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Query: EC:6.4.1.1 (
pyruvate carboxylase
)
1,516
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Isolated kidney tubules from chicken have been used to study the actions of ethanol, ouabain and aminooxyacetate on glucose formation from lactate and pyruvate. 2. In kidney tubules from well-fed chickens the rate of glucose production from lactate was higher than from pyruvate. Ethanol (10 mM) and ouabain (0.1 mM) were found to increase glucose formation from pyruvate but not from lactate. 3. It is concluded that in the presence of ethanol the fluxes of pyruvate through pyruvate dehydrogenase are in favour of the
pyruvate carboxylase
reaction restricted. 4. Glucose formation from lactate is decreased by aminooxyacetate (0.1 mM) and ouabain (0.1 mM). 5. Aminooxyacetate inhibited glucose formation from lactate, although chicken phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase is located intramitochondrially. 6. The results indicate that the effect of aminooxyacetate like that of ouabain is caused by the restricted formation of pyruvate.
...
PMID:Regulation of glucose formation from lactate and pyruvate in isolated tubules of chicken kidney. 31 99
Hydrazine (2 mmol/l) and phenelzine (0.5 mmol/l), which are known to produce hypoglycaemia, inhibit glucose formation from lactate in the perfused guinea-pig liver. The hydrazone formed from pyruvate and phenelzine exerted the same effect at concentrations of only 0.05 mmol/l. It is suggested that the hydrazones are the substances which are effective. All these compounds inhibited pyruvate consumption and decreased CO2 production by the perfused liver which, togeteher with the pattern of hepatic metabolite concentrations, indicate that they diminish pyruvate metabolism. None of them influenced the activities in vitro of
pyruvate carboxylase
, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and pyruvate dehydrogenase. The hydrazone compound caused an increase of the ATP/ADP ration at lower concentrations and an opposite effect above 0.5 mmol/l. Nialamide, another hydrazine derivative, also reduced hepatic glucoeogenesis but led to a marked decrease in the hepatic ATP/ADP ratio and liver cell respiration accompanied by a rise in the 3-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio.
...
PMID:The influence of hydrazine, phenelzine and nialamide on gluconeogenesis and cell respiration in the perfused guinea-pig liver. 41 69
A 10 month old female infant was evaluated for severe lactic acidosis. Clinically she was well nourished and had a substantial amount of adipose tissue despite recurrent episodes of acidosis. Her psychomotor development was retarded, her movements were dystonic and generalized seizures punctuated her course. Metabolic abnormalities included elevated blood concentrations of lactate, pyruvate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, acetoacetate, alanine, proline and glycine, decreased blood concentrations of glutamine, aspartate, valine and citrate, and intermittent elevations of serum cholesterol. A trial on a high-fat diet worsened the clinical condition and intensified the ketoacidosis and hyperalaninemia. Analysis of hepatic tissue obtained by open biopsy revealed increased concentrations of lactate, alanine, acetyl-CoA and other short-chain acyl-CoA esters, and decreased concentrations of oxaloacetate, citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, malate and aspartate. The blood and tissue metabolic perturbations reflected a deficiency of hepatic
pyruvate carboxylase
. The apparent Km of hepatic citrate synthase for oxaloacetate was 4.6 micrometer. Calculated tissue oxaloacetate concentrations were 0.50--0.84 micrometer suggesting that tricarboxylic acid cycle activity was severely limited by the decreased availability of this substrate. An iv glucose tolerance test resulted in the paradoxical synthesis of ketone bodies. This observation, coupled with the intermittent hypercholesterolemia and the increased tissue acetyl-CoA concentrations, suggests that
pyruvate carboxylase
is important in modulating the fractional distribution of intracellular acetyl-CoA between the tricarboxylic acid cycle, the beta-hydroxy-beta-methyl-glutaryl-CoA cycle (and the synthesis of cholesterol and ketone bodies), and fatty acid synthesis. Treatment in future cases might be directed toward increasing tissue concentrations of oxaloacetate.
...
PMID:The clinical and biochemical implications of pyruvate carboxylase deficiency. 41 60
A mutant of Bacillus subtilis which grew in complex medium at 30 degrees C but lysed at 45 degrees C has been isolated. It could only grow on minimal medium at 45 degrees C with added aspartate (20 microgram ml-1) but lysed if lysine (20 microgram ml-1) was also present. The requirement for aspartate was due to a low activity of
pyruvate carboxylase
; the site of the mutation (pyc) was linked (16% cotransducible using phage PBSI) to the pyrD locus, and the order of markers deduced was: pyrD-cysC-pyc. This defect appeared to lead to decreased synthesis of mesodiaminopimelic acid (mesoA2pm), an amino acid unique to peptidoglycan and its precursors. At the restrictive temperature the mutant accumulated uridine-5'-diphosphate N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanyl-D-glutamate, since meso A2pm is the next amino acid to be added to the growing peptide chain of peptidoglycan. This resulted in an inhibition of peptidoglycan synthesis, determined as a reduced incorporation of N-acetyl[14C]glucosamine. Peptidoglycan synthesis was not decreased if the mutant was grown in media containing aspartate but lacking lysine. The sensitivity to lysine may arise because (i) at 45 degrees C the mutant was starved for aspartate and hence mesoA2pm even when aspartate was present, since aspartate utilization, as estimated by the incorporation of [3H]aspartate into trichloroacetic acid precipitable material, was relatively inefficient; and (ii) this diminished level of mesoA2pm synthesis from aspartate was further curtailed since lysine inhibits one of the aspartokinases in B. subtilis. Thus, addition of lysine allowed protein synthesis and hence autolysin production to proceed whilst peptidoglycan synthesis remained inhibited. When autolysis was blocked, either indirectly by stopping protein synthesis through starvation of aspartate and lysine, or directly by introducing a lyt mutation, then shifting the mutant to 45 degrees C did not result in lysis but growth still ceased.
...
PMID:A heat-sensitive lysis mutant of Bacillus subtilis 168 with a low activity of pyruvate carboxylase. 41 47
1.
Pyruvate carboxylase
is present in brown adipose tissue mitochondria. 2. In isolated mitochondria, pyruvate, bicarbonate and ATP, the substrates for
pyruvate carboxylase
, are able to replace added malate in supplying a condensing partner for acetyl-CoA formed from beta-oxidation of fatty acids. 3. In brown adipocytes, pyruvate and CO2 increase the rate of norepinephrine-stimulated respiration synergistically. 4. The norepinephrine-stimulated respiration in brown adipocytes is diminished when pyruvate transport into the mitochondria is inhibited. 5. Pyruvate carboxylation increases the intramitochondrial level of citric acid cycle intermediates, as shown by titrations of malonate inhibition of respiration. 6. Pyruvate carboxylation can continuously supply the mitochondria with citric acid cycle intermediates, as evidenced by its ability to maintain respiration when oxoglutarate conversion to glutamate is stimulated. 7. Pyruvate carboxylation is necessary for maximal oxygen consumption even when drainage of the citric acid cycle for amino acid synthesis is eliminated. 8. Pyruvate carboxylation explains observed effects of CO2 on respiration in brown adipocytes, and may also explain the increased glucose uptake by brown adipose tissue during thermogenesis in vivo.
...
PMID:The physiological role of pyruvate carboxylation in hamster brown adipose tissue. 42 95
Apparent conformational transitions induced in chicken liver
pyruvate carboxylase
by substrates, KHCO(3) and MgATP, and the allosteric effector, acetyl-CoA, were studied by using the fluorescent probe, 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulphonic acid and c.d. Fluorescence measurements were made with both conventional and stopped-flow spectrophotometers. Additions of acetyl-CoA and/or ATP to the enzyme-probe solutions quenched fluorescence of the probe by the following cumulative amounts regardless of the sequence of additions: acetyl-CoA, 10-13%; ATP, 21-24%; acetyl-CoA plus ATP, about 35%. Additions of KHCO(3) had no effect on the fluorescence. The rates of quenching by acetyl-CoA and MgATP (in the presence of acetyl-CoA) were too rapid to measure by stopped-flow kinetic methods, but kinetics of the MgATP effect (in the absence of acetyl-CoA) indicate three unimolecular transitions after the association step. The negligible effect of the probe on enzyme catalytic activity, a preservation of the near-u.v. c.d. effect of MgATP and acetyl-CoA in the presence of the probe and no observable unimolecular transitions after binding of the probe to the enzyme indicate that the probe had no deleterious effect on the enzyme. In contrast with results with 8-anilinonaphthalene-1-sulphonic acid, fluorescence of the epsilon-derivative of acetyl-CoA or ATP [fluorescent analogues; Secrist, Barrio, Leonard & Weber (1972) Biochemistry11, 3499-3506] was not changed when either one was added to the enzyme. Secondary-structure composition of chicken liver
pyruvate carboxylase
estimated from the far-u.v. c.d. spectrum of the enzyme is 27% helix, 7% beta-pleated sheet and 66% other structural types.
...
PMID:Ligand-induced conformational transitions and secondary structure composition of chicken liver pyruvate carboxylase. 43 60
1. The contents of some intermediates of glycolysis, the citric acid cycle and adenine nucleotides have been measured in the freeze-clamped locust flight muscle at rest and after 10s and 3min flight. The contents of glucose 6-phosphate, pyruvate, alanine and especially fructose bisphosphate and triose phosphates increased markedly upon flight. The content of acetyl-CoA is decreased after 3min flight whereas that of acetylcarnitine is decreased markedly after 10s flight, but returns towards the resting value after 3min flight. The content of citrate is markedly decreased after both 10s and 3min flight, whereas that of isocitrate is changed very little after 10s and is increased by 50% after 3min. The content of oxaloacetate is very low in insect flight muscle and hence it was measured by a sensitive radiochemical assay. The content of oxaloacetate increased about 2-fold after 3min flight. A similar change was observed in the content of malate. The content of ATP decreased about 15%, whereas those of ADP and AMP increased about 2-fold after 3min flight. 2. Calculations based on O(2) uptake of the intact insect indicate that the rate of the citric acid cycle must be increased >100-fold during flight. Consequently, if citrate synthase catalyses a non-equilibrium reaction, the activity of the enzyme must increase >100-fold during flight. However, changes in the concentrations of possible regulators of citrate synthase, oxaloacetate, acetyl-CoA and citrate (which is an allosteric inhibitor), are not sufficient to account for this change in activity. It is concluded that there may be much larger changes in the free concentration of oxaloacetate than are indicated by the changes in the total content of this metabolite or that other unknown factors must play an additional role in the regulation of citrate synthase activity. 3. The increased content of oxaloacetate could be produced via
pyruvate carboxylase
, which may be stimulated during the early stages of flight by the increased concentration of pyruvate. 4. The decreases in the concentrations of citrate and alpha-oxoglutarate indicate that isocitrate dehydrogenase and oxoglutarate dehydrogenase may be stimulated by factors other than their pathway substrates during the early stages of flight. 5. Calculated mitochondrial and cytosolic NAD(+)/NADH ratios are both increased upon flight. The change in the mitochondrial ratio indicates the importance of the intramitochondrial ATP/ADP concentration ratio in the regulation of the rate of electron transfer in this muscle.
...
PMID:Changes in the contents of adenine nucleotides and intermediates of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle in flight muscle of the locust upon flight and their relationship to the control of the cycle. 43 78
The mitochondrial matrix subfractions from rat liver, kidney cortex, brain, heart, and skeletal muscle were isolated and their protein components were resolved by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, revealing between 120 and 150 components for each matrix subfraction. Excellent resolution was obtained utilizing a pH 5 to 8 gradient in the first dimension and in 8 to 13% exponential acrylamide gradient in the second dimension, increasing the number of mitochondrial matrix proteins observed 3-fold over one-dimensional systems. Protein components tentatively identified by co-migration with pure enzymes and by known tissue distributions are carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase (EC 2.7.2.5), ornithine transcarbamylase (EC 2.1.3.3), glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.3),
pyruvate carboxylase
(
EC 6.4.1.1
), citrate synthase (EC 4.1.3.7), fumarase (EC 4.2.1.2), aconitase (EC 4.2.1.3), alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.4.2), dihydrolipoyl transsuccinylase (EC 2.3.1.12), lipoamide dehydrogenase (EC 1.6.4.3), glutamate-aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1), and the two subunits of pyruvate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.4.1). Protein components unambiguously identified by peptide mapping are citrate synthase, aconitase, and
pyruvate carboxylase
. The inner membrane subfraction from rat liver mitochondria was also resolved two dimensionally; the alpha and beta subunits of ATPase (F1) (EC 3.6.1.3) were identified by peptide mapping.
...
PMID:Resolution of rat mitochondrial matrix proteins by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. 44 63
Treatment of rats with cefazolin in vivo significantly suppressed activity of alanine and aspartate aminotransferases in serum and in the liver, brain, kidney, and heart. Simultaneous administration of pyridoxal further reduced enzyme activity except in the liver, where there was no change. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate partly reversed the decreased enzyme activity in the serum, liver, and kidney, but did not return it to the amount observed in the control animals; enzyme activity remained suppressed in the brain and heart. The effect of cefazolin was dose related, but there was no sex-related difference. In contrast to its action on am-notransferase activity, cefazolin elicited no effect on alkaline phosphatase (pyridoxal-5'-phosphate hydrolase) in serum or on
pyruvate carboxylase
in the liver, heart, and kidney. Cefazolin exposed to the hepatic microsomal mixed-function oxidase system in vitro was partly converted into metabolites that inhibited serum alanine aminotransferase activity in vitro. The latter inhibition was reversed by the addition of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate.
...
PMID:Decreased aminotransferase activity of serum and various tissues in the rat after cefazolin treatment. 45 47
There are two metabolic disorders of major commercial importance in poultry that involve the occurrence of fatty deposits in the liver. Fatty Liver and Kidney Syndrome (FLKS) affects young birds and the main manifestations, lipid infiltrations into liver and many other organs, are apparently secondary effects of the primary lesion that lies in carbohydrate metabolism. Although several nutritional and environmental factors influence FLKS, the main factor is the vitamin, biotin. In the absence of an adequate supply of biotin, the hepatic activity of
pyruvate carboxylase
, a biotin-dependent enzyme, becomes so low that gluconeogenesis in the liver via pyruvate becomes negligible. When the bird is then subject to a mild stress and/or short term fasting, liver glycogen reserves become rapidly depleted and a progressive hypoglycaemia develops that ultimatley proves fatal. Supplementing diets with adequate amounts of biotin can prevent the syndrome. Fatty Liver Haemorrhagic Syndrome (FLHS) is brought about by an excessive accumulation of fat in the livers of adult hens which weakens the cellular structure of the liver and allows fatal haemorrhaging to occur. The aetiology of the syndrome is not clear, but a major factor is an excessive intake of dietary energy. However, the involvement of hormonal and toxicological factors, as well as other nutritional factors, is also possible.
...
PMID:Nutritional and metabolic aspects of fatty liver disease in poultry. 47 52
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