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Pyruvate reductases

Nondirected probes O 0 cl -x N vif-N>r hrvcoNH2 H ° v Oxidoreductases Enoyl-CoA hydratases Glutathione-S- transferases (GSTs) Hydroxy pyruvate reductase GSTs [27. 43. 44] [45]... [Pg.414]

The lactate produced mainly in muscle diffuses in blood and reaches the heart where the principal function of LDH-H is oxidizing lactate to pyruvate, which can then be utilized through the Krebs cycle. In fact, if blood concentrations of lactate are increased, the uptake of that metabolite by the heart is also increased. Thus, the H-type is the true lactic dehydrogenase, while the M-type is really a pyruvic reductase. [Pg.14]

Alanine. Transamination of alanine forms pyruvate. Perhaps for the reason advanced under glutamate and aspartate catabolism, there is no known metabolic defect of alanine catabolism. Cysteine. Cystine is first reduced to cysteine by cystine reductase (Figure 30-7). Two different pathways then convert cysteine to pyruvate (Figure 30-8). [Pg.250]

Mutation of the dihydrolipoate reductase component impairs decarboxylation of branched-chain a-keto acids, of pyruvate, and of a-ketoglutarate. In intermittent branched-chain ketonuria, the a-keto acid decarboxylase retains some activity, and symptoms occur later in life. The impaired enzyme in isovaleric acidemia is isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase (reaction 3, Figure 30-19). Vomiting, acidosis, and coma follow ingestion of excess protein. Accumulated... [Pg.259]

Fig. 14.1. Role ofthe pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) during aerobic/ anaerobic transitions in the development of Ascaris suum. PDC, pyruvate dehydrogenase complex AD, acyl CoA dehydrogenase ER, enoyl CoA reductase FR, fumarate reductase SDH, succinate dehydrogenase. Fig. 14.1. Role ofthe pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) during aerobic/ anaerobic transitions in the development of Ascaris suum. PDC, pyruvate dehydrogenase complex AD, acyl CoA dehydrogenase ER, enoyl CoA reductase FR, fumarate reductase SDH, succinate dehydrogenase.
Fig. 1. Modification of plant metabolic pathways for the synthesis of poly(3HB) and poly(3HB-co-3HV). The pathways created or enhanced by the expression of transgenes are highlighted in bold, while endogenous plant pathways are in plain letters. The various transgenes expressed in plants are indicated in italics. The ilvA gene encodes a threonine deaminase from E. coli. The phaARe, phaBRe, and phaCRe genes encode a 3-ketothiolase, an aceto-acetyl-CoA reductase, and a PHA synthase from R. eutropha, respectively. The btkBRe gene encodes a second 3-ketothiolase isolated from R. eutropha which shows high affinity for both propionyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA [40]. PDC refers to the endogenous plant pyruvate dehydrogenase complex... Fig. 1. Modification of plant metabolic pathways for the synthesis of poly(3HB) and poly(3HB-co-3HV). The pathways created or enhanced by the expression of transgenes are highlighted in bold, while endogenous plant pathways are in plain letters. The various transgenes expressed in plants are indicated in italics. The ilvA gene encodes a threonine deaminase from E. coli. The phaARe, phaBRe, and phaCRe genes encode a 3-ketothiolase, an aceto-acetyl-CoA reductase, and a PHA synthase from R. eutropha, respectively. The btkBRe gene encodes a second 3-ketothiolase isolated from R. eutropha which shows high affinity for both propionyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA [40]. PDC refers to the endogenous plant pyruvate dehydrogenase complex...
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]

Fig. 16. Ferredoxin (Fd)/ferredoxin-NADP+-reductase (FNR) mediated enzymatic carboxylation of pyruvic acid to form malic acid catalyzed by the NADPH-dependent malic enzyme (ME)... Fig. 16. Ferredoxin (Fd)/ferredoxin-NADP+-reductase (FNR) mediated enzymatic carboxylation of pyruvic acid to form malic acid catalyzed by the NADPH-dependent malic enzyme (ME)...
The realization of the widespread occurrence of amino acid radicals in enzyme catalysis is recent and has been documented in several reviews (52-61). Among the catalytically essential redox-active amino acids glycyl [e.g., anaerobic class III ribonucleotide reductase (62) and pyruvate formate lyase (63-65)], tryptophanyl [e.g., cytochrome peroxidase (66-68)], cysteinyl [class I and II ribonucleotide reductase (60)], tyrosyl [e.g., class I ribonucleotide reductase (69-71), photosystem II (72, 73), prostaglandin H synthase (74-78)], and modified tyrosyl [e.g., cytochrome c oxidase (79, 80), galactose oxidase (81), glyoxal oxidase (82)] are the most prevalent. The redox potentials of these protein residues are well within the realm of those achievable by biological oxidants. These redox enzymes have emerged as a distinct class of proteins of considerable interest and research activity. [Pg.158]

Studies on three different iron-sulfur enzyme systems, which all require S-adenosyl methionine—lysine 2,3-aminomutase, pyruvate formate lyase and anaerobic ribonucleotide reductase—have led to the identification of SAM as a major source of free radicals in living cells. As in the dehydratases, these systems have a [4Fe-4S] centre chelated by only three cysteines with one accessible coordination site. The cluster is active only in the reduced... [Pg.228]

Arabinose-binding protein domains 1 and 2 Dihydrofolate reductase Adenylate kinase Rhodanese domains 1 and 2 Glutathione reductase domains 1 and 2 Phosphoglycerate mutase Phosphoglycerate kinase domain 2 Pyruvate kinase domain 3 Hexokinase domains 1 and 2 Catalase domain 3 Aspartate aminotransferase... [Pg.257]

This pyruvate-dependent enzyme [EC 1.4.4.1], also referred to as D-proline reductase (dithiol), catalyzes the reaction of 5-aminopentanoate with hpoate to produce D-proline and dihydrolipoate. Other dithiols can function as reducing agents. [Pg.575]

ADP as a substrate in enzyme reactions, ADENYLATE KINASE (or MYOKINASE) ATP SYNTHASE CREATINE KINASE NUCLEOSIDE DIPHOSPHATE KINASE PHOSPHOGLYCERATE KINASE PYRUVATE KINASE RIBONUCLEOTIDE REDUCTASE SULFATE ADENYLYLTRANSFERASE (ADP) [ADP]/[ATP] ratio,... [Pg.721]

PYRUVATE CARBOXYLASE PYRUVATE DEHYDROGENASE KINASE PYRUVATE KINASE PYRUVATE, WATER DIKINASE RESTRICTION ENZYMES RHODOPSIN KINASE RIBOFLAVIN KINASE RIBONUCLEOTIDE REDUCTASE... [Pg.725]

NITRATE REDUCTASE NITRITE REDUCTASE PHENOL HYDROXYLASE PROLINE DEHYDROGENASE PUTRESCINE OXIDASE PYRUVATE OXIDASE SALICYLATE 1-MONOOXYGENASE SUCCINATE DEHYDROGENASE SULFITE REDUCTASE XANTHINE OXIDASE Falling ball viscometry,... [Pg.742]

NITRITE REDUCTASE NITROGENASE PYRUVATE SYNTHASE RUBREDOXIN NAD REDUCTASE STEROID 11 -HYDROXYLASE SULFITE REDUCTASE TUNGSTOENZYMES... [Pg.742]


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