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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)
Disruption of microsomal membranes after freezing liver samples can undermine the reliability of in vitro enzymatic diagnosis of the type 1 glycogen storage diseases. However, freezing of biopsy material is necessary if biopsy samples are to be safely transported to the place of assay. We have therefore examined several different methods (each of which could easily be carried out in routine hospital laboratories) of preparing and freezing liver tissue before analysis for
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
EC 3.1.3.9
) enzyme activity, and determination of microsomal intactness. Our study showed that homogenizing fresh liver, and centrifuging the homogenate at 10,000 x g for 10 min at 4 degrees C, followed by freezing the resulting supernatant material at -80 degrees C, provided the optimum source of material for subsequent preparation of microsomes for analysis of
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity. We also demonstrated that 1-naphthol UDP glucuronosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.17) activity could be used to assess microsomal intactness in cases of type 1a glycogen storage disease, where mannose-6
phosphatase
activity cannot be used.
...
PMID:Improved preparation of hepatic microsomes for in vitro diagnosis of inherited disorders of the glucose-6-phosphatase system. 185 76
The thermal stability of
glucose-6-phosphatase
in rat liver microsomes was examined in untreated and cholate-treated microsomes. Activity of the enzyme was measured with both glucose-6-P and mannose-6-P as substrates. Heat treatment did not cause
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity to decline to zero with a single rate constant in untreated microsomes. Instead, heat treatment produced an enzyme with a small residual activity that was stable. The residual level of activity was not stimulated by addition of detergent. In untreated microsomes the energies of activation for the processes of decay were different for
glucose-6-phosphatase
and mannose-6-
phosphatase
activities, suggesting that the rate-limiting steps for the hydrolysis of these compounds were different. Treatment of microsomes with detergent increased the rate constants for the thermal decay of
glucose-6-phosphatase
by about 150 times, and, in contrast to untreated microsomes,
glucose-6-phosphatase
and mannose-6-
phosphatase
decayed to zero with a single rate constant in cholate-treated microsomes. Also, rate constants for thermal inactivation of
glucose-6-phosphatase
and mannose-6-
phosphatase
were the same in cholate-treated microsomes. Removal of cholate increased the stability of
glucose-6-phosphatase
but did not regenerate the form of the enzyme present in untreated microsomes. The data for the stability of
glucose-6-phosphatase
under different conditions provide evidence that the enzyme can exist in at least five different stable states that are enzymatically active.
...
PMID:Thermal stability of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase. 215 19
A procedure to prepare microsomes from the mussel digestive gland is proposed. The data concerning the biochemical characterization of this subcellular fraction shows a typical RNA:protein ratio, but the presence of hydrolytic enzymes was also found; therefore a mixture of hydrolase inhibitors to study the different biochemical characteristics was used. The biochemical data demonstrate that
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity (G6Pase), a typical microsomal marker in mammalian cells, is not present in mussel digestive gland microsomes but a high non-specific
phosphatase
activity was detected. Benzo[a]pyrene hydroxylase activity was found to be present although in a minimal amount. The evaluation of the molecular weight of the rRNA demonstrates that the larger ribosomal subunit contains RNA of Mr 1.40 X 10(-6) (approximately 26S) and the smaller subunit is composed of RNA of Mr 0.65 X 10(-6) (18S). The data from mussel digestive gland microsomes was compared with that experimentally obtained from rat liver microsomes and discussed from a functional or an evolutionary point of view.
...
PMID:Isolation and biochemical characterization of the microsomal fraction from the digestive gland of mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis Lam. 242 92
The effect of varying concentrations of free Ca2+ on the formation of Pi from mannose-6-P or of Pi and [U-14C]glucose from [U-14C]glucose-6-P was investigated in isolated fasted rat hepatocytes made permeable by freezing and in liver microsomes. Free Ca2+ concentration was adjusted by the use of Ca-EGTA buffers. In permeabilized cells,
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
EC 3.1.3.9
) activity was inhibited up to 50% and in intact microsomes up to 70% by increasing free Ca2+ concentrations from 0.01 to 10 microM. The inhibition was reversible and competitive with respect to glucose-6-P. Treatment of microsomes with 0.4% deoxycholate exposed 90% of latent mannose-6-
phosphatase
activity which was insensitive to Ca2+. The results indicate that Ca2+ affects the glucose-6-P translocase rather than the phosphohydrolase component. It is concluded that the
glucose-6-phosphatase
system is modulated by changes in Ca2+ concentrations in the range of those occurring in the liver cell upon hormonal stimulation.
...
PMID:Liver glucose-6-phosphatase activity is modulated by physiological intracellular Ca2+ concentrations. 253 66
A translocase to transport hexose phosphate formed in the cytosol into the cisterns of the endoplasmic reticulum, where the
phosphatase
resides, is absent in brain (Fishman and Karnovsky, 1986). 2-Deoxyglucose-6-phosphate (DG-6-P) may therefore have limited access to
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G-6-Pase
), and transport of the DG-6-P across the endoplasmic reticular membrane may be rate limiting to its dephosphorylation. To take this compartmentation into account, a five-rate constant (5K) model was developed to describe the kinetic behavior of 2-deoxyglucose (DG) and its phosphorylated product in brain. Loss of DG-6-P was modeled as a two-step process: (a) transfer of DG-6-P from the cytosol into the cisterns of the endoplasmic reticulum; (b) hydrolysis of DG-6-P by
G-6-Pase
and subsequent return of the free DG to the precursor pool. Local CMRglc (LCMRglc) was calculated in the rat on the basis of this model and compared with values calculated on the basis of the three-rate constant (3K) and the four-rate constant (4K) models of the DG method. The results show that under normal physiological conditions all three models yield values of LCMRglc that are essentially equivalent for experimental periods between 25 and 45 min. Therefore, the simplest model, the 3K model, is sufficient. For experimental periods from 60 to 120 min, the 4K and 5K models do not correct completely for loss of product, but the 5K model does yield estimates of LCMRglc that are closer to the values at 45 min than those obtained with the 3K and 4K models.
...
PMID:Refinement of the kinetic model of the 2-[14C]deoxyglucose method to incorporate effects of intracellular compartmentation in brain. 254 Nov 46
The method is suggested to isolate simultaneously microsomes and plasma membranes of neuroblastoma S 1300 N 18 cells by means of differential centrifugation in the step density gradient of Percoll/Ficoll with a high degree of purification determined from the activity of marker enzymes (acetyl cholinesterase Na+,K+-ATPase, alkali
phosphatase
,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, succinate-dehydrogenase, acid phosphatase) as well as from the content of DNA and RNA and with a sufficiently high protein yield. The purified fractions of microsomes and plasma membranes are established to contain no phosphatidyl glycerol and cardiolipin--safety markers of mitochondrial membrane purification. A degree of separation of microsomes, plasma membranes and proteins dissolved in cytosol may be estimated by the activity of the cholesterol-synthesizing system of enzymes with the use of sterol-transferring protein.
...
PMID:[Rapid simultaneous isolation of microsomes and plasma membranes from neuroblastoma C 1300 N 18 cells]. 258 50
The concentrations of NAD and NADP have been determined in detergent extracts of washed rat liver microsomes. Precautions were taken during the preparation of the microsomes to remove nicotinamide nucleotides from their external surface both by hydrolysis by nucleotide pyrophosphatase (EC 3.6.1.9) and by washing them three times in 0.15 M-Tris/HCl, pH 8.0, to remove soluble proteins which bind these nucleotides. The mannose
phosphatase
was essentially completely latent, indicating that the microsomes were intact. Assuming these nucleotides are in the cisternae of the microsomes, the concentrations in the cisternae are 240 +/- 25 microM-NAD and 55 +/- 12 microM-NADP. These levels of nucleotides are compatible with both the glucose:NAD+ and the glucose 6-phosphate:NADP+ oxidoreductase activities of hexose phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.47). Since the organ and subcellular distributions of this dehydrogenase and
glucose-6-phosphatase
are similar, and Pi stimulates the glucose:NAD+ oxidoreductase activity, it is proposed that the combined action of these two enzymes leads to the reduction of both coenzymes in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. A modification of the colorimetric method of Nisselbaum & Green [(1969) Anal. Biochem. 27, 212-217] for the determination of NADP+ is described. Colour formation is linear with the concentration of NADP+ and is sensitive to less than 0.3 nmol of NADP+.
...
PMID:The levels of nicotinamide nucleotides in liver microsomes and their possible significance to the function of hexose phosphate dehydrogenase. 282 15
Rat liver microsomes are known to contain a 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase which differs from the 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase in the soluble fraction. Microsomes which were washed once bind the soluble phosphogluconate dehydrogenase more tightly than they do glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Microsomes washed three times in 0.15 M Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, contain only the microsomal 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. Two observations show that this dehydrogenase is located in the cisternae. First, this dehydrogenase is inactive in intact, three times washed microsomes. Second, proteolytic inactivation of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase like that of the cisternal enzyme
glucose-6-phosphatase
requires disruption of the membrane. Under the conditions used, detergent did not affect the proteolytic inactivation of NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, an enzyme located on the external surface. The excellent correspondence between the activations of hexose phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase in microsomes at various stages of disruption of the microsomal membrane produced by detergent supports the earlier contention that these two dehydrogenases are reducing NADP in the same region of the microsomes. A similar experiment which shows an exact correspondence between the activations of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and mannose-6-
phosphatase
with increasing concentrations of detergent indicates that the activation of the dehydrogenase can be explained solely by the penetration of the substrates to the active dehydrogenase within the microsomes and strongly suggests that the dehydrogenase is catalytically active in the cisternae.
...
PMID:The topology of phosphogluconate dehydrogenases in rat liver microsomes. 282 99
Approximately the same levels of six of the seven enzymes catalyzing reactions of the pentose phosphate pathway are in the cisternae of washed microsomes from rat heart, spleen, lung, and brain. Renal and hepatic microsomes also have detectable levels of these enzymes except ribulose-5-phosphate epimerase and ribose-5-phosphate isomerase. Their location in the cisternae is indicated by their latencies, i.e. requirement for disruption of the membrane for activity. In addition, transketolase, transaldolase, and
glucose-6-phosphatase
, a known cisternal enzyme, are inactivated by chymotrypsin and subtilisin only in disrupted hepatic microsomes under conditions in which NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, an enzyme on the external surface, is inactivated equally in intact and disrupted microsomes. The failure to detect the epimerase and isomerase in hepatic microsomes is due to inhibition of their assays by ketopentose-5-
phosphatase
. Xylulose 5-phosphate is hydrolyzed faster than ribulose 5-phosphate. A mild heat treatment destroys hepatic xylulose-5-
phosphatase
and
glucose-6-phosphatase
without affecting acid phosphatase. These results plus the established wide distribution of glucose dehydrogenase, the microsomal glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and its localization to the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum suggest that most mammalian cells have two sets of enzymes of the pentose phosphate pathway: one is cytoplasmic and the other is in the endoplasmic reticulum. The activity of the microsomal pentose phosphate pathway is estimated to be about 1.5% that of the cytoplasmic pathway.
...
PMID:The pentose phosphate pathway in the endoplasmic reticulum. 284
New light microscopic visualization methods were developed for the histochemical detection of non-specific alkaline and acid phosphatase, Mg-, Ca- and Na, K-dependent adenosine triphosphatase, myosin adenosine triphosphatase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, 5'-nucleotidase and thiamine pyrophosphatase with cerium ions as trapping agents in cryostat and plastic sections. The techniques are based on the conversion of cerium phosphate into cerium perhydroxide by H2O2 which decomposes at 55 degrees-60 degrees C into cerium hydroxide and oxygen radicals. These radicals are able to oxidize diaminobenzidine (DAB) to DAB brown. Addition of nickel ions to the DAB-H2O2 mixture generates bluish-black stained nickel-DAB complexes. Compared with the classical metal precipitation, azo, azoindoxyl and tetrazolium procedures the H2O2-DAB and especially the H2O2-DAB-nickel methods provided identical or superior results in catalytic
phosphatase
histochemistry and immunohistochemistry when using non-specific alkaline phosphatase as the enzyme label.
...
PMID:The cerium perhydroxide-diaminobenzidine (Ce-H2O2-DAB) procedure. New methods for light microscopic phosphatase histochemistry and immunohistochemistry. 285 63
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