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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 262, Issue 11, 5106-5112, 04, 1987
B Aronow and B Ullman
The regulatory role of the allosteric site of CTP synthetase on flux
through the enzyme in situ and on pyrimidine nucleotide triphosphate (NTP)
pool balance was investigated using a mutant mouse T lymphoblast (S49) cell
line which contains a CTP synthetase refractory to complete inhibition by
CTP. Measurements of [3H]uridine incorporation into cellular pyrimidine NTP
pools as a function of time indicated that CTP synthesis in intact wild
type cells was markedly inhibited in a cooperative fashion by small
increases in CTP pools, whereas flux across the enzyme in mutant cells was
much less affected by changes in CTP levels. The cooperativity of the
allosteric inhibition of the enzyme was greater in situ than in vitro.
Exogenous manipulation of levels of GTP, an activator of the enzyme,
indicated that GTP had a moderate effect on enzyme activity in situ, and
changes in pools of ATP, a substrate of the enzyme, had small effects on
CTP synthetase activity. The consequences of incubation with actinomycin D,
cycloheximide, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, and 6-azauridine on the flux across
CTP synthetase and on NTP pools differed considerably between wild type and
mutant cells. Under conditions of growth arrest, an intact binding site for
CTP on CTP synthetase was required to maintain a balance between the CTP
and UTP pools in wild type cells. Moreover, wild type cells failed to
incorporate H14CO3- into pyrimidine pools following growth arrest. In
contrast, mutant cells incorporated the radiolabel at a high rate
indicating loss of a regulatory function. These results indicated that
uridine nucleotides are important regulators of pyrimidine nucleotide
synthesis in mouse S49 cells, and CTP regulates the balance between UTP and
CTP pools.
In situ regulation of mammalian CTP synthetase by allosteric inhibition
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