Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a new type of fatal mitochondrial disorder caused by selective deficiency of mitochondrial ATP synthase (ATPase). A hypotrophic newborn from a consanguineous marriage presented severe lactic acidosis, cardiomegaly and hepatomegaly and died from heart failure after 2 days. The activity of oligomycin-sensitive ATPase was only 31-34% of the control, both in muscle and heart, but the activities of cytochrome c oxidase, citrate synthase and pyruvate dehydrogenase were normal. Electrophoretic and western blot analysis revealed selective reduction of ATPase complex but normal levels of the respiratory chain complexes I, III and IV. The same selective deficiency of ATPase was found in cultured skin fibroblasts which showed similar decreases in ATPase content, ATPase hydrolytic activity and level of substrate-dependent ATP synthesis (20-25, 18 and 29-33% of the control, respectively). Pulse-chase labelling of patient fibroblasts revealed low incorporation of [(35)S]methionine into assembled ATPase complexes, but increased incorporation into immunoprecipitated ATPase subunit beta, which had a very short half-life. In contrast, no difference was found in the size and subunit composition of the assembled and newly produced ATPase complex. Transmitochondrial cybrids prepared from enucleated fibroblasts of the patient and rho degrees cells derived from 143B. TK(-)human osteosarcoma cells fully restored the ATPase activity, ATP synthesis and ATPase content, when compared with control cybrids. Likewise, the pattern of [(35)S]methionine labelling of ATPase was found to be normal in patient cybrids. We conclude that the generalized deficiency of mitochondrial ATPase described is of nuclear origin and is caused by altered biosynthesis of the enzyme.
Hum Mol Genet 1999 Oct
PMID:A novel deficiency of mitochondrial ATPase of nuclear origin. 1048 64

Chronic sepsis promotes a stable increase in pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDHK) activity in skeletal muscle. PDHK is found tightly bound to the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex and as free kinase. We investigated the ability of sepsis to modify the activity of the PDHK intrinsic to the PDH and free PDHK. Sepsis was induced by the intraabdominal introduction of a fecal-agar pellet infected with E. coli and B. fragilis. Five days later, mitochondria were isolated from skeletal muscle and PDHK measured in mitochondrial extracts. Sepsis caused an approximate 2-fold stimulation of PDHK. The mitochondrial extracts from control and septic rats were fractionated by gel chromatography on Sephacryl S-300 to separate PDHK intrinsic to PDH complex and free PDHK. PDH complex eluted at void volume and was assayed for PDHK intrinsic to the complex. The activity of PDHK intrinsic to PDH complex was a significantly increased 3 fold during sepsis. Free PDHK activity eluted after the PDH complex and its activity was enhanced by 70% during sepsis. Incubation of PDHK intrinsic to PDH with dichloroactate, an uncompetitive inhibitor of PDHK, showed the PDHK from septic rats relatively less sensitive to inhibition than controls. These results indicate that sepsis induces stable changes in PDHK in skeletal muscle.
Mol Cell Biochem 1999 Aug
PMID:Sepsis alters pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity in skeletal muscle. 1049 85

Measurements have been made, in adult male diabetic patients and control subjects, of the urinary content of inositol phosphoglycans (IPGs), the IPG A-type and IPG P-type forms, which, among other actions, regulate pathways of glucose utilization, lipogenesis, triglyceride formation, and pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity. Urine samples from the entire diabetic group showed a 2- to 3-fold increase in IPG A-type, and a fall in the IPG P-type:IPG A-type ratio relative to the control group. Subdivision of the diabetic patients into lean IDDM and obese NIDDM groups revealed significant differences in the IPG P-type:IPG A-type ratio between these groups, this ratio decreasing with increases in the body mass index (BMI). Analysis of the relationships among IPGs and HbA1, blood pressure, and BMI indicated that a fall in the IPG P-type:IPG A-type ratio correlated with a rise in the HbA1 (indicative of impaired glycemic control), with increased systolic blood pressure and increased obesity, all factors linked to Syndrome X. There was a parallism between the profile of the IPG P-type:IPG A-type ratio and the well-established pattern of insulin resistance and BMI. In vitro studies of the effects of alterations in the IPG P-type:IPG A-type ratio on the activation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH complex) at the PDH phosphatase reaction demonstrated that IPG A-type forms antagonized the stimulation of the PDH phosphatase by IPG P-type forms, thus having a negative effect on the conversion of PDH to the active, dephosphorylated, form. This observation could provide a mechanism whereby the shifts in the IPG P-type:IPG A-type ratio reported above could change the metabolic pattern from one directed to glucose oxidation to one more directed toward energy conservation and lipid storage.
Mol Genet Metab 1999 Dec
PMID:Inositol phosphoglycans in diabetes and obesity: urinary levels of IPG A-type and IPG P-type, and relationship to pathophysiological changes. 1060 79

T(2) relaxation experiments in combination with chemical shift and site-directed mutagenesis data were used to identify sites involved in weak but specific protein-protein interactions in the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus. The pyruvate decarboxylase component, a heterotetramer E1(alpha(2)beta(2)), is responsible for the first committed and irreversible catalytic step. The accompanying reductive acetylation of the lipoyl group attached to the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase (E2) component involves weak, transient but specific interactions between E1 and the lipoyl domain of the E2 polypeptide chain. The interactions between the free lipoyl domain (9 kDa) and free E1alpha (41 kDa), E1beta (35 kDa) and intact E1alpha(2)beta(2) (152 kDa) components, all the products of genes or sub-genes over-expressed in Escherichia coli, were investigated using heteronuclear 2D NMR spectroscopy. The experiments were conducted with uniformly (15)N-labeled lipoyl domain and unlabeled E1 components. Major contact points on the lipoyl domain were identified from changes in the backbone (15)N spin-spin relaxation time in the presence and absence of E1(alpha(2)beta(2)) or its individual E1alpha or E1beta components. Although the E1alpha subunit houses the sequence motif associated with the essential cofactor, thiamin diphosphate, recognition of the lipoyl domain was distributed over sites in both E1alpha and E1beta. A single point mutation (N40A) on the lipoyl domain significantly reduces its ability to be reductively acetylated by the cognate E1. None the less, the N40A mutant domain appears to interact with E1 similarly to the wild-type domain. This suggests that the lipoyl group of the N40A lipoyl domain is not being presented to E1 in the correct orientation, owing perhaps to slight perturbations in the lipoyl domain structure, especially in the lipoyl-lysine beta-turn region, as indicated by chemical shift data. Interaction with E1 and subsequent reductive acetylation are not necessarily coupled.
J Mol Biol 2000 Jan 28
PMID:Protein-protein interaction revealed by NMR T(2) relaxation experiments: the lipoyl domain and E1 component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus. 1065 8

Pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDHK), a negative regulator of the mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex (mtPDC), plays a pivotal role in controlling mtPDC activity, and hence, the TCA cycle and cell respiration. This report describes the cloning of a pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase cDNA (AtPDHK) from Arabidopsis thaliana and focuses on the effects of antisense down-regulation of its expression on plant growth and development. The deduced amino acid sequence of AtPDHK exhibits extensive similarity to other plant and mammalian PDHKs, containing conserved domains typical of two-component histidine protein kinases. The Escherichia coli expressed AtPDHK specifically phosphorylated mammalian PDH E1 in a time-dependent manner. Antisense expression of the AtPDHK cDNA led to marked elevation of mtPDC activity in transgenic plants with increases ranging from 137% to 330% compared to control plants. Immunoblot analyses performed with a monoclonal antibody to the E1alpha mtPDH component (the subunit phosphorylated by PDHK) indicated that the increased mtPDC activity was not the result of an increase in the level of PDH protein. MtPDC from transgenic plants showed a reduced sensitivity to ATP-dependent inactivation compared to that observed in wild-type plants. Collectively, these data suggest that the antisense partial silencing of the negative regulator, PDHK, was responsible for the increased mtPDC activity observed in the antisense PDHK plants. Transgenic plants with partially repressed AtPDHK also displayed altered vegetative growth with reduced accumulation of vegetative tissues, early flower development and shorter generation time. The potential role for AtPDHK gene manipulation in crop improvement is discussed.
Plant Mol Biol 1999 Dec
PMID:Effects of antisense repression of an Arabidopsis thaliana pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase cDNA on plant development. 1073 48

Human pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex deficiency is an extremely heterogeneous disease in its presentation and clinical course. We have characterized novel mutations that affect the C-terminal portion of the PDH-E(1)alpha-coding sequence. Although the molecular defects underlying these mutations are different, both effectively produce a stop codon prematurely three amino acids from the C-terminus. The clinical and biochemical consequences of these mutations are unusual in that the affected individuals are very long-term survivors with PDH complex deficiency despite having low (<20%) activity in skin fibroblasts. These findings prompted us to investigate the C-terminus of E(1)alpha in greater detail. We constructed and expressed a series of PDH-E(1)alpha deletion mutants in a cell line with zero PDH complex activity due to a null E(1)alpha allele. Sequential deletion of the C-terminus by one, two, three and four amino acids resulted in PDH complex activities of 100, 60, 36 and 14%, respectively, compared with wild-type E(1)alpha expressed in PDH complex-deficient cells. The immunodetectable protein was decreased by the same amount as the activity, suggesting that the stability and/or assembly of the E(1)alpha(2)beta(2)heterotetramer might depend on the intactness of the PDH-E(1)alpha C-terminus. In addition, we compared the somatic and the testis-specific isoforms of E(1)alphaand concluded that they are biochemically equivalent.
Hum Mol Genet 2000 Apr 12
PMID:Sequential deletion of C-terminal amino acids of the E(1)alpha component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex leads to reduced steady-state levels of functional E(1)alpha(2)beta(2) tetramers: implications for patients with PDH deficiency. 1076 28

Genes coding for components of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) multienzyme complex (PDHc) from Sinorhizobium meliloti, the alfalfa symbiont, have been isolated on the basis of their high expression in symbiotic bacteria. The Elp component, PDH, is encoded by two genes, pdhAalpha (1,047 bp) and pdhAbeta (1,383 bp), a situation encountered in the alpha-proteobacteria Rickettsia prowazekii and Zymomonas mobilis as well as in some gram-positive bacteria and in mitochondria. pdhAalpha and pdhAbeta precede pdhB (1,344 bp), which encodes the E2p component, dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase, of the PDHc. No gene encoding the E3 component, lipoamide dehydrogenase, was found in the immediate vicinity of pdhA and pdhB genes. pdhAalpha, pdhAbeta and pdhB likely constitute an operon. Here, we provide evidence that pdhA expression is induced in the symbiotic stage, compared with free-living conditions. We demonstrate that symbiotic expression of pdhA genes does not depend on the fix LJ regulatory cascade that regulates nitrogen fixation and respiration gene expression in symbiotic S. meliloti cells. Induction of pdhA expression could be obtained under free-living conditions upon the addition of pyruvate to the culture medium. Induction by pyruvate and symbiotic activation of pdh gene expression take place at the same promoter.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact 2000 May
PMID:Symbiotic induction of pyruvate dehydrogenase genes from Sinorhizobium meliloti. 1079 14

The three lipoyl (E2plip) domains of the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex of Escherichia coli house the lipoyl-lysine side chain essential for active-site coupling and substrate channelling within the complex. The structure of the unlipoylated form of the innermost domain (E2plip(apo)) was determined by multidimensional NMR spectroscopy and found to resemble closely that of a nonfunctional hybrid domain determined previously [Green et al. (1995) J. Mol. Biol. 248, 328-343]. The domain comprises two four-stranded beta-sheets, with the target lysine residue residing at the tip of a type-I beta-turn in one of the sheets; the N- and C-termini lie close together at the opposite end of the molecule in the other beta-sheet. Measurement of (15)N NMR relaxation parameters and backbone hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange rates reveals that the residues in and surrounding the lipoyl-lysine beta-turn in the E2plip(apo) form of the domain become less flexible after lipoylation of the lysine residue. This implies that the lipoyl-lysine side chain may not sample the full range of conformational space once thought. Moreover, reductive acetylation of the lipoylated domain (E2plip(holo) --> E2plip(redac)) was accompanied by large changes in chemical shift between the two forms, and multiple resonances were observed for several residues. This implies a change in conformation and the existence of multiple conformations of the domain on reductive acetylation, which may be important in stabilizing this catalytic intermediate.
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PMID:Restricted motion of the lipoyl-lysine swinging arm in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli. 1091 50

A CpG-specific commitment common to both caspase-dependent and -independent cell deaths implies critical gene activity from epigenetic modulation. Using a focused microarray (genechip) of 22 housekeeping genes, which have canonical CpG islands at 5'-promoter regions, here we show critical regulation of vital intermediary metabolism and cell structure that are common to both caspase-dependent fasL-mediated and caspase-independent etoposide-mediated cell deaths. Gene activity of at least twofold under or over control levels and common to both cell death pathways was considered to be significantly regulated in common. Seven genes controlling energy production in glycolysis, tricarboxylic acid cycle, and the respiratory electron transport chain were significantly downregulated in common. Energy depletion is lethal. Downregulated pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 gene, in addition, suggested primary metabolic acidification. Cell acidification is also lethal. Critical derangement of the cell structure was suggested by common downregulation of the basal histone gene H2A.X which is required for nucleosome assembly. Common upregulation of the alpha-tubulin gene suggested perturbation of vital microtubular dynamics. Gene-commanded cell suicide was suggested. We further show that a Bcl-2 overexpression of three- to fourfold above normal levels could not prevent the CpG-specific megabase DNA cleavages in the two cell death pathways, but abolished their low-molecular-weight 200-bp ladder cleavages. Together with incomplete suppression of the other apoptotic expressions, the Bcl-2 inhibition point appeared downstream from the CpG-cleavage commitment point.
Mol Cell Biol Res Commun 2000 May
PMID:Housekeeping genes commanded to commit suicide in CpG-cleavage commitment upstream of Bcl-2 inhibition in caspase-dependent and -independent pathways. 1096 57

Reductive acetylation of the lipoyl domain (E2plip) of the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Escherichia coli is catalysed specifically by its partner pyruvate decarboxylase (E1p), and no productive interaction occurs with the analogous 2-oxoglutarate decarboxylase (E1o) of the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex. Residues in the lipoyl-lysine beta-turn region of the unlipoylated E2plip domain (E2plip(apo)) undergo significant changes in both chemical shift and transverse relaxation time (T(2)) in the presence of E1p but not E1o. Residue Gly11, in a prominent surface loop between beta-strands 1 and 2 in the E2plip domain, was also observed to undergo a significant change in chemical shift. Addition of pyruvate to the mixture of E2plip(apo) and E1p caused larger changes in chemical shift and the appearance of multiple cross-peaks for certain residues, suggesting that the domain was experiencing more than one type of interaction. Residues in both beta-strands 4 and 5, together with those in the prominent surface loop and the following beta-strand 2, appeared to be interacting with E1p, as did a small patch of residues centred around Glu31. The values of T(2) across the polypeptide chain backbone were also lower than in the presence of E1p alone, suggesting that E2plip(apo) binds more tightly after the addition of pyruvate. The lipoylated domain (E2plip(holo)) also exhibited significant changes in chemical shift and decreases in the overall T(2) relaxation times in the presence of E1p, the residues principally affected being restricted to the half of the domain that contains the lipoyl-lysine (Lys41) residue. In addition, small chemical shift changes and a general drop in T(2) times in the presence of E1o were observed, indicating that E2plip(holo) can interact, weakly but non-productively, with E1o. It is evident that recognition of the protein domain is the ultimate determinant of whether reductive acetylation of the lipoyl group occurs, and that this is ensured by a mosaic of interactions with the Elp.
J Mol Biol 2001 Jan 05
PMID:Recognition of the lipoyl domain is the ultimate determinant of substrate channelling in the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex. 1111 46


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