Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Synthesis of glucose from lactate and generation of urea from ammonia were inhibited when sodium benzoate was added to suspensions of rat hepatocytes. Assays with isolated mitochondria suggested pyruvate carboxylase and the N-acetyl-L-glutamate (NAG)-dependent carbamoylphosphate synthetase (CPS-I) as potential sites of inhibition for both pathways, owing to a shared dependency on aspartate efflux from the mitochondria and its subsequent conversion to oxaloacetate in the cytosol. Assays with isolated hepatocytes indicated inhibition to be initiated by accumulation of benzoyl CoA with a resultant depletion of free CoA and acetyl CoA. Measurements of adenine nucleotides showed that benzoate metabolism did not sufficiently alter energy status to account for the observed inhibition. Consistent with these interpretations, acceleration of the conversion of benzoyl CoA to hippurate by the addition of glycine restored the levels of free CoA and acetyl CoA and the rates of gluconeogenesis and ureagenesis. Reduction of the levels of aspartate and glutamate, presumably by interference with the anapleurotic function of pyruvate carboxylase, most likely accounted for inhibition of gluconeogenesis by benzoate. Whether reduced flux through the urea cycle also contributed to inhibition of gluconeogenesis (by diminishing cytosolic conversion of aspartate to oxaloacetate) requires further study. Depression of glutamate and acetyl CoA to levels at or below the Km for NAG synthetase probably accounted for the observed inhibition of ureagenesis. Rates of urea production were observed to vary with changes in the levels of NAG, suggesting NAG-dependent CPS-I to be the primary site of inhibition of ureagenesis by benzoate.
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PMID:On the mechanism of inhibition of gluconeogenesis and ureagenesis by sodium benzoate. 167 73

The carbonic anhydrase inhibitor acetazolamide reduces citrulline synthesis by intact guinea pig liver mitochondria and also inhibits mitochondrial carbonic anhydrase (CA V) and the more lipophilic carbonic anhydrase inhibitor ethoxzolamide reduces urea synthesis by intact guinea pig hepatocytes in parallel with its inhibition of total hepatocytic carbonic anhydrase activity. Intact hepatocytes from 48-h starved male guinea pig livers were incubated at 37 degrees C in Krebs-Henseleit with 95% O2/5% CO2 at pH 7.1 with 5 mM pyruvate, 5 mM lactate, 3 mM ornithine, 10 mM NH4Cl, 1 mM oleate; with these inclusions both urea and glucose synthesis start with HCO3- -requiring enzymes, carbamyl phosphate synthetase I and pyruvate carboxylase, respectively. Urea and glucose synthesis were inhibited in parallel by increasing concentrations of ethoxzolamide, estimated Ki for each approximately 0.1 mM. In other experiments hepatocytes were incubated at 37 degrees C in Krebs-Henseleit with 95% O2/5% CO2 at pH 7.1 with 10 mM glutamine, 1 mM oleate; with these inclusions glucose synthesis no longer starts with a HCO3- -requiring enzyme. Urea synthesis was inhibited by ethoxzolamide with an estimated Ki of 0.1 mM, but glucose synthesis was unaffected. Intact mitochondria were prepared from 48-h starved male guinea pig livers. Pyruvate carboxylase activity of intact mitochondria was determined in isotonic KCl-Hepes buffer, pH 7.4, 25 degrees C, with 7.5 mM pyruvate, 3 mM ATP, and 10 mM NaHCO3. Inclusion of ethoxzolamide resulted in reduction in the rate of pyruvate carboxylation in intact mitochondria, but not in disrupted mitochondria. It is concluded that carbonic anhydrase is functionally important for gluconeogenesis in the male guinea pig liver when there is a requirement for bicarbonate as substrate.
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PMID:Inhibition of CA V decreases glucose synthesis from pyruvate. 309 76

Patients with an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency share the disease features of hypoglycemia, hyperammonemia, tissue fatty change, hypoketonemia, carnitine deficiency, and organic acidemia due to apparent disruption of normal fatty acid, glucose, and urea metabolism. Most of the acute clinical episodes occur in young children. These episodes are precipitated by fasting and are often fatal, with the in vivo mechanisms essentially unknown. Since the genes of the rate controlling enzymes of these pathways are tissue and developmentally regulated at the transcriptional level, we measured, throughout neonatal development, the steady-state mRNA levels of long-chain, medium-chain, and short-chain (SCAD) acyl-CoA dehydrogenases, pyruvate carboxylase (PC), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), carbamyl phosphate synthetase I (CPS), ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC), and argininosuccinate synthetase (AS) in fed or fasted SCAD-deficient BALB/ByJ mice compared to BALB/cBy controls. Overall, our results showed no major effects on expression of acyl-CoA dehydrogenases due to SCAD deficiency, regardless of age or fasting. In SCAD-deficient mice we found depressed mRNA expression and enzyme activity for the urea cycle enzymes CPS and AS at 6 days of age, and found no apparent effects on expression of gluconeogenic enzymes PC or PEPCK. There was a period of overall lower gene expression for most genes at 6 and 15 days, which appears to be in parallel with the developmental period when children with these diseases are most severely affected.
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PMID:Effects of short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency on development expression of metabolic enzyme genes in the mouse. 873 88

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

Carbonic anhydrase (CA) V is a mitochondrial enzyme that has been reported in several tissues of the gastrointestinal tract. In liver, it participates in ureagenesis and gluconeogenesis by providing bicarbonate ions for two other mitochondrial enzymes: carbamyl phosphate synthetase I and pyruvate carboxylase. This study presents evidence of immunohistochemical localization of CA V in the rodent nervous tissue. Polyclonal rabbit antisera against a polypeptide of 17 C-terminal amino acids of rat CA V and against purified recombinant mouse isozyme were used in western blotting and immunoperoxidase stainings. Immunohistochemistry showed that CA V is expressed in astrocytes and neurons but not in oligodendrocytes, which are rich in CA II, or capillary endothelial cells, which express CA IV on their plasma face. The specificity of the immunohistochemical results was confirmed by western blotting, which identified a major 30-kDa polypeptide band of CA V in mouse cerebral cortex, hippocampus, cerebellum, spinal cord, and sciatic nerve. The expression of CA V in astrocytes and neurons suggests that this isozyme has a cell-specific, physiological role in the nervous system. In astrocytes, CA V may play an important role in gluconeogenesis by providing bicarbonate ions for the pyruvate carboxylase. The neuronal CA V could be involved in the regulation of the intramitochondrial calcium level, thus contributing to the stability of the intracellular calcium concentration. CA V may also participate in bicarbonate ion-induced GABA responses by regulating the bicarbonate homeostasis in neurons, and its inhibition could be the basis of some neurotropic effects of carbonic anhydrase inhibitors.
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PMID:Mitochondrial carbonic anhydrase in the nervous system: expression in neuronal and glial cells. 1103 10

Four children in three unrelated families (one consanguineous) presented with lethargy, hyperlactatemia, and hyperammonemia of unexplained origin during the neonatal period and early childhood. We identified and validated three different CA5A alterations, including a homozygous missense mutation (c.697T>C) in two siblings, a homozygous splice site mutation (c.555G>A) leading to skipping of exon 4, and a homozygous 4 kb deletion of exon 6. The deleterious nature of the homozygous mutation c.697T>C (p.Ser233Pro) was demonstrated by reduced enzymatic activity and increased temperature sensitivity. Carbonic anhydrase VA (CA-VA) was absent in liver in the child with the homozygous exon 6 deletion. The metabolite profiles in the affected individuals fit CA-VA deficiency, showing evidence of impaired provision of bicarbonate to the four enzymes that participate in key pathways in intermediary metabolism: carbamoylphosphate synthetase 1 (urea cycle), pyruvate carboxylase (anaplerosis, gluconeogenesis), propionyl-CoA carboxylase, and 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase (branched chain amino acids catabolism). In the three children who were administered carglumic acid, hyperammonemia resolved. CA-VA deficiency should therefore be added to urea cycle defects, organic acidurias, and pyruvate carboxylase deficiency as a treatable condition in the differential diagnosis of hyperammonemia in the neonate and young child.
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PMID:Mitochondrial carbonic anhydrase VA deficiency resulting from CA5A alterations presents with hyperammonemia in early childhood. 2453 Feb 3