1 research outputs found
Diversification of the kinetic properties of yeast NADPâglutamateâdehydrogenase isozymes proceeds independently of their evolutionary origin
"In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the ScGDH1 and ScGDH3 encoded glutamate dehydrogenases (NADPâGDHs) catalyze the synthesis of glutamate from ammonium and αâketoglutarate (αâKG). Previous kinetic characterization showed that these enzymes displayed different allosteric properties and respectively high or low rate of αâKG utilization. Accordingly, the coordinated action of ScGdh1 and ScGdh3, regulated balanced αâKG utilization for glutamate biosynthesis under either fermentative or respiratory conditions, safeguarding energy provision. Here, we have addressed the question of whether there is a correlation between the regulation and kinetic properties of the NADPâGDH isozymes present in S. cerevisiae (ScGdh1 and ScGdh3), Kluyveromyces lactis (KlGdh1), and Lachancea kluyveri (LkGdh1) and their evolutionary history. Our results show that the kinetic properties of K. lactis and L. kluyveri single NADPâGDHs are respectively similar to either ScGDH3 or ScGDH1, which arose from the whole genome duplication event of the S. cerevisiae lineage, although, KlGDH1 and LkGDH1 originated from a GDH clade, through an ancient interspecies hybridization event that preceded the divergence between the Saccharomyces clade and the one containing the genera Kluyveromyces, Lachancea, and Eremothecium. Thus, the kinetic properties which determine the NADPâGDHs capacity to utilize αâKG and synthesize glutamate do not correlate with their evolutionary origin.