Literature DB >> 1390656

13C NMR detection of folate-mediated serine and glycine synthesis in vivo in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

L B Pasternack1, D A Laude, D R Appling.   

Abstract

Saccharomyces cerevisiae has both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial C1-tetrahydrofolate (THF) synthases. These trifunctional isozymes are central to single-carbon metabolism and are responsible for interconversion of the THF derivatives in the respective compartments. In the present work, we have used 13C NMR to study folate-mediated single-carbon metabolism in these two compartments, using glycine and serine synthesis as metabolic endpoints. The availability of yeast strains carrying deletions of cytoplasmic and/or mitochondrial C1-THF synthase allows a dissection of the role each compartment plays in this metabolism. When yeast are incubated with [13C]formate, 13C NMR spectra establish that production of [3-13C]serine is dependent on C1-THF synthase and occurs primarily in the cytosol. However, in a strain lacking cytoplasmic C1-THF synthase but possessing the mitochondrial isozyme, [13C]formate can be metabolized to [2-13C]glycine and [3-13C]serine. This provides in vivo evidence for the mitochondrial assimilation of formate, activation and conversion to [13C]CH2-THF via mitochondrial C1-THF synthase, and subsequent glycine synthesis via reversal of the glycine cleavage system. Additional supporting evidence of reversibility of GCV in vivo is the production of [2-13C]glycine and [2,3-13C]serine in yeast strains grown with [3-13C]serine. This metabolism is independent of C1-THF synthase since these products were observed in strains lacking both the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial isozymes. These results suggest that when formate is the one-carbon donor, assimilation is primarily cytoplasmic, whereas when serine serves as one-carbon donor, considerable metabolism occurs via mitochondrial pathways.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1390656     DOI: 10.1021/bi00152a005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  11 in total

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7.  13C nuclear magnetic resonance detection of interactions of serine hydroxymethyltransferase with C1-tetrahydrofolate synthase and glycine decarboxylase complex activities in Arabidopsis.

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9.  Growth of E. coli on formate and methanol via the reductive glycine pathway.

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10.  Population FBA predicts metabolic phenotypes in yeast.

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