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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
l-Threonine deaminase (l-threonine dehydratase [deaminating], EC 4.2.2.16) has been shown to be involved in the regulation of three of the enzymes of
isoleucine
-valine biosynthesis in yeast. Mutations affecting the affinity of the enzyme for
isoleucine
also affected the repression of acetohydroxyacid synthase, dihydroxyacid dehydrase, and reductoisomerase. The data indicate that
isoleucine
must be bound for effective repression of these enzymes to take place. In a strain with a nonsense mutation midway in liv 1, the gene for threonine deaminase,
starvation
for
isoleucine
or valine did not lead to derepression of the three enzymes;
starvation
for leucine did. The effect of the nonsense mutation is recessive; it is tentatively concluded, therefore, that intact threonine deaminase is required for derepression by two of the effectors for multivalent repression, but not by the third. A model is presented which proposes that a regulatory species of leu tRNA(leu) is the key intermediate for repression and that threonine deaminase is a positive element, regulating the available pool of charged leu tRNA by binding it.
...
PMID:Involvement of threonine deaminase in repression of the isoleucine-valine and leucine pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 457 Jul 83
In Escherichia coli, the three branched-chain amino acid activating enzymes appear to be essential for multivalent repression of the
isoleucine
- and valine-forming enzymes. The results of experiments with a mutant, strain CU18, having an altered threonine deaminase, indicate that free
isoleucine
and some form of threonine deaminase (the product of the ilvA gene) are also involved in multivalent repression. This strain exhibits abnormally high derepressibility but normal repressibility of its ilv gene products, and its threonine deaminase is inhibited only by high concentrations of
isoleucine
. In strain CU18, the
isoleucine
analogue, thiaisoleucine, is incapable of replacing
isoleucine
in the multivalent repression of the ilv genes, whereas the analogue can fully replace the natural amino acid in repression in other strains examined. The dipeptide, glycyl-leucine, which, like
isoleucine
, is a heterotropic negative effector of threonine deaminase but is not a substrate for isoleucyl-transfer ribonucleic acid synthetase, can completely prevent the accumulation of threonine deaminase-forming potential during
isoleucine
starvation
in strains with normal threonine deaminases. It can not, however, prevent such accumulation in strain CU18 or in other strains in which threonine deaminase is insensitive to any concentration of
isoleucine
.
...
PMID:Role for free isoleucine of glycyl-leucine in the repression of threonine deaminase in Escherichia coli. 458 10
The concentration of rifampin necessary to affect the initiation of ribonucleic acid (RNA) synthesis quickly in Escherichia coli strains K-12 and 15TAU was about 200 mug/ml, as determined by extrapolation of the effect of the drug on the induction of beta-galactosidase synthesis. A lag in the action of rifampin of about 10 s was confirmed. Rifampin was then used as a probe to compare RNA synthesis in growing and amino acid-starved E. coli. Restoring arginine to arginine-starved strain 15TAU immediately after rifampin inhibition did not detectably restore the rate of uracil uptake to that of uninhibited cells. The residual rate of RNA synthesis (corrected for acid-soluble triphosphate specific activities) after rifampin treatment of both growing and
isoleucine
-starved (valine-inhibited) cultures of strain K-12 showed similar decay kinetics. These findings support the notion that amino acid
starvation
blocks the initiation of some RNA transcription units, but do not rule out other possibilities.
...
PMID:Decay of ribonucleic acid synthesis in amino acid-starved Escherichia coli after rifampin treatment. 459 64
Albumin synthesis was measured in the isolated perfused rat liver by using the livers of both well-fed and starved rats.
Starvation
markedly decreased albumin synthesis. The livers from starved rats were unable to increase synthesis rates after the addition to the perfusates of single amino acids or the addition of both glucagon and tryptophan. Arginine, asparagine,
isoleucine
, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, proline, threonine, tryptophan and valine, added together to ten times their normal peripheral blood concentrations, restored synthesis rates to normal. The plasma aminogram (i.e. the relative concentrations, of amino acids) was altered by depriving rats of protein for 48h. The use of blood from the deprived rats as perfusate, instead of normal blood, decreased albumin synthesis rates significantly by livers obtained from well-fed rats. The addition of single amino acids, including the non-metabolizable amino acid, alpha-aminoisobutyric acid, to the above mixture increased albumin synthesis rates to normal values. It is concluded that amino acids play an important role in the control of albumin synthesis and that more than one mechanism is probably involved.
...
PMID:The effects of amino acids on albumin synthesis by the isolated perfused rat liver. 465 17
The relationship between aspartokinase activity and fruiting body formation in Myxococcus xanthus was investigated. Two required amino acids, methionine and
isoleucine
, which stimulated the enzyme in vitro also inhibited fruiting body formation when added to 0.1% Casitone agar. Threonine, a potent feedback inhibitor of the aspartokinase, completely reversed the effects of methionine and
isoleucine
both on enzyme activity and fruiting body formation. A mutant, M. xanthus FB-S, which had the unusual property of forming fruiting bodies on 1.0% Casitone agar, also exhibited an altered regulation of aspartokinase activity. Spermidine, which is a strong stimulator of the enzyme in vitro, interfered with the developmental cycle of both M. xanthus FB and FS-S. During glycerol induction of myxospores the level of aspartokinase dropped more than 75% during the first hour. These data indicate a strong correlation between aspartokinase activity and the induction of the developmental cycle in M. xanthus. It is suggested that the decrease in aspartokinase activity results in diaminopimelic acid
starvation
, blockage of cell wall growth, and subsequent induction of the developmental cycle.
...
PMID:Aspartokinase activity and the developmental cycle of Myxococcus xanthus. 471 18
The beta chain of rabbit (Oryctolagus caniculus) hemoglobin has previously been reported to contain a single residue of
isoleucine
at beta(112). We have detected other rabbits with either zero isoleucyl residues or half a residue per beta chain. This character is polymorphic and inherited as a simple mendelian autosomal codominant.-Normally the modal number of ribosomes per polyribosome is 4 to 6 in reticulocyte lysates; but incubation of rabbit reticulocytes prior to lysis with L-o-methylthreonine (OMT), an isostere of
isoleucine
, leads to a bimodal distribution in lysates with 2-3 and 8-12 ribosomes as modes. This alteration has been attributed to ribosomal traffic jams caused by
starvation
for ile-tRNA at mRNA codons corresponding to the locations of isoleucyl residues at positions alpha(10), alpha(17), alpha(55) and beta(112). We have confirmed this interpretation by incubating OMT with reticulocytes from rabbits with integral, half integral and nil values for isoleucyl residues per beta chain to show that formation of the larger clusters of polyribosomes requires that beta(112) = ile.
...
PMID:An electrophoretically silent polymorphism for the beta chains of rabbit hemoglobin and associated polyribosome patterns. 481 67
The effect of the ribonucleic acid (RNA) control (RC) gene on the biosynthesis of viral RNA has been examined in an RC(str) and an RC(rel) host infected with R17 RNA bacteriophage under conditions in which host RNA and protein synthesis were inhibited by the addition of rifampicin. Methionine and
isoleucine
starvation
depressed viral RNA biosynthesis in an RC(str) host but not in an RC(rel) host. However, histidine
starvation
had little effect on viral RNA and protein synthesis in both RC(str) and RC(rel) cells, although it had a marked effect on host protein and RNA synthesis in an RC(str) host. Chloramphenicol relieved the effect of amino acid
starvation
on viral RNA synthesis in an RC(str) host. It is concluded that stringent control of viral RNA biosynthesis does not require the continued biosynthesis of the RC gene product (RNA or protein) and that a preformed RC gene product can regulate the biosynthesis of the exogenous RNA. It is suggested that the amino acid dependence of viral RNA biosynthesis is due to its obligatory coupling with the translation of the viral coat protein which lacks histidine. It may be inferred that the amino acid requirement of bacterial RNA is due to its coupling with the translation of a host-specific protein (other than the RC gene product) which requires a full complement of amino acids. Since chloramphenicol is known to permit ribosome movement in the absence of protein synthesis, it is suggested that ribosome movement along the nascent RNA chain is a sufficient condition for the continuation of RNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Continued expression of the ribonucleic acid control gene during inhibition of Escherichia coli ribonucleic acid and protein synthesis. 491 75
Methionine auxotrophs of strains derived from Escherichia coli 15 lose their colony-forming ability when deprived of this amino acid. Late addition of methionine to liquid cultures did not restore plating efficiency but permitted growth of surviving cells. This phenomenon, termed methionineless death (mld), was not observed with methionine auxotrophs of E. coli strains B, W, or K(12), nor was a similar amino acidless death observed with corresponding auxotrophs of E. coli 15 for arginine, tryptophan, proline,
isoleucine
, and leucine. Mld was not dependent upon the genetic site determining methionine auxotrophy, nor did it affect the decarboxylation of methionine or the stability of methionyl-transfer ribonucleic acid synthetase activity of starved cells. Death was not altered by the presence of spermine or spermidine but was abolished by the methionine analogue, alpha-methylmethionine. Simultaneous
starvation
of another amino acid in a multiple auxotroph also significantly reduced mld, suggesting a possible role of protein synthesis. The onset of mld is correlated with a lower net increase of deoxyribonucleic acid.
...
PMID:Methionineless death in Escherichia coli. 494 88
Wachsman, J. T. (University of Illinois, Urbana), and L. Hogg. Use of thymineless death to enrich for doubly auxotrophic mutants of Bacillus megaterium. J. Bacteriol. 87:1118-1122. 1964.-When strain KM:T(-), a thymine auxotroph of Bacillus megaterium strain KM, is allowed to undergo thymineless death on a minimal medium, the survivors are greatly enriched in polyauxotrophic mutants. Cells were irradiated with ultraviolet light, grown in the presence of thymidine and a complete amino acid mixture, and then starved for thymidine in the absence of amino acids. Doubly auxotrophic mutants (thymine(-) amino acid(-)) may account for more than 90% of the survivors. The most reproducible results were obtained when sucrose (0.4 m) was added to both growth and
starvation
media. Although the percentage of mutants among the survivors increases with the time of thymine
starvation
, the absolute number of double auxotrophs per milliliter decreases. It is probable that the extent of cross-feeding determines both the mutant yield and the mutants types. Substrains of KM:T(-) having additional requirements for each of the following amino acids have been isolated: histidine, threonine, tyrosine, tryptophan, arginine,
isoleucine
, methionine, serine, and cysteine.
...
PMID:Use of thymineless death to enrich for doubly auxotrophic mutants of Bacillus megaterium. 495 96
To evaluate the factors regulating gluconeogenesis in pregnancy, plasma amino acid levels were determined during the course of an 84-90 hr fast in physically healthy women studied during wk 16-22 of gestation (before undergoing therapeutic abortion), and in nonpregnant controls. The effect of pregnancy on the glycemic response to exogenous alanine administration during
starvation
was also investigated. In the nonpregnant group fasting resulted in a 2- to 3-fold increase in the levels of plasma valine, leucine,
isoleucine
, and alpha-aminobutyrate, while the concentration of alanine and glycine fell. In the pregnant group, the levels of most amino acids were significantly reduced in the postabsorptive state. With
starvation
, the plasma concentration of alanine fell more rapidly in the pregnant group and was significantly below that of the nonpregnant subjects for the first 60 hr of the fast. In contrast, a significant elevation in plasma glycine, serine, and threonine was observed in the pregnant group after 84 hr of fasting, whereas similar increments were not demonstrable until after 10 days of fasting in previously studied nonpregnant obese subjects. Paralleling the changes in maternal plasma, amniotic fluid levels of valine, leucine, and
isoleucine
increased while that of alanine fell during the fast. Although the plasma glucose concentration was lower in the pregnant group at termination of the fast, intravenous alanine administration (0.15 g/kg), resulted in a prompt, comparable increase (20-25 mg/100 ml) in plasma glucose in both groups of subjects. It is concluded that (a) pregnancy accelerates and exaggerates the hypoalaninemic and hyperglycinemic effects of
starvation
; (b) lack of key endogenous substrate rather than altered intrahepatic processes may limit hepatic gluconeogenesis in pregnancy and contribute to gestational hypoglycemia; (c) maternal caloric deprivation profoundly alters the levels of amino acids in amniotic fluid.
...
PMID:Amino acid metabolism during starvation in human pregnancy. 502 Apr 32
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