scholarly journals The redistribution of carbon label by the reactions involved in glycolysis, gluconeogenesis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle in rat liver

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.

1968 ◽  
Vol 110 (2) ◽  
pp. 337-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. F. Heath ◽  
C. J. Threlfall

1. The equations derived by Heath (1968) were applied to data from experiments on rats in four metabolic states: fed, post-absorptive, starved and 2hr. after an eventually lethal injury. The data used were: (a) The fractions of label injected as C1-, C2- and C3-pyruvate (where the prefix indicates the position of labelling) that are incorporated into carbon dioxide and glucose in post-absorptive and injured rats (yields). Yields could be corrected to yields on label taken up by the liver. (b) The (C5-label in glutamate)/(total label in glutamate) ratio in the liver after C2-pyruvate in rats in all four states. (c) The distribution of label within glutamate after C2-pyruvate or C2-alanine in the livers of fed, post-absorptive and starved rats. (d) The distribution of label within glucose after C2-lactate or C2-pyruvate in starved rats. (e) The relative specific radioactivities of pyruvate, aspartate, glutamate and (in two states only) of glucose 6-phosphate after injection of [U−14C]glucose into rats in all four states. These data were previously published, except those after (e) and some after (b) above, which are given in this paper. 2. In addition the concentrations of pyruvate, citrate, glutamate and aspartate in the livers of post-absorptive and injured rats were found. Injury decreased glutamate and citrate concentrations and to a smaller extent aspartate and pyruvate concentrations. 3. Non-steady-state theory showed that most of the data could be used without serious error in steady-state theory. Steady-state theory correlated all but one observation (the relative yields of 14CO2 from C2- and C3-pyruvate) listed after (a)–(e) above within the experimental errors, and gave rough estimates of the rates of pyruvate carboxylation, conversion of pyruvate and fat into acetyl-CoA and utilization of glutamate. The main conclusions were: (a) symmetrization of label in oxaloacetate both in the mitochondrion and in the cytoplasm was far from complete, because oxaloacetate did not equilibrate with fumarate in either. From this and other findings it was deduced: (b) that malate or fumarate or both left the mitochondrion, and not oxaloacetate; (c) that there was a loss from the mitochondrion of a fraction of the malate or fumarate or both formed from succinate, and (d) the resulting deficiency of oxaloacetate for the perpetuation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle was made up from pyruvate in fed and post-absorptive rats, but (e) in the starved rat could only be made up by utilization of glutamate. (f) In the fed rat the tricarboxylic acid cycle ran mostly on pyruvate, but in the post-absorptive and starved rat mostly on fat. (g) In the injured rat the tricarboxylic acid cycle was slowed, label in oxaloacetate was completely symmetrized (cf. conclusion a), and the tricarboxylic acid cycle utilized glutamate. (h) The conclusions were not invalidated by isotopic exchange, i.e. flux of label without net flux of compound, nor by interaction with lipogenic processes. (i) In the kidneys interaction between the tricarboxylic acid cycle and gluconeogenesis was different from in the liver, and was much less. The effects on the theory were roughly assessed, and were small. 4. The experiments and optimum experimental conditions required to check the theory are listed, and several predictions, open to experimental confirmation, are made.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
E-Bin Gao ◽  
Penglin Ye ◽  
Haiyan Qiu ◽  
Junhua Wu ◽  
Huayou Chen

Abstract Background: The outstanding ability of directly assimilating carbon dioxide and sunlight to produce biofuels and chemicals impels photosynthetic cyanobacteria to become attractive organisms for the solution to the global warming crises and the world energy growth. The cyanobacteria-based method for ethanol production has been increasingly regarded as alternatives to food biomass-based fermentation and traditional petroleum-based production. Therefore, we engineered the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 to synthesize ethanol and optimized the biosynthetic pathways for improving ethanol production under photoautotrophic conditions.Results: In this study, we successfully achieved the photosynthetic production of ethanol from atmospheric carbon dioxide by an engineered mutant Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 with over-expressing the heterologous genes encoding Zymomonas mobilis pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC) and Escherichia coli NADPH-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase (YqhD). The engineered strain was further optimized by an alternative engineering approach to improve cell growth, and increase the intracellular supply of the precursor pyruvate for ethanol production under photoautotrophic conditions. This approach includes blocking phosphoenolpyruvate synthetic pathway from pyruvate, removing glycogen storage, and shunting carbon metabolic flux of tricarboxylic acid cycle. Through redirecting and optimizing the metabolic carbon flux of Synechocystis, a high ethanol-producing efficiency was achieved (248 mg L-1 day-1) under photoautotrophic conditions with atmospheric CO2 as the sole carbon source. Conclusions: The engineered strain SYN009 (∆slr0301/pdc-yqhD, ∆slr1176/maeB) would become a valuable biosystem for photosynthetic production of ethanol and for expanding our knowledge of exploiting cyanobacteria to produce value chemicals directly from atmospheric CO2.


1974 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 221 ◽  
Author(s):  
CJ Pearson ◽  
FL Milthorpe

Studies were made of the structure and rates of CO2 fixation of epidermis and of changes in organic metabolites in Commelina cyanea during transition to light and dark in both normal and CO2-free air. Guard cells of C. cyanea and Vicia faba contain numerous highly developed mitochondria and starch-forming chloroplasts (mitochondria: chloroplast ratios of 3 : 1) in comparison to other epidermal cells with few mitochondria and rudimentary plastids without starch. Their rates of photosynthesis per chloroplast appeared to be at least as high as those of the mesophyll, but circumstantial evidence suggested that about half of current photosynthate was respired. The rate of CO2 fixation in the dark was about 0.2–0.4% of that in the light. Illumination caused an increase, and darkening a decrease, of aperture, malate, and organic acid 1% within the epidermis of C. cyanea. Darkening in CO2-free air was accompanied by only slight decreases in aperture and malate. There were close positive correlations between aperture and concentration of malate and between aperture and organic acid 14C. During opening, the rise in organic acid 14C was associated with a decline in amino acid 14C. It is suggested that organic acids may be formed through aspartate and possibly also from sugars and other amino acids entering the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Concentrations of sugars were not related to aperture although they increased on illumination and declined about 2 h after darkening. Polysaccharide concentrations in the epidermis of darkened leaves were similar to those in illuminated leaves.


1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 359-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. R. Tustanoff ◽  
H. B. Stewart

In a previous paper it was shown that neutral salt or sucrose, probably as a consequence of osmotic activity, interferes with the utilization of pyruvate by washed particle preparations from rat liver. In the present paper the effects of neutral salt on reaction sequences in the tricarboxylic acid cycle have been investigated. α-Oxoglutarate utilization is inhibited by salt in a fashion that closely resembles the osmolar inhibition of pyruvate oxidation. Citrate, but not cis-aconitate or isocitrate, utilization is inhibited by salt concentrations somewhat greater than those required for inhibition of α-oxo acid metabolism. Succinate, fumarate, and malate utilization are not highly sensitive to salt inhibition, and anaerobic utilization of citrate in the presence of 1,10-phenanthroline does not appear to be affected by salt.


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