Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P17174 (aspartate aminotransferase)
14,872 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of cortical lesions and intrastriatal kainic acid injections on various striatal enzyme activities were investigated. Ornithine aminotransferase decreased concomitantly with glutamate uptake in decorticated and chronic kainic acid-treated rats. It was also decreased in acute kainic acid-lesioned striatum where glutamate uptake was unaffected. Aspartate aminotransferase, however, decreased only after acute kainic acid treatment. Results for glutamate uptake, glutamate decarboxylase, and choline acetyltransferase were in agreement with previous findings. These results suggest that ornithine may act as a precursor for glutamate in nerve terminals, although the nonspecific localization does not allow ornithine aminotransferase to be a convenient biochemical marker. The decrease in aspartate aminotransferase is thought to be due to the widespread cell degeneration after acute kainic acid. Aspartate aminotransferase activities were also found to be reduced in the frontal cortex, caudate nucleus and putamen of Huntington's disease brains.
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PMID:Effects of kainic acid injection and cortical lesion on ornithine and aspartate aminotransferases in rat striatum. 613 Nov 42

There is substantial evidence supporting the role of aspartate or glutamate as the neurotransmitter of the auditory nerve. The concentration of aspartate aminotransferase (L-aspartate:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase, EC 2.6.1.1), an enzyme associated with the metabolism of these amino acids, is high in axons and terminals of the auditory nerve. Antibodies were raised against aspartate aminotransferase and used in immunocytochemical studies to determine its localization in the cochlear nucleus of the guinea pig. Indirect immunofluorescence techniques were used for light microscopic localization of aspartate aminotransferase-like immunoreactivity in normal guinea pigs and guinea pigs with auditory nerve lesions. Fluorescent rings of aspartate aminotransferase-like immunoreactivity were seen around spherical cells in the anteroventral cochlear nucleus. In animals with auditory nerve lesions, rings were no longer seen in the ipsilateral cochlear nucleus. Immunoreactivity was also seen on cells in the posteroventral cochlear nucleus and in auditory nerve fibers. Ultrastructural studies were done in the rostral anteroventral cochlear nucleus, using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique. Aspartate aminotransferase-like immunoreactivity was seen at axosomatic synapses on large spherical cells in terminals with the morphological characteristics of auditory nerve terminals. Other classes of terminals on the soma of large spherical cells showed no immunoreactivity. It was concluded that aspartate aminotransferase-like immunoreactivity is present in axons and terminals of the auditory nerve. These findings indicate that aspartate aminotransferase-like immunoreactivity may serve as a marker at terminals where aspartate or glutamate is a neurotransmitter.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical localization of aspartate aminotransferase immunoreactivity in cochlear nucleus of the guinea pig. 694 43

The electron distribution in the coenzyme-substrate adduct of aspartate aminotransferase was changed by replacing active-site Arg386 with alanine and introducing a new arginine residue nearby. [Y225R, R386A]Aspartate aminotransferase decarboxylates L-aspartate to L-alanine (kcat = 0.04 s-1), while its transaminase activity towards dicarboxylic amino acids is decreased by three orders of magnitude (kcat = 0.19 s-1). Molecular-dynamics simulations based on the crystal structure of the mutant enzyme suggest that a new hydrogen bond to the imine N atom of the pyridoxal-5'-phosphate- aspartate adduct and an altered electrostatic potential around its beta-carboxylate group underlie the 650,000-fold increase in the ratio of beta-decarboxylase/transaminase activity.
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PMID:Changing the reaction specificity of a pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzyme. 755 24

Leishmania isolates from patients in the Sudan suffering from either visceral or cutaneous leishmaniasis were characterized using a battery of 12 enzymes. Aspartate aminotransferase separated the L. donovani isolates into 2 distinct zymodemes, but the overall results showed no significant geographical variation among L. donovani isolates. In contrast, the isolates of L. major were polymorphic, exhibiting differences in nucleoside hydrolase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, superoxide dismutase, esterase, mannose phosphate isomerase, and aspartate aminotransferase, resulting in the description of 4 new enzymatic variants.
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PMID:Diversity among Leishmania isolates from the Sudan: isoenzyme homogeneity of L. donovani versus heterogeneity of L. major. 757 Aug 63

Determination of cellular enzyme activities in washout preservation solution used in hypothermic liver graft storage may allow development of an index that could be clinically valuable in prediction of early post-transplant graft function. In the present study, we collected washed out preservation fluid at the time of graft rinsing from 53 liver recipients. Aspartate aminotransferase and, to a lesser extent, lactate dehydrogenase levels correlated with early postoperative graft viability as assessed by 1-month graft survival and standard biochemical indices of liver function. Those patients with the highest aspartate aminotransferase activity in the washout preservation solution experienced the highest levels of this enzyme postoperatively (area-under-the-curve day 1-3; 1340 vs. 788 IU/L), total bilirubin (area-under-the-curve day 1-5; 901 vs. 538 mumol/L), and rejection frequency (67% vs. 31%) (all P < 0.05), with a significantly lower 1-month graft survival rate compared with patients with low effluent levels (62% vs. 92%, P < 0.05). Two markers of endothelial cell damage, purine nucleoside phosphorylase and a creatine kinase isoenzyme, measured in the fluid did not correlate with early graft viability. It is suggested that assay of aspartate aminotransferase activities in preservation fluid washout samples is a clinically useful indicator of graft viability.
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PMID:Relationship between early liver graft viability and enzyme activities in effluent preservation solution. 757 Sep 66

Aspartate aminotransferase is a pyridoxal-phosphate dependent enzyme which plays a key role in cell metabolism. We describe the cloning and sequence analysis of the cDNA encoding bovine mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase and compare the sequence with those of isoenzymes from other mammalian species. An adult bovine heart cDNA library constructed in lambda lambda gt11 was screened using two 32P-end labeled synthetic oligonucleotides. From the screening of the cDNA library two positive clones were isolated. A subclone in pEMBL18, 6B2, generated from the longest recombinant phage was further analyzed. This clone contains an insert of 2500 bp with an Open Reading Frame of 1287 bp that encodes a protein of 430 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence confirms previous results obtained by mass spectrometric sequencing. We calculated the percentage of amino acid identity for each protein pair and for each comparison the average number of amino acid substitution per site (Kaa); the lowest Kaa values were obtained from the comparison between the bovine and pig enzymes. This study shows that the rate of evolution of mammalian mitochondrial AspAT is lower and more constant than the equivalent cytosolic enzyme and adds to the growing body of knowledge on the evolution of the aspartate aminotransferase.
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PMID:Nucleotide sequence of a cDNA coding for bovine mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase. 764 Oct 80

Aspartate aminotransferase isoenzymes are located in both the cytosol and organelles of eukaryotes, but all are encoded in the nuclear genome. In the work described here, a phylogenetic analysis was made of aspartate aminotransferases from plants, animals, yeast, and a number of bacteria. This analysis suggested that five distinct branches are present in the aspartate aminotransferase tree. Mitochondrial forms of the enzyme form one distinct group, bacterial aspartate aminotransferase formed another, and the plant and vertebrate cytosolic isoenzymes each formed a distinct group. Plant cytosolic isozymes formed a further group of which the plastid sequences were a member. The yeast mitochondrial and cytosolic aspartate aminotransferases formed groups separate from other members of the family.
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PMID:Evolutionary analysis of aspartate aminotransferases. 776 21

In an attempt to change the reaction and substrate specificity of aspartate aminotransferase, several apolar active-site residues were substituted in turn with a histidine residue. Aspartate aminotransferase W140H (of Escherichia coli) racemizes alanine seven times faster (Kcat' = 2.2 x 10(-4) s-1) than the wild-type enzyme, while the aminotransferase activity toward L-alanine was sixfold decreased. X-ray crystallographic analysis showed that the structural changes brought about by the mutation are limited to the immediate environment of H140. In contrast to the tryptophan side chain in the wild-type structure, the imidazole ring of H140 does not form a stacking interaction with the coenzyme pyridine ring. The angle between the two ring planes is about 50 degrees. Pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate dissociates 50 times more rapidly from the W140H mutant than from the wild-type enzyme. A model of the structure of the quinonoid enzyme substrate intermediate indicates that H140 might assist in the reprotonation of C alpha of the amino acid substrate from the re side of the deprotonated coenzyme-substrate adduct in competition with si-side reprotonation by K258. In aspartate aminotransferase I17H (of chicken mitochondria), the substituted residue also lies on the re side of the coenzyme. This mutant enzyme slowly decarboxylates L-aspartate to L-alanine (Kcat' = 8 x 10(-5) s-1). No beta-decarboxylase activity is detectable in the wild-type enzyme. In aspartate aminotransferase V37H (of chicken mitochondria), the mutated residue lies besides the coenzyme in the plane of the pyridine ring; no change in reaction specificity was observed. All three mutations, i.e. W140-->H, I17-->H and V37--H, decreased the aminotransferase activity toward aromatic amino acids by 10-100-fold, while decreasing the activity toward dicarboxylic substrates only moderately to 20%, 20% and 60% of the activity of the wild-type enzymes, respectively. In all three mutant enzymes, the decrease in aspartate aminotransferase activity at pH values lower than 6.5 was more pronounced than in the wild-type enzyme, apparently due to the protonation of the newly introduced histidine residues. The study shows that substitutions of single active-site residues may result in altered reaction and substrate specificities of pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes.
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PMID:Substitution of apolar residues in the active site of aspartate aminotransferase by histidine. Effects on reaction and substrate specificity. 785 26

Molecular modeling suggested that the large and small domain of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase might be linked by an engineered disulfide bond that could be expected to interfere with ligand-induced and syncatalytic changes in conformation and thus to assist in the elucidation of their significance for the catalytic mechanism. His-352, which is situated in the small domain close to Cys-166 of the large domain, was replaced with a cysteine residue by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. Aspartate aminotransferase H352C, that had not been exposed to reducing conditions, in part contained a disulfide bond between Cys-166 and Cys-352. Exposure to a reducing agent cleaved the crosslink completely and produced an enzyme derivative with 8% of the activity of the wild type enzyme. Cu2+-mediated autoxidation resulted in complete formation of the disulfide bond and a decrease in enzymic activity to 2%. Independently of the redox state of the disulfide bond, the H352C substitution seems to shift the equilibrium from the open toward the closed conformation of the enzyme. This change in conformation was accompanied by an increase in the binding affinity for both the amino and oxo acid substrate by one order of magnitude. Apparently, 1-2 kcal/mol of the binding energy of the substrates are no longer diverted to shift the conformational equilibrium toward the closed conformation. The kcat/Km values were unchanged or even increased in the reduced form of the mutant enzyme and only slightly decreased in its oxidized form. Both the disulfide-independent decrease in enzymic activity, as observed in reduced aspartate aminotransferase H352C and also in two other mutant enzymes (C166H/H352C and H352Q), and the redox-dependent modulation of activity indicate that unhindered domain movements are essential for full catalytic competence of aspartate aminotransferase.
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PMID:Modulation of the activity of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase H352C by the redox state of the engineered interdomain disulfide bond. 792 41

We have examined the effects of administration of the blood substitute, liposome-encapsulated haemoglobin (LEH), in the normovolaemic rat. Test groups included LEH, lyophilized EH, the liposome vehicle, unencapsulated haemoglobin and normal saline, which were injected into the tail vein (n = 6; n = 3 for sham and saline groups). Administration of LEH (2.5 g phospholipid, 1.25 g haemoglobin/kg rat) was followed by blood sampling at 2 h, 24 h, 1 wk and 2 wk. Blood samples were analysed for alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyltransferase, total and indirect bilirubin, serum creatinine, albumin, total protein, lipase, cholesterol, blood urea nitrogen, haematocrit, haemoglobin and differential white blood cell counts. Observed effects following injection were mild and transient, with baseline values recovered at 1 wk. Alanine aminotransferase increased moderately in the LEH group at 24 h to 601 +/- 143 IU/dl (P < 0.0001), with a return to baseline at 1 wk. Aspartate aminotransferase showed a smaller increase from 46 +/- 5 to 162 +/- 40 at 24 h and also returned to baseline at the 1 wk measurement (P < 0.001). The transient increase in serum transaminases was not observed for the lyophilized LEH group. Tissue sections showed accumulation of liposome groups in resident macrophages of the liver and spleen. Incubation of an adherent population of human peripheral blood monocytes with LEH in culture did not elicit the production of the inflammatory cytokine, tumour necrosis factor. Pre-incubation of monocytes with LEH prior to exposure to endotoxin did, however, result in a reduced expression of this inflammatory cytokine.
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PMID:Transient changes in the mononuclear phagocyte system following administration of the blood substitute liposome-encapsulated haemoglobin. 798 44


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