azaserine and 2-(methylamino)isobutyric-acid

azaserine has been researched along with 2-(methylamino)isobutyric-acid* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for azaserine and 2-(methylamino)isobutyric-acid

ArticleYear
Substrate-specificity of glutamine transporters in membrane vesicles from rat liver and skeletal muscle investigated using amino acid analogues.
    The Biochemical journal, 1991, Aug-15, Volume: 278 ( Pt 1)

    We investigated the effects of glutamine and histidine analogues on glutamine transport processes in membrane vesicles prepared from rat liver (sinusoidal membrane) and skeletal muscle (sarcolemma). L-[14C]Glutamine is transported in these membranes predominantly by Systems N/Nm (liver and muscle respectively), and to a lesser extent by Systems A and L (e.g. about 60, 20 and 20% of total flux respectively via Systems N, A and L at 0.05 mM-glutamine in liver membrane vesicles). The glutamine anti-metabolites 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine and acivicin were relatively poor inhibitors of glutamine uptake into liver membrane vesicles (less than 25% inhibition at 20-fold excess) and appeared primarily to inhibit System A activity (i.e. N-methylaminoisobutyric acid-inhibitable glutamine uptake). In similar experiments azaserine (also a glutamine anti-metabolite) inhibited approx. 50% of glutamine uptake, apparently by inhibition of System A and also of System L (i.e. 2-amino-2-carboxybicyclo[2,2,1]heptane-inhibitable glutamine uptake). Glutamate gamma-hydroxamate, aspartate beta-hydroxamate, histidine and N'-methylhistidine were all strong inhibitors of glutamine uptake into liver membrane vesicles (greater than 65% inhibition at 20-fold excess), but neither homoglutamine nor N'-methylhistidine produced inhibition. L-Glutamate-gamma-hydroxamate was shown to be a competitive inhibitor of glutamine transport via System N (Ki approximately 0.6 mM). Glutamine uptake in sarcolemmal vesicles showed a similar general pattern of inhibition as in liver membrane vesicles. The results highlight limits on the substrate tolerance of System N; we suggest that the presence of both an L-alpha-amino acid group and a nitrogen group with a delocalized lone-pair of electrons (amide or pyrrole type), separated by a specific intramolecular distance (C2-C4 chain equivalent), is important for substrate recognition by this transporter.

    Topics: Amino Acids; Amino Acids, Cyclic; Aminoisobutyric Acids; Animals; Azaserine; Biological Transport; Carrier Proteins; Cell Membrane; Diazooxonorleucine; Female; Glutamine; Kinetics; Lithium; Liver; Muscles; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Sarcolemma; Sodium

1991