Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

1. The maximum catalytic activities of fructose diphosphatase from flight muscles of bumble-bees (Bombus spp.) are at least 30-fold those reported for the enzyme from other tissues. The maximum activity of fructose diphosphatase in the flight muscle of any particular bee is similar to that of phosphofructokinase in the same muscle, and the activity of hexokinase is similar to or greater than the activity of phosphofructokinase. There is no detectable activity of glucose 6-phosphatase and only a very low activity of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase in these muscles. The activities of both fructose diphosphatase and phosphofructokinase vary inversely with the body weight of the bee, whereas that of hexokinase is relatively constant. 2. There is no significant hydrolysis of fructose 1-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, glucose 1,6-diphosphate and glycerol 3-phosphate by extracts of bumble-bee flight muscle. 3. Fructose 1,6-diphosphatase from bumble-bee flight muscle and from other muscles is inhibited by Mn(2+) and univalent cations; the potency of inhibition by the latter varies in the order Li(+)>Na(+)>K(+). However, the fructose diphosphatase from bumble-bee flight muscle is different from the enzyme from other tissues in that it is not inhibited by AMP. 4. The contents of ATP, hexose monophosphates, fructose diphosphate and triose phosphates in bumble-bee flight muscle showed no significant changes between rest and flight. 5. It is proposed that both fructose diphosphatase and phosphofructokinase are simultaneously active and catalyse a cycle between fructose 6-phosphate and fructose diphosphate in resting bumble-bee flight muscle. Such a cycle would produce continuous hydrolysis of ATP, with the release of energy as heat, which would help to maintain the thoracic temperature during rest periods at a level adequate for flight.
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PMID:The activities of fructose diphosphatase in flight muscles from the bumble-bee and the role of this enzyme in heat generation. 434 71

1. The effects of Ca(2+) on the activities and regulatory properties of trehalase, hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, fructose diphosphatase and pyruvate kinase from vertebrate red and white muscle and insect fibrillar and non-fibrillar muscle have been investigated. These muscles were selected because of the possible difference in the role of glycolysis in energy production in the vertebrate muscles, and the possible difference in the role of Ca(2+) in the control of contraction in the two types of insect muscle. An increase in Ca(2+) concentration from 0.001mum to 10mum did not modify the activities nor did it modify the regulatory properties of these enzymes from these various muscles. 2. Concentrations of Ca(2+) above 0.1mm inhibited the activities of hexokinase and phosphofructokinase from the different muscles. It has been suggested that this inhibition may provide the basis for a theory of regulation of glycolysis (Margreth et al., 1967). If phosphofructokinase is located within the sarcoplasmic reticulum, its activity will be inhibited when the muscle is at rest, but the release of Ca(2+) from the reticulum during contraction will lead to a stimulation of its activity and hence an increase in glycolytic flux. The distribution of hexokinase and phosphofructokinase in the various cell fractions of these muscles was very variable. In particular, both enzymes were present almost exclusively in the 100000g supernatant fraction in the extracts of insect flight muscles. Thus there is no correlation between the properties of the enzymes and their distribution in muscle. 3. It is concluded that Ca(2+) does not control the activities of the important regulatory enzymes of glycolysis in muscle. It is suggested that in some muscles the sensitivity of the control mechanism at the level of phosphofructokinase to changes in the concentration of AMP may be increased by a process known as ;substrate-cycling'.
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PMID:The effects of calcium ions on the activities of trehalase, hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, fructose diphosphatase and pyruvate kinase from various muscles. 435 81

1. The activities of six enzymes (hexokinase, phosphoglucose isomerase, phosphofructokinase, aldolase, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and amylase) in extracts of pea cotyledons were determined. The activities during the first 10 days after germination showed individual and characteristic changes that indicate a specific control of both synthesis and destruction of enzymes. 2. Tissue contents of glucose, inorganic phosphate, glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, ATP, ADP, AMP, NAD and NADP were also determined, and a correlation is reported between the substrate concentrations at day 1 and the subsequent enzymic activity. 3. The initial NAD(+)/NADH ratio value of 1 changed to about 3 by day 4; the NADP content was lower and changes in the oxidation state were less striking. The ratio of ATP to ADP and AMP remained virtually constant.
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PMID:Correlated changes of some enzyme activities and cofactor and substrate contents of pea cotyledon tissue during germination. 438 39

Present concepts of the hydrolytic deamination of adenylic acid through AMP-aminohydrolase of brain and other tissues are discussed. The content of AMP-aminohydrolase of tissues, its intracellular disposition, physico-chemical properties, physiological role and the regulation of its activity are considered. AMP-aminohydrolase of brain is compared with that of other tissues (muscle, liver, kidney, erythrocytes, etc.), and characteristic features of the regulation of its activity in brain tissue is included. The participation of nucleotides, phosphoorganic compounds, hexokinase and some cations in the regulation of AMP-aminohydrolase activity of brain and other tissues are discussed on the basis of the experiments carried out and the data available.
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PMID:[AMP-aminohydrolase of the brain and other organs and the regulation of its activity]. 462 Aug 15

1. The substrate kinetic properties of cerebral hexokinases (mitochondrial and cytoplasmic) were studied at limiting concentrations of both glucose and MgATP(2-). Primary plots of the enzymic activity gave no evidence of a Ping Pong mechanism in three types of mitochondrial preparation tested (intact and osmotically disrupted mitochondria, and the purified mitochondrial enzyme), nor in the purified cytoplasmic preparation. 2. Secondary plots of intercepts from the primary plots (1/v versus 1/s) versus reciprocal of second substrate of the mitochondrial activity gave kinetic constants which differed from those obtained directly from the plots of 1/v versus 1/s or of s/v versus s, although the ratios of the derived constants were consistent. The kinetic constants obtained with the cytoplasmic enzyme from primary and secondary plots were consistent. 3. Deoxyglucose, as alternative substrate, inhibited cytoplasmic hexokinase by competition with glucose, but did not compete when MgATP(2-) was the substrate varied. The K(i) for deoxyglucose when glucose concentrations were varied was 0.25mm. 4. A range of ATP analogues was tested as potential substrates and inhibitors of hexokinase activity. GTP, ITP, CTP, UTP and betagamma-methylene-ATP did not act as substrates, nor did they cause significant inhibition. Deoxy-ATP proved to be almost as effective a substrate as ATP. AMP inhibited but did not act as substrate. 5. N-Acetyl-glucosamine inhibited all preparations competitively when glucose was varied and non-competitively when MgATP(2-) was varied. AMP inhibition was competitive when MgATP(2-) was the substrate varied and non-competitive when glucose was varied. 6. The results are interpreted as providing evidence for a random reaction mechanism in all preparations of brain hexokinase, cytoplasmic and mitochondrial. The kinetic properties and reaction mechanism do not change on extraction and purification of the particulate enzyme. 7. The results are discussed in terms of the participation of hexokinase in regulation of cerebral glycolysis.
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PMID:Cerebral-cortex hexokinase. Elucidation of reaction mechanisms by substrate and dead-end inhibitor kinetic analysis. 512 80

The regulation of extramicrosomal Ca2+ concentration maintained by suspensions of rat insulinoma microsomes was studied using Ca2+-selective minielectrodes. The Ca2+-transporting activity was MgATP dependent and correlated with the endoplasmic reticulum marker NADPH-cytochrome c reductase. When incubated in a high KCl medium containing Mg2+ and phosphate, the microsomes lowered [Ca2+] within less than 10 min to around 0.2 microM. They had a high Ca2+-sequestering activity since they were able to take up and retain several small Ca2+ additions. No evidence for a Na+/Ca2+ countertransport was obtained. The accumulated Ca2+ was released by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 or upon transforming ATP into ADP using glucose plus hexokinase. The addition of ADP, at concentrations present in cells, resulted in a dose-dependent and reversible net Ca2+ efflux from the microsomes until a higher [Ca2+] steady state was reached. This was specific for ADP since GDP, UDP, CDP, IDP, and the nonhydrolyzable analogue methylene-ADP as well as AMP and cAMP did not reproduce the effect. Insulin secretory granules were unable to lower medium [Ca2+] or to take up a pulse addition of Ca2+. However, most of the large granular calcium content was released by A23187. The addition of Na+ and lowering or increasing medium pH by 0.2 pH unit did not induce Ca2+ uptake or efflux from the secretory granules. The results indicate that insulinoma endoplasmic reticulum but not insulin secretory granules may play a critical role in the regulation of cytosolic Ca2+. A variation in cellular ADP content following secretagogue addition might modulate Ca2+ fluxes across the endoplasmic reticulum and contribute in raising cytosolic Ca2+.
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PMID:Regulation of Ca2+ transport by isolated organelles of a rat insulinoma. Studies with endoplasmic reticulum and secretory granules. 608 82

Glutamine synthetase specific activity increases greater than 100-fold during the insulin-mediated differentiation of confluent 3T3-L1 cells into adipocytes. Incubation of the adipocytes for 22 h with 0.5 mM dibutyryl cyclic AMP plus 0.5 mM theophylline, 0.2 mM 8-bromo-cyclic AMP, 10 micro M epinephrine, or 1 microgram of alpha 1-24 adrenocorticotropic hormone/ml decreased glutamine synthetase by greater than 60%. During the same incubation period, there was no effect of these compounds on protein or on the specific activities of glucose-6-P dehydrogenase or hexokinase. In the presence of 0.5 mM theophylline, the dibutyryl cyclic AMP-mediated decrease in glutamine synthetase activity was half-maximal at 50 micro M dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Furthermore, between 10 micro M and 5 mM dibutyryl cyclic AMP, the dibutyryl cyclic AMP-mediated decrease in glutamine synthetase was similar in the absence or presence of 1 microgram of insulin/ml. Immunotitration of glutamine synthetase activity from 3T3 adipocytes indicates that the dibutyryl cyclic AMP-mediated decrease in the activity is due to a decrease in the cellular content of glutamine synthetase molecules. We studied the effects of dibutyryl cyclic AMP on the synthesis and degradation of glutamine synthetase. Synthesis rate was estimated from the incorporation of L-[35S]methionine into glutamine synthetase during a 60-min incubation period. Degradation rate was estimated from the first order disappearance of radioactivity from glutamine synthetase in 3T3 adipocytes previously incubated with L-[35S]methionine. Glutamine synthetase was isolated by immunoprecipitation followed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Incubation of 3T3 adipocytes with dibutyrl cyclic AMP resulted in a rapid decline in the apparent synthesis rate of glutamine synthetase. In addition, dibutyryl cyclic AMP treatment increased the initial rate of glutamine synthetase degradation. The half-life of glutamine synthetase was 24.5 h in control cultures and 16 h in dibutyryl cyclic AMP-treated cultures. In contrast, dibutyryl cyclic AMP had little effect on the synthesis or degradation of soluble protein. Our data indicate that the dibutyryl cyclic AMP-mediated decrease in 3T3 adipocyte glutamine synthetase activity results from a decrease in the synthesis rate and an increase in the initial degradation rate of the enzyme.
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PMID:Dibutyryl cyclic AMP decreases glutamine synthetase in cultured 3T3-L1 adipocytes. 610 99

Glycolysis in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells suspended in buffer containing 5 mM Pi was 50% inhibited by ouabain. In the absence of Pi the inhibition was less striking. Permeabilization of the cells with filipin abolished glycolysis, but glycolysis was restored by addition of Pi and AMP. Neither ouabain nor quercetin inhibited glycolysis in these permeabilized cells. We conclude that quercetin did not inhibit hexokinase sufficiently to affect glycolysis. An extract of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells glycolyzed weakly unless either Pi or an ATPase (e.g. (Na+K+)-ATPase) was added. The low rate of glycolysis of the extract was even further reduced when an endogenous ATPase was removed by precipitation with CaATP. The glycolytic activity of this ATPase-deficient extract was restored by addition of purified (Na+K+)-ATPase or of CaATP-precipitable ATPase. Addition of hexokinase without Pi did not restore glycolytic activity to the extract. An explanation for the contradictory conclusions by Bustamante, E., Morris, H.P., and Pedersen, P.L. (J. Biol. Chem. (1981) 265, 8699-8704) is presented.
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PMID:The role of ATPase in glycolysis of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells. 621 95

The interaction of the cardiac glycoside [3H]ouabain with the Na+, K+ pump of resealed human erythrocyte ghosts was investigated. Binding of [3H]ouabain to high intracellular Na+ ghosts was studied in high extracellular Na+ media, a condition determined to produce maximal ouabain binding rates. Simultaneous examination of both the number of ouabain molecules bound per ghost and the corresponding inhibition of the Na+, K+-ATPase revealed that one molecule of [3H]ouabain inhibited one Na+, K+-ATPase complex. Intracellular magnesium or magnesium plus inorganic phosphate produced the lowest ouabain binding rate. Support of ouabain binding by adenosine diphosphate (ADP) was negligible, provided synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) through the residual adenylate kinase activity was prevented by the adenylate kinase inhibitor Ap5A. Uridine 5'-triphosphate (UTP) alone did not support ouabain binding after inhibition of the endogenous nucleoside diphosphokinase by trypan blue and depletion of residual ATP by the incorporation of hexokinase and glucose. ATP acting solely at the high-affinity binding site of the Na+, K+ pump (Km approximately 1 microM) promoted maximal [3H]ouabain binding rates. Failure of 5'-adenylyl-beta-gamma-imidophosphate (AMP-PNP) to stimulate significantly the rate of ouabain binding suggests that phosphorylation of the pump was required to expose the ouabain receptor.
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PMID:[3H]Ouabain binding and Na+, K+-ATPase in resealed human red cell ghosts. 630 99

Glucagon and dibutyryl cyclic AMP inhibited glucose utilization and lowered fructose 2,6-bisphosphate levels of hepatocytes prepared from fed chickens. Partially purified preparations of chicken liver 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase and fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase were activated and inhibited by fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, respectively. The sensitivities of these enzymes and the changes observed in fructose 2,6-bisphosphate levels are consistent with an important role for this allosteric effector in hormonal regulation of carbohydrate metabolism in chicken liver. In contrast, oleate inhibition of glucose utilization by chicken hepatocytes occurred without change in fructose, 2,6-bisphosphate levels. Likewise, pyruvate inhibition of lactate gluconeogenesis in chicken hepatocytes cannot be explained by changes in fructose 2,6-bisphosphate levels. Exogenous glucose caused a marked increase in fructose 2,6-bisphosphate content of hepatocytes from fasted but not fed birds. Both glucagon and lactate prevented this glucose effect. Fasted chicken hepatocytes responded to lower glucose concentrations than fasted rat hepatocytes, perhaps reflecting the species difference in hexokinase isozymes.
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PMID:Role of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate in the regulation of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis in chicken liver. 631 91


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