Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Slices of duodenum and jejunum produce ammonia from glutamine in vitro. 2. Ammoniagenesis does not increase in response to acidosis or potassium deficiency, two conditions known to cause enhanced ammoniagenesis in the kidney. 3. Gut contains glutaminase 1 as well as gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase. 4. These enzymes do not show any increase during starvation.
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PMID:Ammonia production by the small intestine of the rat. 0 12

L-Asparagine uptake by Stemphylium botryosum is mediated by two distinct energy- and temperature-dependent transport systems. One permease is relatively specific for L-asparagine and L-glutamine and is present in nutrient-sufficient mycelium. The specific permease shows an optimum pH at 5.2, saturation kinetics (Km = 4.4 x 10(-4) M, Vmax = 1.1 mumol/g per min), competitive gradient of L-asparagine, and higher affinity towards the L-isomer of asparagine. Amide derivatives of L-asparagine (5-diazo-4-oxo-L-norvaline or L-aspartyl hydroxamate) are the most effective competitors, alpha-amino derivative (N-acetyl asparagine) is a moderate competitor, and alpha-carboxyl derivative (L-asparagine-t-butylester) shows only slight inhibition of the specific permease. Derivatives of L-glutamine are significantly less effective competitors than those of L-asparatine. The level of the specific permease is affected by nitrogen sources and increases approximately threefold upon starvation. The nonspecific permease possesses an optimum pH at 6.8, saturation kinetics (Km = 7 x 10(-5) M, Vmax = 5 mumol/g per min, Kt = 7.4 x 10(-5) M for L-leucine), and high affinity towards various types of amino acids.
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PMID:Characterization of L-asparagine transport systems in Stemphylium botryosum. 0 27

A 1-mg/ml amount of threonine (8.4 mM) inhibited growth and sporulation of Bacillus subtilis 168. Inhibition of sporulation was efficiently reversed by valine and less efficiently by pyruvate, arginine, glutamine, and isoleucine. Inhibition of vegetative growth was reversed by asparate and glutamate as well as by valine, arginine, or glutamine. Cells in minimal growth medium were inhibited only transiently by very high concentrations of threonine, whereas inhibition of sporulation was permanent. Addition of threonine prevented the normal increase in alkaline phosphatase and reduced the production of extracellular protease by about 50%, suggesting that threonine blocked the sporulation process relatively early. 2-Ketobutyrate was able to mimic the effect of threonine on sporulation. Sporulation in a strain selected for resistance to azaleucine was partially resistant. Seventy-five percent of the mutants selected for the ability to grow vegetatively in the presence of high threonine concentrations were found to be simultaneously isoleucine auxotrophs. In at least one of these mutants, the threonine resistance phenotpye could not be dissociated from the isoleucine requirement by transformation. This mutation was closely linked to a known ilvA mutation (recombination index, 0.16). This strain also had reduced intracellular threonine deaminase activity. These results suggest that threonine inhibits B. subtilis by causing valine starvation.
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PMID:Inhibition of Bacillus subtilis growth and sporulation by threonine. 10 59

Anthranilate synthase of Agmenellum quadruplicatum, a unicellular species of blue-green bacteria, consists of two nonidentical subunits. A 72,000 dalton protein has aminase activity but is incapable of reaction with glutamine (amidotransferase) unless a second protein (18,000 molecular weight) is present. The small subunit was first detected through its ability to complement a partially purified aminase subunit from Bacillus subtilis to produce a hybrid complex capable of amidotransferase function. Conditions for the function of the heterologous complex were less stringent than for the homologous A. quadruplicatum complex. A reducing agent such as dithiothreitol stabilizes the A. quadruplicatum aminase subunit and is obligatory for amidotransferase function. L-Tryptophan feedback inhibits both the aminase and amidotransferase reactions of anthranilate synthase; Ki values of 6 X 10(-8) M for the amidotransferase activity and 2 X 10(-6) M for the aminase activity were obtained. The Km value calculated for ammonia (2.2 mM) was more favorable than the Km value glutamine (13 mM). Likewise, the Vmax of anthranilate synthase was greater with ammonia than with glutamine. Starvation of a tryptophan auxotroph results in a threefold derepression of the aminase subunit, but no corresponding increase in the small 18,000 M subunit occurs. While microbial anthranilate synthase complexes are remarkably similar overall, the relatively good aminase activity of the A. quadruplicatum enzyme may be of physiological significance in nature.
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PMID:An anthranilate synthase of the extreme aminase type in a species of blue-green bacteria (algae). 10 18

The phenotype of certain mutations in pyrA, the gene encoding carbamylphosphate synthetase (CPSase), is expressed only in the presence od exogenous arginine. In unsupplemented media, synthesis of carbamylphosphate and growth was almost normal; in arginine-containing media, synthesis of carbamylphosphate stopped, as did growth, as a consequence of starvation for pyrimidine. Genetic and biochemical evidence suggests that arginine exerts this inhibition by repressing the synthesis of ornithine carbamyltransferase (OTCase), the intracellular presence of which is required for assembly of the unequal subunits and proper functioning of the mutant CPSase. After the addition of arginine to a culture of the mutant, CPSase activity (glutamine dependent) characteristic of the intact holoenzyme progressively decreased, whereas activity (ammonia dependent) characteristic of the free large (alpha) subunit increased. Extracts of mutant cells contain free small (beta) subunits, as demonstrated directly by in vitro complementation using purified alpha subunits from wild type. The mutant enzyme from cultures grown in the presence of arginine had a markedly decreased affinity for adenosine 5'-triphosphate. Mutations in argR that cause depressed synthesis of OTCase suppressed the phenotype, and a certain mutation in argI, the gene encoding OTCase, enhanced it. In vitro experiments using purified enzyme confirm the stimulatory effect of OTCase on the activity of mutant CPSase.
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PMID:Arginine-sensitive phenotype of mutations in pyrA of Salmonella typhimurium: role of ornithine carbamyltransferase in the assembly of mutant carbamylphosphate synthetase. 18 93

Azaguanine-resistant mutants of Chinese hamster ovary cells were isolated following mutagenesis with ICR-17OG. Of the eight mutant isolates examined, only one, Ag-5 had detectable hypoxanthine(guanine)phosphoribosyltransferase activity. Under normal conditions of growth, de novo purine biosynthesis in the mutants was not significantly different from wild type. However, when the cultures were starved for glutamine over a 2 h period before measuring 5'phosphoribosyl formylglycinamide (a relative measure of de novo purine biosynthesis), elevated levels of 5'-phosphoribosyl formylglycinamide accumulated in some of the mutants, and decreased levels in wild type and Ag-5. The level of purine biosynthesis could be related to the levels of glutamine in the pregrowth medium. The rate of purine biosynthesis correlated with 5-phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate levels, which were enhanced in the mutant (Ag-C) following the starvation period. No alterations were found in levels of 5-phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate synthetase or glutamine synthetase. The extent of feedback inhibition was normal in both mutant and wild type cells. These data suggest that the hypoxanthine (guanine) phosphoribosyltransferase locus is a regulatory gene.
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PMID:Regulation of de novo purine biosynthesis in normal and 8-azaguanine-resistant Chinese hamster cells. 20 17

Methylamine (methylammonium ion) entered Saccharomyces cerevisiae X2180-A by means of a specific active transport system. Methylamine uptake was pH dependent (maximum rate between pH 6.0 and 6.5) and temperature dependent (increasing up to 35 C) and required the presence of a fermentable or oxidizable energy source in the growth medium. At 23 C the vmax for methylamine transport was similar 17 nmol/min per mg of cells (dry weight) and the apparent Km was 220 muM. The transport system exhibited maximal activity in ammonia-grown cells and was repressed 60 to 70 percent when glutamine or asparagine was added to the growth medium. There was no significant derepression of the transport system during nitrogen starvation. Ammonia (ammonium ion) was a strong competitive inhibitor of methylamine uptake, whereas other amines inhibited to a much lesser extent. Mutants selected on the basis of their reduced ability to transport methylamine (Mea-R) simultaneously exhibited a decreased ability to transport ammonia.
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PMID:Methylamine and ammonia transport in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 23 81

The effects of starvation on the acid-base status of the rat and on the glucoeogenic and ammoniagenic capacity of rat renal-cortical slices were examined. Starvation for 48 or 72 hr did not affect acid-base status, and urinary ammonia production did not change. Kidney cortical slices from starved as compared to fed rats showed increased gluconeogenic capacity when incubated with the substrated pyruvate, succinate, fumarate, malate, 2-oxyoglutarate, glutamine and glutamate. Renal cortical tissue from starved rats also had increased activity of the gluconeogenic enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Renal cortical slices from starved rats did not differ from those from fed rats in the ability to produce ammonia from glutamine or glutamate, nor was there any difference inhe activity of glutaminase between these groups. These results show that renal gluconeogenic capacity is increased in starved rats in the absence of systemic acidosis, and starvation does not lead to an increase in urinary ammonia excretion or renal ammoniagenic capacity.
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PMID:Effect of starvation on renal metabolism in the rat. 24 54

A cyclic nucleotide-binding phosphohydrolase that possesses both a phosphomonoesterase and a phosphodiesterase catalytic function has been partially purified from Aspergillus nidulans. The enzyme hydrolyzes both p-nitrophenylphosphate and bis-(p-nitrophenyl)-phosphate. o'-Nucleoside monophosphates are the best physiological phosphomonesterase substrates but 5'- and 2'-nucleoside monophosphates are also hydrolyzed. The enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of adenosine 5'-triphosphate, adenosine 5'-diphosphate, and 2',3'- and 3'5'-cyclic nucleotides, but not of ribonucleic acid, deoxyribonucleic acid, or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide. The enzyme has acid pH optima and is not activated by divalent cations. Nucleosides and nucleotides inhibit the enzyme. Cyclic nucleotides are competitive inhibitors of the phosphodiesterase-phosphomonoesterase. The enzyme can occur extracellularly. The phosphodiesterase-phosphomonoesterase is present at high levels in nitrogen-starved mycelium, and it is strongly repressed during growth in media containing ammonium or glutamine and weakly repressed during growth in glutamate-containing medium. Experiments with various area mutants show that this regulatory gene is involved in the control of the enzyme. No evidence for regulation of the enzyme by carbon or phosphorus starvation has been found.
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PMID:Enzymology and genetic regulation of a cyclic nucleotide-binding phosphodiesterase-phosphomonoesterase from Aspergillus nidulans. 24 43

When CHO cells are incubated under conditions of extreme amino acid starvation, effected by withdrawal of an amino acid from the medium together with genetic or chemical interference with the activity of the corresponding aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase, there is a rapid and profound decline in the functional capacity of the protein synthetic machinery. The effect was observed for all amino acids tested including leucine, asparagine, histidine, methionine and glutamine. This decline in protein synthetic potential appears to be due to a progressive permanent inactivation of the specific aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase concerned, as shown by a decline in the amount of cellular, specific aminoacyl-tRNA and a decline in the cell-free enzyme activity, measured after reversal of the starvation conditions. When cells are left for more than several hours under these starvation conditions, they shrink in size, lose viability and eventually disintegrate, with anomalous rapidity. We suggest that the progressive loss of protein synthetic capacity of the cells is the prime cause of these subsequent events. If the starvation conditions are reversed before cell death, regeneration of the protein synthetic potential occurs rapidly but requires protein synthesis itself, implying the existence of strong control mechanisms for cellular aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase activities.
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PMID:Effect of extreme amino acid starvation on the protein synthetic machinery of CHO cells. 24 69


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