The changes in the activities of the two vitamin B 12 -dependent enzymes methylmalonyl-CoA mutase ( EC 5.4.99.2) and methionine synthetase (5-methyltetrahydrofolate–homocysteine methyltransferase, EC 2.1.1.13) are described in two groups of sheep maintained for 20 weeks on either a cobalt-deficient or a Co-sufficient whole-barley diet. At the end of that period, the plasma concentrations of vitamin B 12 were depressed and those of methylmalonic acid were raised in the Co-deficient group. During the course of the experiment hepatic holo-mutase activity, measured on biopsy samples, declined in Co-deficient animals with a half-life of 73 d. There was a similar, but slower decline in lymphocyte holo-mutase activity which fell with a half-life of 125 d. At slaughter, there was no difference between Co-sufficient and Co-deficient animals in total mutase activity in liver, kidney, brain and spinal cord. In contrast, the total-synthetase activity of liver and kidney was reduced by 60 and 30% respectively in the Co-deficient animals. There was no change in either group of animals in total-synthetase activity, or in either holo-mutase or holo-synthetase activity, in brain and spinal cord. In the Co-deficient animals, holo-mutase and holo-synthetase activities in liver, the tissue with the greatest activity of both enzymes, fell to 25 and 39% respectively, of that of Co-sufficient animals. The corresponding reductions for kidney were 12 and 51 % respectively. These results indicated that activity of both holoenzymes is greatly reduced in Co-deficient sheep.
CITATION STYLE
Kennedy, D. G., Cannavan, A., Molloy, A., O’ harte, F., Taylor, S. M., Kennedy, S., & Blanchflower, W. J. (1990). Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase ( EC 5.4.99.2) and methionine synthetase ( EC 2.1.1.13) in the tissues of cobalt–vitamin B 12 deficient sheep. British Journal of Nutrition, 64(3), 721–732. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19900074
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