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Enzyme
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Query: UNIPROT:P17174 (
aspartate aminotransferase
)
14,872
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The levels of several enzymes have been studied during sporulation of Saccharomyces cerevisia. The specific activities of
ribonuclease
and aminopeptidase I raised several-fold after transfer of the cells to sporulation medium, whereas the specific activities of phosphofructokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, tryptophan synthase and pyruvate decarboxylase were not significantly altered. The specific activities of NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase, isocitrate lyase, malate dehydrogenase and fructose bisphosphatase all decreased from the onset of sporulation. The inactivation of these latter enzymes was inhibited by cycloheximide and by inhibitors of energy metabolism. Hexokinase, alcohol dehydrogenase and
glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase
were partially lost from the cells during the period of ascus maturation. None of the enzyme changes observed proved to be 'sporulation-specific' in that it occurred exclusively in sporulating diploid yeast cells. Therefore it is postulated that the meiotic events and the metabolic changes required for ascospore formation are under separate genetic control in this organism. During sporulation, the cellular content of cytochromes b, c, and aa3 was reduced to 20% or less of that present in vegetative derepressed cells. Since the relative percentage of total to cycloheximide-insensitive mitochondrial protein synthesis was not significantly altered throughout sporulation, and the pattern of mitochondrially synthesized polypeptides was rather similar both in vegetative and in sporulating cells, it appeared that not only degradation but also synthesis and therefore turnover of the mitochondrially coded polypeptides of cytochromes b and aa3 took place during sporulation. The activity ratio of cytochrome c oxidase to F1-ATPase in submitochondrial particles isolated from vegetative cells and from purified asci was almost identical. This indicates that the loss of membrane-bound mitochondrial cytochromes during sporulation is probably due to a nonselective degradation of inner mitochondrial membrane proteins.
...
PMID:Protein degradation during yeast sporulation. Enzyme and cytochrome patterns. 18 44
Lysosomal degradation of intracellular proteins during serum withdrawal is stimulated by a member of the 70-kDa heat shock protein (hsp70) family (Chiang, H.-L., Terlecky, S. R., Plant, C. P., and Dice, J. F. (1989) Science 246, 382-385). This hsp70, isolated by affinity chromatography with
RNase
S-peptide-Sepharose, is referred to as the 73-kDa peptide recognition protein (prp73). We now report that prp73 binds to several proteins and peptides whose degradative rates are increased during serum withdrawal. prp73 also binds to the pentapeptide, KFERQ, and more weakly to most modified
RNase
S-peptide derivatives with a single amino acid substitution within the KFERQ sequence. Taken together, these results suggest that prp73 binds to a variety of proteins at peptide regions biochemically related to KFERQ. Three lines of evidence indicate that prp73 is the heat shock cognate protein of 73 kDa (hsc73): (a) among five hsp70s tested, hsc73 binds to
RNase
S-peptide most avidly, (b) both prp73 and hsc73 also bind to
RNase A
and
aspartate aminotransferase
but not to ovalbumin, lysozyme, or ubiquitin, and (c) both prp73 and hsc73 promote uptake and degradation of [3H]
RNase
S-peptide by lysosomes in vitro, while three other hsp70s are without activity in this assay.
...
PMID:Protein and peptide binding and stimulation of in vitro lysosomal proteolysis by the 73-kDa heat shock cognate protein. 157 55
Immunochemical techniques with enzymes as the antigen have grown in frequency during the last few years. These techniques have allowed evaluation of enzymes in the presence of endogenous inhibitors. Among those enzymes measured by immunochemical techniques and which have found diagnostic application, mention will be made of alkaline phosphatase (with particular reference to the intestinal, placental, and Regan isoenzymes), lactate dehydrogenase (in which renewed interest has developed due to techniques for specifically measuring the LD-1 isoenzyme),
aspartate aminotransferase
(of which the cytosolic and mitochondrial forms can now be independently measured by immunochemical techniques), acid phosphatase (for which a specific immunochemical assay for the prostatic enzyme has been widely introduced in diagnostic laboratories), and creatine kinase (for which a variety of immunochemical techniques to measure the M- and B-subunits are now part of standard laboratory assays). Other enzymes which will be discussed in this review include phosphohexose isomerase, amylase,
ribonuclease
, and lysozyme (muramidase). Finally, the use of enzymes, particularly asparaginase, in the chemotherapy of cancer will be outlined.
...
PMID:Immunoassay of enzymes--an overview. 634 26
The activities of alanine aminotransferase (ES 2.6.1.2),
aspartate aminotransferase
(EC 2.6.1.1) and monoaminoxidase (EC 1.4.3.4) in the liver nuclei and mitochondria of human fes rises gradually beginning from the early periods of the antenatal development till birth and reaches the highest value in the last month of the fetus intra-uterine life. The monoaminoxidase activity is found in the liver nuclei of 21-32-week human feti. The activity of
RNase
(EC 2.7.7.16) and DNase (EC 3.1.4.5) in the liver nuclei is 10 and 15 times as low, respectively, by the 40th week of development, and 1.5 times as low in mitochondria.
...
PMID:[Comparative characteristics of the activity of enzyme systems for nitrogen metabolism in the liver of human fetuses during embryogenesis]. 713 1
We have studied the expression and regulation of the rat testis
cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase
gene. The
cytosolic aspartate aminotransferase
activity was 5-fold lower in the testis than in the liver and kidney. A 1.9-kilobase mRNA form was detected in the rat testis in contrast to the 2.1- and 1.8-kilobase forms present in other organs. Using Northern blot and S1 mapping analyses, we found that the proximal polyadenylation site was almost exclusively used in the testis as opposed to other organs where the distal site was preferentially used.
RNase
protection and primer extension analysis showed that transcription was initiated at multiple sites in all organs, but the pattern of those start sites was different in the testis; in particular, a novel transcription start site was specifically detected in this organ (at position -115 from the translation start site). This site was first observed in 29-day-old rats and was maximally utilized in the adult testis. DNase I footprinting using testis nuclear extracts revealed the presence of three sites of DNA-protein interaction in the 250-base pair proximal promoter, a pattern similar to the one found using liver nuclear extracts. However, the proteins bound had different properties as shown by gel retardation experiments. We conclude that the pattern of transcription initiation and the polyadenylation site selection of a housekeeping gene can be tissue-specific.
...
PMID:Testis-specific transcription start site in the aspartate aminotransferase housekeeping gene promoter. 817 62
During differentiation of mouse 3T3-L1 fibroblasts to an adipocyte phenotype, the mitochondrial isoform of
aspartate aminotransferase
accumulates on the plasma membrane. The determination of whether this reflects translation of an alternatively spliced message lacking the mitochondrial leader sequence required cloning of the enzyme's uncommon a allele, for which these cells are homozygous. The 1.4-kb cDNA sequence of the a allele was obtained from oligo-dT-primed reverse-transcriptase PCR products amplified from FVB mouse RNA. It differed from the b allele at only 2 bp and one amino acid. By contrast, gene-specific primers generated an additional 1.4-kb fragment that differed from the b allele by approximately 1% of nucleotides, encoding four amino acid substitutions. This sequence proved to represent a recently diverged processed pseudogene. The presence of such pseudogenes can complicate interpretation of expressed-sequence-tag data and single-nucleotide-polymorphism genotyping studies. Using probes derived from the a allele,
RNase
protection analyses indicated that only a single message for the enzyme was present in 3T3-L1 fibroblasts and adipocytes, despite differences in subcellular protein distribution.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase: direction of a single protein with two distinct functions to two subcellular sites does not require alternative splicing of the mRNA. 1064 97
Legionella pneumophila is an aquatic bacterium that is also the agent of Legionnaires' disease pneumonia. Since L. pneumophila is transmitted directly from the environment to the lung, it is important to understand how legionellae survive at low temperatures. To identify genes that are needed for L. pneumophila growth at low temperature, we screened a population of mutagenized legionellae for strains that are specifically impaired for growth at 17 degrees C. From the 7,400 mutants tested, 11 displayed defects ranging from ca. 10-fold to a complete inability to grow at the low temperature. PCR and sequence analysis were then utilized to identify the genes whose loss had compromised growth. The proteins thereby implicated in low-temperature growth included components of the type II secretion system (LspE, LspG, LspH), a lipid A biosynthetic enzyme (LpxP), a
ribonuclease
(RNAse R), an RNA helicase (CsdA/DeaD), TCA cycle enzymes (citrate synthase), enzymes linked to fatty acid (FadB) or amino acid (
aspartate aminotransferase
) catabolism, and two putative membrane proteins that were, based upon their sequences, unlike previously characterized proteins. Given the magnitude of their mutant's defect, the
aspartate aminotransferase
, RNA helicase, and one of the putative membrane proteins were the factors most critical for L. pneumophila low-temperature growth. Thus, L. pneumophila not only employs some of the same processes and factors as other bacteria do in order to survive at low temperatures (e.g., LpxP, CsdA), but it also appears to possess novel modes of cold adaptation.
...
PMID:Mediators of lipid A modification, RNA degradation, and central intermediary metabolism facilitate the growth of Legionella pneumophila at low temperatures. 1976 2
This brief review discusses our current understanding of the molecular basis of enzyme catalysis. A historical development is presented, beginning with steady state kinetics and progressing through modern fast reaction methods, nuclear magnetic resonance, and single-molecule fluorescence techniques. Experimental results are summarized for
ribonuclease
,
aspartate aminotransferase
, and especially dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). Multiple intermediates, multiple conformations, and cooperative conformational changes are shown to be an essential part of virtually all enzyme mechanisms. In the case of DHFR, theoretical investigations have provided detailed information about the movement of atoms within the enzyme-substrate complex as the reaction proceeds along the collective reaction coordinate for hydride transfer. A general mechanism is presented for enzyme catalysis that includes multiple intermediates and a complex, multidimensional standard free energy surface. Protein flexibility, diverse protein conformations, and cooperative conformational changes are important features of this model.
...
PMID:Flexibility, diversity, and cooperativity: pillars of enzyme catalysis. 2202 78
The serum and hepatic enzymes of rats were studied after exposed to country made liquor (CML) along with two chelating agents (glutathione and Selenium). There was a significant increase in several serum enzyme levels (viz.,
aspartate transaminase
, alanine transaminase, alkaline phosphatase, sorbitol dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase, bilirubin) and decrease in various hepatic enzymes (Succinic dehydrogenase, Glucose 6-phosphatase, 5'Nucleotiease, Acid phosphatase, Acid
ribonuclease
, Cytochrome P-450) due to repeated administration of CML (2ml/100g of body weight). Results of this study revealed that the GSH and Se could give a significant protective action in serum and hepatic enzymes of CML exposed rats.
...
PMID:Biochemical activity of selenium and glutathione on country made liquor (CML) induced hepatic damage in rats. 2310 62