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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glutamate dehydrogenase activity was found to be present at a high level in neoplastic cytosol and microsomes, 3.45 and 9.90 nmoles
NADH
/min mg protein, respectively. This remains in accordance with the high rate of RNA and protein synthesis in the neoplastic process.
Mol
Biol Rep 1979 Dec 31
PMID:Glutamate dehydrogenase activity in subcellular fractions of mouse fibrosarcoma. 53 Feb 74
Gluconeogenesis by isolated hepatocytes resulted in glucose release but insignificant rates of glycogen synthesis. The effectiveness of precursors was similar for hepatocytes from fed and starved chickens except for impaired gluconeogenesis from pyruvate when compared to lactate in lactate starved chicken hepatocytes. The impairment was caused by limitations in cytosolic
NADH
production as a result of the mitochondrial location of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in chicken liver. The order of effectiveness of precursors on hepatic gluconeogenesis was generally similar to the effects of precursors on increasing the plasma glucose concentration in vivo. The exceptions were caused by interactions with other precursors in vivo. The alteration of the
NADH
/NAD+ ratio by ethanol and ATP/ADP ratio by adenosine could play significant roles in the control of precursor conversion to glucose. Physiological glucagon concentrations stimulated gluconeogenesis from precursors entering the pathway both above and below the level of triose phosphates, and its effect were mimicked by dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Previous results on the effects of precursor and glucagon injection on the plasma glucose concentration of chickens in vivo can largely be explained by effects at the hepatic level. Isolated chicken and rat hepatocytes share many common features. Qualitatively the ordering of gluconeogenic effectiveness was similar but quantitive differences existed as a result of differing activities and cellular locations of enzymes. Neither preparation readily synthesised glycogen and the sensitivity to glucagon was similar.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1978 Dec 22
PMID:Hepatic gluconeogenesis in chickens. 74 98
1. A mutant (ANT 8) of Schizosaccharomyces pombe which shows resistance to antimycin both in vivo and in vitro is characterized biochemically and genetically. 2. In crosses of ANT 8 with auxotrophic strains, resistance to antimycin segregates 2:2 indicating that resistance is conferred by a single nuclear gene. Diploids heterozygous for the resistance gene, however, show segregation of the resistance and sensitivity during mitosis. Possible reasons for this segregation are discussed. 3. Compared with the wild type, the
NADH
oxidase of ANT 8 requires 13 times as much antimycin for 95% inhibition. After addition of ubiquinone-3, electron transport which is less sensitive to antimycin is found only in the mutant. 4. The resistance of the mutant ANT 8 si due to the much weaker binding of antimycin to mitochondria. As in the wild type, two antimycin binding sites can be separated by binding studies. From the inhibition curves it is evident that binding of antimycin to oxidized mitochondrial particles does not correspond with its inhibitory effect on the partly reduced enzyme in kinetic studies. 5. The peak of the b-cytochrome absorbing at 560.2 nm at 77 degrees K in the wild type is shifted to 561 nm in the mutant. 6. A special preparation method for mutant mitochondrial particles is described, yielding highly active enzymes and CO-insensitive cytochromes. 7. The results are discussed with reference to the components in our model of the respiratory chain, which may be responsible for this type of resistance.
Mol
Gen Genet 1975
PMID:Studies on the mechanism of electron trasport in the bc1-segment of the respiratory chain in yeast. III. Isolation and characterization of an antimycin resistant mutant ANT 8 in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. 118 59
The synthesis of ketone bodies by intact isolated rat-liver mitochondria has been studied at varying rates of acetyl-CoA production and of acetyl-CoA utilization in the Krebs cycle. Factors which enhanced the rate of acetyl-CoA production caused an increase in the fraction of acetyl-CoA which was incorporated into ketone bodies. On the other hand, it was found that factors which stimulated the formation of citrate lowered the relative rate of ketogenesis. It is concluded that acetyl-CoA is preferentially used for citrate synthesis, if the level of oxaloacetate in the mitochondrial matrix space is adequate. The intramitochondrial level of oxaloacetate, which is determined by the malate concentration and the ratio of
NADH
over NAD+, is the main factor controlling the rate of citrate synthesis. The ATP/ADP ratio per se does not affect the activity of citrate synthase in this in vitro system. Ketogenesis can be described as an overflow of acetyl-groups: Ketone-body formation is stimulated only when the rate of acetyl-CoA production increases beyond the capacity for citrate synthesis. The interaction between fatty acid oxidation and pyruvate metabolism and the effects of long-chain acyl-CoA on mitochondrial metabolism are discussed. Ketone bodies which were generated during the oxidation of [1-14C] fatty acids were preferentially labelled in their carboxyl group. This carboxyl group had the same specific activity as the acetyl-CoA pool, whereas the specific activity of the acetone moiety of acetoacetate was much lower, especially at low rates of ketone-body formation. The activities of acetoacetyl-CoA deacylase and the hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) pathway were compared in soluble and mitochondrial fractions of rat- and cow-liver in different ketotic states. In rat-liver mitochondria, both pathways of acetoacetate synthesis were stimulated upon starvation or in alloxan diabetes. In cow liver, only the HMG-CoA pathway was increased during ketosis in the mitochondrial as well as in the soluble fraction.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1975 Dec 31
PMID:Aspects of ketogenesis: control and mechanism of ketone-body formation in isolated rat-liver mitochondria. 119 5
Palmitylcarnitine oxidation by isolated liver mitochondria has been used to investigate the interaction of fatty acid oxidation with malate, glutamate, succinate, and the malate-aspartate shuttle. Mitochondria preincubated with fluorocitrate were added to a medium containing 2mM ATP and ATPase. This system, characterized by a high energy change, allowed titration of respiration to any desired rate between States 4 and 3 (Chance, B., and Williams, G. R. (1956) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas
Mol
. Biol. 17, 65-134). When respiration (reference, with palmitylcarnitine and malate as substrates) was set at 75% of State 3, the oxidation of palmitylcarnitine was limited by acetoacetate formation. The addition of malate or glutamate approximately doubled the rate of beta oxidation. Malate circumvented this limitation by citrate formation, but the effect of glutamate apparently was due to enhancement of the capacity for ketogenesis. The rate of beta oxidation was curtailed when malate and glutamate were both present. This curtailment was more pronounced when the malate-aspartate shuttle was fully reconstituted. Among the oxidizable substrates examined, succinate was most effective in inhibiting palmitylcarnitine oxidation. Mitochondrial
NADH
/NAD+ ratios were correlated positively with suppression of beta oxidation. The degree of suppression of beta oxidation by the malate-aspartate shuttle (
NADH
oxidation) or by succinate oxidation was dependent on the respiratory state. Both substrates extensively reduced mitochondrial NAD+ and markedly suppressed beta oxidation as respiration approached State 4. Calculations of the rates of flux of hydrogen equivalents through beta oxidation show that the suppression of beta oxidation by glutamate or by the malate-aspartate shuttle is accounted for by increased flux of reducing equivalents through mitochondrial malic dehydrogenase. This increased Flux is accompanied by an increase in the steady state
NADH
/NAD+ ratio and a marked decrease in the synthesis of citrate. The alpha-glycerophosphate shuttle was reconstituted with mitochondria isolated from rats treated with L-thyroxine. This shuttle was about equal to the reconstructed malate-aspartate shuttle in supression of palmitylcarnitine oxidation. This interaction could not be demonstrated in euthyroid animals owing to the low activity of the mitochondrial alpha-glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase. It is concluded that beta oxidation can be regulated by the
NADH
/NAD+ ratio. The observed stimulation of flux through malate dehydrogenase both by glutamate and by the malate-aspartate shuttle results in an increased steady state
NADH
/NAD+ ratio, and is linked to a stoichiometric outward transport of aspartate. We suggest, therefore, that some of the reducing pressure exerted by the malate-aspartate shuttle and by glutamate plus malate is provided through the energy-linked, electrogenic transport of aspartate out of the mitochondria. These results are discussed with respect to the mechanism of the genesis of ethanol-induced fatty liver.
...
PMID:Suppression of the mitochondrial oxidation of (-)-palmitylcarnitine by the malate-aspartate and alpha-glycerophosphate shuttles. 124 72
The oxidation of
NADH
and accompanying reduction of oxygen to H2O2 stimulated by polyvanadate was markedly inhibited by SOD and cytochrome c. The presence of decavanadate, the polymeric form, is necessary for obtaining the microsomal enzyme-catalyzed activity. The accompanying activity of reduction of cytochrome c was found to be SOD-insensitive and therefore does not represent superoxide formation. The reduction of cytochrome c by vanadyl sulfate was also SOD-insensitive. In the presence of H2O2, all the forms of vanadate were able to oxidize reduced cytochrome c, which was sensitive to mannitol, tris and also catalase, indicating H2O2-dependent generation of hydroxyl radicals. Using ESR and spin trapping technique only hydroxyl radicals, but not superoxide anion radicals, were detected during polyvanadate-dependent
NADH
oxidation.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1992 Apr
PMID:Characterization of oxygen free radicals generated during vanadate-stimulated NADH oxidation. 131 4
The activity of pure calf-liver and Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductases decreased drastically in the presence of NADPH or
NADH
, while NADP+, NAD+ and oxidized E. coli thioredoxin activated both enzymes significantly, particularly the bacterial one. The loss of activity under reducing conditions was time-dependent, thus suggesting an inactivation process: in the presence of 0.24 mM NADPH the half-lives for the E. coli and calf-liver enzymes were 13.5 and 2 min, respectively. Oxidized E. coli thioredoxin fully protected both enzymes from inactivation, and also promoted their complete reactivation after only 30 min incubation at 30 degrees C. Lower but significant protection and reactivation was also observed with NADP+ and NAD+. EDTA protected thioredoxin reductase from NADPH inactivation to a great degree, thus indicating the participation of metals in the process; EGTA did not protect the enzyme from redox inactivation. Thioredoxin reductase was extensively inactivated by NADPH under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, thus excluding the participation of O2 or oxygen active species in redox inactivation. The loss of thioredoxin reductase activity promoted by NADPH was much faster and complete in the presence of NAD+ glycohydrolase, thus suggesting that inactivation was related to full reduction of the redox-active disulfide. Those results indicate that thioredoxin reductase activity can be modulated in bacteria and mammals by the redox status of NADP(H) and thioredoxin pools, in a similar way to glutathione reductase. This would considerably expand the regulatory potential of the thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system with the enzyme being self-regulated by its own substrate, a regulatory protein.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1992 Jan 15
PMID:NADPH and oxidized thioredoxin mediate redox interconversion of calf-liver and Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductase. 131 49
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), either alone or in combination with cytokines, induces nitric oxide (NO) synthase activity in cells that normally release little or no NO. In arterial smooth muscle cells and various macrophage cell lines, NO synthase activity is induced after several hours of incubation with LPS. In brain, NADPH-dependent diaphorase activity has been associated with constitutive NO synthase. Here we show that incubation of rat aorta or cultured macrophages with LPS causes a time-dependent induction of NO synthase. The NO synthase activity in both rat aorta and macrophages was calcium independent and inhibited by NG-monomethyl-L-arginine and NG-nitro-L-arginine. We also found that LPS caused a time-dependent induction in NADPH-dependent diaphorase activity in both rat aorta and cultured macrophages. The diaphorase activity was mainly NADPH dependent and
NADH
independent. NO synthase activity and NADPH-diaphorase activity in crude cytosol from LPS-treated macrophages were found to co-purify, using 2',5'-ADP-Sepharose followed by Superose-6 gel permeation chromatography.
Mol
Pharmacol 1992 Jun
PMID:Induction of NADPH-dependent diaphorase and nitric oxide synthase activity in aortic smooth muscle and cultured macrophages. 137 28
3 alpha-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3 alpha-HSD) was purified greater than 500-fold from human liver cytosol. The purification was monitored using 5 beta-[3H]dihydrocortisol (5 beta-DHF) as substrate. Electrophoretically homogeneous enzyme was obtained using a procedure that involved ammonium sulfate precipitation and three successive column chromatography steps: DEAE-cellulose, hydroxylapatite and Blue-Sepharose. The enzyme is a monomer since the native molecular weight was found to be 37,000, using a calibrated Sephadex G-75 column, and the denatured subunit molecular weight was determined to be 38,500, by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. The enzyme had a pI of 5.6-5.9. The 3-ketosteroids: cortisol, testosterone, progesterone and androstenedione, were not substrates for 3 alpha-HSD indicating that a saturated 4,5 double bond was required for substrate activity. The conformation at the 5 position, however, did not influence substrate activity since 5 alpha- and 5 beta-DHF and 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone were all reduced at similar rates. The purified enzyme preferred NADPH to
NADH
as a cofactor and showed a broad peak of activity in the pH range of 6.8-7.4. The apparent Km for 5 beta-DHF was 18 microM. The enzyme was markedly stabilized by 50 mM phosphate buffer containing 10 to 20% glycerol at 4 degrees C. Freezing and thawing of the enzyme resulted in a large loss of activity during early stages of the purification. This is the first report of the purification to homogeneity of 3 alpha-HSD from human tissue.
J Steroid Biochem
Mol
Biol 1992 Oct
PMID:Purification and properties of human hepatic 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. 139 Feb 84
The gene encoding the streptococcal flavoprotein
NADH
oxidase (NOXase), which catalyzes the four-electron reduction of O2-->2H2O, has been cloned and sequenced from the genome of Streptococcus (Enterococcus) faecalis 10C1 (ATCC 11700). The deduced NOXase protein sequence corresponds to a molecular mass of 48.9 kDa and contains three previously sequenced cysteinyl peptides obtained with the purified enzyme. In Escherichia coli, the expressed nox gene produced a catalytically active product, which retained its immunoreactivity to affinity-purified NOXase antisera. Alignment of the NOXase protein sequence with that of streptococcal NADH peroxidase (NPXase) revealed that the proteins are 44% identical. Among the most highly conserved segments is a sequence containing Cys42; this residue is known to exist as a stabilized cysteine-sulfenic acid (Cys-SOH) in NPXase and serves as the non-flavin redox center. In addition, three previously identified NPXase segments, known to be involved in FAD and NAD(P)-binding in other pyridine nucleotide-linked flavoprotein oxidoreductases, are strongly conserved in NOXase. Overall, the extensive homology observed between NOXase and NPXase suggests that the monomer chain fold of the oxidase closely resembles that of the peroxidase. Both sequences share limited but significant homology to those of glutathione reductase and other members of the flavoprotein disulfide reductase family. These and other considerations suggest that these two unusual streptococcal flavoproteins constitute a distinct class of FAD-dependent oxidoreductases, the flavoprotein peroxide reductases, easily contrasted with enzymes such as glutathione reductase and thioredoxin reductase.
J
Mol
Biol 1992 Oct 05
PMID:Molecular cloning and analysis of the gene encoding the NADH oxidase from Streptococcus faecalis 10C1. Comparison with NADH peroxidase and the flavoprotein disulfide reductases. 140 82
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