General Information of MET (ID: META00227)
Name Pyroglutamic acid
Synonyms   Click to Show/Hide Synonyms of This Metabolite
(-)-2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylate; (-)-2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylic acid; (-)-Pyroglutamate; (-)-Pyroglutamic acid; (5S)-2-Oxopyrrolidine-5-carboxylate; (5S)-2-Oxopyrrolidine-5-carboxylic acid; (S)-(-)-2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylate; (S)-(-)-2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylic acid; (S)-(-)-g-Butyrolactam-g-carboxylate; (S)-(-)-g-Butyrolactam-g-carboxylic acid; (S)-(-)-gamma-Butyrolactam-gamma-carboxylate; (S)-(-)-gamma-Butyrolactam-gamma-carboxylic acid; (S)-2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylate; (S)-2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylic acid; (S)-5-oxo-2-Pyrrolidinecarboxylate; (S)-5-oxo-2-Pyrrolidinecarboxylic acid; (S)-Pyroglutamate; (S)-Pyroglutamic acid; 2-L-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylate; 2-L-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylic acid; 2-Oxopyrrolidine-5(S)-carboxylate; 2-Oxopyrrolidine-5(S)-carboxylic acid; 2-Pyrrolidinone-5-carboxylate; 2-Pyrrolidinone-5-carboxylic acid; 2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylic acid; 5-Carboxy-2-pyrrolidinone; 5-Ketoproline; 5-L-Oxoproline; 5-Oxoprolinate; 5-Oxoproline; 5-Oxopyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid; 5-Pyrrolidinone-2-carboxylate; 5-Pyrrolidinone-2-carboxylic acid; 5-Pyrrolidone-2-carboxylate; 5-Pyrrolidone-2-carboxylic acid; 5-oxo-L-Proline; Ajidew a 100; Glutimate; Glutimic acid; Glutiminate; Glutiminic acid; L-2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylate; L-2-Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylic acid; L-5-Carboxy-2-pyrrolidinone; L-5-Oxoproline; L-5-Pyrrolidone-2-carboxylate; L-5-Pyrrolidone-2-carboxylic acid; L-5-oxo-2-Pyrrolidinecarboxylate; L-5-oxo-2-Pyrrolidinecarboxylic acid; L-Glutamic acid g-lactam; L-Glutimate; L-Glutimic acid; L-Glutiminate; L-Glutiminic acid; L-Pyroglutamate; L-Pyroglutamic acid; L-Pyrrolidinonecarboxylate; L-Pyrrolidinonecarboxylic acid; L-Pyrrolidonecarboxylate; L-Pyrrolidonecarboxylic acid; Magnesium pidolate; Oxoproline; Oxopyrrolidinecarboxylate; Oxopyrrolidinecarboxylic acid; PCA; Pidolate; Pidolate, magnesium; Pidolic acid; Pidolidone; Pyroglutamate; Pyrrolidinonecarboxylate; Pyrrolidinonecarboxylic acid; Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylate; Pyrrolidone-5-carboxylic acid; Pyrrolidonecarboxylic acid
Source Aliphatic heteromonocyclic compounds
Structure Type   Amino acids, peptides, and analogues  (Click to Show/Hide the Complete Structure Type Hierarchy)
Organic acids and derivatives
Carboxylic acids and derivatives
Amino acids, peptides, and analogues
PubChem CID
7405
HMDB ID
HMDB0000267
Formula
C5H7NO3
Structure
<iframe style="width: 300px; height: 300px;" frameborder="0" src="https://embed.molview.org/v1/?mode=balls&cid=7405"></iframe>
3D MOL 2D MOL
  Click to Show/Hide the Molecular/Functional Data (External Links/Property/Function) of This Metabolite
KEGG ID
C01879
DrugBank ID
DB03088
ChEBI ID
18183
FooDB ID
FDB014506
Physicochemical Properties Molecular Weight 129.11 Topological Polar Surface Area 66.4
XlogP -0.8 Complexity 154
Heavy Atom Count 9 Rotatable Bond Count 1
Hydrogen Bond Donor Count 2 Hydrogen Bond Acceptor Count 3
Function
Pyroglutamic acid (5-oxoproline) is a cyclized derivative of L-glutamic acid. It is an uncommon amino acid derivative in which the free amino group of glutamic acid cyclizes to form a lactam. It is formed nonenzymatically from glutamate, glutamine, and gamma-glutamylated peptides, but it can also be produced by the action of gamma-glutamylcyclotransferase on an L-amino acid. Elevated blood levels may be associated with problems of glutamine or glutathione metabolism. This compound is found in substantial amounts in brain tissue and other tissues in bound form, especially skin. It is also present in plant tissues. It is sold, over the counter, as a "smart drug" for improving blood circulation in the brain. Pyroglutamate in the urine is a biomarker for the consumption of cheese. When present in sufficiently high levels, pyroglutamic acid can act as an acidogen and a metabotoxin. An acidogen is an acidic compound that induces acidosis, which has multiple adverse effects on many organ systems. A metabotoxin is an endogenously produced metabolite that causes adverse health effects at chronically high levels. Chronically high levels of pyroglutamic acid are associated with at least five inborn errors of metabolism including 5-oxoprolinuria, 5-oxoprolinase deficiency, glutathione synthetase deficiency, hawkinsinuria, and propionic acidemia. Pyroglutamic acid is an organic acid. Abnormally high levels of organic acids in the blood (organic acidemia), urine (organic aciduria), the brain, and other tissues lead to general metabolic acidosis. Acidosis typically occurs when arterial pH falls below 7.35. In infants with acidosis, the initial symptoms include poor feeding, vomiting, loss of appetite, weak muscle tone (hypotonia), and lack of energy (lethargy). These can progress to heart, liver, and kidney abnormalities, seizures, coma, and possibly death. These are also the characteristic symptoms of the untreated IEMs mentioned above. Many affected children with organic acidemias experience intellectual disability or delayed development. In adults, acidosis or acidemia is characterized by headaches, confusion, feeling tired, tremors, sleepiness, and seizures. It has been shown that pyroglutamic acid releases GABA from the cerebral cortex and displays anti-anxiety effects in a simple approach-avoidance conflict situation in the rat. In clinical pharmacology experiments, pyroglutamic acid significantly shortens the plasma half-life of ethanol during acute intoxication.
Regulatory Network
Full List of Protein(s) Regulating This Metabolite
      Hydrolases (EC 3)
            Leukotriene-C4 hydrolase (GGT1) Click to Show/Hide the Full List of Regulating Pair(s):   1 Pair(s)
               Detailed Information Protein   Info click to show the details of this protein
               Regulating Pair Experim Info click to show the details of experiment for validating this pair [1]
                      Introduced Variation Knockdown (siRNA) of GGT1
                      Induced Change Pyroglutamic acid concentration: increase
                      Summary Introduced Variation         Induced Change 
                      Disease Status Renal cell carcinoma [ICD-11: 2C90]
                      Details It is reported that knockdown of GGT1 leads to the increase of pyroglutamic acid levels compared with control group.
      Monocarboxylate porter (MNP)
            Monocarboxylate transporter 1 (SLC16A1) Click to Show/Hide the Full List of Regulating Pair(s):   1 Pair(s)
               Detailed Information Protein   Info click to show the details of this protein
               Regulating Pair Experim Info click to show the details of experiment for validating this pair [2]
                      Introduced Variation Overexpression of SLC16A1
                      Induced Change Pyroglutamic acid concentration: increase
                      Summary Introduced Variation         Induced Change 
                      Disease Status Healthy individual
                      Details It is reported that overexpression of SLC16A1 leads to the increase of pyroglutamic acid levels compared with control group.
      Pore-forming PNC peptide (PNC)
            Cellular tumor antigen p53 (TP53) Click to Show/Hide the Full List of Regulating Pair(s):   1 Pair(s)
               Detailed Information Protein   Info click to show the details of this protein
               Regulating Pair Experim Info click to show the details of experiment for validating this pair [3]
                      Introduced Variation Knockout of TP53
                      Induced Change Pyroglutamic acid concentration: decrease (Log2 FC=0.5)
                      Summary Introduced Variation         Induced Change 
                      Disease Status Colon cancer [ICD-11: 2B90]
                      Details It is reported that knockout of TP53 leads to the decrease of pyroglutamic acid levels compared with control group.
      Transferases (EC 2)
            Carnitine O-palmitoyltransferase 1 (CPT1) Click to Show/Hide the Full List of Regulating Pair(s):   1 Pair(s)
               Detailed Information Protein   Info click to show the details of this protein
               Regulating Pair Experim Info click to show the details of experiment for validating this pair [4]
                      Introduced Variation Knockout of Cpt1c
                      Induced Change Pyroglutamic acid concentration: decrease
                      Summary Introduced Variation         Induced Change 
                      Disease Status Healthy individual
                      Details It is reported that knockout of Cpt1c leads to the decrease of pyroglutamic acid levels compared with control group.
            SNF-related serine/threonine-protein kinase (SNRK) Click to Show/Hide the Full List of Regulating Pair(s):   1 Pair(s)
               Detailed Information Protein   Info click to show the details of this protein
               Regulating Pair Experim Info click to show the details of experiment for validating this pair [5]
                      Introduced Variation Knockdown (shRNA) of SNRK
                      Induced Change Pyroglutamic acid concentration: increase
                      Summary Introduced Variation         Induced Change 
                      Disease Status Healthy individual
                      Details It is reported that knockdown of SNRK leads to the increase of pyroglutamic acid levels compared with control group.
References
1 Impairment of gamma-glutamyl transferase 1 activity in the metabolic pathogenesis of chromophobe renal cell carcinoma. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Jul 3;115(27):E6274-E6282.
2 Functional characterization of 5-oxoproline transport via SLC16A1/MCT1. J Biol Chem. 2015 Jan 23;290(4):2303-11.
3 Integrative omics analysis of p53-dependent regulation of metabolism. FEBS Lett. 2018 Feb;592(3):380-393.
4 Metabolomic profiling reveals a role for CPT1c in neuronal oxidative metabolism. BMC Biochem. 2012 Oct 25;13:23.
5 Sucrose Nonfermenting-Related Kinase Enzyme-Mediated Rho-Associated Kinase Signaling is Responsible for Cardiac Function. Circ Cardiovasc Genet. 2016 Dec;9(6):474-486.

If you find any error in data or bug in web service, please kindly report it to Dr. Zhang and Dr. Mou.