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Query: UNIPROT:O15067 (
FGAM synthetase
)
19
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The assignment of the known ade genes to steps in purine biosynthesis in Schizosaccharomyces pombe has been completed with the demonstration that an ade3 mutants lacks
FGAR amidotransferase
, ade1A mutants lack GAR synthetase and ade1B mutants lack AIR synthetase. A comparison of enzyme activity with map position for ade1 mutants shows that (1) complementing ade1A mutants lack GAR synthetase but posses wild type amounts of AIR synthetase, (2) complementing ade1B mutants lack AIR synthetase but posses variable amounts of GAR synthetase, (3) non-complementing mutants lack both activities. In wild type strains the two activities fractionate together throughout a hundred-fold purification. Hence the ade1 gene appears to code for a bifunctional enzyme catalysing two distinct steps in purine biosynthesis. The two activities are catalysed by two different regions of the polypeptide chain which can be altered independently by mutation. Gel filtration studies on partially purified enzymes from wild type and various complementing mutant strains, indicate that the bifunctional enzyme is a multimer consisting of between four and six sub-units of 40,000 daltons each. GAR synthetase activity is associated with both the monomeric and multimeric forms but AIR synthetase is only associated with the multimer. A comparison of enzyme levels between diploids and their original complementing haploid strains suggests that complementation is due to hybrid enzyme formation.
...
PMID:The product of the ade1: gene in Schizosaccharomyces pombe: a bifunctional enzyme catalysing two distinct steps in purine biosynthesis. 96 58
The glutamine antagonists, acivicin (NSC 163501), azaserine (NSC 742), and 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine (DON) (NSC 7365), are potent inhibitors of many glutamine-dependent amidotransferases in vitro. Experiments performed with mouse L1210 leukemia growing in culture show that each antagonist has different sites of inhibition in nucleotide biosynthesis. Acivicin is a potent inhibitor of CTP and GMP synthetases and partially inhibits N-formylglycineamidine ribotide (FGAM) synthetase of purine biosynthesis. DON inhibits
FGAM synthetase
, CTP synthetase, and glucosamine-6-phosphate isomerase. Azaserine inhibits
FGAM synthetase
and glucosamine-6-phosphate isomerase. Large accumulations of FGAR and its di- and triphosphate derivatives were observed for all three antagonists which could interfere with the biosynthesis of nucleic acids, providing another mechanism of cytotoxicity. Acivicin, azaserine, and DON are not potent inhibitors of carbamyl phosphate synthetase II (glutamine-hydrolyzing) and amidophosphoribosyltransferase in leukemia cells growing in culture although there are reports of such inhibitions in vitro. Blockade of de novo purine biosynthesis by these three antagonists results in a "complementary stimulation" of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis.
...
PMID:Cytotoxic mechanisms of glutamine antagonists in mouse L1210 leukemia. 235 67
The purL gene of Escherichia coli encoding the enzyme formylglycinamidine ribonucleotide (FGAM) synthetase which catalyzes the conversion of formylglycinamide ribonucleotide (FGAR), glutamine, and MgATP to FGAM, glutamate, ADP, and Pi has been cloned and sequenced. The mature protein, as deduced by the structural gene sequence, contains 1628 amino acids and has a calculated Mr of 141,418. Comparison of the purL control region to other pur loci control regions reveals a common region of dyad symmetry which may be the binding site for the "putative" repressor protein. Construction of an overproducing strain permitted purification of the protein to homogeneity. N-Terminal sequence analysis and comparison of glutamine binding domain sequences (Ebbole & Zalkin, 1987) confirm the amino acid sequence deduced from the gene sequence. The purified protein exhibits glutaminase activity of 0.02% the normal turnover, and NH3 can replace glutamine as a nitrogen donor with a Km = 1 M and a turnover of 3 min-1 (2% glutamine turnover). The enzyme forms an isolable (1:1) complex with glutamine: t1/2 is 22 min at 4 degrees C. This isolated complex is not chemically competent to complete turnover when FGAR and ATP are added, demonstrating that ammonia and glutamine are not covalently bound as a thiohemiaminal available to complete the chemical conversion to FGAM. hydroxylamine trapping experiments indicate that glutamine is bound covalently to the enzyme as a thiol ester. Initial velocity and dead-end inhibition kinetic studies on
FGAM synthetase
are most consistent with a sequential mechanism in which glutamine binds followed by rapid equilibrium binding of MgATP and then FGAR. Incubation of [18O]FGAR with enzyme, ATP, and glutamine results in quantitative transfer of the 18O to Pi.
...
PMID:Formylglycinamide ribonucleotide synthetase from Escherichia coli: cloning, sequencing, overproduction, isolation, and characterization. 265 70
Formylglycinamidine ribonucleotide (FGAM) synthetase, which catalyzes the conversion of formylglycinamide ribonucleotide (FGAR), glutamine, and ATP to FGAM, ADP, glutamate, and Pi, has been purified to homogeneity (sp act. 0.20 mumol min-1 mg-1) from chicken liver by an alternative procedure to that of Buchanan et al. [Buchanan, J. M., Ohnoki, S., & Hong, B. S. (1978) Methods Enzymol. 51, 193-201] (sp act. 0.12 mumol min-1 mg-1). A variety of new analogues of formylglycinamide ribonucleotide have been prepared in which the formylglycinamide arm (R = CH2NHCHO) has been replaced by R = CH3, CH2OH, CH2Cl, CH2NH3, CH2NHCOCH3, CH2NHCOCH2Cl, CH2NHCO2CH2Ph, and L-CHC-H3NHCHO. These compounds have been characterized by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. With compounds R = CH3, CH2OH, and CH2NHCOCH3 and ATP, in the presence or absence of glutamine,
FGAM synthetase
catalyzes the production of Pi at 4.5, 48, and 20%, respectively, the rate of production of Pi from formylglycinamide ribonucleotide. Only R = CH2NHCOCH3 causes glutaminase activity as well as ATPase activity and has been shown to be converted to the amidine analogue. Both FGAR (R = CH2NHCHO) and the FGAR analogue (R = CH2NHCHOCH3) in the presence of ATP and
FGAM synthetase
and in the absence of glutamine form a complex isolable by Sephadex G-50 chromatography.
FGAM synthetase
is thus highly specific for its formylglycine side chain. [18O]-beta-FGAR was prepared biosynthetically, and
FGAM synthetase
was shown by 31P NMR spectroscopy to catalyze the transfer of amide 18O to inorganic phosphate.
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of formylglycinamidine synthetase. 293 78
The antitumor drug acivicin, L-(alpha S,5S)-alpha-amino-3-chloro-4,5-dihydro-5-isoxazoleacetic acid, irreversibly inactivated in vivo formylglycinamidine ribonucleotide synthetase (
FGAM synthetase
,
EC 6.3.5.3
) in transplantable rat hepatoma 3924A while the activity in host liver remained unchanged. At acivicin doses of 1.0 and 5.0 mg/kg body weight, enzyme activity in the hepatoma decreased to 26 and 5%, respectively, after 2 hr. The activity of the in vivo inactivated hepatoma 3924A enzyme could not be restored by gel filtration or 40 hr of dialysis. In the absence of L-glutamine, acivicin in vitro inactivated both liver and hepatoma
FGAM synthetase
in a time-dependent fashion, with an inactivation constant Kinact = 66 microM and a minimum inactivation half-time T = 1.0 min. In the presence of L-glutamine, competitive inhibition was observed with a Ki = 5 microM. Protection against in vitro inactivation was observed in the presence of 1 mM L-glutamine, suggesting that L-glutamine concentrations are important in the selective toxicity of acivicin on hepatoma cells in vivo. Irreversible inhibition of
FGAM synthetase
by acivicin is consistent with the view that this antibiotic is an active site-directed affinity analog of L-glutamine and indicates that this enzyme is a sensitive target of acivicin action.
...
PMID:In vivo inactivation of formylglycinamidine ribonucleotide synthetase in rat hepatoma. 396 25
The behavior of phosphoribosylformylglycinamidine ( FGAM ) synthetase (
EC 6.3.5.3
) activity was elucidated in normal and proliferating tissues and in murine and human neoplasms. Enzymic activity was measured in the 100,000 X g crude supernatant fluid prepared from tissue homogenates. The assay was based on coupling FGAM produced to diazotizable aminoimidazole ribonucleotide. In the crude extracts of normal rat liver and hepatoma 3924A, the apparent KmS of
FGAM synthetase
for formylglycinamide ribonucleotide, adenosine triphosphate and L-glutamine were 0.06, 1.5, and 0.03 mM, respectively. The liver and hepatoma 3924A FGAM synthetases were saturated at formylglycinamide ribonucleotide, adenosine triphosphate, and L-glutamine concentrations of 0.1, 7.0, and 0.5 mM, respectively; both enzymes had a pH optimum of 7.4. In the liver of normal adult rats, the
FGAM synthetase
activity was 7.2 to 10.7 nmol/hr/mg protein. The synthetase specific activity in hepatomas of slow and medium growth rates increased 1.2- to 2.2-fold, and in rapidly growing hepatomas it was elevated 3.2- to 5-fold over the values of the respective control normal livers. There was a positive correlation between the increase in synthetase activity and hepatoma proliferation rate. In rat tissues of high cell renewal activity, thymus, spleen, and testis, synthetase specific activity was 7.0-, 3.9-, and 3.3-fold higher than that of normal liver. In the 24- and 48-hr regenerating liver,
FGAM synthetase
specific activity was increased by 1.2- and 1.5-fold, respectively. In 5-day-old differentiating liver, specific activity was 202% of the adult value; when data were expressed per average cell, the activity was 55% of that of the adult liver. The markedly increased activity in the rapidly proliferating hepatomas appears to be more characteristic of neoplastic growth than of normal liver proliferation.
FGAM synthetase
activity was also increased in human renal cell carcinoma and hepatocellular and colon carcinomas to 1.4-, 2.7-, and 3.8-fold of the activity of the respective homologous normal and host tissues. The synthetase activity in the rapidly proliferating murine Lewis lung carcinoma was 9.6-fold that of the normal lung. The increased activity of
FGAM synthetase
should confer selective advantages to the cancer cells and marks this glutamine-utilizing enzyme as a potentially important target in the design of chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Proliferation-linked increase in phosphoribosylformylglycinamidine synthetase activity (EC 6.3.5.3). 672 84
5'-Phosphoribosyl N-formylglycinamide (FGAR) amidotransferase (
EC 6.3.5.3
) catalyzes the fourth reaction in the de novo synthesis of purines, that is, the conversion of FGAR to 5'-phosphoribosyl N-formylglycinamidine (FGAM). This is the only step of the pathway for which a vertebrate gene has not been cloned.
FGAR amidotransferase
has been highly purified from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, and this preparation has been used to generate monoclonal antibodies in mice. Two of these antibodies, designated BD4 and DD2, have been shown to recognize a 150-kDa protein in CHO-K1 cells that is of very low abundance in Ade-B cells, a CHO line in which
FGAR amidotransferase
activity is undetectable. Furthermore, the protein recognized by these antibodies is 5-10-fold more abundant in Azr cells. The CHO Azr cell line was made resistant to azaserine, a potent inhibitor of
FGAR amidotransferase
, and displays a 5-10-fold increase in
FGAR amidotransferase
activity over the parental K1 line.
FGAR amidotransferase
activity and the 150-kDa protein recognized by both monoclonal antibodies were found to immunoprecipitate concomitantly using antibody BD4. Monoclonal antibody DD2 cross-reacted with a human protein of identical molecular mass. A number of Ade-B/human hybrid cells were generated by somatic cell fusion and subsequent 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine segregation. Analysis of these lines, together with two independently generated human/mouse hybrid cell lines, by both cytogenetics and immunoblotting with antibody DD2 revealed that the human
FGAR amidotransferase
gene is located on chromosome 17p.
...
PMID:Purification of, generation of monoclonal antibodies to, and mapping of phosphoribosyl N-formylglycinamide amidotransferase. 811 Jul 88
Extensive circadian (daily) control over gene expression in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 is programmed into at least two differentially phased groups. The transcriptional activity of the smaller group of genes is maximal at about dawn and minimal at about dusk. We identified one of the genes belonging to this latter group as purF, which encodes the key regulatory enzyme in the de novo purine synthetic pathway, glutamine PRPP amidotransferase (also known as amidophosphoribosyltransferase). Its expression pattern as a function of circadian time was confirmed by both luminescence from a purF::luxAB reporter strain and the abundance of purF mRNA. By fusing sequences upstream of the purF coding region to promoterless luxAB genes, we identified a limited upstream region, which potentially regulates purF circadian expression patterns in vivo. We also identified the purL gene immediately upstream of purF. The purL gene encodes
FGAM synthetase
, the fourth enzyme in the purine nucleotide biosynthesis pathway. Although these genes are expressed as part of a larger operon in other bacteria, reporter gene fusions revealed that purF and purL are transcribed independently in Synechococcus and that they are expressed at different phases of the circadian cycle. This differential expression pattern may be related to the oxygen sensitivity of amidophosphoribosyltransferase.
...
PMID:Circadian expression of genes involved in the purine biosynthetic pathway of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942. 880 59
The yexA gene encodes an 84 amino acid reading frame; in Bacillus subtilis it is positioned between the purC and purQ genes of the purine biosynthetic operon. Disruption of yexA resulted in a purine-auxotrophic phenotype. When yexA was expressed in trans it was able to complement a yexA mutation. Growth experiments and enzyme analysis of yexA mutant strains revealed a defective
phosphoribosylformylglycinamidine synthetase
(
FGAM synthetase
). In the organisms in which
FGAM synthetase
has been studied a single polypeptide is responsible for activity. In some organisms two separate genes - in B. subtilis the purL and purQ genes - encode polypeptides with similarity to the N-terminal and the C-terminal region, respectively, of the single-polypeptide
FGAM synthetase
. Thus, active
FGAM synthetase
in B. subtilis requires the yexA gene product in addition to the purL and purQ gene products. Open reading frames with sequence similarity to yexA are found in other Gram-positive organisms, in a cyanobacterium and in methanogenic archaea. The designation purS is proposed for this novel function in purine biosynthesis in B. subtilis.
...
PMID:The yexA gene product is required for phosphoribosylformylglycinamidine synthetase activity in Bacillus subtilis. 1078 38
The production of toxins A and B by Clostridium difficile was greatly enhanced under biotin-limited conditions, in which a 140-kDa protein was expressed strongly. Gene cloning revealed that this protein was a homologue of formylglycinamidine ribonucleotide synthetase (
FGAM synthetase
,
EC 6.3.5.3
), which is known as PurL in Escherichia coli and catalyses the fourth step of the de novo purine biosynthesis pathway. This enzyme consisted of a single polypeptide, although FGAM synthetases of gram-positive bacteria usually consist of two subunits. Inhibition of the enzymic activity of C. difficile PurL by O-diazoacetyl-L-serine (azaserine) resulted in enhanced toxin B production even in biotin-sufficient conditions. In contrast, blockade of the preceding step of the PurL catalysing step by sulfamethoxazole inhibited toxin B production almost completely. These results suggest that accumulation of formylglycinamide ribonucleotide (FGAR), a substrate of
FGAM synthetase
, enhances toxin production by C difficile and depletion of FGAR reduces toxin production.
...
PMID:Linkage between toxin production and purine biosynthesis in Clostridium difficile. 1180 Apr 70
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