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Query: EC:2.7.1.1 (
hexokinase
)
5,274
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have previously proposed that metabolic status is important in the regulation of cucumber
malate synthase
(MS) and isocitrate lyase (ICL) gene expression during plant development. In this article, we used a cell culture system to demonstrate that intracellular metabolic status does influence expression of both of these genes. Starvation of cucumber cell cultures resulted in the coordinate induction of the expression of MS and ICL genes, and this effect was reversed when sucrose was returned to the culture media. The induction of gene expression was closely correlated with a drop in intracellular sucrose, glucose, and fructose below threshold concentrations, but it was not correlated with a decrease in respiration rate. Glucose, fructose, or raffinose in the culture media also resulted in repression of MS and ICL. Both 2-deoxyglucose and mannose, which are phosphorylated by
hexokinase
but not further metabolized, specifically repressed MS and ICL gene expression relative to a third glyoxylate cycle gene, malate dehydrogenase. However, the addition of 3-methylglucose, an analog of glucose that is not phosphorylated, did not result in repression of either MS or ICL. It is proposed that the signal giving rise to a change in gene expression originates from the intracellular concentration of hexose sugars or the flux of hexose sugars into glycolysis.
...
PMID:Carbon Catabolite Repression Regulates Glyoxylate Cycle Gene Expression in Cucumber. 1224 57
The dauer larva, a non-feeding and developmentally arrested stage of the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, is morphologically and physiologically specialized for survival and dispersal during adverse growth conditions. The ability of dauer larvae to live several times longer than the continuous developmental life span has been attributed in part to a repressed metabolism. We used serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) profiles from dauer larvae and mixed growing stages to compare expression patterns for genes with known or predicted roles in glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, glycogen metabolism, the Krebs and glyoxylate cycles, and selected fermentation pathways. Ratios of mixed:dauer transcripts indicated non-dauer enrichment that was consistent with previously determined adult:dauer enzyme activity ratios for
hexokinase
(glycolysis), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (gluconeogenesis), isocitrate dehydrogenase (NADP-dependent), and isocitrate lyase-
malate synthase
(glyoxylate cycle). Transcripts for the majority of Krebs cycle components were not differentially represented in the two profiles. Transcript abundance for pyruvate kinase, alcohol dehydrogenase, a putative cytosolic fumarate reductase, two pyruvate dehydrogenase components, and a succinyl CoA synthetase alpha subunit implied that anaerobic pathways were upregulated in dauer larvae. Generation of nutritive fermentation byproducts and the moderation of oxidative damage are potential benefits of a hypoxic dauer interior.
...
PMID:SAGE surveys C. elegans carbohydrate metabolism: evidence for an anaerobic shift in the long-lived dauer larva. 1287 42
The effect of culture age on intra- and extracellular metabolite levels as well as on in vitro determined specific activities of enzymes of central carbon metabolism was investigated during evolution for over 90 generations of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK 113-7D in an aerobic glucose/ethanol-limited chemostat at a specific dilution rate of 0.052 h(-1). It was found that the fluxes of consumed (O2, glucose/ethanol) and secreted compounds (CO2) did not change significantly during the entire cultivation period. However, morphological changes were observed, leading to an increased cellular surface area. During 90 generations of chemostat growth not only the residual glucose concentration decreased, also the intracellular concentrations of trehalose, glycolytic intermediates, TCA cycle intermediates and amino acids were found to have decreased with a factor 5-10. The only exception was glyoxylate which showed a fivefold increase in concentration. In addition to this the specific activities of most glycolytic enzymes also decreased by a factor 5-10 during long-term cultivation. Exceptions to this were
hexokinase
, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase of which the activities remained unchanged. Furthermore, the concentrations of the adenylate nucleotides as well as the energy charge of the cells did not change in a significant manner. Surprisingly, the specific activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH),
malate synthase
(MS) and isocitrate lyase (ICL) increased significantly during 90 generations of chemostat cultivation. These changes seem to indicate a pattern where metabolic overcapacities (for reversible reactions) and storage pools (trehalose, high levels of amino acids and excess protein in enzymes) are lost during the evolution period. The driving force is proposed to be a growth advantage in the absence of these metabolic overcapacities.
...
PMID:Changes in the metabolome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae associated with evolution in aerobic glucose-limited chemostats. 1569 47
The function of the peroxisomes was examined in the pathogenic basidiomycete Cryptococcus neoformans. Recent studies reveal the glyoxylate pathway is required for virulence of diverse microbial pathogens of plants and animals. One exception is C. neoformans, in which isocitrate lyase (encoded by ICL1) was previously shown not to be required for virulence, and here this was extended to exclude also a role for
malate synthase
(encoded by MLS1). The role of peroxisomes, in which the glyoxylate pathway enzymes are localized in many organisms, was examined by mutation of two genes (PEX1 and PEX6) encoding AAA (ATPases associated with various cellular activities)-type proteins required for peroxisome formation. The pex1 and pex6 deletion mutants were unable to localize the fluorescent DsRED-SKL protein to peroxisomal punctate structures, in contrast to wild-type cells. pex1 and pex6 single mutants and a pex1 pex6 double mutant exhibit identical phenotypes, including abolished growth on fatty acids but no growth difference on acetate. Because both icl1 and mls1 mutants are unable to grow on acetate as the sole carbon source, these findings demonstrate that the glyoxylate pathway can function efficiently outside the peroxisome in C. neoformans. The pex1 mutant exhibits wild-type virulence in a murine inhalation model and in an insect host, demonstrating that peroxisomes are not required for virulence under these conditions. An unusual phenotype of the pex1 and pex6 mutants was that they grew poorly with glucose as the carbon source, but nearly wild type with galactose, which suggested impaired
hexokinase
function and that C. neoformans peroxisomes might function analogously to the glycosomes of the trypanosomid parasites. Deletion of the
hexokinase
HXK2 gene reduced growth in the presence of glucose and suppressed the growth defect of the pex1 mutant on glucose. The hexokinase 2 protein of C. neoformans contains a predicted peroxisome targeting signal (type 2) motif; however, Hxk2 fused to fluorescent proteins was not localized to peroxisomes. Thus, we hypothesize that glucose or glycolytic metabolites are utilized in the peroxisome by an as yet unidentified enzyme or regulate a pathway required by the fungus in the absence of peroxisomes.
...
PMID:Peroxisome function regulates growth on glucose in the basidiomycete fungus Cryptococcus neoformans. 1704 Nov 84