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)

Parenchymal cells from adult rat liver, isolated by a collagenase perfusion technique, have been maintained in primary culture and a detailed study on carbohydrate metabolism carried out over the initial 48-hour culture period. The glucose concentration of the medium exerts a major influence on glycogen accumulation by the cells. Insulin, particularly at high glucose concentrations, stimulates glycogen biosynthesis, whereas glucagon prevents glycogen accumulation. Dexamethasone was without effect on glycogen metabolism. Glucose appears to stimulate glycogen accumulation by activation of glycogen synthetase enzyme. However, there is a gradual loss of synthetase activity throughout the culture period. Similar decreases in activity were noted for pyruvate kinase, aldolase and hexokinase. Glucose, insulin and dexamethasone were unable to prevent these decreases in enzyme activity. Foetal bovine serum contains fructose and this hexose appears to be the factor in serum which is responsible for the activation of glycogen accumulation in the presence of physiological glucose concentrations. The lactic acid content of the serum may also stimulate glycogen accumulation. In general, there is a gradual loss of the pattern of carbohydrate metabolism typical of differentiated hepatocytes during the culture period.
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PMID:Effects of hormones and serum on glycogen metabolism in adult rat liver parenchymal cell primary cultures. 40 98

The hepatocyte and haematopoietic cell contents of the liver of the foetal guinea pig were measured over the latter half of gestation. Hepatocytes represented about 30% of liver volume at mid-gestation and this increased to 70-80% by term; cell volume remained fairly constant until 5-7 days before term, then more than doubled. Haematopoietic cells represented about 5% of liver volume at mid-gestation and this progressively fell to <1% by term. At 75% of gestation hepatocytes and haematopoietic cells were prepared from perfused foetal livers by collagenase digestion. Enzyme activity of the hepatocyte was, without exception, similar to that of the whole liver. In general, enzyme activity in the haematopoietic cells was similar to that in erythrocytes, with relatively low values for aldolase, glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate mutase, enolase, lactate dehydrogenase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, ;malic' enzyme, glutamate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase. The haematopoietic cell contribution to total enzyme activity in the foetal liver was usually much less than 10% and could thus not account for the major changes in hepatic enzyme activity over the latter half of gestation. Hepatocytes contained hexokinase isoenzymes I and III, aldolase isoenzymes A and B and pyruvate kinase isoenzymes 1, 2 and 4. The haematopoietic cells contained hexokinase isoenzyme I and two additional bands of activity with slightly greater mobility, aldolase isoenzyme A and pyruvate kinase isoenzymes 2 and 4.
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PMID:The distribution of enzyme and isoenzyme activities between parenchymal and haematopoietic cells in the liver of the foetal guinea pig. 43 88

A new procedure for separately isolating milligram quantities of rabbit renal proximal straight (PST) or convoluted (PCT) tubules is described, and the differential abilities of these segments to utilize glucose as a metabolic substrate are investigated. Separate dissection of the cortical cortices and the outer medullary stripe, followed by collagenase digestion and discontinuous Percoll centrifugation, provide enriched populations (greater than 98% pure) of PCT (37 mg) and PST (14 mg), respectively, per rabbit. The purity of PCT and PST fractions was quantitated morphologically and by comparing the enriched activity of the proximal tubular marker leucine aminopeptidase and deenriched activity of the distal marker hexokinase to previously published values reported from microdissection studies. To investigate glucose-dependent metabolic differences, PCT and PST suspensions (1 mg/ml) were preincubated in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's-Ham's F-12 medium for 1 h before being incubated for 30 min in buffer with or without glucose as the only available metabolic substrate. In glucose-containing buffer, PST segments maintained their oxygen consumption and ATP contents at levels significantly higher than PCT segments. These differential responses between PST and PCT were glucose-dependent because they were abolished when segments were incubated under glucose-free conditions. Because responses in PCT were glucose-independent, these results suggest that PCT cannot utilize glucose to support oxidative metabolism, whereas PST segments can oxidatively metabolize this substrate. These differences in glucose utilization do not correlate with the distribution of glycolytic enzyme activities, suggesting that differential metabolic regulation of these enzymes may determine the ability of each segment to utilize glucose.
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PMID:Bulk isolation of renal PCT and PST. I. Glucose-dependent metabolic differences. 237 89

We recently described a preferential reduction of the secretory response to nutrient secretagogues (glucose; leucine plus glutamine) in islets maintained in culture after in vitro exposure to streptozotocin (SZ). The present study is an attempt to further clarify the biochemical mechanisms behind this defective insulin response. Mouse pancreatic islets were collagenase isolated and, after 4-5 days in culture, exposed during 30 min at 37 C to 1.8 mM SZ or vehicle alone (controls). The islets were subsequently cultured for 7 days in medium RPMI 1640 plus 10% calf serum, before the enzymatic and metabolic studies were performed. The activities of the glycolytic enzymes, hexokinase, glucokinase, and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, were similar in the control and SZ-exposed islets. The relative amount of cytosolic and mitochondria-bound hexokinase was also unaffected by SZ. However, there was a 30-40% decrease in the activity of NAD+- and NADP+-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase and glutamate-aspartate transaminase in the SZ-treated islets. This coincided with a 40% decrease in L-[U-14C]glutamine oxidation in the SZ-treated islets. The D-glucose catabolism was further examined in the presence of D-[5-3H] and D-[6-14C] glucose. There was no difference between control and SZ islets in terms of glucose utilization at either 1.7 or 16.7 mM glucose. The oxidation of D-[6-14C]glucose was nevertheless decreased by more than 50% in SZ islets incubated at 16.7 mM (but not 1.7 mM) glucose. Altogether, these converging observations suggest a perturbation of distal regulatory processes, apparently at the mitochondrial level, in the D-glucose and L-glutamine catabolism of SZ-exposed islets. Whether this reflects a primary action of SZ on the islet mitochondria, or an inhibitory effect of SZ on the synthesis of mitochondrial enzymes, as a result of nuclear DNA damage, remains to be elucidated.
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PMID:Defective catabolism of D-glucose and L-glutamine in mouse pancreatic islets maintained in culture after streptozotocin exposure. 296 23

1. Rates of insulin secretion, glucose utilization, lactate output, incorporation of glucose into glycogen, contents of glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 1,6-diphosphate and ATP, and maximally extractable enzyme activities of hexokinase, high-K(m) glucose-phosphorylating activity (;glucokinase'), glucose 6-phosphatase and unspecific acid phosphatase were measured in isolated pancreatic islets from fed and 48-h-starved mice. 2. In the fed state insulin secretion from isolated islets was increased five- to six-fold when the extracellular glucose concentration was raised from 2.5mm to 16.7mm; 5mm-caffeine potentiated this effect. The secretory response to glucose of islets from mice starved for 48h was diminished at all glucose concentrations from 2.5mm up to approx. 40mm. Very high glucose concentrations (60mm and above) restored the secretory response to that found in the fed state, suggesting that the K(m) value for the overall secretory process had been increased (approx. fourfold) by starvation. Addition of 5mm-caffeine to islets from starved mice also restored the insulin secretory response to 2.5-16.7mm-glucose to normal values. 3. Extractable hexokinase, ;glucokinase', glucose 6-phosphatase and unspecific phosphatase activities were not changed by starvation. 4. Glucose utilization and glycolysis (measured as the rate of formation of (3)H(2)O from [5-(3)H]glucose over a 2h period) was decreased in islets from starved mice at all glucose concentrations up to approx. 55mm. At still higher glucose concentrations up to approx. 100mm, there was no difference between the fed and starved state, suggesting that the K(m) value for the rate-limiting glucose phosphorylation had been increased (approx. twofold) by starvation. Preparation of islets omitting substrates (glucose, pyruvate, fumarate and glutamate) from the medium during collagenase treatment lowered the glucose utilization measured subsequently at 16.7mm-glucose by 38 and 30% in islets from fed and starved mice respectively. Also the 2h lactate output by the islets at 16.7mm extracellular glucose was diminished by starvation. Incorporation of glucose into glycogen was extremely low, but the rate of incorporation was more than doubled by starvation. 5. After incubation for 30min at 16.7mm-glucose the content of glucose 6-phosphate was unchanged by starvation, that of ATP was increased and the concentration of (fructose 1,6-diphosphate plus triose phosphates) was decreased. 6. Possible mechanisms behind the correlated impairment in insulin secretion and islet glucose metabolism during starvation are discussed.
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PMID:The effect of starvation on insulin secretion and glucose metabolism in mouse pancreatic islets. 415 24

The cellular distribution of hexokinase isoenzymes, N-acetylglucosamine Kinase and pyruvate kinases in rat liver was studied. Hepatocytes and non-parenchymal cells with high viability and almost no cross-contamination were obtained by perfusion in situ of the liver with collagenase, with the use of an enriched cell-culture medium in all steps of cell isolation. Separation of hexokinase isoenzymes was done by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and enzyme activities were measured by a specific radioassay. Cytosol from isolated hepatocytes contained high-affinity hexokinases A, B and C, in addition to hexokinase D. The last-mentioned represented about 95% of total glucose-phosphorylating activity. Only hexokinase A was found associated t the particulate fraction. Isolated non-parenchymal cells contained only hexokinases A, B and C. N-Acetylglucosamine kinase was measured with a specific radioassay and was found as a single enzyme form in both hepatocytes and non-parenchymal cells, with higher activities in the former. Pyruvate kinase isoenzyme L was present only in the hepatocytes and isoenzyme K only in the non-parenchymal liver cells, confirming that they are good cellular markers.
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PMID:All hexokinase isoenzymes coexist in rat hepatocytes. 608 33

A suspension of cortical tissue fragments prepared by collagenase digestion of renal cortex obtained from fed and chronically acidotic (NH4Cl) rats was separated into four bands on a Percoll density gradient. By microscopic examination, vital staining with trypan blue, and histologic staining technique (periodic acid-Schiff) the F4 band was shown to contain only (greater than 98%) proximal tubules, whereas the F1 band was significantly enriched (70%) with distal tubules contaminated by glomeruli and short segments of proximal tubules. Intra/extracellular ratios for PAH of 15 were measured in the F4 band and of 2 in F1 band. ATP was 1.4 and 2.8 mumol/g in the F4 and F1 bands, respectively, and was stable for at least 60 min. The proximal F4 band was shown to be gluconeogenic (L-glutamine or L-lactate 2.5 mM as substrate) and to adapt to metabolic acidosis. The distal F1 band was shown to be glycolytic (glucose 2.5 mM) with no changes with acid-base status. All fractions were shown to metabolize glutamine, but the metabolic fate of this amino acid was different in proximal and distal structures. A F4/F1 activity ratio for the proximal cytoplasmic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase enzyme of 2.6 and 4.3 was observed in normal and acidotic rats, respectively. In contrast, a F4/F1 ratio of 0.13 and 0.22 was observed for the distal cytoplasmic hexokinase enzyme. This preparation, therefore, allows the metabolism of a homogeneous population of proximal tubular fragments to be studied and can be used to obtain information on enzyme location within the nephron.
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PMID:Isolation of a pure suspension of rat proximal tubules. 611 31

Radiochemical microprocedures were developed for the determination of hexokinase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) activity in single microdissected segments of the mature rabbit nephron dissected from fresh tissue after collagenase treatment. All results were related to tubular length and tubular protein content. Hexokinase activity was found to be lowest in the proximal convoluted tubule and to increase along the following nephron segments, with highest activity in the connecting tubule. The gluconeogenic enzyme PEPCK, on the other hand, was exclusively found in the proximal tubule. Early and late portions of the convoluted segment exhibited the same specific activity, but only 50% was found in the pars recta. All other renal structures exhibited only insignificant activity of PEPCK. The results show that renal glucose metabolism and gluconeogenesis are clearly separated. As previously shown for the cytosolic rat enzyme, rabbit mitochondrial PEPCK is also exclusively a proximal tubular enzyme, thus confirming the dominant role of this segment in mammalian renal gluconeogenesis. The high activity of hexokinase in the segments of the distal tubule points to the role of glucose as metabolic fuel, glycogen precursor, and other glucose-6-phosphate-using pathways in these structures.
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PMID:Distribution of hexokinase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase along the rabbit nephron. 724 39

Methods have been developed for producing functional, transporting monolayers of avian proximal tubule (PT) cells. A highly homogenous fraction of PT fragments was prepared by enzymatic digestion (collagenase + Dispase) of chick (3- to 5-day-old) kidneys, followed by Percoll gradient centrifugation. The PT fraction was enriched in glucose-6-phosphatase, a proximal enzyme marker, and reduced in specific activity of hexokinase, a distal marker. PT fragments were grown to confluence in serum-free media on collagen-coated permeable filter supports. Electron microscopy of confluent monolayers revealed numerous microvilli and mitochondria, central cilia, and tight junctions, all characteristic of PT cells. gamma-Glutamyltranspeptidase, a proximal brush-border enzyme, showed threefold higher activity on apical than on basolateral sides of the monolayer. The electrophysiological characteristics of monolayers were investigated by voltage-clamp techniques. Monolayers displayed low transepithelial resistances (40-60 Omega . cm2), lumen-negative potentials, and baseline currents of 6-12 microA/cm2 (with or without 5 mM glucose). Both alpha-methyl-D-glucose (2 mM), a nonmetabolizable hexose, and phenylalanine (2 mM) significantly stimulated short-circuit current when added to the mucosal side of glucose-free monolayers. Phloridzin, a specific inhibitor of Na+-coupled glucose transport, significantly inhibited short-circuit current, as did 10(-5) M amiloride. Monolayers also expressed net secretory transport of urate. This cell culture preparation may provide a useful working model for the study of avian PT transport.
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PMID:Characterization of a primary cell culture model of the avian renal proximal tubule. 968 82

We correlated the changes in glucose-induced insulin secretion with those observed in glucose metabolism and hexokinase/glucokinase activity in islets from normal sucrose-fed hamsters. Blood glucose and insulin levels were measured in normal male hamsters fed with (S5) or without (C5) 10% sucrose in the drinking water for 5 weeks. Isolated islets (collagenase digestion) from both groups of animals were used to study insulin secretion, (14)CO(2) and (3)H(2)O production from D-[U-(14)C]-glucose and D-[5-(3)H]-glucose respectively, with 3.3 or 16.7 mM glucose in the medium, and hexokinase/glucokinase activity (fluorometric assay) in islet homogenates. Whereas S5 and C5 animals had comparable normal blood glucose levels, S5 showed higher insulin levels than C5 hamsters (2.3+/-0.1 vs 0.6+/-0.03 ng/ml, P<0.001). Islets from S5 hamsters released significantly more insulin than C5 islets in the presence of low and high glucose (3.3 mM glucose: 0.77+/-0.04 vs 0.20+/-0.06 pg/ng DNA/min, P<0.001; 16.7 mM glucose: 2.77+/-0.12 vs 0.85+/-0.06 pg/ng DNA/min, P<0.001) and produced significantly higher amounts of (14)CO(2) and (3)H(2)O at both glucose concentrations ((14)CO(2): 3.3 mM glucose: 0.27+/-0.01 vs 0.18+/-0.01, P<0.001; 16.7 mM glucose: 1.44+/-0.15 vs 0.96+/-0.08, P<0.02; (3)H(2)O: 3.3 mM glucose: 0.31+/-0.02 vs 0.15+/-0.01, P<0.001; 16.7 mM glucose: 1.46+/-0.20 vs 0.76+/-0.05 pmol glucose/ng DNA/min, P<0.005). The hexokinase K(m) and V(max) values from S5 animals were significantly higher than those from C5 ones (K(m): 100.14+/-7.01 vs 59.90+/- 3.95 microM, P<0.001; V(max): 0.010+/-0.0005 vs 0.008+/- 0.0006 pmol glucose/ng DNA/min, P<0.02). Conversely, the glucokinase K(m) value from S5 animals was significantly lower than in C5 animals (K(m): 15.31+/-2.64 vs 35.01+/-1.65 mM, P<0.001), whereas V(max) figures were within a comparable range in both groups (V(max): 0.048+/-0.009 vs 0.094+/-0.035 pmol glucose/ng DNA/min, not significant). The glucose phosphorylation ratio measured at 1 and 100 mM (hexokinase/glucokinase ratio) was significantly higher in S5 (0.26+/-0.02) than in C5 animals (0.11+/-0.01, P<0.005), and it was attributable to an increase in the hexokinase activity in S5 animals. In conclusion, sucrose administration increased the hexokinase/glucokinase activity ratio in the islets, which would condition the increase in glucose metabolism by beta-cells, and in beta-cell sensitivity and responsiveness to glucose. These results support the concept that increased hexokinase rather than glucokinase activity causes the beta-cell hypersensitivity to glucose, hexokinase being metabolically more active than glucokinase to up-regulate beta-cell function.
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PMID:Changes induced by sucrose administration on glucose metabolism in pancreatic islets in normal hamsters. 1173 21


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