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)

Activities of hexokinase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase have been measured in red blood cells from control, diabetic and insulin treated rats. After an initial decrease, the enzyme activities increased, but remained lower than control levels. A reversal of the diabetes effect was seen with insulin administration. Insulin induced hypoglycemia increased both enzymes. An overall control of glucose metabolism by insulin in red blood cells was observed.
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PMID:Effect of diabetes and insulin-induced hypoglycemia on hexokinase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in red blood cells. 267 46

Male and female Wistar rats were exercise-trained for 6 or 11 weeks respectively, to examine the effects of acute exercise or exercise training per se on insulin-stimulated glucose utilization in soleus muscles isolated and incubated in vitro. The maximal activities of hexokinase and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase were significantly elevated (by greater than 50%) in gastrocnemius muscle of exercise-trained male and female rats, indicating an adaptation to the training regime. No significant differences in any of the variables studied were observed between appropriately matched male and female rats. There were no significant differences in the sensitivity or responsiveness of the rates of lactate formation or glycogen synthesis in soleus muscles isolated from exercise-trained and sedentary animals at rest (exercise-trained animals were studied 40 h after the last exercise bout). On the other hand, acute exercise caused significant changes in soleus muscle glucose metabolism. Basal and insulin-stimulated rates of glycogen synthesis were significantly elevated in soleus muscles incubated from both sedentary and exercise-trained rats immediately after an exercise bout. In addition, the responsiveness of glucose utilization to insulin in soleus muscles from exercise-trained rats was significantly increased after acute exercise. The results indicate that significant changes in the control of glucose metabolism by insulin in soleus muscle occur as a result of an acute exercise bout, while no adaptive changes in insulin sensitivity occur in soleus muscle after exercise training.
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PMID:Acute and chronic effects of strenuous exercise on glucose metabolism in isolated, incubated soleus muscle of exercise-trained rats. 267 34

Ganoderan B increased the plasma insulin level in normal and glucose-loaded mice but elicited no effect on insulin binding to isolated adipocytes. Administration of ganoderan B elicited significant increases of the activities of hepatic glucokinase, phosphofructokinase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, decreased the hepatic glucose-6-phosphate and glycogen synthetase activities and did not affect the activities of hexokinase and glycogen phosphorylase. Ganoderan B reduced the glycogen content in the liver but had no influence on total cholesterol and triglyceride levels in the plasma and liver.
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PMID:Mechanisms of hypoglycemic activity of ganoderan B: a glycan of Ganoderma lucidum fruit bodies. 268

The effects of vitamin B6 on erythrocyte metabolism, erythrocyte hemoglobin O2 affinity (P50), and nonenzymatic glycosylation were studied in 15 Caucasian men with type II (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. A control group of 13 healthy Caucasian men was also evaluated. Before treatment, diabetic subjects had low mean cell hemoglobin concentration values and increases in both erythrocyte 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG) levels and erythrocyte hexokinase activities. Although all three of these changes are associated with a decrease in hemoglobin O2 (Hb-O2) affinity, P50 values were normal in diabetic subjects. Moreover, P50 values normalized to pH 7.4 (P50(7.4] were inversely related to the level of glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c). Both erythrocyte 2,3-DPG and erythrocyte ATP were also inversely related to HbA1c. Vitamin B6 nutriture, as determined by erythrocyte aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) activities, was normal in all diabetic subjects before vitamin B6 therapy. Nonetheless, HbA1c levels decreased after 6 wk of treatment with 150 mg/day pyridoxine and increased again during placebo administration. These changes were not explained by changes in fasting blood glucose. Pyridoxine therapy also decreased P50(7.4) values and increased erythrocyte AST and ALT activities but had no effect on 2,3-DPG, ATP, or the activities of hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. These observations suggest that 1) nonenzymatic glycosylation may play a role in regulating both erythrocyte metabolism and Hb-O2 affinity in diabetic subjects, and 2) vitamin B6 therapy may modify nonenzymatic glycosylation of hemoglobin in this population.
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PMID:Erythrocyte O2 transport and metabolism and effects of vitamin B6 therapy in type II diabetes mellitus. 273 64

The role of glucokinase in the regulation of insulin secretion was examined in normal rat pancreatic islets and in chemically- and radiation-induced rat pancreatic B-cell tumours which show an impaired insulin secretory response to glucose. In normal rats glucokinase activity in cytoplasmic fractions of pancreatic islets was decreased with the duration of fasting and increased by refeeding or insulin administration. This observation is consistent with the induction of glucokinase by insulin. Hexokinase activity was only slightly reduced during fasting. Glucokinase activity decreased in cytoplasmic fractions of streptozotocin-nicotinamide-induced rat pancreatic islet cell tumours. Glucokinase activity contributed about 75% to the total glucose phosphorylation capacity in cytoplasmic fractions of normal pancreatic islets and of small (less than 1 mg) streptozotocin-nicotinamide-tumours. This proportion decreased to about 20% in the large streptozotocin-nicotinamide tumours. Glucokinase activity in cytoplasmic fractions of transplantable radiation-induced NEDH (New England Deaconess Hospital) rat B-cell tumours was seven times lower than in normal pancreatic islets and contributed only 15% to the total glucose phosphorylation capacity. In contrast, hexokinase activity of the NEDH tumour B-cells was 2.5 times higher than normal. Decreased glucokinase activity in the chemically- and radiation-induced tumour B-cells appears to result from a loss of the ability of insulin to induce this enzyme and may explain the lack of insulin secretory responsiveness of these tumour B-cells.
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PMID:Defective regulation of glucokinase in rat pancreatic islet cell tumours. 282 Jan 74

We show in the accompanying paper that the steady-state level of free Ca2+ maintained by the organelles of permeabilized RINm5F insulinoma cells varies inversely with the ATP/ADP ratio when this ratio is set by addition of creatine phosphokinase and fixed ratios of creatine to creatine phosphate. We, therefore, asked whether acute cyclic alterations in the cytosolic ATP/ADP ratio in the range known to modulate O2 consumption might be involved in regulating the physiological activity of Ca2+ -ATPases and the cytosolic free Ca2+ level. To explore this hypothesis we combined two experimental systems: 1) permeabilized RINm5F insulinoma cells that can maintain a low medium Ca2+ concentration and 2) a cell-free extract of rat skeletal muscle that spontaneously exhibits oscillatory behavior of glycolysis and linked oscillations in the ATP/ADP ratio, when provided with glucose. The free Ca2+ level maintained by the permeabilized cells oscillated in phase with the glycolytic oscillations and correlated closely with the ATP/ADP ratio but not with glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, orthophosphate, or pH. When glucokinase replaced hexokinase as the glucose phosphorylating enzyme, Ca2+ oscillations were induced by increasing the glucose concentration from 2 to 8 mM. The results demonstrate a link between metabolite changes and free Ca2+ levels in a reconstituted physiological system. They support a model in which oscillations in glycolysis and the ATP/ADP ratio may cause oscillations in cytosolic free Ca2+, beta-cell electrical activity, and insulin release.
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PMID:Linked oscillations of free Ca2+ and the ATP/ADP ratio in permeabilized RINm5F insulinoma cells supplemented with a glycolyzing cell-free muscle extract. 283 Dec 25

Rat liver glucokinase (ATP:D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1) was purified to homogeneity, cleaved, and subjected to amino acid sequence analysis. Forty-five percent of the protein sequence was obtained, and this information was used to design oligonucleotide probes to screen a rat liver cDNA library. A 1601-base pair cDNA (GK1) contained an open reading frame that encoded the amino acid sequences found in the peptides used to generate the oligonucleotide probes. A second cDNA was subsequently identified (GK.Z2), which is 2346 base pairs long and corresponds to nearly the entire glucokinase mRNA. Blot transfer analysis of hepatic RNA showed that glucokinase mRNA exists as a single species of about 2400 nucleotides. Four hours of insulin treatment of diabetic rats resulted in a 30-fold induction of this mRNA. GK.Z2 has a long open reading frame which, with the known partial peptide sequence, allowed us to deduce the primary structure of glucokinase. The enzyme is composed of 465 amino acids and has a mass of 51,924 daltons. Glucokinase has 53 and 33% amino acid sequence identities with the carboxyl-terminal domains of rat brain hexokinase I and yeast hexokinase, respectively. If conservative amino acid replacements are also considered, glucokinase is similar to these two enzymes at 75 and 63% of positions, respectively. The putative glucose- and ATP-binding domains of glucokinase were identified, and these regions appear to be highly conserved in the hexokinase family of enzymes.
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PMID:The amino acid sequence of rat liver glucokinase deduced from cloned cDNA. 290 25

Muscle homogenates representing slow-twitch oxidative, fast-twitch oxidative-glycolytic, fast-twitch glycolytic, and mixed fiber types were prepared from normal, diabetic, and insulin-treated diabetic rats. Diabetes was induced by injection of 80 mg . kg-1 of streptozotocin. The activities of citrate synthase, succinate dehydrogenase, and 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase were employed as markers of oxidative potential, whereas phosphorylase, hexokinase, and phosphofructokinase activities were used as an indication of glycolytic capacity. Diabetes was associated with a general decrement in the activity of oxidative marker enzymes for all fiber types except the fast-twitch glycolytic fiber. In contrast, the fast-twitch glycolytic fibers demonstrated the greatest decline in glycolytic enzymatic activity. Insulin-treated animals, either trained or untrained, exhibited enzyme activities similar to their normal counterparts. Exercise training of diabetic rats mimicked the effect of insulin treatment and caused a near normalization of the activity of the marker enzymes. These findings suggest that the enzymatic potential of all skeletal muscle fiber types of diabetic rats may be normalized by exercise training even in the absence of significant amounts of insulin.
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PMID:Influence of training on skeletal muscle enzymatic adaptations in normal and diabetic rats. 293 94

Glucose transport and metabolism, and the effect of insulin thereon, was studied using suspensions of rat renal tubules enriched in the proximal component. [U-14C]Glucose oxidation is a saturable process (Km 3.1 +/- 0.2 mM; Vmax 14 +/- 0.2 mumole 14CO2 formed/g tissue protein per h). Glucose oxidation and [14C]lactate formation from glucose are inhibited in part by phlorizin and phloretin: the data suggest that the rate-limiting entry of glucose into the cell metabolic pool occurs by both the Na-glucose cotransport system (at the brush border) and the equilibrating, phloretin-sensitive system (at the basal-lateral membrane). Raising external glucose from 5 to 30 mM markedly increases aerobic and anaerobic lactate formation. Gluconeogenesis from lactate is not affected by variations of glucose concentrations. 24 h after streptozotocin administration, aerobic lactate formation is enhanced, as is the uptake of methyl alpha-D-glucoside by the tubules, while anaerobic glycolysis is depressed. Streptozotocin treatment (ST) increases both the Km and Vmax of glucose oxidation; gluconeogenesis and lactate oxidation are not affected. The effect of streptozotocin treatment on lactate formation are abolished by 1 mU/ml insulin. Streptozotocin treatment increases tissue hexokinase activity, decreases glucose-6-phosphatase, but has no significant effect on fructose-1,6-diphosphatase; phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and pyruvate dehydrogenase. The data demonstrate fast streptozotocin-induced changes in cellular enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism. The enhancing effect of streptozotocin on methyl alpha-glucoside uptake is transient: 8 days after administration of the agent, no significant difference from controls is found. It is concluded that under the given experimental conditions insulin enhances the equilibrating glucose entry by the phloretin-sensitive pathway at the basal-lateral membrane, and transiently inhibits the Na-glucose cotransport system.
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PMID:Glucose transport and metabolism in rat renal proximal tubules: multicomponent effects of insulin. 293 29

The relative rate of synthesis of hexokinase II in the skeletal muscle of the normal, streptozotocin-diabetic, and diabetic insulin-treated rat was determined by the rate of incorporation of [3H]leucine into hexokinase II and the total cytosolic proteins to determine if the rate of hexokinase II synthesis was altered relative to that of the average protein. This relative rate of synthesis of hexokinase II is approximately 1.9 times higher in the normal than in the diabetic rat. The administration of insulin to the diabetic animal increases the rate of hexokinase synthesis to approximately normal levels. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay procedure was developed to determine the amount of hexokinase II protein in the skeletal muscle extracts, and immunoprecipitation was utilized to determine the hexokinase II activity. The specific activity of hexokinase II was determined from these analyses. The specific activity of hexokinase II was the same in the skeletal muscle extracts from normal, streptozotocin-diabetic, and diabetic insulin-treated rats. These results suggest that the decrease in muscle hexokinase activity is not caused by the loss of an activator of the enzyme nor by the increased formation of a hexokinase inhibitor in streptozotocin-induced diabetes; rather the decrease in hexokinase II activity reported in diabetic rats relative to normal animals is a result of decreased synthesis coupled to increased degradation in the diabetic relative to the normal animal.
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PMID:Effect of streptozotocin-induced diabetes and insulin treatment on the synthesis of hexokinase II in the skeletal muscle of the rat. 294 26


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