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Query: EC:3.1.3.9 (
glucose-6-phosphatase
)
3,081
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glycogen storage disease type 1a (von Gierke disease, GSD 1a) is caused by the deficiency of microsomal
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G6Pase
) activity which catalyzes the final common step of glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis. The recent cloning of the
G6Pase
cDNA and characterization of the human
G6Pase
gene enabled the characterization of the mutations causing GSD 1a. This, in turn, allows the introduction of a noninvasive DNA-based diagnosis that provides reliable carrier testing and prenatal diagnosis. In this study, we report the biochemical and clinical characteristics as well as mutational analyses of 12 Israeli GSD 1a patients of different families, who represent most GSD 1a patients in Israel. The mutations,
G6Pase
activity, and glycogen content of 7 of these patients were reported previously. The biochemical data and clinical findings of all patients were similar and compatible with those described in other reports. All 9 Jewish patients, as well as one Muslim Arab patient, presented the R83C mutation. Two Muslim Arab patients had the V166G mutation which was not found in other patients' populations. The V166G mutation, which was introduced into the
G6Pase
cDNA by site-directed mutagenesis following transient expression in
COS
-1 cells, was shown to cause complete inactivation of the
G6Pase
. The characterization of all GSD 1a mutations in the Israeli population lends itself to carrier testing in these families as well as to prenatal diagnosis, which was carried out in 2 families. Since all Ashkenzai Jewish patients harbor the same mutation, our study suggests that DNA-based diagnosis may be used as an initial diagnostic step in Ashkenazi Jews suspected of having GSD 1a, thereby avoiding liver biopsy.
...
PMID:Glycogen storage disease type 1a in Israel: biochemical, clinical, and mutational studies. 933 55
A pancreatic islet-specific glucose-6-phosphatase-related protein (IGRP) was cloned using a subtractive cDNA expression cloning procedure from mouse insulinoma tissue. Two alternatively spliced variants that differed by the presence or absence of a 118-bp exon (exon IV) were detected in normal balb/c mice, diabetic ob/ob mice, and insulinoma tissue. The longer, 1901-bp full-length cDNA encoded a 355-amino acid protein (molecular weight 40,684) structurally related (50% overall identity) to the liver
glucose-6-phosphatase
and exhibited similar predicted transmembrane topology, conservation of catalytically important residues, and the presence of an endoplasmic reticulum retention signal. The shorter transcript encoded two possible open reading frames (ORFs), neither of which possessed His174, a residue thought to be the phosphoryl acceptor (Pan CJ, Lei KJ, Annabi B, Hemrika W, Chou JY: Transmembrane topology of
glucose-6-phosphatase
. J Biol Chem 273:6144-6148, 1998). Northern blot and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis showed that the mRNA was highly expressed in pancreatic islets and expressed more in beta-cell lines than in an alpha-cell line. It was notably absent in tissues and cell lines of non-islet neuroendocrine origin, and no other major tissue source of the mRNA was found. During development, it was expressed in parallel with insulin mRNA. The mRNA was efficiently translated and glycosylated in an in vitro translation/membrane translocation system and readily transcribed into
COS
1, HIT, and CHO cells using cytomegalovirus or Rous sarcoma virus promoters. Whereas the liver
glucose-6-phosphatase
showed activity in these transfection systems, the IGRP failed to show glucose phosphotransferase or phosphatase activity with p-nitrophenol phosphate, inorganic pyrophosphate, or a range of sugar phosphates hydrolyzed by the liver enzyme. While the metabolic function of the enzyme is not resolved, its remarkable tissue-specific expression warrants further investigation, as does its transcriptional regulation in conditions where glucose responsiveness of the pancreatic islet is altered.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning of a pancreatic islet-specific glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic subunit-related protein. 1007 53
We investigated the membrane topogenesis of
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G6Pase
), a multispanning membrane protein, on the endoplasmic reticulum. In
COS
-7 cells, the first transmembrane segment (TM1) with weak hydrophobicity is inserted into the membrane in the N-terminus-out/C-terminus-cytoplasm orientation. The following TM2 is inserted depending on TM3. TM3 has the same orientation as TM1. In contrast to data from living cells, the full-length molecule and N-terminal fusion constructs were not inserted into the membrane in a cell-free system. Addition of a signal recognition particle did not improve
G6Pase
insertion. When the 37-residue N-terminal segment was deleted, however, TM2 and TM3 were correctly inserted. We concluded that the three N-terminal TM segments are inserted into the membrane dependent on the two signal-anchor sequences of TM1 and TM3. TM1 is likely to be an unconventional signal sequence that barely functions in vitro. The 37-residue N-terminal segment inhibits the signal function of the following TM3 in cell-free systems.
...
PMID:Membrane topogenesis of the three amino-terminal transmembrane segments of glucose-6-phosphatase on endoplasmic reticulum. 1189 Jun 86
The dual specificity tyrosine phosphorylated and regulated kinase (DYRK) family of protein kinases is a group of evolutionarily conserved protein kinases that have been characterized as regulators of growth and development in mammals, Drosophila and lower eukaryotes. In the present study, we have characterized three splicing variants of DYRK1B (DYRK1B-p65, DYRK1B-p69 and DYRK1B-p75) with different expression patterns and enzymic activities. DYRK1B-p65 and DYRK1B-p69 exhibited similar, but not identical, patterns of expression in mouse tissues, with the highest protein levels found in the spleen, lung, brain, bladder, stomach and testis. In contrast, DYRK1B-p75 was detected specifically in skeletal muscles, in the neuronal cell line GT1-7 and also in differentiated, adipocyte-like 3T3-L1 cells, but not in undifferentiated 3T3-L1 preadipocytes. A comparison of the mouse and human Dyrk1b genomic and cDNA sequences defined the alternative splicing events that produce the variants of DYRK1B. In DYRK1B-p75, transcription starts with exon 1B instead of exon 1A, generating a new translation start, which extends the open reading frame by 60 codons. This gene structure suggests that alternative promoters direct the expression of DYRK1B-p69 and DYRK1B-p75. Both splicing variants exhibited kinase activity in vitro and contained phosphotyrosine when expressed in
COS
-7 cells. Owing to differential recognition of the 3'-splice site in exon 9, DYRK1B-p65 differs from DYRK1B-p69 by the absence of 40 amino acids within the catalytic domain. DYRK1B-p65 lacked kinase activity in vitro and did not contain phosphotyrosine. DYRK1B-p69 and DYRK1B-p75 stimulated reporter gene activity driven by the f or kh ead in r habdosarcoma (FKHR)-dependent
glucose-6-phosphatase
promoter more strongly when compared with DYRK1B-p65, indicating that the DYRK1B splicing variants exhibit functional differences.
...
PMID:Alternative splicing variants of dual specificity tyrosine phosphorylated and regulated kinase 1B exhibit distinct patterns of expression and functional properties. 1263 99
Deficiency of a microsomal phosphate transporter in the liver has been suggested in some patients affected by glycogen storage disease type Ic (GSD Ic). Several Na(+)/phosphate co-transporters have been characterized as members of the anion-cation symporter family. Recently, the cDNA sequence of two phosphate transporters, NPT3 and NPT4, expressed in liver, kidney and intestine, has been determined. We studied expression of human NPT4 in
COS
cells and observed an ER localization of the transporter by immunofluorescence microscopy. We speculated that this transporter could play a role in the regulation of the
glucose-6-phosphatase
(G6-Pase) complex. We revealed the genomic structure of NPT4 and analysed the gene as a candidate for GSD Ic. DNA was collected from five patients without mutations in G6-Pase or the G6-P transporter gene. DNA analysis of NPT4 revealed that one patient was heterozygous for a G>A transition at nucleotide 601 which would result in a G201R substitution. Our results do not confirm the hypothesis that this gene is mutated in GSD Ic patients. However, we cannot exclude that the mutation found reduces the phosphate transport efficiency, possibly modulating the G6-Pase complex.
...
PMID:NPT4, a new microsomal phosphate transporter: mutation analysis in glycogen storage disease type Ic. 1550 77