107 research outputs found

    Analysis of ecological thresholds in a temperate forest undergoing dieback.

    Get PDF
    Positive feedbacks in drivers of degradation can cause threshold responses in natural ecosystems. Though threshold responses have received much attention in studies of aquatic ecosystems, they have been neglected in terrestrial systems, such as forests, where the long time-scales required for monitoring have impeded research. In this study we explored the role of positive feedbacks in a temperate forest that has been monitored for 50 years and is undergoing dieback, largely as a result of death of the canopy dominant species (Fagus sylvatica, beech). Statistical analyses showed strong non-linear losses in basal area for some plots, while others showed relatively gradual change. Beech seedling density was positively related to canopy openness, but a similar relationship was not observed for saplings, suggesting a feedback whereby mortality in areas with high canopy openness was elevated. We combined this observation with empirical data on size- and growth-mediated mortality of trees to produce an individual-based model of forest dynamics. We used this model to simulate changes in the structure of the forest over 100 years under scenarios with different juvenile and mature mortality probabilities, as well as a positive feedback between seedling and mature tree mortality. This model produced declines in forest basal area when critical juvenile and mature mortality probabilities were exceeded. Feedbacks in juvenile mortality caused a greater reduction in basal area relative to scenarios with no feedback. Non-linear, concave declines of basal area occurred only when mature tree mortality was 3-5 times higher than rates observed in the field. Our results indicate that the longevity of trees may help to buffer forests against environmental change and that the maintenance of old, large trees may aid the resilience of forest stands. In addition, our work suggests that dieback of forests may be avoidable providing pressures on mature and juvenile trees do not pass critical thresholds

    Structure of D-amino acid oxidase: new insights from an old enzyme

    No full text
    D-amino acid oxidase is the prototype of flavin-dependent oxidases. The recent resolution of its 3D structure has provided an explanation for several of its properties and has led to a substantial revision of the mechanism of D-amino acid dehydrogenation, with significant implications for the general understanding of flavin-dependent catalysis

    Energy matters: Mitochondrial proteomics for biomedicine

    No full text
    This review compiles results of medical relevance from mitochondrial proteomics, grouped either according to the type of disease - genetic or degenerative - or to the involved mechanism - oxidative stress or apoptosis. The findings are commented in the light of our current understanding of uniformity/variability in cell responses to different stimuli. Specificities in the conceptual and technical approaches to human mitochondrial proteomics are also outlined

    Limited proteolysis and X-ray crystallography reveal the origin of substrate specificity and of the rate-limiting product release during oxidation of D-amino acids catalyzed by mammalian D-amino acid oxidase

    No full text
    Limited proteolysis of D-amino acid oxidase holoenzyme with trypsin cleaves the protein at Arg 221 and near the C-terminus, producing stable 25, 13.4, and 2 kDa polypeptides [Torri-Tarelli, G., Vanoni, M. A., Negri, A., & Curti, B. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 21242-21246]. The 25 and 13.4 kDa polypeptides remain associated to form a nicked D-amino acid oxidase species. This nicked protein form maintains the ability to bind FAD, but exhibits altered catalytic efficiency toward the oxidation of various D-amino acids when compared to native DAAO. Changes in substrate specificity were first monitored by measuring the activity in the presence of different amino acid substrates at various times during proteolysis. Three amino acid substrates were then selected for further analysis of the properties of the nicked D-amino acid oxidase species produced by limited tryptic proteolysis: D-serine, D-arginine, and D-alanine. The three D-amino acids represented limiting cases of the observed changes of enzyme activity on nicking: loss of activity, increase of activity, and minor activity changes, respectively. D-serine was found to be no longer a substrate of D-amino acid oxidase. D-arginine exhibited a 2.5-fold increased apparent maximum velocity although its Km value increased 2-fold with the nicked enzyme in comparison to the native species. D-alanine was oxidized 1.5-fold faster by the nicked D-amino acid oxidase at infinite substrate concentration, and its Km value increased approximately 4-fold. The Kd for benzoate, which was determined kinetically with D-alanine as the enzyme substrate, increased 17-fold in the nicked species. Primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects on V and V/K during the oxidation of D-alanine were also measured. (D)V/K increased from 1.4 +/- 0.2 to 1.8 +/- 0.3 on nicking, while (D)V increased from 1.04 +/- 0.1 to 2.53 +/- 0.5. All the observed changes of the values of the kinetic parameters and of the observed isotope effects are consistent with the hypothesis that nicking of D-amino acid oxidase at position 221 decreases the strength of binding of both substrates and products to the enzyme active site. The information obtained by limited tryptic proteolysis nicely complements that gathered from the analysis of the three-dimensional structure of D-amino acid oxidase in complex with benzoate, which was recently determined [Mattevi, A., Vanoni, M. A., Todone, F., Rizzi, M., Teplyakov, A., Coda, A., Bolognesi, M., & Curti, B. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 93, 7496-7501]. Arginine 221 is part of the 216-228 loop that covers the active site and contributes residues to substrate binding and catalysis. The limited proteolysis data support the hypothesis that this loop acts as a lid on the active site and controls both substrate specificity and the rate of turnover of D-amino acid oxidase

    Active site plasticity in D-amino acid oxidase: a crystallographic analysis.

    No full text
    D-Amino acid oxidase (DAAO) is the prototype of the flavin-containing oxidases. It catalyzes the oxidative deamination of various D-amino acids, ranging from D-Ala to D-Trp. We have carried out the X-ray analysis of reduced DAAO in complex with the reaction product imino tryptophan (iTrp) and of the covalent adduct generated by the photoinduced reaction of the flavin with 3-methyl-2-oxobutyric acid (kVal). These structures were solved by combination of 8-fold density averaging and least-squares refinement techniques. The FAD redox state of DAAO crystals was assessed by single-crystal polarized absorption microspectrophotometry. iTrp binds to the reduced enzyme with the N, C alpha, C, and C beta atoms positioned 3.8 A from the re side of the flavin. The indole side chain points away from the cofactor and is bound in the active site through a rotation of Tyr224. This residue plays a crucial role in that it adapts its conformation to the size of the active site ligand, providing the enzyme with the plasticity required for binding a broad range of substrates. The iTrp binding mode is fully consistent with the proposal, inferred from the analysis of the native DAAO structure, that substrate oxidation occurs via direct hydride transfer from the C alpha to the flavin N5 atom. In this regard, it is remarkable that, even in the presence of the bulky iTrp ligand, the active center is made solvent inaccessible by loop 216-228. This loop is thought to switch between the "closed" conformation observed in the crystal structures and an "open" state required for substrate binding and product release. Loop closure is likely to have a role in catalysis by increasing the hydrophobicity of the active site, thus making the hydride transfer reaction more effective. Binding of kVal leads to keto acid decarboxylation and formation of a covalent bond between the keto acid C alpha and the flavin N5 atoms. Formation of this acyl adduct results in a nonplanar flavin, characterized by a 22 degrees angle between the pyrimidine and benzene rings. Thus, in addition to an adaptable substrate binding site, DAAO has the ability to bind a highly distorted cofactor. This ability is relevant for the enzyme's function as a highly efficient oxidase

    “ Syntesis and biological evaluation of new amino acids structurally related to antitumor agent acivicin”.

    No full text
    Abstract A set of racemic conformationally constrained analogues of the antitumor antibiotic acivicin (+)-1 has been prepared through a strategy based on 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of bromonitrile oxide to suitable dipolarophiles. The bromo analogue (2) of acivicin was also synthesized and tested as a reference compound, together with its stereoisomer 3. The antitumor properties of novel amino acids 4-7 were evaluated in vitro against human tumor cell lines. Their efficacy to inhibit glutamate synthase (GltS) from Azospirillum brasilense was also assayed. None of the studied compounds, but 2, showed significant activity
    corecore