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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)
1. Addition of concanavalin A to T-cell lymphocytes from rat cervical lymph nodes increases the activity of
glutaminase
within 1 h and those of
carbamoyl-phosphate synthase
II and aspartate transcarbamoylase within 3 h. There was a similar time course for the effects of concanavalin A on rates of glutamine utilization, which was increased within 1 h, and on pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis, which was increased by 40% at 2 h and by 100% at 3 h. 2. A delay in the addition of glutamine to the culture medium after addition of concanavalin A caused a decrease in [3H]thymidine incorporation only after 4-6 h. In the absence of glutamine, delay in addition of guanosine or inosine caused a decrease in [3H]thymidine incorporation only after 6-8 h after the addition of concanavalin A. 3. In contrast, a delay in addition of adenosine or uridine to the culture medium had an immediate effect (i.e. within 2 h) on the rate of incorporation of [3H]thymidine. It is suggested that adenosine and uridine have specific effects on proliferation via specific receptors for these nucleosides in the membrane.
...
PMID:The effect of time of addition of glutamine or nucleosides on proliferation of rat cervical lymph-node T-lymphocytes after stimulation by concanavalin A. 189 39
Glutamine-dependent
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
(
EC 6.3.5.5
) catalyzes the first step in de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis. The mammalian enzyme is part of a 240-kDa multifunctional protein which also has the second (aspartate carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.2), and third (dihydroorotase, EC 3.5.2.3) activities of the pathway. Shigesada et al. (Shigesada, K., Stark, G.R., Maley, J.A., and Davidson, J.N. (1985) Mol. Cell Biol. 175, 1-7) produced a truncated cDNA clone from a Syrian hamster cell line that contained most of the coding region for this protein. We have completed sequencing this clone, known as pCAD142. The cDNA insert contained all of the coding region for the
glutaminase
(
GLN
) and carbamyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) domains but lacked a short amino-terminal segment. By comparing the primary structure of the mammalian chimera to monofunctional proteins we have identified the borders of the functional domains. The
GLN
domain is 21 kDa, close to the size of the functionally similar polypeptide products of the Escherichia coli pabA and hisH genes. The domain has the three regions of homology common to trpG-type glutamine amidotransferases, as well as a fourth region specific to the carbamyl phosphate synthetases. The CPSase domain is similar to other reported CPSases in size (120 kDa), primary structure (37-67% amino acid identity), and homology between its amino and carboxyl halves. Analysis of the nucleotide and amino acid sequence identities among the various carbamyl phosphate synthetases suggests that the gene fusion which joined the
GLN
and CPS domains was an early event in the evolution of eukaryotic organisms and that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae enzyme consisting of separate subunits arose by defusion from an ancestral multifunctional protein.
...
PMID:Mammalian carbamyl phosphate synthetase (CPS). DNA sequence and evolution of the CPS domain of the Syrian hamster multifunctional protein CAD. 197 79
Three catalytic domains of the Escherichia coli
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
(
EC 6.3.5.5
) have been identified in previous studies. These include the glutamine amide-N transfer domain in the carboxyl-terminal half of the
glutaminase
component and at least two adenine nucleotide binding sites in the synthetase component. To delineate the domains involved in subunit interactions, we have examined the effects of deletions and point mutations in the
glutaminase
and synthetase subunits on formation of the alpha beta holoenzyme. Deletion of the amino-terminal third of the
glutaminase
subunit abolishes interactions with the synthetase subunit, suggesting that this domain functions to stabilize the complex. Two subunit binding domains have been identified in the synthetase subunit. They are homologous to one another and are located in the amino-terminal and central regions of the synthetase component. These domains are adjacent to regions of the synthetase previously proposed to be involved in ATP binding and, possibly, activation of CO2. The new data enlarge the definition of the structural and functional domains in the two interdependent components of
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase: domains of glutaminase and synthetase subunit interaction. 268 45
The maximum catalytic activities of
carbamoyl-phosphate synthase
II, a limiting enzyme for pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis, are very much less than those of
glutaminase
, a limiting enzyme for glutamine utilization, in lymphocytes and macrophages; and the flux through the pathway for pyrimidine formation de novo is only about 0.4% of the rate of glutamine utilization by lymphocytes. The Km of synthase II for glutamine is about 16 microM and the concentration of glutamine necessary to stimulate lymphocyte proliferation half-maximally is about 21 microM. This agreement suggests that the importance of glutamine for these cells is provision of nitrogen for biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides (and probably purine nucleotides). However, the glutamine concentration necessary for half-maximal stimulation of glutamine utilization (glutaminolysis) by the lymphocytes is 2.5 mM. The fact that the rate of glutamine utilization by lymphocytes is markedly in excess of the rate of the pathway for pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis de novo and that the Km and 'half-maximal concentration' values are so different, suggests that the glutaminolytic pathway is independent of the use of glutamine nitrogen for pyrimidine synthesis.
...
PMID:The effect of glutamine concentration on the activity of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase II and on the incorporation of [3H]thymidine into DNA in rat mesenteric lymphocytes stimulated by phytohaemagglutinin. 280 58
The activities of key glutamine and urea cycle enzymes were assayed in liver homogenates from control and chronically acidotic rats and compared with citrulline and urea productions by isolated mitochondria and intact liver slices, respectively. Glutamine-dependent urea and citrulline synthesis were increased significantly in isolated mitochondria and in liver slices; the activities of
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
and arginase were unchanged and increased, respectively. Glutamine was not a precursor in the
carbamoyl phosphate synthetase
system, suggesting that the glutamine effect is an indirect one and that glutamine requires prior hydrolysis. Increased mitochondrial citrulline synthesis was associated with enhanced oxygen consumption, suggesting glutamine acts both as a nitrogen and fuel source. Hepatic phosphate-dependent glutaminase was elevated by chronic acidosis. The results indicate that the acidosis-induced reduction in ureagenesis and reversal from glutamine uptake to release observed in vivo are not reflections of corresponding changes in the hepatic enzyme content. Rather, when available, glutamine readily supports ureagenesis, suggesting a close coupling of hepatic
glutaminase
flux with citrulline synthesis.
...
PMID:Hepatic enzymes of glutamine and ureagenesis in metabolic acidosis. 287 77
A near full-length cDNA copy of rat
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I (EC 6.3.4.16) mRNA has been cloned. The cDNA insert in the recombinant plasmid pHN234 is 5.3 kilobases long. Analysis of the sequence coding for
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I indicates that the gene has arisen from a fusion of two ancestral genes: one homologous to Escherichia coli carA, coding for a
glutaminase
subunit, and the second homologous to the carB gene that codes for the synthetase subunit. A short amino acid sequence previously proposed to be part of the active site involved in glutamine amide nitrogen transfer in the E. coli and yeast carbamoyl-phosphate synthetases (
EC 6.3.5.5
) is also present in the rat enzyme. In the mammalian enzyme, however, the
glutaminase
domain lacks a cysteine residue previously shown to interact with glutamine. The cysteine is replaced by a serine residue. This substitution could, in part, account for the inability of mammalian
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
I to catalyze the hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamic acid and ammonia.
...
PMID:The gene coding for carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase I was formed by fusion of an ancestral glutaminase gene and a synthetase gene. 298 6
We have examined the domain organization, and the locations of the sites phosphorylated by the cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase, in the multifunctional polypeptide of the pyrimidine-biosynthetic protein, CAD. Fragments produced after limited proteolysis by elastase or trypsin were separated by SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and transferred onto nitrocellulose. The blots were probed with antibodies raised against the core aspartate carbamoyltransferase (ACTase) and dihydroorotase (DHOase) fragments to locate fragments containing these domains, and we also examined the locations of the phosphorylation sites by complete tryptic digestion of blotted, 32P-labelled fragments, followed by analytical isoelectric focussing. Our results are consistent with the domain order
glutaminase
(GLNase)-
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
-(CPSase)-DHOase-ACTase, as suggested by recently reported homologies between the predicted amino acid sequence for the Drosophila rudimentary gene product, and monofunctional CPSases/ACTases/DHOases. In particular, the finding of a 95-kDa elastase fragment which cross-reacted with both anti-DHOase and anti-ACTase antibodies rules out the previously suggested domain order: DHOase-GLNase-CPSase-ACTase. Phosphorylation by cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase accelerates cleavage of native CAD by both elastase and trypsin, and abolishes the protective effect of UTP. Site 1 is located close to the C-terminal end of the 160-kDa GLNase/CPSase region. Comparison with the predicted amino acid sequence of the Drosophila rudimentary gene revealed a strong homology between the tryptic peptide containing site 1 from hamster CAD, and a region at the extreme C-terminal end of the CPSase II domain of the Drosophila enzyme. Alignment of the Drosophila sequence and that of rat liver CPSase I, which is not phosphorylated by cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase, revealed that this putative site 1 region is missing in CPSase I. Site 2 could not be located with certainty, either from the limited proteolysis data, or from comparison of the sequence around this site and the sequence of the rudimentary gene. There were also one or more previously undetected minor phosphorylation site(s) located in the protease-sensitive hinge region between the DHOase and ACTase domains.
...
PMID:Mapping of catalytic domains and phosphorylation sites in the multifunctional pyrimidine-biosynthetic protein CAD. 334 46
The expression of gene CPA1, encoding the
glutaminase
subunit of the arginine pathway
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
, is repressed by arginine at a posttranscriptional level. The 5' region of CPA1 mRNA contains a 25 codon upstream open reading frame. The importance of this feature for the repression of CPA1 expression has been analyzed by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis and by sequencing of constitutive cis-dominant mutations obtained in vivo. The results show that the leader peptide, the product of the upstream open reading frame, plays an essential, negative role in the specific repression of CPA1 by arginine. A model of translational regulation of CPA1 is proposed that takes into account the cis-dominance of the mutations affecting the leader peptide.
...
PMID:The leader peptide of yeast gene CPA1 is essential for the translational repression of its expression. 355 44
In isolated rat-liver mitochondria the rate of citrulline synthesis from glutamine does not respond to changes in the ammonia concentration in the extramitochondrial fluid. This suggest that ammonia, produced in the mitochondria via
glutaminase
, is directly channeled to
carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase
.
...
PMID:Channeling of ammonia from glutaminase to carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase in liver mitochondria. 405 9
In the course of studies on
glutamine-dependent carbamyl phosphate synthetase
from Aerobacter aerogenes, we purified another protein which was found to be glutamate synthase (EC 2.6.1.53). The enzyme, obtained in apparently homogeneous form (monomer molecular weight about 227,000; s(20,omega) = 17.6 S), was found to be a typical glutamine amidotransferase in that it exhibits
glutaminase
activity and can utilize ammonia in place of glutamine as a nitrogen donor. The enzyme also catalyzes at low rates the oxidative deamination of glutamate in the presence of TPN, and it exhibits TPNH oxidase activity. The enzyme is similar to the glutamate synthase found in Escherichia coli in that it is an iron-sulfide flavoprotein. Treatment of the enzyme with sodium dodecyl sulfate or potassium thiocyanate dissociates it into nonidentical subunits exhibiting molecular weights of about 175,000 and 51,500. The glutamine-dependent activity of the enzyme is inhibited by L-2-amino-4-oxo-5-chloropentanoic acid, but this chloroketone analog of glutamine does not affect the ammonia-dependent glutamate synthase activity. Studies with [(14)C]chloroketone show that the reagent binds to the heavy subunit only. Inhibition by the chloroketone and its binding to the heavy subunit are markedly reduced in the presence of L-glutamine. Sedimentation velocity studies carried out in potassium thiocyanate indicate that iron-sulfide and flavin sites are also located on the heavy subunit. While these studies show that glutamate synthase resembles other glutamine amidotransferases in certain of its catalytic properties, the findings indicate that the light subunit of this enzyme, in contrast to that of several other glutamine amidotransferases, does not function to bind glutamine. It is of interest that the enzyme exhibits an unusually high affinity for ammonia as compared to a number of other glutamine amidotransferases. Glutamate synthase is inhibited (competitively with respect to glutamine) by low concentrations of methionine sulfone, methionine sulfoximine, and methionine sulfoxide.
...
PMID:Glutamine-binding subunit of glutamate synthase and partial reactions catalyzed by this glutamine amidotransferase. 453 Oct 4
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