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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:4.1.1.32 (
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
)
4,204
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Expression of the serum albumin gene is extinguished in rat hepatoma microcell hybrids that retain mouse chromosome 1. These data define a trans-dominant extinguisher locus, Tse-2, on mouse chromosome 1. To localize the human TSE2 locus, we prepared and characterized rat/human microcell hybrids that contained either human chromosome 1 or chromosome 2, the genetic homologues of mouse chromosome 1. Rat hepatoma microcell hybrids retaining a derivative human chromosome 1 [der 1 t(1;17)(p34.3;q11.2)] expressed their serum albumin genes at levels similar to those of parental hepatoma cells. In contrast, microcell transfer of human chromosome 2 into rat hepatoma recipients produced karyotypically heterogeneous collections of hybrid clones, some of which displayed dramatic albumin extinction phenotypes. For example, albumin mRNA levels in several extinguished microcell hybrids were reduced at least 500-fold, similar to albumin mRNA levels in hepatoma x fibroblast whole-cell hybrids. Expression of several other liver genes, including alpha 1-antitrypsin, aldolase B, alcohol dehydrogenase, and
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
, was also affected in some of the microcell hybrids, but expression of these genes was not concordant with expression of albumin. Hybrid segregants were prepared from the albumin-extinguished hybrids, and reexpression of albumin mRNA and protein was observed in sublines that had lost or fragmented human chromosome 2. Finally, expression of mRNAs encoding the liver-enriched trans activators HNF-1, HNF-4, HNF-3 alpha, and
HNF-3
beta was not affected in any of the chromosome 2-containing hybrids. These data define and map a genetic locus on human chromosome 2 that extinguishes albumin gene expression in trans, and they suggest that TSE2-mediated extinction is independent of HNF-1, -4, -3 alpha, and -3 beta expression.
...
PMID:Extinction of albumin gene expression in a panel of human chromosome 2 microcell hybrids. 883 17
Highly related insulin response sequences (IRSs) mediate effects of insulin on the expression of multiple genes in the liver, including insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1 (IGFBP-1) and
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(
PEPCK
). Gel shift studies reveal that oligonucleotide probes containing an IRS from the IGFBP-1 or
PEPCK
gene form a similar complex with hepatic nuclear proteins. Unlabeled competitors containing the IGFBP-1 or
PEPCK
IRS or a binding site for C/EBP proteins inhibit the formation of this complex. Antibody against C/EBPbeta (but not other C/EBP proteins) supershifts this complex, and Western blotting of affinity purified proteins confirms that C/EBPbeta is present in this complex. Studies with affinity purified and recombinant protein indicate that C/EBPbeta does not interact directly with the IRS, but that other factors are required. Gel shift assays and reporter gene studies with constructs containing point mutations within the IRS reveal that the ability to interact with factors required for the formation of this complex correlates well with the ability of insulin to regulate promoter activity via this IRS (r = 0.849, p < 0.01). Replacing the IRS in reporter gene constructs with a C/EBP-binding site (but not an
HNF-3
/forkhead site or cAMP response element) maintains the effect of insulin on promoter activity. Together, these findings indicate that a nucleoprotein complex containing C/EBPbeta interacts with IRSs from the IGFBP-1 and
PEPCK
genes in a sequence-specific fashion and may contribute to the ability of insulin to regulate gene expression.
...
PMID:A nucleoprotein complex containing CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein beta interacts with an insulin response sequence in the insulin-like growth factor-binding protein-1 gene and contributes to insulin-regulated gene expression. 1111 47
Pancreatic beta-cells couple the oxidation of glucose to the secretion of insulin. Apart from the canonical K(ATP)-dependent glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS), there are important K(ATP)-independent mechanisms involving both anaplerosis and mitochondrial GTP (mtGTP). How mtGTP that is trapped within the mitochondrial matrix regulates the cytosolic calcium increases that drive GSIS remains a mystery. Here we have investigated whether the mitochondrial isoform of
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase
(PEPCK-M) is the GTPase linking hydrolysis of mtGTP made by succinyl-CoA synthetase (SCS-GTP) to an anaplerotic pathway producing phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). Although cytosolic PEPCK (PEPCK-C) is absent, PEPCK-M message and protein were detected in
INS-1
832/13 cells, rat islets, and mouse islets. PEPCK enzymatic activity is half that of primary hepatocytes and is localized exclusively to the mitochondria. Novel (13)C-labeling strategies in
INS-1
832/13 cells and islets measured substantial contribution of PEPCK-M to the synthesis of PEP. As high as 30% of PEP in
INS-1
832/13 cells and 41% of PEP in rat islets came from PEPCK-M. The contribution of PEPCK-M to overall PEP synthesis more than tripled with glucose stimulation. Silencing the PEPCK-M gene completely inhibited GSIS underscoring its central role in mitochondrial metabolism-mediated insulin secretion. Given that mtGTP synthesized by SCS-GTP is an indicator of TCA flux that is crucial for GSIS, PEPCK-M is a strong candidate to link mtGTP synthesis with insulin release through anaplerotic PEP cycling.
...
PMID:Phosphoenolpyruvate cycling via mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase links anaplerosis and mitochondrial GTP with insulin secretion. 1963 91