Regulation of branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase kinase expression in rat liver. (41/535)

Branched-chain amino acids are toxic in excess but have to be conserved for protein synthesis. This is accomplished in large part by control of the activity of the branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation. Regulation of the activity of the hepatic enzyme appears particularly important, at least in rats, since an exceptional high activity of the complex in this tissue makes the liver the primary clearing house for excess branched-chain alpha-keto acids released by other tissues. The degree to which the branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex is inactivated by phosphorylation is determined by the activity of the branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase kinase, which is itself regulated by allosteric effectors as well as factors that affect its level of expression. Well established among these are the alpha-keto acid produced by leucine transamination, which is a potent inhibitor of the kinase, and starvation for dietary protein, which causes increased expression of the branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase kinase. The latter finding resulted in the working hypothesis that nutrients and hormones regulate expression of the branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase kinase. Evidence has been obtained for the involvement of thyroid hormone, glucocorticoids and ligands for peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha. Thyroid hormone induces, whereas glucocorticoids and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha ligands repress, expression of the kinase. Increased blood levels of thyroid hormone are proposed to be responsible for increased expression of branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase kinase in animals starved for protein.  (+info)

Acidification and glucocorticoids independently regulate branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase subunit genes. (42/535)

Acidification or glucocorticoids increase the maximal activity and subunit mRNA levels of branched chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCKAD) in various cell types. We examined whether these stimuli increase transcription of BCKAD subunit genes by transfecting BCKAD subunit promoter-luciferase plasmids containing the mouse E2 or human E1alpha-subunit promoter into LLC-PK(1) cells, which do not express glucocorticoid receptors, or LLC-PK(1)-GR101 cells, which we have engineered to constitutively express the glucocorticoid receptor gene. Dexamethasone or acidification increased luciferase activity in LLC-PK(1)-GR101 cells transfected with the E2 or E1alpha-minigenes; acidification augmented luciferase activity in LLC-PK(1) cells transfected with these minigenes but dexamethasone did not. A pH-responsive element in the E2 subunit promoter was mapped to a region >4.0 kb upstream of the transcription start site. Dexamethasone concurrently stimulated E2 subunit promoter activity and reduced the binding of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) to a site in the E2 promoter. Thus acidification and glucocorticoids independently enhance BCKAD subunit gene expression, and the glucocorticoid response in the E2 subunit involves interference with NF-kappaB, which may act as a transrepressor.  (+info)

Effect of starvation on branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase activity in rat heart and skeletal muscle. (43/535)

The aim of the present study was to investigate changes in the activity of branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase (BCKAD) in skeletal muscle and the heart during brief and prolonged starvation. Fed control rats and rats starved for 2, 4 and 6 days were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium before heart and hindlimb muscles were frozen in situ by liquid nitrogen. Basal (an estimate of in vivo activity) and total (an estimate of enzyme amount) BCKAD activities were determined by measuring the release of 14CO2 from alpha-keto[1-(14)C]isocaproate. The activity state of BCKAD complex was calculated as basal activity in percentages of total activity. Both basal and total activities and the activity state of the BCKAD were lower in skeletal muscles than in the heart. In both tissues, starvation for 2 or 4 days caused a decrease in the basal activity and activity state of BCKAD. On the contrary, in the heart and muscles of animals starved for 6 days a marked increase in basal activity and activity state of BCKAD was observed. The total BCKAD activity was increasing gradually during starvation both in muscles and the heart. The increase was significant in muscles on the 4th and 6th day of starvation. The demonstrated changes in BCKAD activity indicate significant alterations in branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) and protein metabolism during starvation. The decreased BCKAD activity in skeletal muscle and heart observed on the 2nd and 4th day of starvation prevents the loss of essential BCAA and is an important factor involved in protein sparing. The increased activity of BCKAD on the 6th day of starvation indicates activated oxidation of BCAA and accelerated protein breakdown.  (+info)

Pyruvate : NADP+ oxidoreductase from the mitochondrion of Euglena gracilis and from the apicomplexan Cryptosporidium parvum: a biochemical relic linking pyruvate metabolism in mitochondriate and amitochondriate protists. (44/535)

Most eukaryotes perform the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate in mitochondria using pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH). Eukaryotes that lack mitochondria also lack PDH, using instead the O(2)-sensitive enzyme pyruvate : ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFO), which is localized either in the cytosol or in hydrogenosomes. The facultatively anaerobic mitochondria of the photosynthetic protist Euglena gracilis constitute a hitherto unique exception in that these mitochondria oxidize pyruvate with the O(2)-sensitive enzyme pyruvate : NADP oxidoreductase (PNO). Cloning and analysis of Euglena PNO revealed that the cDNA encodes a mitochondrial transit peptide followed by an N-terminal PFO domain that is fused to a C-terminal NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) domain. Two independent 5.8-kb full-size cDNAs for Euglena mitochondrial PNO were isolated; the gene was expressed in cultures supplied with 2% CO(2) in air and with 2% CO(2) in N(2). The apicomplexan Cryptosporidium parvum was also shown to encode and express the same PFO-CPR fusion, except that, unlike E. gracilis, no mitochondrial transit peptide for C. parvum PNO was found. Recombination-derived remnants of PNO are conserved in the genomes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe as proteins involved in sulfite reduction. Notably, Trypanosoma brucei was found to encode homologs of both PFO and all four PDH subunits. Gene organization and phylogeny revealed that eukaryotic nuclear genes for mitochondrial, hydrogenosomal, and cytosolic PFO trace to a single eubacterial acquisition. These findings suggest a common ancestry of PFO in amitochondriate protists with Euglena mitochondrial PNO and Cryptosporidium PNO. They are also consistent with the view that eukaryotic PFO domains are biochemical relics inherited from a facultatively anaerobic, eubacterial ancestor of mitochondria and hydrogenosomes.  (+info)

Protein expressions of branched-chain keto acid dehydrogenase subunits are selectively and posttranscriptionally altered in liver and skeletal muscle of starved rats. (45/535)

Although it has been well established that starvation increases the oxidation of branched-chain keto acids (BCKA) in humans and experimental animals such as rats, the mechanism has not been adequately investigated. For example, the effects of starvation on protein and mRNA expressions of BCKA dehydrogenase, which is the key enzyme regulating this oxidation, have not yet been studied. To initiate such studies, we first determined the activity of BCKA dehydrogenase in the liver and skeletal muscle of fed and starved rats. The levels of activity of BCKA dehydrogenase were significantly greater in tissues of starved rats than in those of fed rats. We then investigated the possible mechanisms of these increases in enzyme activity. The activity state of the enzyme was greater by 3-fold in the muscle of starved compared with fed rats, but there was no significant difference between the activity states in the liver. There were no significant differences between protein expressions of BCKA dehydrogenase subunits (E(1)alpha, E(1)beta and E(2)) in tissues of fed and starved rats; the exceptions were a greater expression of E(1)alpha in the liver and a lower expression of E(1)beta in the skeletal muscle of starved rats. These differences in protein expressions were not accompanied with any difference in the mRNA expressions of genes encoding E(1)alpha and E(1)beta. The rate of inactivation of BCKA dehydrogenase, mediated by its associated kinase, was significantly slower in the skeletal muscle of starved rats but was the same in the liver. However, there was no significant difference between the protein or the mRNA expressions of the gene encoding BCKA dehydrogenase kinase in tissues of fed and starved rats. These results show that starvation increases the activity of BCKA dehydrogenase in the liver and skeletal muscle, and the mechanisms of increases in activity are posttranscriptional and involve cellular rather than the molecular mechanisms.  (+info)

Leucine and its keto acid enhance the coordinated expression of genes for branched-chain amino acid catabolism in Arabidopsis under sugar starvation. (46/535)

Branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase (BCKDH), a multienzyme complex, plays a key role in branched-chain amino acid catabolism. However, it remains unclear whether expression of each subunit is coordinately regulated in plants, which should be important for the efficient assembly of subunits into a functional multienzyme complex. We show that the transcripts from the Arabidopsis E1alpha subunit gene accumulated in dark-adapted leaves and in sugar-starved suspension cells. These results are complementary to our previous report that the transcripts for the E1beta and E2 subunit genes accumulated in sugar-starved cells. Expression of the E1alpha gene is likely to be regulated by hexokinase-mediated sugar signaling, indicating that sugar plays a regulatory role in the coordinated expression of BCKDH subunit genes. Furthermore, Leu and its metabolite alpha-ketoisocaproate have synergistic effects on the enhanced expression of BCKDH subunit genes under sugar starvation. We hence suggest that branched-chain amino acids activate their own degradation pathway in sugar-starved cells through co-induction of each subunit gene of BCKDH.  (+info)

Dietary and hormonal regulation of pancreatic xanthine dehydrogenase in the chick. (47/535)

Chick pancreatic xanthine dehydrogenase (PXDH) is synthesized in response to feeding. Its induction generally correlates with growth; in the absence of growth, induction is observed uniquely when pure glucose is fed. This study attempted to determine what events after feeding lead to PXDH synthesis. When chicks were fed diets providing equal numbers of calories/gram of diet and varying only in the major energy source (carbohydrate, protein, or fat), PXDH response was high in the carbohydrate-fed, low in the protein-fed, and minimal in the fat-fed chicks. A unique, transitory increase in plasma glucose occurred in the carbohydrate-fed chicks within day 2 after feeding. These unique effects of dietary glucose indicated that the induction of PXDH after feeding was linked to carbohydrate metabolism. Effects of injected insulin on PXDH were examined. Insulin doses between 0.001 and 10.0 IU induced PXDH 25-60% above the activity found in carbohydrate-fed chicks. The initiation of PXDH accumulation may be the result of a sequence of metabolic responses to dietary carbohydrate beginning with an increase in plasm glucose, which induces an insulin response.  (+info)

Biochemical basis of type IB (E1beta ) mutations in maple syrup urine disease. A prevalent allele in patients from the Druze kindred in Israel. (48/535)

Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) is a metabolic disorder associated with often-fatal ketoacidosis, neurological derangement, and mental retardation. In this study, we identify and characterize two novel type IB MSUD mutations in Israeli patients, which affect the E1beta subunit in the decarboxylase (E1) component of the branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase complex. The recombinant mutant E1 carrying the prevalent S289L-beta (TCG --> TTG) mutation in the Druze kindred exists as a stable inactive alphabeta heterodimer. Based on the human E1 structure, the S289L-beta mutation disrupts the interactions between Ser-289-beta and Glu-290-beta', and between Arg-309-beta and Glu-290-beta', which are essential for native alpha(2)beta(2) heterotetrameric assembly. The R133P-beta (CGG --> CCG) mutation, on the other hand, is inefficiently expressed in Escherichia coli as heterotetramers in a temperature-dependent manner. The R133P-beta mutant E1 exhibits significant residual activity but is markedly less stable than the wild-type, as measured by thermal inactivation and free energy change of denaturation. The R133P-beta substitution abrogates the coordination of Arg-133-beta to Ala-95-beta, Glu-96-beta, and Ile-97-beta, which is important for strand-strand interactions and K(+) ion binding in the beta subunit. These findings provide new insights into folding and assembly of human E1 and will facilitate DNA-based diagnosis for MSUD in the Israeli population.  (+info)