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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)

Mitochondrial carbonic anhydrase V (CA V) in liver provides HCO3- to pyruvate carboxylase for the first step in gluconeogenesis and HCO3- to carbamyl phosphate synthetase I for the first step in ureagenesis. Because carbamyl phosphate synthetase I and ornithine transcarbamylase are also expressed in enterocytes, we tested the hypothesis that CA V is expressed in the gastrointestinal tract in addition to liver. Polyclonal rabbit antisera were raised against a polypeptide of 17 C-terminal amino acids of human CA V and against purified recombinant mouse isozyme and were used in Western blotting and immunoperoxidase staining of human and rat tissues. Immunohistochemistry showed that CA V is expressed cell-specifically in the alimentary canal mucosa from stomach to rectum. Immunoreactions for CA V were detected in the parietal cells and gastrin-producing G-cells of the stomach and in intestinal enterocytes. Western blotting of human and rat gastrointestinal tissues with isozyme-specific antibodies showed positive signals for CA V with the expected molecular mass. The findings in human tissues paralleled those in rat. The cell-specific pattern of CA V expression suggests a role for CA V in alimentary canal physiology. We propose that mitochondrial CA V participates in the detoxification of ammonia produced in the gastrointestinal tract by providing bicarbonate to carbamyl phosphate synthetase I. (J Histochem Cytochem 47:517-524, 1999)
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PMID:Cell-specific expression of mitochondrial carbonic anhydrase in the human and rat gastrointestinal tract. 1008 53

The membrane-associated human isozyme of carbonic anhydrase, hCA IV, has been investigated for its interaction with anion inhibitors, for the CO(2) hydration reaction catalyzed by this enzyme. Surprisingly, halides were observed to act as potent hCA IV inhibitors, with inhibition constants in the range of 70-90 microM, although most of these ions, and especially fluoride, the best hCA IV inhibitor among the halides, are weak inhibitors of other isozymes, such as hCA I, II and V. The metal poisons cyanate, cyanide and hydrogen sulfide were weaker hCA IV inhibitors (K(i)'s in the range of 0.6-3.9 mM), whereas thiocyanate, azide, nitrate and nitrite showed even weaker inhibitory properties (K(i)'s in the range of 30.8-65.1 mM). Sulfate was a good hCA IV inhibitor (K(i) of 9 mM), although it is a much weaker inhibitor of isozymes I, II, V and IX. Excellent hCA IV inhibitory properties showed sulfamic acid, sulfamide, phenylboronic acid and phenylarsonic acid, with K(i)'s in the range of 0.87-0.93 microM, whereas their affinities for the other investigated isozymes were in the millimolar range. The interaction of some anions with the mitochondrial isozyme hCA V has also been investigated for the first time here. It has been observed that among all these isozymes, hCA V has the lowest affinity for bicarbonate and carbonate (K(i)'s in the range of 82-95 mM), which may represent an evolutionary adaptation of this isozyme to the rather alkaline environment (pH 8.5) within the mitochondria, where hCA V plays important functions in some biosynthetic reactions involving carboxylating enzymes (pyruvate carboxylase and acetyl coenzyme A carboxylase). There are important differences of affinity for anions between the two membrane-associated isozymes, hCA IV and hCA IX.
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PMID:Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors: inhibition of the membrane-bound human isozyme IV with anions. 1550 Oct 38

In this review we examine the effects of the allosteric activator, acetyl CoA on both the structure and catalytic activities of pyruvate carboxylase. We describe how the binding of acetyl CoA produces gross changes to the quaternary and tertiary structures of the enzyme that are visible in the electron microscope. These changes serve to stabilize the tetrameric structure of the enzyme. The main locus of activation of the enzyme by acetyl CoA is the biotin carboxylation domain of the enzyme where ATP-cleavage and carboxylation of the biotin prosthetic group occur. As well as enhancing reaction rates, acetyl CoA also enhances the binding of some substrates, especially HCO3-, and there is also a complex interaction with the binding of the cofactor Mg2. The activation of pyruvate carboxylase by acetyl CoA is generally a cooperative processes, although there is a large degree of variability in the degree of cooperativity exhibited by the enzyme from different organisms. The X-ray crystallographic holoenzyme structures of pyruvate carboxylases from Rhizobium etli and Staphylococcus aureus have shown the allosteric acetyl CoA binding domain to be located at the interfaces of the biotin carboxylation and carboxyl transfer and the carboxyl transfer and biotin carboxyl carrier protein domains.
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PMID:Regulation of the structure and activity of pyruvate carboxylase by acetyl CoA. 2212 May 19

Numerous steady-state kinetic studies have examined the complex catalytic reaction mechanism of the multifunctional enzyme, pyruvate carboxylase (PC). Through initial velocity, product inhibition, isotopic exchange and alternate substrate experiments, early investigators established that PC catalyzes the MgATP-dependent carboxylation of pyruvate by HCO3 (-) through a nonclassical sequential Bi Bi Uni Uni reaction mechanism. This review surveys previous steady-state kinetic investigations of PC and evaluates the proposed hypotheses concerning the overall catalytic mechanism, nonlinear kinetics and active site coupling in the context of recent structural and mutagenic analyses of this multifunctional enzyme. The determination several PC holoenzyme structures have aided in corroborating the proposed molecular mechanisms by which catalysis occurs and established the inextricable link between the dynamic protein motions and complex kinetic mechanisms associated with PC activity. Unexpectedly, the conclusions drawn from these early steady-state kinetic investigations have consistently proven to be in fundamental agreement with our current understanding of PC catalysis, which is a testament to the overarching sophistication of the methods pioneered by Michaelis and Menten and further developed by Northrop, Cleland and others.
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PMID:Nearly 50 years in the making: defining the catalytic mechanism of the multifunctional enzyme, pyruvate carboxylase. 2447 17


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