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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)
Mannosephosphate isomerase (MPI) showed a higher activity than
hexokinase
(HKM) in its ability to phosphorylate mannose in the spleen, thymus, brain, liver, striated muscles, kidneys, and testes from BALB/c mice. This led to a HKM/MPI ratio of less than 1 in all the organs and tissues mentioned. In contrast, Ehrlich ascites tumor cells obtained from the peritoneum of BALB/c mice had low MPI activity (half of the HKM activity and, therefore, a ratio of 2). Mannose, which is nontoxic to nontumor cells at a concentration of 0.1 M, induced marked in vitro mortality of the tumor cells. Incubation of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells with mannose resulted in a high accumulation of
mannose-6-phosphate
and a marked depletion of ATP which did not appear when the cells were incubated with glucose. These facts may explain the selective mortality caused by mannose in the tumor cells studied.
...
PMID:Mannose toxicity in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells. 277 33
The effect of lonidamine (LND), 1-(2,4-dichlorobenzyl)-1H-indazol-3 carboxylic acid, on the utilization of carbon from 14C-labeled glucose by cell cultures of the permanent strain LI derived from a human glioblastoma multiforme (astrocytoma) has been investigated. The results may be summarized as follows. Aerobic glycolysis is the main energy-yielding process as shown by the fact that the greatest part of glucose carbon atoms is incorporated into lactate. Nevertheless, the amount of glucose converted accounts for only 63% of the lactate produced, indicating the presence of an elevated endogenous aerobic glycolysis. The amount of glucose carbon atoms incorporated into CO2, lipids, nucleic acid, and supporting structures is low. LND decreased the incorporation of 14C activity in all the above mentioned isolated compounds because of its ability to inhibit glucose phosphorylation. Consequently, there is a lower concentration of
glucose-6-phosphate
which, in turn, affects the rate of formation of several metabolites in glycolytic and pentose phosphate pathways. Experiments with [1-14C]-2-deoxy-D-glucose further substantiate the idea of glucose phosphorylation as a main target of LND and strongly suggest the presence of a mitochondrially bound
hexokinase
. The higher inhibition of glucose phosphorylation in exponentially growing cells indicates a further shift of the enzyme toward mitochondria-bound form and confirms the importance of the energy status of the cell in eliciting the response to LND. The reduced capacity of LND-treated cells to synthetize ATP and
glucose-6-phosphate
reflects the decreased synthesis of proteins and nucleic acids, which affects cell growth and duplication.
...
PMID:Effect of lonidamine on the utilization of 14C-labeled glucose by human astrocytoma cells. 282 Jul 86
The effects of different cerebro-protective agents on selected key enzymes of the energy metabolism of rat primary glial cultures and rat cerebral cortex were studied. As indicators for the capacity of the most important pathways of energy metabolism the following enzyme activities were determined:
hexokinase
(HK), phosphofructokinase (PFK), pyruvate kinase (PK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-P-DH), malate dehydrogenase (MDH), glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), and cytochrome-c-reductase (CCR). After a one week growth period, rat glial cultures were incubated for 3 or 4 weeks with the substances to be tested. Bencyclane (5 X 10(-5) mol/l) increased the activities of HK, G-6-P-DH, and LDH, whereas PFK and CCR were reduced. Pyritinol (10(-4) mol/l) led to a higher G-6-P-DH activity, simultaneously lowering the values for PFK, CCR, PK, LDH, and MDH. Under the influence of an extract of the leaves of Ginkgo bilobae (EGB; 100 mg/l) PFK, LDH, and MDH activities were reduced. All these alterations in enzyme activities went along with simultaneous reductions in protein content, therefore not allowing to exclude toxic effects with regard to the doses used. Moreover, direct interference with the analytical procedure was demonstrable for bencyclane and EGB. Piracetam (10(-3) mol/l), flunarizine (10(-6) mol/l), dihydroergocristine (5 X 10(-6) mol/l), and nicergoline (5 X 10(-6) mol/l) failed to induce any alteration in the employed doses. The most striking effects were obtained with meclofenoxate which was tested at 10(-3) and 10(-4) mol/l. The higher dose caused an elevation of HK, PFK, CCR, G-6-P-DH, GDH and MDH activities, while slightly reducing PK. With the lower dose of meclofenoxate CCR and G-6-P-DH activities were increased. Short-term incubation of the cultures with 10(-3) mol/l meclofenoxate for 24 hr led to an increase in LDH, G-6-P-DH, and GDH activities. Chronic incubation with meclofenoxate (10(-3) mol/l) followed by 48 hr deprivation of the drug resulted in elevated HK, PFK, CCR, G-6-P-DH, GDH, and MDH activities. These changes were accompanied by alterations in related metabolite levels. These include elevations in the concentration of creatine phosphate and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, whereas
glucose-6-phosphate
levels were reduced. After one week of meclofenoxate deprivation the activities of CCR and G-6-P-DH were still elevated. The metabolites of meclofenoxate dimethylaminoethanol (DMAE; 10(-3) mol/l) and p-chlorophenoxyacetic acid (10(-3) mol/l) were also investigated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of cerebro-protective agents on enzyme activities of rat primary glial cultures and rat cerebral cortex. 294 86
We propose the following scheme for cerebral uptake and overall metabolism of glucose in vivo: that brain selects from two pools of glucose anomers in arterial blood, that it takes up excess glucose, that glucose enters the brain tissue as
glucose-6-phosphate
through the actions of mutarotase and
hexokinase
, that some
glucose-6-phosphate
becomes metabolized to CO2 and some becomes incorporated into brain carbon pools, and that excess
glucose-6-phosphate
leaves brain through glucose-6-phosphatase and mutarotase activities. This results from our observations in arterio-venous studies for the determination of cerebral metabolism in humans in vivo that the cerebral uptake of [14C]glucose often appeared to differ from that of unlabeled glucose. With rapidly falling arterial radioactivity, unlabeled glucose uptake was more than [14C]glucose. With rising arterial radioactivity, [14C]glucose extraction exceeded unlabeled glucose. Studies with [14C]
glucose-6-phosphate
suggested that glucose-6-phosphatase in brain removes excess substrate by dephosphorylation. However, when arterial [14C]glucose increased slowly, [14C]glucose uptake varied considerably and the data resembled human cerebral metabolism of glucose anomers. An experiment employing [13C]glucose and NMR provided further support for our proposed scheme.
...
PMID:Evidence for the cerebral uptake in vivo from two pools of glucose and the role of glucose-6-phosphatase in removing excess substrate from brain. 298 20
The rate and efficiency of energy transport were examined in a system containing isolated rabbit heart mitochondria,
hexokinase
, adenylate kinase and low concentrations of adenine nucleotides. Oxygen consumption by mitochondria and
glucose-6-phosphate
synthesis by
hexokinase
were registered. It was found that when adenylate kinase is active both in mitochondria and in the environmental solution, the rate and efficiency (
glucose-6-phosphate
/O ratio) of
glucose-6-phosphate
formation considerably increase. The effects of adenylate kinase activity are fully abolished by diadenosine pentaphosphate, an inhibitor of adenylate kinase.
...
PMID:The effect of adenylate kinase activity on the rate and efficiency of energy transport from mitochondria to hexokinase. 298 36
The notion of the "primary blocks" of cellular metabolism (designated as "metabolic system") has been introduced. Metabolic system is defined as a metabolic pathway which corresponds to the really existing multienzyme complex. The complex of glycolytic enzymes which catalyzes the anaerobic reduction of
glucose-6-phosphate
with production of ATP may serve as an example of metabolic system (this complex does not contain
hexokinase
). The complex is formed on thin filaments of I-band of the muscle fibers or on dimers of band 3 protein embedded in the erythrocyte membranes. The fixation of the multienzyme complex to the support of biological nature provides the material basis for regulation of the metabolic system by chemical signals produced by the higher levels of metabolic control. Owing to interaction with anchor protein of the support the chemical signals exert the general control of functioning the multienzyme complex (switching on--switching-off of the metabolic system). It is assumed that the glycolytic system in skeletal muscles is stimulated by Ca2+ ions which interact with the anchor protein of the support (troponin C).
...
PMID:[Principles of integration of cell metabolism]. 301 80
The effect of adenylate kinase activity on the rate and efficiency of energy transport from mitochondria to
hexokinase
was studied in a system containing isolated rabbit heart mitochondria,
hexokinase
and adenylate kinase at low concentrations of adenine nucleotides. Oxygen consumption by mitochondria and
glucose-6-phosphate
synthesis by
hexokinase
were recorded. It was found that with adenylate kinase being active both in mitochondria and in the washing solution, the rate and efficiency of
glucose-6-phosphate
synthesis considerably increases. The effects of adenylate kinase activity are fully abolished by diadenosine pentaphosphate, an inhibitor of adenylate kinase. The experimental results based on the use of adenylate kinase demonstrate the possibility of increasing the rate and efficiency of energy transfer between two spatially uncoupled biochemical processes in vitro with the aid of an enzymatic system.
...
PMID:[The role of adenylate kinase in the regulation of the rate and effectiveness of energy transfer from mitochondria to hexokinase in vitro]. 301 65
A cyclic pathway of NADPH generation involving interconversion of mannitol and fructose has been proposed to occur in fungi. In Aspergillus nidulans three enzymes of this proposed mannitol cycle (
hexokinase
, NADP-mannitol dehydrogenase and mannitol-l-phosphate phosphatase) were shown to be localized exclusively in the cytosol. Two isoenzymes of the fourth enzyme (mannitol-l-phosphate dehydrogenase) were detected and shown to be localized respectively in the mitochondrion and the cytosol. The mitochondrial isoenzyme appeared to be present on the outer face of the inner mitochondrial membrane. No evidence was found for a coordinated change in the maximal activities of the enzymes of the proposed mannitol cycle in extracts prepared from mycelia grown on six different carbon, and three different nitrogen sources nor for any increase in these activities induced by growth on NO3-. Studies of this type in which other NADP-linked dehydrogenases were measured showed that for most carbon sources tested growth on NO3- increased the maximal activity of NADP-isocitrate dehydrogenase as well as that of
glucose-6-phosphate
and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenases but had little effect on the maximal activity of NADP-malate dehydrogenase (decarboxylating). Our studies provide no support for the operation of the mannitol cycle, or for the proposed role of this cycle in NADPH generation in A. nidulans.
...
PMID:NADPH generation in Aspergillus nidulans: is the mannitol cycle involved? 314 71
Rat lenses treated with greater than 0.06 mM hydrogen peroxide (HP) appeared to sustain epithelial damage, particularly a loss of enzymes including
hexokinase
, which controls the supply of
glucose-6-phosphate
. This may account for the lower level of hexose monophosphate shunt activation observed in these lenses. Other alterations include a decrease of lactate production and disturbance to ionic balance. These changes occurred despite HP removal by glutathione reductase/peroxidase system, catalase and other mechanisms. This suggests an inherent weakness for the lens to resist stresses from high levels of HP. Further, competition for NADPH between aldose reductase and glutathione reductase apparently affects the lens's ability to detoxify HP. This implies a role for oxidation in diabetic cataractogenesis.
...
PMID:The lens's response to exogenous hydrogen peroxide. 322 97
Recent studies from this laboratory have demonstrated that a form of
hexokinase
characteristic of rapidly growing, highly glycolytic tumor cells is bound to an outer mitochondrial membrane receptor complex containing a Mr 35,000 pore protein (D. M. Parry and P. L. Pedersen, J. Biol. Chem., 258: 10904-10912, 1983; R. A. Nakashima, et al., Biochemistry, 25: 1015-1021, 1986). In new studies reported here the specificity of this receptor complex for binding
hexokinase
is defined, and a purification scheme is described which leads to a homogeneous and bindable form of the tumor
hexokinase
. In the AS-30D hepatoma,
hexokinase
activity is elevated more than 100-fold relative to liver tissue. The relative increase in
hexokinase
activity is 8 times greater than that of any other glycolytic enzyme. Hexokinase is the only glycolytic enzyme of AS-30D cells to exhibit a mitochondrial/cytoplasmic specific activity ratio greater than 1, showing a 3.5-fold elevation in the mitochondrial fraction. Purification of
hexokinase
is accomplished by preferential solubilization of the mitochondrial bound enzyme with
glucose-6-phosphate
, followed by high-performance liquid chromatography on gel permeation and anion exchange columns. The final fraction has a specific activity of 144 units per mg of protein, with a Km for glucose of 0.13 mM and for ATP of 1.4 mM. The purified tumor enzyme migrates as a single species upon sodium dodecyl sulfate: polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with an apparent molecular weight of 98,000. Significantly, the purified tumor enzyme retains its activity for mitochondrial binding. Additional results derived from chromatographic, polyclonal antibody, and amino acid analysis studies indicate that the predominant rat hepatoma
hexokinase
species is related most closely to isozymic form(s) of the enzyme commonly referred to as type II, and least related to the liver type IV isozyme (glucokinase).
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a bindable form of mitochondrial bound hexokinase from the highly glycolytic AS-30D rat hepatoma cell line. 333 84
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