Abstract

When provided with glycollate, peroxisomal extracts of leaves of spinach beet (Beta vulgaris L. cv.) converted L-serine and L-glutamate to hydroxypyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate respectively. When approximately saturating concentrations of each of these amino acids were incubated separately with glycollate, the utilization of serine was greater than that of glutamate. The utilization of glutamate was substantially reduced by the presence of relatively low concentrations of serine in the reaction mixture, whereas even high concentrations of glutamate caused only small reductions in serine utilization. Over the entire range of concentrations of amino acids examined, serine was invariably the preferred amino-group donor, but this preference was abolished at higher concentrations of glyoxylate. Serine not only competed favourably for glyoxylate but also inhibited L-glutamate: glyoxylate aminotransferase (GGAT), the degree of inhibition depending upon the glyoxylate concentration. Studies of L-serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase (SGAT) and GGAT in partially purified extracts from spinach-beet leaves confirmed that serine competitively inhibited GGAT but glutamate did not affect SGAT. Both enzymes were inhibited by high glyoxylate concentrations, the inhibition being relieved by suitably high concentrations of the appropriate amino acid. It is concluded that at the low glyoxylate concentrations likely to occur in vivo, the preferential utilization of serine would ensure flux through the glycollate pathway to glycerate, but at higher concentrations of glyoxylate, both enzymes could be fully active in glyoxylate amination.

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