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Malate transport

FIGURE 23.5 Pyruvate carboxyl compartmentalized reaction. Pyruva verted to oxaloacetate in the mitoci Because oxaloacetate cannot be trai across the mitochondrial membrant reduced to malate, transported to tl and then oxidized back to oxaloace gluconeogenesis can continue. [Pg.747]

D. L. Jones, A. M. Prabowo, and L. Kochian, Kinetics of malate transport and decomposition in acid soils and i.solated bacterial populations the effect of microorganisms on root exudation of malate under Al stress. Plant Soil JH2 229 (1996). [Pg.79]

Olsen, E.B., Russell, J.B., and Henick-Kling, T. 1991. Electrogenic L-malate transport by Lactobacillus plantation A basis of energy derivation from malolactic fermentation. J. Bacteriol. 173, 6199-6206. [Pg.174]

Figure 9.19 There are two options to genetically engineer extraneous malate utilisation in order to deacidify wine. One approach utilises the Schizosaccharomyces pombe malate transporter gene (mael) and the O. oeni malolactic enzyme gene (mleA), enabling yeast to perform malolactic fermentation in parallel with alcoholic fermentation. Alternatively, Saccharomyces cerevisiae can be modified by the introduction of mael and the S. pombe malic enzyme gene (mae2), thereby enabling the conversion of malate into ethanol. Figure 9.19 There are two options to genetically engineer extraneous malate utilisation in order to deacidify wine. One approach utilises the Schizosaccharomyces pombe malate transporter gene (mael) and the O. oeni malolactic enzyme gene (mleA), enabling yeast to perform malolactic fermentation in parallel with alcoholic fermentation. Alternatively, Saccharomyces cerevisiae can be modified by the introduction of mael and the S. pombe malic enzyme gene (mae2), thereby enabling the conversion of malate into ethanol.
New information on malate transport into the vacuole based on electrochemical investigations became recently available (Luttge,U., Ball,E. Electrochemical investigations of active malic acid transport at the tonoplast into the vacuoles of the CAM plant Kalanchoe daigremontiana. J. Membrane Biol., submitted). [Pg.200]

Halperin, M.L., Schiller, C.M. and Fritz, LB. (1971), The inhibition by methylmalonic acid of malate transport by the dicarboxylate carrier in rat liver mitochondria. J. Clin. Invest.y 50, 2276. [Pg.327]

Finally, citrate can be exported from the mitochondria and then broken down by ATP-citrate lyase to yield oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA, a precursor of fatty acids (Figure 20.23). Oxaloacetate produced in this reaction is rapidly reduced to malate, which can then be processed in either of two ways it may be transported into mitochondria, where it is reoxidized to oxaloacetate, or it may be oxidatively decarboxylated to pyruvate by malic enzyme, with subse-... [Pg.662]

The second electron shuttle system, called the malate-aspartate shuttle, is shown in Figure 21.34. Oxaloacetate is reduced in the cytosol, acquiring the electrons of NADH (which is oxidized to NAD ). Malate is transported across the inner membrane, where it is reoxidized by malate dehydrogenase, converting NAD to NADH in the matrix. This mitochondrial NADH readily enters the electron transport chain. The oxaloacetate produced in this reaction cannot cross the inner membrane and must be transaminated to form aspartate, which can be transported across the membrane to the cytosolic side. Transamination in the cytosol recycles aspartate back to oxaloacetate. In contrast to the glycerol phosphate shuttle, the malate-aspartate cycle is reversible, and it operates as shown in Figure 21.34 only if the NADH/NAD ratio in the cytosol is higher than the ratio in the matrix. Because this shuttle produces NADH in the matrix, the full 2.5 ATPs per NADH are recovered. [Pg.704]

Because the 2 NADH formed in glycolysis are transported by the glycerol phosphate shuttle in this case, they each yield only 1.5 ATP, as already described. On the other hand, if these 2 NADH take part in the malate-aspartate shuttle, each yields 2.5 ATP, giving a total (in this case) of 32 ATP formed per glucose oxidized. Most of the ATP—26 out of 30 or 28 out of 32—is produced by oxidative phosphorylation only 4 ATP molecules result from direct synthesis during glycolysis and the TCA cycle. [Pg.704]

Compartmentation of these reactions to prevent photorespiration involves the interaction of two cell types, mescrphyll cells and bundle sheath cells. The meso-phyll cells take up COg at the leaf surface, where Og is abundant, and use it to carboxylate phosphoenolpyruvate to yield OAA in a reaction catalyzed by PEP carboxylase (Figure 22.30). This four-carbon dicarboxylic acid is then either reduced to malate by an NADPH-specific malate dehydrogenase or transaminated to give aspartate in the mesophyll cells. The 4-C COg carrier (malate or aspartate) then is transported to the bundle sheath cells, where it is decarboxylated to yield COg and a 3-C product. The COg is then fixed into organic carbon by the Calvin cycle localized within the bundle sheath cells, and the 3-C product is returned to the mesophyll cells, where it is reconverted to PEP in preparation to accept another COg (Figure 22.30). Plants that use the C-4 pathway are termed C4 plants, in contrast to those plants with the conventional pathway of COg uptake (C3 plants). [Pg.738]

Succinyl-CoA derived from propionyl-CoA can enter the TCA cycle. Oxidation of succinate to oxaloacetate provides a substrate for glucose synthesis. Thus, although the acetate units produced in /3-oxidation cannot be utilized in glu-coneogenesis by animals, the occasional propionate produced from oxidation of odd-carbon fatty acids can be used for sugar synthesis. Alternatively, succinate introduced to the TCA cycle from odd-carbon fatty acid oxidation may be oxidized to COg. However, all of the 4-carbon intermediates in the TCA cycle are regenerated in the cycle and thus should be viewed as catalytic species. Net consumption of succinyl-CoA thus does not occur directly in the TCA cycle. Rather, the succinyl-CoA generated from /3-oxidation of odd-carbon fatty acids must be converted to pyruvate and then to acetyl-CoA (which is completely oxidized in the TCA cycle). To follow this latter route, succinyl-CoA entering the TCA cycle must be first converted to malate in the usual way, and then transported from the mitochondrial matrix to the cytosol, where it is oxida-... [Pg.793]

The acetyl-CoA derived from amino acid degradation is normally insufficient for fatty acid biosynthesis, and the acetyl-CoA produced by pyruvate dehydrogenase and by fatty acid oxidation cannot cross the mitochondrial membrane to participate directly in fatty acid synthesis. Instead, acetyl-CoA is linked with oxaloacetate to form citrate, which is transported from the mitochondrial matrix to the cytosol (Figure 25.1). Here it can be converted back into acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate by ATP-citrate lyase. In this manner, mitochondrial acetyl-CoA becomes the substrate for cytosolic fatty acid synthesis. (Oxaloacetate returns to the mitochondria in the form of either pyruvate or malate, which is then reconverted to acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate, respectively.)... [Pg.804]

Figure 12-13. Malate shuttle for transfer of reducing equivalents from the cytosol into the mitochondrion. Ketoglutarate transporter , glutamate/aspartate transporter (note the proton symport with glutamate). Figure 12-13. Malate shuttle for transfer of reducing equivalents from the cytosol into the mitochondrion. Ketoglutarate transporter , glutamate/aspartate transporter (note the proton symport with glutamate).
In pigeon, chicken, and rabbit liver, phospho-enolpymvate carboxykinase is a mitochondrial enzyme, and phosphoenolpyruvate is transported into the cytosol for gluconeogenesis. In the rat and the mouse, the enzyme is cytosolic. Oxaloacetate does not cross the mitochondrial inner membrane it is converted to malate, which is transported into the cytosol, and convetted back to oxaloacetate by cytosolic malate dehydrogenase. In humans, the guinea pig, and the cow, the enzyme is equally disttibuted between mitochondria and cytosol. [Pg.153]

Electrons from NADH outside the mitochondria are transported into the mitochondria by the malate-aspartate shuttle or the a-glycerol phosphate shuttle. [Pg.189]

Abnormalities of the respiratoiy chain. These are increasingly identified as the hallmark of mitochondrial diseases or mitochondrial encephalomyopathies [13]. They can be identified on the basis of polarographic studies showing differential impairment in the ability of isolated intact mitochondria to use different substrates. For example, defective respiration with NAD-dependent substrates, such as pyruvate and malate, but normal respiration with FAD-dependent substrates, such as succinate, suggests an isolated defect of complex I (Fig. 42-3). However, defective respiration with both types of substrates in the presence of normal cytochrome c oxidase activity, also termed complex IV, localizes the lesions to complex III (Fig. 42-3). Because frozen muscle is much more commonly available than fresh tissue, electron transport is usually measured through discrete portions of the respiratory chain. Thus, isolated defects of NADH-cytochrome c reductase, or NADH-coenzyme Q (CoQ) reductase suggest a problem within complex I, while a simultaneous defect of NADH and succinate-cytochrome c reductase activities points to a biochemical error in complex III (Fig. 42-3). Isolated defects of complex III can be confirmed by measuring reduced CoQ-cytochrome c reductase activity. [Pg.709]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.180 , Pg.181 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.235 , Pg.270 ]




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Electron transport chain malate-aspartate shuttle

Malate

Malates

Vacuoles malate transport

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