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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)
8-Azido-ATP serves as a substrate for rat brain
hexokinase
(
ATP:D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase
,
EC 2.7.1.1
). Irradiation of
hexokinase
in the presence of this photoactivatable ATP analog results in inactivation of the enzyme. ATP and
hexose
6-phosphates (Glc-6-P, 1,5-anhydroglucitol-6-P) previously shown to competitively inhibit nucleotide binding protect the enzyme from photoinactivation; other
hexose
6-phosphates do not. Hexoses (Glc, Man) previously shown to enhance nucleotide binding also protect against photoinactivation; other hexoses do not. These effects of hexoses and
hexose
6-phosphates can be interpreted in terms of the conformational changes previously shown to result from the binding of these ligands and to influence the characteristics of the nucleotide binding site (M. Baijal and J. E. Wilson (1982) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 218, 513-524). Limited tryptic cleavage of the enzyme produces three major fragments having molecular weights of about 10K, 40K, and 50K, and thought to represent major structural domains within the enzyme (P. G. Polakis and J. E. Wilson (1984) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 234, 341-352). Tryptic cleavage of the enzyme, photoinactivated in the presence of 14C-labeled azido-ATP, discloses prominent labeling of the 10K and 40K domains, which are known to originate from the N- and C-terminal regions, respectively. Labeling of the 40K domain is influenced by ligands in a manner that corresponds to the effectiveness of these ligands in protecting against photoinactivation whereas labeling of the 10K domain is not affected by these same ligands. It is concluded that the 40K domain includes the binding site for nucleotide substrates. More refined two-dimensional peptide mapping techniques demonstrate that the predominant site of labeling is a peptide segment, molecular weight approximately 20K, that is located in the central and/or C-terminal region of the 40K domain. Labeling of the 10K domain is attributed to nonspecific interaction of azido-ATP with the hydrophobic sequence shown to be located at the N-terminus of brain
hexokinase
(P. G. Polakis and J. E. Wilson (1985) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 236, 328-337).
...
PMID:Rat brain hexokinase: location of the substrate nucleotide binding site in a structural domain at the C-terminus of the enzyme. 378 48
Enzymes of the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway and
hexose
monophosphate shunt were examined in cytoplasmic extracts of three serovars of Ureaplasma urealyticum. We found no glucose-6-phosphate or 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase,
hexokinase
, phosphoglucose isomerase, aldolase, or lactic dehydrogenase activities. We failed to find cytochrome pigments in extracts and found no significant production of 14CO2 from [U-14C]glucose, nor did we find oxygen-dependent reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide oxidase activity. Lactic acid was found only at trace levels in spent culture fluids. Ureaplasmas are apparently nonfermentative and are unlike all other mollicutes in that they have no detectable oxygen-dependent reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide oxidase activity.
...
PMID:Metabolic distinctiveness of ureaplasmas. 379 29
Red blood cell glucose metabolism was studied in erythrocytes from a patient with trisomy 10 p which resulted in + 50%
hexokinase
specific activity, in normal controls and in cases of heterozygous
hexokinase
deficiency. The results obtained show that the
hexokinase
activity level is an important factor in the control of the erythrocyte's glycolytic rate while having no appreciable effect on the
hexose
monophosphate pathway under resting conditions. No clear conclusion could be drawn when an oxidative stress was present.
...
PMID:Role of hexokinase in the regulation of glucose metabolism in human erythrocytes. 380 99
M. Kuwajima, C. B. Newgard, D. W. Foster, and J. D. McGarry (1986, J. Biol. Chem. 261, 8849-8853) have concluded that the reason postprandial hepatic glycogenesis occurs primarily from gluconeogenic precursors rather than glucose is because glucokinase activity is insufficient to support the observed rates of glycogen synthesis. F. L. Alvares and R. C. Nordlie (1977, J. Biol. Chem. 252, 8404-8414) have concluded that the combined activities of glucokinase and
hexokinase
are less than the apparent rates of hepatic glucose uptake. We have identified several factors in the assays used in these studies which lead to substantial underestimations of glucokinase activity. Glucokinase was assayed either by allowing glucose 6-phosphate to accumulate over 10 min (discontinuous assay) or by coupling the formation of glucose 6-phosphate with its oxidation by Leuconostoc mesenteroides glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and NAD (continuous assay). Accurate determinations of glucokinase at 37 degrees C with subsaturating glucose require both 100 mM KCl and 2.5 mM dithioerythritol in the assay medium; 2-mercaptoethanol will not substitute for dithioerythritol. When both KCl and dithioerythritol are absent (Kuwajima et al.) glucokinase activity is underestimated by 3- to 5-fold. The discontinuous assay as used previously (Alvares and Nordlie) underestimates glucokinase activity in crude extracts by 2- to 2.5-fold, due in part to the hydrolysis of glucose 6-phosphate and its transformation to other
hexose
monophosphates. Under optimized conditions at 37 degrees C both assays yield similar results in extracts from fed rats, i.e., 2-3 and 4-5 units/g liver at 10 and 100 mM glucose, respectively. Some implications of the finding that total hepatic glucose phosphorylating capacity at physiological concentrations significantly exceeds the observed rates of postprandial glycogen synthesis are discussed.
...
PMID:Factors underlying significant underestimations of glucokinase activity in crude liver extracts: physiological implications of higher cellular activity. 381 60
Hexokinase D, also called
hexokinase
IV or glucokinase, is the isoenzyme characteristic of liver. In spite of its common name of glucokinase it phosphorylates also other sugars besides glucose; in particular, it phosphorylates fructose with similar specificity to that shown by the other hexokinases. Although
hexokinase D
is a monomeric protein it displays positive cooperativity with glucose and mannose. In contrast, the kinetic behaviour with 2-deoxyglucose and fructose is Michaelian.
Mannose
, fructose, 2-deoxyglucose and N-acetylglucosamine are competitive inhibitors of glucose phosphorylation and suppress the cooperativity. The cooperative behaviour can also be suppressed by the presence of glycerol at the assay medium at concentrations over 20%, with a decrease in the K0.5. Neither glycerol nor the inhibitors affect the monomeric state of the enzyme. Hexokinase D exhibits an intrinsic fluorescence at about 326 nm due to tryptophan residues. The binding of glucose to the enzyme enhances the native fluorescence by about 15%. A dissociation constant for glucose of about 3.5 mM was estimated; this value decreased to about 0.5 mM glucose in the presence of glycerol. These and other results are discussed on the basis of steady-state models which assume that
hexokinase D
exists mainly in one conformation state (EI) in the absence of ligands, and that the binding of glucose or mannose induces a conformational transition to a new conformation EII with higher affinity for the sugar substrates. It is postulated that differences in the velocities of the conformational transitions induced by the different sugar substrates give account of the differences in kinetic behaviour with the different sugar substrates.
...
PMID:Cooperative interactions in hexokinase D ("glucokinase"). Kinetic and fluorescence studies. 387 19
Observations in vivo suggest that insulin acts as a long-term regulator of
hexose
uptake in fat cells. In the present study, we examined the long-term effect of insulin on
hexose
uptake in vitro. Exposure of fully differentiated mouse 3T3-L1 adipocytes to insulin induced a time-, concentration-, and protein synthesis-dependent increase in basal 2-deoxyglucose uptake (up to 40%) and a decrease in the 'acute' insulin response. The decrease in insulin effect was due to post-receptor alterations, since insulin binding was not substantially altered. The increase in basal 2-deoxyglucose uptake was due to an increase in the apparent Vmax of the transport system rather than to the observed increase (30%) in
hexokinase
activity, since the concentration of non-phosphorylated 2-deoxyglucose inside the cell was far below the extracellular concentration. The increase in apparent Vmax was most likely due to a protein synthesis-dependent increase in de novo synthesis of
hexose
transporters. Glucose was not essential for the effect. The mechanism responsible for the loss in insulin response remains to be solved. It can be concluded that insulin has the ability to act as a long-term regulator of
hexose
uptake in fat cells in vitro.
...
PMID:Long-term regulation of hexose transport by insulin in cultured mouse (3T3) adipocytes. 388 17
In rat parotid or pancreatic islet homogenates incubated at 7 degrees C,
hexokinase
displayed a greater affinity for but a lower maximal velocity with the alpha-anomer, as distinct from beta-anomer, of
D-mannose
. The anomeric specificity of mammalian
hexokinase
was similar in the case of
D-mannose
and D-glucose, but represented a mirror image of that of yeast
hexokinase
.
...
PMID:Anomeric specificity of mannose phosphorylation by hexokinase. 389 Sep 55
Homogenates of insulin-producing tumoral cells catalyzed the phosphorylation of glucose, mannose, and fructose. The kinetics of phosphorylation at increasing glucose concentrations, the inhibitory effect of glucose 6-phosphate, and the comparison of results obtained with distinct hexoses indicated the presence of both low-Km
hexokinase
-like and high-Km enzymatic activities, the results being grossly comparable to those collected in normal pancreatic islets. Relative to protein content, the glucose-phosphorylating enzymatic activity was higher in tumoral than normal islet cells. The activity of other enzymes was either lower (glutamate dehydrogenase), moderately higher (phosphoglucomutase, lactate dehydrogenase) or considerably greater (ornithine decarboxylase) in tumoral than in normal islet cells. In intact tumoral cells, incubated under increasing glucose concentrations, the oxidation of D-[U-14C]glucose and the output of lactic and pyruvic acids reached a close-to-maximal value at 2.8 mM glucose. The ratios for glucose oxidation/utilization and lactate/pyruvate output were much lower in tumoral than in normal islet cells. Although glucose caused a modest increase in insulin output from the tumoral cells, this effect was saturated at a low glucose concentration (2.8 mM) and less marked than that of other secretagogues (e.g., L-leucine, L-ornithine, or forskolin). Thus, despite a close-to-normal enzymatic equipment for glucose phosphorylation, the tumoral cells displayed severe abnormalities in the metabolism and secretory response to this
hexose
. These findings point to regulatory mechanisms distal to glucose phosphorylation in the control of glucose metabolism in insulin-producing cells.
...
PMID:Glucose metabolism in insulin-producing tumoral cells. 389 13
At a low concentration of D-glucose (3.3 mM), the phosphorylation rate of this
hexose
in rat pancreatic islet homogenates incubated at 8 degrees C is higher with the beta- than with the alpha-anomer, as expected from the anomeric specificity of
hexokinase
. In the presence of a high concentration of glucose 6-phosphate (3.0 mM), which inhibits
hexokinase
but not glucokinase, the phosphorylation rates of the two anomers are not significantly different from one another. Nevertheless, in intact islets exposed at 8 degrees C to the same low concentration of D-glucose, the alpha-anomer augments, more than the beta-anomer, the production of lactic acid and net uptake of 45Ca. At the same concentration (3.3 mM), the alpha-anomer is also more potent than the beta-anomer in enhancing insulin release from perfused pancreases stimulated at 37 degrees C by L-leucine or by the combination of Ba2+ and theophylline. It is concluded that the participation of glucokinase is not essential for the anomeric specificity of glycolysis and insulin release in rat pancreatic islets.
...
PMID:Is glucokinase responsible for the anomeric specificity of glycolysis in pancreatic islets? 390 11
We examined the effects of the membrane-impermeant amino-group-modifying agent fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) on the basal and insulin-stimulated
hexose
-transport activity of isolated rat adipocytes. Pre-treatment of cells with FITC causes irreversible inhibition of transport measured in subsequently washed cells. Transport activity was inhibited by approx. 50% with 2 mM-FITC in 8 min. The cells respond to insulin, after FITC treatment and removal, and the fold increase in transport above the basal value caused by maximal concentrations of insulin was independent of the concentration of FITC used for pre-treatment over the range 0-2 mM, where basal activity was progressively inhibited. The ability of FITC to modify selectively
hexose
transporters accessible only to the external milieu was evaluated by two methods. (1) Free intracellular FITC, and the distribution of FITC bound to cellular components, were assessed after dialysis of the homogenate and subcellular fractionation on sucrose gradients by direct spectroscopic measurement of fluorescein. Most (98%) of the FITC was associated with the non-diffusible fractions. Equilibrium sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation of the homogenate demonstrated that the subcellular distribution of the bound FITC correlated with the density distribution of a plasma-membrane marker, but not markers for Golgi, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria or protein. Exposing the cellular homogenate, rather than the intact cell preparation, to 2 mM-FITC resulted in a 4-5-fold increase in total bound FITC, and the density-distribution profile more closely resembled the distribution of total protein. (2) Incubation of
hexokinase
preparations with FITC rapidly and irreversibly inactivates this protein. However, both intracellular
hexokinase
total activity and its apparent Michaelis constant for glucose were unaffected in FITC-treated intact cells. Further control experiments demonstrated that FITC pre-treatment of cells had no effect on the intracellular ATP concentration or the dose-response curve of insulin stimulation of
hexose
transport. Since the fold increase of
hexose
transport induced by insulin is constant over the range of inhibition of surface-labelled
hexose
transporters, we suggest that insulin-induced insertion of additional transporters into the plasma membrane may not be the major locus of acceleration of
hexose
transport by the hormone.
...
PMID:Insulin stimulation of glucose transport in isolated rat adipocytes. Functional evidence for insulin activation of intrinsic transporter activity within the plasma membrane. 391 27
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