scholarly journals The tricarboxylic acid cycle in Dictyostelium discoideum. A model of the cycle at preculmination and aggregation

1979 ◽  
Vol 184 (3) ◽  
pp. 589-597 ◽  
Author(s):  
P J Kelly ◽  
J K Kelleher ◽  
B E Wright

A preliminary model of tricarboxylic acid-cycle activity in Dictyostelium discoideum is presented. Specific-radioactivity labelling patterns of intra- and extra-mitochondrial pools are simulated by this model and compared with the experimental data. The model arrived at by this method shows the following features. (1) The cycle flux rate is approx. 0.4 mM/min. (2) Both fumarate and malate are compartmentalized at approx. 1:5 between cycle pools and non-cycle pools. These may represent mitochondrial and cytoplasmic pools. Citrate is compartmentalized at 1:10. Succinate appears to exist in three compartments, two of which become labelled by [14C]glutamate and only one by [14C]aspartate (3) Two pools of aspartate with two associated pools of oxaloacetate are necessary for simulation. (4) Exchange between the cycle and non-cycle pools of both citrate and fumarate occurs at very low rates of about 0.003 mM/min, whereas exchange between the malate pools is about 0.004 mM/min. The exchange reaction glutamate in equilibrium 2-oxoglutarate runs at approx. 15 times the cycle flux. (5) A reaction catalysed by “malic” enzyme is included in the model, as this reaction is necessary for complete oxidation of amino acid substrates. (6) Calculation of the ATP yield from the model is consistent with earlier estimates of ATP turnover if the activity of adenylate kinase is considered.

1979 ◽  
Vol 184 (1) ◽  
pp. 185-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
L A Sauer ◽  
R T Dauchy ◽  
W O Nagel

An NAD(P)+-dependent ‘malic’ enzyme is shown to be present in mitochondria from small-intestinal mucosa. The intracellular location, activity and regulatory kinetic properties of the enzyme suggest that it participates in the major energy-producing pathway for net oxidation of glutamine-derived tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates.


1968 ◽  
Vol 110 (2) ◽  
pp. 313-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. F. Heath

A scheme is presented that shows how the reactions involved in gluconeogenesis, glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle are linked in rat liver. Equations are developed that show how label is redistributed in aspartate, glutamate and phosphopyruvate when it is introduced as specifically labelled pyruvate or glucose either at a constant rate (steady-state theory) or at a variable rate (non-steady-state theory). For steady-state theory the fractions of label introduced as specifically labelled pyruvate that are incorporated into glucose and carbon dioxide are also given, and for both theories the specific radioactivities of aspartate and glutamate relative to the specific radioactivity of the substrate. The theories allow for entry of label into the tricarboxylic acid cycle via both oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA, for 14CO2 fixation and for loss of label from the tricarboxylic acid cycle in glutamate, but not for losses in citrate. They also allow for incomplete symmetrization of label in oxaloacetate due to incomplete equilibration with fumarate both in the extramitochondrial part of the cell and in the mitochondrion on entry of oxaloacetate into the tricarboxylic acid cycle. In the latter case failure both of oxaloacetate to equilibrate with malate and of malate to equilibrate with fumarate are considered.


1977 ◽  
Vol 23 (7) ◽  
pp. 916-921 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Lewis ◽  
J. D. A. Miller

Strains of two species of Desulfovibrio were examined for enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and related pathways. Pyruvate carboxylase (EC 6.4.1.1) is present, and α-ketoglutarate is formed via the tricarboxylic acids. Glutamate, but not succinyl-CoA, arises from α-ketoglutarate. A pathway exists from pyruvate by malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.39) activity to malate, then fumarate and succinate, again with no evidence of succinyl-CoA formation. The enzymes concerned with metabolism of these dicarboxylic acids show greater activity in the strains that can grow by fumarate dismutation. Glutamate (or glutamine), α-ketoglutarate, and yeast extract repress the enzymes that metabolize the tricarboxylic acids. There appears to be no glyoxylate cycle in Desulfovibrio vulgaris or D. desulfuricans.


1982 ◽  
Vol 202 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
K J Peuhkurinen ◽  
I E Hassinen

1. The role of pyruvate carboxylation in the net synthesis of tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates during acetate metabolism was studied in isolated rat hearts perfused with [1-14C]pyruvate. 2. The incorporation of the 14C label from [1-14C]pyruvate into the tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates points to a carbon input from pyruvate via enzymes in addition to pyruvate dehydrogenase and citrate synthase. 3. On addition of acetate, the specific radioactivity of citrate showed an initial maximum at 2 min, with a subsequent decline in labelling. The C-6 of citrate (which is removed in the isocitrate dehydrogenase reaction) and the remainder of the molecule showed differential labelling kinetics, the specific radioactivity of C-6 declining more rapidly. Since this carbon is lost in the isocitrate dehydrogenase reaction, the results are consistent with a rapid inactivation of pyruvate dehydrogenase after the addition of acetate, which was confirmed by measuring the 14CO2 production from [1-14C]pyruvate. 4. The results can be interpreted to show that carboxylation of pyruvate to the C4 compounds of the tricarboxylic acid cycle occurs under conditions necessitating anaplerosis in rat myocardium, although the results do not identify the enzyme involved. 5. The specific radioactivity of tissue lactate was too low to allow it to be used as an indicator of the specific radioactivity of the intracellular pyruvate pool. The specific radioactivity of alanine was three times that of lactate. When the hearts were perfused with [1-14C]lactate, the specific radioactivity of alanine was 70% of that of pyruvate. The results suggest that a subcompartmentation of lactate and pyruvate occurs in the cytosol.


1971 ◽  
Vol 121 (3) ◽  
pp. 469-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Patel ◽  
R. Balázs

1. The effects of treatment with thyroid hormone (tri-iodothyronine) and of neonatal thyroidectomy on the cerebral metabolism of [U-14C]leucine were investigated during the period of functional maturation of the rat brain extending from 9 to 25 days after birth. 2. Age-dependent changes in the labelling of brain constituents under normal conditions appear to depend on changes in the availability of blood-borne [14C]leucine resulting from differential rates of growth of body and brain; but developmental changes in the pool size of free leucine and in the rates of protein synthesis and oxidation of leucine are also involved. 3. Treatment with thyroid hormone had no significant effect on the conversion of leucine carbon into proteins and lipids; and the age-dependent changes in the concentration and specific radioactivity of leucine were similar to controls. On the other hand there was an acceleration in the conversion of leucine carbon into amino acids associated with the tricarboxylic acid cycle. These observations indicate that leucine oxidation was the process mainly affected. 4. The specific radioactivity of glutamine relative to that of glutamate was used as an index of metabolic compartmentation in brain tissue. Treatment with thyroid hormone advanced the development of metabolic compartmentation. 5. Neonatal thyroidectomy led to a marked decrease in the conversion of leucine carbon into proteins and lipids and to a significant increase in the amount of 14C combined in the amino acids associated with the tricarboxylic acid cycle. The age-dependent increase in the glutamate/glutamine specific-radioactivity ratio was strongly retarded. 6. The increased conversion of leucine carbon into cerebral amino acids applied to glutamate and aspartate, but not to glutamine and γ-aminobutyrate. This observation facilitated the understanding of the effects of thyroid deprivation on brain metabolism and provided new evidence for the allocation of morphological structures to the metabolic compartments in brain tissue. 7. In contrast with the marked effects of the thyroid state on metabolic compartmentation, it had relatively little effect on the developmental changes in the concentration of amino acids in the brain. 8. The rate of conversion of leucine carbon into the ‘cycle amino acids’ both under normal conditions and in thyroid deficiency indicated a special metabolic relationship between glutamate and aspartate on the one hand, and glutamine and γ-aminobutyrate on the other.


1987 ◽  
Vol 243 (3) ◽  
pp. 853-857 ◽  
Author(s):  
K E Sundqvist ◽  
J Heikkilä ◽  
I E Hassinen ◽  
J K Hiltunen

Cytosolic and mitochondrial concentrations of malate, 2-oxoglutarate, isocitrate and pyruvate in the isolated perfused rat heart were measured by non-aqueous tissue fractionation, taking the NADP-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase as indicator reactions for the free [NADPH]/[NADP+] ratios. The mass-action ratios of NADP-linked malic enzymes (EC 1.1.1.40) were found to be on the side of pyruvate carboxylation by more than one order of magnitude in both the cytosolic and the mitochondrial spaces in hearts perfused with glucose, whereas during propionate perfusion this ratio approached the equilibrium constant (Keq.) of malic enzyme. The results consequently indicate that the NADP-linked malic enzymes cannot be responsible for the feed-out (cataplerotic) reactions from the tricarboxylic acid cycle which occur during glucose perfusion. Only when other anaplerotic fluxes into the cycle are high, as during propionate oxidation, which results in accumulation of tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates, is a steady state reached which allows efflux via the malic enzyme.


1970 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
pp. 469-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Hammond ◽  
Y. Machiyama ◽  
R. Balázs ◽  
T. Julian ◽  
D. Richter

1. The metabolism of γ-aminobutyrate (GABA) was investigated in cerebral-cortex slices incubated in glucose–saline medium with [1-14C]GABA and [U-14C]-glucose as labelled substrates. 2. A rapid release of GABA from the tissue, amounting to 25–30% of the total, was observed on addition of 66m-equiv. of K+/1 to the medium; the liberation of other amino acids was relatively small. The effect was apparently specific for K+; GABA was not released on addition of equivalent amounts of Na+ or on increasing the respiration rate with 10mm-ammonium chloride. The results show that GABA behaves like the transmitter compounds (acetylcholine, catecholamines) on K+ stimulation, and therefore now satisfies certain of the criteria required for a transmitter in mammalian brain. 3. The release of GABA from the tissue on addition of K+ was followed by a slow re-uptake. The rate of uptake of GABA in a medium containing 5.9m-equiv. of K+/1 was more than four times that in a medium containing 66m-equiv. of K+/1. 4. The concentration of GABA in brain tissue incubated for 1h in a medium containing 66m-equiv. of K+/1 was about 50% higher than that observed under normal conditions. 5. There was evidence that exogenous [14C]GABA mixed with the endogenous pool(s), since the proportion of the total GABA released on K+ stimulation was the same, and the specific radioactivity of the liberated GABA was close to that remaining in the tissue, whether the GABA was labelled by [1-14C]GABA from the medium or generated in the tissue from [14C]glucose. 6. On the basis of these findings and the observations outlined in the preceding papers it was possible to calculate the kinetic constants of GABA metabolism by computer simulation of the results. K+ stimulation led to a 2.5-fold increase in the flux through the tricarboxylic acid cycle, whereas the flux in the GABA bypath was little affected; as a result the flux through the GABA bypath, which under normal conditions was 8% of that through the tricarboxylic acid cycle, decreased to 3–5%. 7. The metabolism of glutamine was greatly affected by K+-stimulation. The ratio of the concentration of glutamine in the slices to that in the medium, which under normal conditions was the smallest among the amino acids investigated, increased from about 17 to 63 in 1h. This effect was attributable partly to an uptake of glutamine from the medium (1.8μmol/h per g) and partly to a net increase in the total amount of glutamine (2.6μmol/h per g). At 1h after the addition of K+ the net gain of glutamine could be accounted for by the decrease of glutamate. 8. Metabolic compartmentation was evident when brain-cortex slices were incubated in glucose–saline medium and the labelled substrate was [14C]GABA, since the specific radioactivity of glutamine exceeded that of glutamate. On addition of K+ the signs of metabolic compartmentation promptly disappeared: this effect was apparently associated with an increase in the permeability of the compartments containing labelled metabolites derived from [14C]GABA. The change in the permeability, however, did not affect all the compartments; when the labelled substrate was [14C]glucose the equilibration of labelled amino acids between tissue and medium was similar under normal conditions and in the presence of high concentrations of K+. 9. The metabolism of [14C]glucose was followed by measuring oxygen uptake, respiratory 14CO2, and incorporation of 14C into amino acids. The results showed that K+ stimulation increased the flux of glucose carbon, both in the glycolytic pathway and in the tricarboxylic acid cycle.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document