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)

Bacillus sphaericus 2362 is pathogenic for mosquito larvae and is being considered for large-scale production as a larvicide. The inability of the bacteria to metabolize carbohydrates requires that they be grown on proteinaceous media. This bacterium was found to be unable to transport glucose or sucrose into the cell, and it lacked glucokinase and hexokinase activity. In addition, it lacked phosphoglucose isomerase, phosphofructokinase, and glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, which are early enzymes of the Embden-Myerhof-Parnas and hexose monophosphate pathways. The presence of other enzymes in these pathways was indicated by assay, by the metabolism of glycerol to acetate, and by growth on acetate and gluconate as sole carbon sources. Critical enzymes of the Entner-Doudoroff pathway were also shown to be absent.
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PMID:Carbohydrate metabolism in the mosquito pathogen Bacillus sphaericus 2362. 256 98

We have developed radiometric assays for small quantities of glycerol, glucose and glycogen, based on a technique described by Thorner and Paulus (1971, J. Biol. Chem. 246, 3885-3894) for the measurement of glycerokinase activity. In the glycerol assay, glycerol is phosphorylated with [32P]ATP and glycerokinase, residual [32P]ATP is hydrolyzed by heating in acid, and free [32P]phosphate is removed by precipitation with ammonium molybdate and triethylamine. Standard dose-response curves were linear from 50 to 3000 pmol glycerol with less than 3% SD in triplicate measurements. Of the substances tested for interference, only dihydroxyacetone gave a slight false positive signal at high concentration. When used to measure glycerol concentrations in serum and in media from incubated adipose tissue, the radiometric glycerol assay correlated well with a commonly used spectrophotometric assay. The radiometric glucose assay is similar to the glycerol assay, except that glucokinase is used instead of glycerokinase. Dose response was linear from 5 to 3000 pmol glucose with less than 3% SD in triplicate measurements. Glucosamine and N-acetylglucosamine gave false positive signals when equimolar to glucose. When glucose concentrations in serum were measured, the radiometric glucose assay agreed well with hexokinase/glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (H/GDH)-based and glucose oxidase/H2O2-based glucose assays. The radiometric method for glycogen measurement incorporates previously described isolation and digestion techniques, followed by the radiometric assay of free glucose. When used to measure glycogen in mouse epididymal fat pads, the radiometric glycogen assay correlated well with the H/GDH-based glycogen assay. All three radiometric assays offer several practical advantages over spectral assays.
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PMID:Radiometric assays for glycerol, glucose, and glycogen. 281 33

Glucose and lipid metabolism in the brain, liver and in a transplanted tumour were found to be variously altered within 2 to 3 h of administering single doses of the radiosensitizer Ro-03-8799 to normal and tumour-bearing mice. Hepatic lactate and glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P) levels were decreased but those of the ketone body beta-hydroxybutyrate (beta-HOBu) were raised. However, in the tumour, these levels were all enhanced. The lactate levels in brain remained relatively constant but both beta-HOBu and G3P levels were altered in a manner similar to that in the liver. The levels of glucose were approximately doubled in blood, brain and tumour, but whereas tumour G6P levels increased, those in the brain were lowered to below the limits of detection. Hepatic glucose levels were significantly decreased after 1 h but G6P levels were not affected. These changes could neither be related to inhibitory effects on hepatic glucokinase or brain hexokinase activity nor to limiting amounts of ATP in both tissues. However, the activity of glucose-6-phosphatase (G6P'ase) was distinctly raised in the liver and the hepatic glycogen stores were also rapidly lowered. Overall, the results suggest that Ro-03-8799 exerts a stimulatory effect on glucose production in the liver. In both liver and brain the levels of free fatty acids and phospholipids were increased whereas those of esterified fatty acids were lowered. Most importantly, the changes in metabolite levels affect the cellular redox couples; those of the cytosol (lactate/pyruvate; G3P/dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DAP] are directed towards the oxidised state in the liver but to a more reduced state in the tumour. The mitochondrial couple (beta-HOBu/acetoacetate (AcAc)) in both tissues is shifted towards the reduced state. These metabolic changes may result in an increase in the degree of hypoxia in the tumour and may well play an important role in the development of neuropathies.
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PMID:Effects on intermediary metabolism in mouse tissues by Ro-03-8799. 282 72

Mitochondrial-bound glycerol kinase in rat brain was examined with reference to factors involved in the binding and significance of the binding in relation to ATP metabolism inside the mitochondria. The mitochondrial-bound glycerol kinase was solubilized with glycerol 3-phosphate or ADP, and the solubilized enzyme was rebound to mitochondria by addition of divalent cations. The rebinding was decreased by the presence of glycerol 3-phosphate, while was increased by glucose 6-phosphate. Positive correlation was found between the formation of glycerol 3-phosphate by mitochondrial-bound glycerol kinase and ATP content in mitochondria in experiments using various concentrations of succinate and ADP. On the other hand, glycerol 3-phosphate formation was inhibited by addition of inhibitors for mitochondria functions, such as oligomycin, dinitrophenol, cyanide, and atractyloside. Furthermore, formation of dihydroxyacetone phosphate from glycerol was proved, indicating the involvement of glycerol kinase in glycerol phosphate shuttle in combination with glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase. These findings are discussed in comparison with those of mitochondrial-bound hexokinase.
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PMID:Binding and function of mitochondrial glycerol kinase in comparison with those of mitochondrial hexokinase. 298 25

Glycosomes, purified from trypomastigote forms of Trypanosoma brucei, contained all the enzymes necessary to convert glucose to alpha-glycerophosphate and 3-phosphoglycerate. The multienzyme reaction which produces 2 alpha-glycerophosphate, 2 ADP, and 2 NAD+ from 1 glucose, 2 ATP, and 2 NADH was studied spectrophotometrically. Intact glycosomes, suspended with 5.6 mM alpha-glycerophosphate and 2 mM ADP, produced ATP inside the glycosomes for glucose phosphorylation at a rate of 0.7 mumol/min/mg protein, so confirming the feasibility of producing ATP from alpha-glycerophosphate and ADP catalyzed by glycosomal glycerol kinase, and coupling this ATP production to the ATP-requiring stages of glycolysis. No evidence was found for direct channeling of the ATP generated by glycerol kinase and either hexokinase or phosphofructose kinase in glycosomal enzyme complexes cross-linked by dimethyl suberimidate treatment of intact glycosomes prior to solubilization of their membrane. Compartmentation of glycolytic intermediates, enzymes, and ATP inside isolated glycosomes was demonstrated by their inaccessibility to exogenous enzymes. We conclude that the compartmentation of the glycosome and the efficient production of ATP in the glycosome from whole cell concentrations of sn-glycerol 3-phosphate and ADP account for the observed whole cell production of equimolar glycerol from glucose with net ATP synthesis by T. brucei under anaerobic conditions.
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PMID:The role of compartmentation and glycerol kinase in the synthesis of ATP within the glycosome of Trypanosoma brucei. 299 27

The effect of peak lactation on the activities of a number of enzymes of glucose and lipid metabolism of perirenal and subcutaneous adipose tissue, skeletal muscle, liver, kidney cortex and mammary parenchyma of sheep are described. Enzymes studied included hexokinase (glucose utilization), pyruvate carboxylase (gluconeogenesis), pyruvate dehydrogenase (glucose oxidation and production of acetyl CoA for fatty acid synthesis), acetyl CoA carboxylase (fatty acid synthesis) and glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (fatty acid esterification). Major changes that were found include a decrease in activities of enzymes of fatty acid synthesis and esterification in adipose tissues, decreased activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase in muscle and adipose tissues and increased pyruvate carboxylase; there was no change in activities of enzyme of fatty acid esterification in liver. Activities of hexokinase, acetyl CoA carboxylase and glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase have been estimated per tissue; this shows the quantitative importance of limiting glucose utilization by muscle and of suppression of fatty acid synthesis in adipose tissue for efficient partitioning of nutrients for milk production.
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PMID:Enzymes of glucose and fatty acid metabolism of liver, kidney, skeletal muscle, adipose tissue and mammary gland of lactating and non-lactating sheep. 358 45

The regulation of oxidative phosphorylation was studied with digitonin-treated epididymal bull spermatozoa in which mitochondria are directly accessible to low molecular compounds in the extracellular medium. Due to the high extramitochondrial ATPase activity in this cell preparation, it was possible to stimulate respiration to a small extent only by added hexokinase in the presence of glucose and adenine nucleotides. Added pyruvate kinase plus phosphoenol pyruvate, however, strongly suppressed the respiration. Under these conditions, the respiration was found to depend on the extramitochondrial [ATP]/[ADP] ratio in the range of 1-100. The contribution of the adenine nucleotide translocator to this dependence was determined by titration with the irreversible inhibitor carboxyatractyloside in the presence of ADP. Using lactate plus malate as substrate, the active state respiration was controlled to about 30% by the translocator, whereas 12 and 4% were determined in the presence of L-glycerol-3-phosphate and malate alone, respectively. In order to compare the results with those for intact cells, the adenine nucleotide patterns were determined in intact and digitonin-treated spermatozoa under conditions of controlled respiration in the presence of vanadate and carboxyatractyloside, respectively. About 21% of total cellular adenine nucleotides were found in digitonin-treated cells representing the mitochondrial compartment. While allowing for the intramitochondrial amount of adenine nucleotides, the cytosolic [ATP]/[ADP] ratio was estimated to be 6-times higher than the mitochondrial ratio in intact cells. It is concluded from the data presented that the principal mechanism by which oxidative phosphorylation in sperm mitochondria is regulated via the extramitochondrial [ATP]/[ADP] ratio is the same as that demonstrated for other isolated mitochondria.
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PMID:Regulation of oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria of epididymal bull spermatozoa. 360 41

A method for determining Control Coefficients is proposed for systems studied in vitro and applied to a model pathway. Rat liver extract, which converts glucose into glycerol 3-phosphate, was used with the addition to the incubation mixture of fructose-bisphosphate aldolase, triose-phosphate isomerase and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase as 'auxiliary' enzymes, which leaves all the control on the first three enzymes. The flux of the metabolic pathway was recorded by assaying NADH decay. Flux Control Coefficients (CJE) of hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphate isomerase and phosphofructokinase were calculated by titration of the system with increasing quantities of extraneous enzymes. It is shown that the summation property is fulfilled. The applicability of this procedure to study the control in any metabolic pathway is discussed. Possible relevance of the method to conditions in vivo and its limitations are considered.
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PMID:Kinetics of metabolic pathways. A system in vitro to study the control of flux. 370 39

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.
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PMID:Cooperative interactions in hexokinase D ("glucokinase"). Kinetic and fluorescence studies. 387 19

Glycosomes, the microbody-like organelles containing mainly glycolytic enzymes, were purified from the long slender bloodstream form of Trypanosoma brucei EATRO 110 monomorphic strain by an improved method in which the protozoa were frozen and thawed in 15% glycerol to free, from the plasma membrane, much of the variant surface glycoprotein which used to constitute the major contaminant of our purified glycosomes. The purified glycosomes have 11 major proteins, 6 of which, tentatively identified as phosphofructose kinase, hexokinase, 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, aldolase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, constitute 87% of the total glycosomal protein. The bifunctional cross-linking reagents dimethyl suberimidate and dimethyl-3,3'-dithiobispropionimidate can penetrate the glycosomal membrane and cause extensive cross-linking of all the major glycosomal proteins. The cross-linked complex, insoluble in 0.1% Triton X-100 plus 0.15 M NaCl, contains all the glycosomal enzyme activities with only partial inactivations. All the enzymes are probably cross-linked into one large complex since they all sediment rapidly to the bottom of a 5-20% (v/v) sucrose density gradient. This successful cross-linking with reagents of span lengths of 11-12 A suggests close proximities among the glycosomal enzymes which may explain the extraordinarily high rate of glycolysis in T. brucei. Whether such a close association represents specific spatial arrangement required for genuine substrate channeling among the enzymes will be verified by future kinetic studies of the cross-linked enzyme complex.
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PMID:Cross-linking of the enzymes in the glycosome of Trypanosoma brucei. 399 56


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