetic mechanism of Escherichia coli
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
has been determined at pH 7.5, 25 degrees C. With
ammonia
as the nitrogen source, the initial velocity and product inhibition patterns are consistent with the ordered addition of MgATP, HCO3-, and
NH3
. Phosphate is then released and the second MgATP adds to the enzyme, which is followed by the ordered release of MgADP, carbamoyl phosphate, and MgADP. With glutamine as the
ammonia
donor, the patterns are consistent with a two-site mechanism in which glutamine binds randomly to the small molecular weight subunit producing glutamate and
ammonia
. Glutamate is released and the
ammonia
is transferred to the larger subunit. Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase has also been shown to require a free divalent cation for full activity.
...
PMID:Kinetic mechanism of Escherichia coli carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase. 21 4
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.
...
PMID:Mechanism of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase. Binding of ATP by the rat-liver mitochondrial enzyme. 21 11
Total RNA or poly(A)(+) RNA of rat liver was translated in a rabbit reticulocyte or wheat germ protein-synthesizing system and the carbamyl phosphate synthetase I [
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
(
ammonia
); carbon dioxide:
ammonia
ligase (ADP-forming, carbamate-phosphorylating), EC 6.3.4.16] synthesized was isolated by indirect immunoprecipitation by using antibody purified on enzyme-bound Sepharose and Staphylococcus aureus cells. The in vitro product moved on sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gels as a polypeptide that was about 5000 daltons larger than the subunit of the mature enzyme (160,000 daltons). The same polypeptide was also obtained by direct immunoprecipitation or by a double-antibody precipitation method. The mature enzyme competed effectively with the in vitro product for interaction with anti-carbamyl phosphate synthetase I antibody. Digestion of the in vitro product by S. aureus protease gave a pattern of peptide fragments similar to that of the mature enzyme. A mitochondrial membrane preparation from rat liver converted the in vitro product into a polypeptide that comigrated with the mature subunit on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. Similar proteolytic activity was not detected in either a cytosol or a microsomal fraction of rat liver. These results indicate that the enzyme is synthesized as a larger precursor which is converted to the mature form of enzyme by posttranslational processing.
...
PMID:Cell-free synthesis and processing of a putative precursor for mitochondrial carbamyl phosphate synthetase I of rat liver. 22 76
1.
Ammonia
liberated continuously in large amounts in muscle, kidney and brain is used immediately for the synthesis of mainly glutamine because of the toxic effects of elevated
ammonia
concentrations. After glutamine hydrolysis in the liver
ammonia
serves as substrate for the urea biosynthesis. In ureotelic animals urea is the quantitatively most important product for the elimination of surplus nitrogen. 2. The rate of urea biosynthesis depends on the amount of surplus nitrogen and acts as regulatory factor for the nitrogen balance of the adult organism. 3. Urea cycle abnormalities in liver diseases or inborn enzymatic defects are important factors leading to hyperammonaemia in patients. 4. The hyperammonaemia induces an increase of the rate of hepatic pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis as a consequence of an ineffective feedback inhibition of the glutamine-dependent
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
. 5. The distribution of
ammonia
between intra- and extracellular space and the amount of ammonium ions excreted in the urine depend on the pH value. An alkalosis induces an intracellular
ammonia
load and inhibits the urinary ammonium ion excretion, which is increased in acidosis as one mechanism of protein elimination. 6. The
ammonia
-induced inhibition of the citric acid cycle by an alpha-ketoglutarate deficiency is one important reason for the neurotoxicity of
ammonia
, which is the main point in the pathogenesis of hepatic coma.
...
PMID:[Biochemical and pathophysiological aspects of hyperammonaemia (author's transl)]. 31 94
Some of the
ammonia
produced by hydrolysis of urea by Ureaplasma urealyticum is channelled into an anabolic pathway with resultant 'de novo' synthesis of citrulline. The organism appears to possess ornithine carbamoyltransferase and
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
or some modified form of these enzymes.
...
PMID:Urea-hydrolysis-dependent citrulline synthesis by Ureaplasma urealyticum. 145 99
We have measured the 'core' mammalian
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
II (CPSII) activity, using NH4Cl as the nitrogen-donating substrate and trapping carbamoyl phosphate as urea through its reaction with ammonium ions. When ATP and magnesium ion concentrations are close to those found in the cell, the substrate saturation curves for
ammonia
and bicarbonate are hyperbolic, giving Km (
NH3
) values of 166 microM at high ATP concentrations and 26 microM at low ATP concentrations, while the Km (bicarbonate) is 1.4 mM at both ATP concentrations used. These values for the Km (
NH3
) are lower than previously reported for
CPS
II, and closer to the values for the mitochondrial counterpart. The Km for
ammonia
and bicarbonate are not altered by phosphorylation of the multienzyme polypeptide CAD, which contains the first three enzyme activities of pyrimidine biosynthesis. The
CPS
II activity is lower with an excess of either ATP or magnesium ions, causing the apparently sigmoid dependence of activity upon ATP concentration to be enhanced at low concentrations of free magnesium ions. The feedback inhibitor, UTP, acts by stabilising a state with a low affinity for magnesium ions and for ATP. In the presence of the activator, 5-phosphoribosyl diphosphate (PRibPP), the enzyme has a higher affinity for magnesium ions and thus the ATP dependence of the activity is hyperbolic. Phosphorylation of CAD similarly activates the
CPS
II enzyme by increasing the affinity for magnesium ions and by pushing the equilibrium away from the low-affinity UTP-stabilised state. Using our improved assay procedure, we observe a very large activation by PRibPP of carbamoylphosphate synthesis at low concentrations of magnesium ions, and we find that unlike UTP, the activator PRibPP is able to act on the phosphorylated enzyme.
...
PMID:Regulation of the mammalian carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase II by effectors and phosphorylation. Altered affinity for ATP and magnesium ions measured using the ammonia-dependent part reaction. 149 69
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