Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In skeletal muscle both insulin and contractile activity are physiological stimuli for glycogen synthesis, which is thought to result in part from the dephosphorylation and activation of glycogen synthase (GS). PP1G/R(GL)(G(M)) is a glycogen/sarcoplasmic reticulum-associated type 1 phosphatase that was originally postulated to mediate insulin control of glycogen metabolism. However, we recently showed (Suzuki, Y., Lanner, C., Kim, J.-H., Vilardo, P. G., Zhang, H., Jie Yang, J., Cooper, L. D., Steele, M., Kennedy, A., Bock, C., Scrimgeour, A., Lawrence, J. C. Jr., L., and DePaoli-Roach, A. A. (2001) Mol. Cell. Biol. 21, 2683-2694) that insulin activates GS in muscle of R(GL)(G(M)) knockout (KO) mice similarly to the wild type (WT). To determine whether PP1G is involved in glycogen metabolism during muscle contractions, R(GL) KO and overexpressors (OE) were subjected to two models of contraction, in vivo treadmill running and in situ electrical stimulation. Both procedures resulted in a 2-fold increase in the GS -/+ glucose-6-P activity ratio in WT mice, but this response was completely absent in the KO mice. The KO mice, which also have a reduced GS activity associated with significantly reduced basal glycogen levels, exhibited impaired maximal exercise capacity, but contraction-induced activation of glucose transport was unaffected. The R(GL) OE mice are characterized by enhanced GS activity ratio and an approximately 3-4-fold increase in glycogen content in skeletal muscle. These animals were able to tolerate exercise normally. Stimulation of GS and glucose uptake following muscle contraction was not significantly different as compared with WT littermates. These results indicate that although PP1G/R(GL) is not necessary for activation of GS by insulin, it is essential for regulation of glycogen metabolism under basal conditions and in response to contractile activity, and may explain the reduced muscle glycogen content in the R(GL) KO mice, despite the normal insulin activation of GS.
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PMID:The muscle-specific protein phosphatase PP1G/R(GL)(G(M))is essential for activation of glycogen synthase by exercise. 1152 87

Glycogen is a branched polymer of glucose which serves as a reservoir of glucose units. The two largest deposits in mammals are in the liver and skeletal muscle but many cells are capable synthesizing glycogen. Its accumulation and utilization are under elaborate controls involving primarily covalent phosphorylation and allosteric ligand binding. Both muscle and liver glycogen reserves are important for whole body glucose metabolism and their replenishment is linked hormonally to nutritional status. Control differs between muscle and liver in part due to the existence of different tissue-specific isoforms at key steps. Control of synthesis is shared between transport into the muscle and the step catalyzed by glycogen synthase. Breakdown of liver glycogen, as part of blood glucose homeostasis, is also in response to nutritional cues. Muscle glycogen serves only to fuel muscular activity and its utilization is controlled by muscle contraction and by catecholamines. Though the number of enzymes directly involved in the metabolism of glycogen is quite small, many more proteins act indirectly in a regulatory capacity. Defects in the basic metabolizing enzymes lead to severe consequences whereas, with some exceptions, mutations in the regulatory proteins appear to cause a more subtle phenotypic change.
Curr Mol Med 2002 Mar
PMID:Glycogen and its metabolism. 1194 30

In vivo effects of insulin and vanadium treatment on glycogen synthase (GS), glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) and protein phosphatase-1 (PP1) activity were determined in Wistar rats with streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes. The skeletal muscle was freeze-clamped before or following an insulin injection (5 U/kg i.v.). Diabetes, vanadium, and insulin in vivo treatment did not affect muscle GSK-3beta activity as compared to controls. Following insulin stimulation in 4-week STZ-diabetic rats muscle GS fractional activity (GSFA) was increased 3 fold (p < 0.05), while in 7-week diabetic rats it remained unchanged, suggesting development of insulin resistance in longer term diabetes. Muscle PP1 activity was increased in diabetic rats and returned to normal after vanadium treatment, while muscle GSFA remained unchanged. Therefore, it is possible that PP1 is involved in the regulation of some other cellular events of vanadium (other than regulation of glycogen synthesis). The lack of effect of vanadium treatment in stimulating glycogen synthesis in skeletal muscle suggests the involvement of other metabolic pathways in the observed glucoregulatory effect of vanadium.
Mol Cell Biochem 2002 Feb
PMID:Effects of diabetes, vanadium, and insulin on glycogen synthase activation in Wistar rats. 1195 62

Glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) is a serine-threonine kinase that is involved in multiple cellular signaling pathways, including the Wnt signaling cascade where it phosphorylates beta-catenin, thus targeting it for proteasome-mediated degradation. Unlike phosphorylation of glycogen synthase, phosphorylation of beta-catenin by GSK-3 does not require priming in vitro, i.e. it is not dependent on the presence of a phosphoserine, four residues C-terminal to the GSK-3 phosphorylation site. Recently, a means of dissecting GSK-3 activity toward primed and non-primed substrates has been made possible by identification of the R96A mutant of GSK-3beta. This mutant is unable to phosphorylate primed but can still phosphorylate unprimed substrates (Frame, S., Cohen, P., and Biondi R. M. (2001) Mol. Cell 7, 1321-1327). Here we have investigated whether phosphorylation of Ser(33), Ser(37), and Thr(41) in beta-catenin requires priming through prior phosphorylation at Ser(45) in intact cells. We have shown that the Arg(96) mutant does not induce beta-catenin degradation but instead stabilizes beta-catenin, indicating that it is unable to phosphorylate beta-catenin in intact cells. Furthermore, if Ser(45) in beta-catenin is mutated to Ala, beta-catenin is markedly stabilized, and phosphorylation of Ser(33), Ser(37), and Thr(41) in beta-catenin by wild type GSK-3beta is prevented in intact cells. In addition, we have shown that the L128A mutant, which is deficient in phosphorylating Axin in vitro, is still able to phosphorylate beta-catenin in intact cells although it has reduced activity. Mutation of Tyr(216) to Phe markedly reduces the ability of GSK-3beta to phosphorylate and down-regulate beta-catenin. In conclusion, we have found that the Arg(96) mutant has a dominant-negative effect on GSK-3beta-dependent phosphorylation of beta-catenin and that targeting of beta-catenin for degradation requires prior priming through phosphorylation of Ser(45).
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PMID:Expression and characterization of GSK-3 mutants and their effect on beta-catenin phosphorylation in intact cells. 1196 63

Glycogen synthases catalyze the transfer of a glucosyl moiety from a nucleotide phosphosugar to a nascent glycogen chain via an alpha1-->4 linkage. Although many genes coding for glycogen synthases have been described, the enzymes from rabbit and yeast are the best characterized. The fungus Neurospora crassa accumulates glycogen during exponential growth, and mobilizes it at the onset of stationary phase, or when placed at high temperature or starved for carbon. Through a PCR methodology, the gsn cDNA coding for the N. crassa glycogen synthase was isolated, and the amino acid sequence of the protein was deduced. The product of the cDNA seems to be the only glycogen synthase present in N. crassa. Characterization of the gsn cDNA revealed that it codes for a 706-amino acids protein, which is very similar to mammalian and yeast glycogen synthases. Gene expression increased during exponential growth, reaching its maximal level at the end of the exponential growth phase, which is consistent with the pattern of glycogen synthase activity and glycogen level. Expression of the gsn is highly regulated at the transcriptional level. Under culture conditions that induce heat shock, conidiation, and carbon starvation, expression of the gsn gene was decreased, and glycogen synthase activity and glycogen content behaved similarly.
Mol Genet Genomics 2002 Apr
PMID:Molecular and biochemical characterization of the Neurospora crassa glycogen synthase encoded by the gsn cDNA. 1197 68

The phosphoglucomutase (pgm) gene codes for a key enzyme required for the formation of UDP-glucose and ADP-glucose, the sugar donors for the biosynthesis of glucose containing polysaccharides. A Mesorhizobium loti pgm null mutant obtained in this study contains an altered form of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), lacks exopolysaccharide (EPS), beta cyclic glucan, and glycogen and is unable to nodulate Lotus tenuis. The nonnodulating phenotype of the pgm mutant was not due to the absence of glycogen, since a glycogen synthase (glgA) null mutant effectively nodulates this legume. In M. loti, pgm is part of the glycogen metabolism gene cluster formed by GlgP (glycogen phosphorylase), glgB (glycogen branching), glgC (ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase), glgA, pgm, and glgX (glycogen debranching). The genes are transcribed as a single transcript from glgP to at least pgm under the control of a strong promoter (promoter I) upstream of glgP. An alternative promoter (promoter II), mapping in a 154-bp DNA fragment spanning 85 bp upstream of the glgA start codon and the first 69 bp of the glgA coding region, controls the expression of glgA and pgm, independently of the rest of the upstream genes. Primer extension experiments showed that transcription starts 19 bp upstream of the glgA start codon.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact 2002 Apr
PMID:Analysis of Mesorhizobium loti glycogen operon: effect of phosphoglucomutase (pgm) and glycogen synthase (g/gA) null mutants on nodulation of Lotus tenuis. 1202 75

Since the glucose-lowering effects of vanadium could be related to increased muscle glycogen synthesis, we examined the in vivo effects of vanadium and insulin treatment on glycogen synthase (GS) activation in Zucker fatty rats. The GS fractional activity (GSFA), protein phosphatase-1 (PP1), and glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) activity were determined in fatty and lean rats following treatment with bis(maltolato)oxovanadium(IV) (BMOV) for 3 weeks (0.2 mmol/kg/day) administered in drinking water. Skeletal muscle was freeze-clamped before or following an insulin injection (5 U/kg i.v.). In both lean and fatty rats, muscle GSFA was significantly increased at 15 min following insulin stimulation. Vanadium treatment resulted in decreased insulin levels and improved insulin sensitivity in the fatty rats. Interestingly, this treatment stimulated muscle GSFA by 2-fold (p < 0.05) and increased insulin-stimulated PP1 activity by 77% (p < 0.05) in the fatty rats as compared to untreated rats. Insulin resistance, vanadium and insulin in vivo treatment did not affect muscle GSK-3beta activity in either fatty or lean rats. Therefore, an impaired insulin sensitivity in the Zucker fatty rats was improved following vanadium treatment, resulting in an enhanced muscle glucose metabolism through increased GS and insulin-stimulated PPI activity.
Mol Cell Biochem 2002 Jul
PMID:Oral treatment with vanadium of Zucker fatty rats activates muscle glycogen synthesis and insulin-stimulated protein phosphatase-1 activity. 1219 Jan 10

The glycogen-associated protein phosphatase (PP1G/ R(GL))may play a central role in the hormonal control of glycogen metabolism in the skeletal muscle. Here, we investigated the in vivo epinephrine effect of glycogen metabolism in the skeletal muscle of the wild-type and R(GL) knockout mice. The administration of epinephrine increased blood glucose levels from 200 +/- +/- 20 to 325 +/- 20 mg/dl in both wild-type and knockout mice. Epinephrine decreased the glycogen synthase -/+ G6P ratio from 0.24 +/- 0.04 to 0.10 +/- 0.02 in the wild-type, and from 0.17 +/- 0.02 to 0.06 +/- 0.01 in the knockout mice. Conversely, the glycogen phosphorylase activity ratio increased from 0.21 +/- 0.04 to 0.65 +/- 0.07 and from 0.30 +/- 0.04 to 0.81 +/- 0.06 in the epinephrine treated wild-type and knockout mice respectively. The glycogen content of the knockout mice was substantially lower (27 percent) than that of both wild-type mice; and epinephrine decreased glycogen content in the wild-type and knockout mice. Also, in Western blot analysis there was no compensation of the other glycogen targeting components PTG/R5 and R6 in the knockout mice compared with the wild-type. Therefore, R(GL) is not required for the epinephrine stimulation of glycogen metabolism, and rather another phosphatase and/or regulatory subunit appears to be involved.
J Biochem Mol Biol 2002 May 31
PMID:Epinephrine control of glycogen metabolism in glycogen-associated protein phosphatase PP1G/R(GL) knockout mice. 1247 8

The finding that during recovery from high intensity exercise, rats have the capacity to replenish their muscle glycogen stores even in the absence of food intake has provided us with an experimental model of choice to explore further this process. Our objective here is to share those questions arising from research carried out by others and ourselves on rats and humans that are likely to be of interest to comparative biochemists/physiologists. On the basis of our findings and those of others, it is proposed that across vertebrate species: (1). the capacity of muscles to replenish their glycogen stores from endogenous carbon sources is dependent on the type of physical activity and animal species; (2). lactate and amino acids are the major endogenous carbon sources mobilized for the resynthesis of muscle glycogen during recovery from exercise, their relative contributions depending on the duration of recovery and type of exercise; (3). the relative contributions of lactate glyconeogenesis and hepatic/renal gluconeogenesis to muscle glycogen synthesis is species- and muscle fiber-dependent; and (4). glycogen synthase and phosphorylase play an important role in the control of the rate of glycogen synthesis post-exercise, with the role of glucose transport being species-dependent.
Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 2002 Nov
PMID:Glycogen resynthesis in the absence of food ingestion during recovery from moderate or high intensity physical activity: novel insights from rat and human studies. 1244 31

Immunocytochemistry of glycogen deposition in dog sperm from fresh ejaculates showed that 53.7% of the population had glycogen at the midpiece, whereas 27.3% of the whole population accumulated glycogen only in the post-acrosomal region of the head. A similar distribution was observed when glycogen synthase, the enzyme which controls glycogen deposition, was studied. Incubation of spermatozoa with fructose increases the intracellular glycogen levels in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Moreover, after incubation with 2 mM fructose for 30 min, 47.3% of the spermatozoa had glycogen located in both the midpiece and post-acrosomal zone, 25.4% of the population showed the polysaccharide only in the midpiece, and 24.7% of the spermatozoa showed a uniform distribution of glycogen all over the cell. Similar results were observed after incubation with 10-mM fructose. The distribution of glycogen synthase followed a similar pattern to that of glycogen. Incubation with glucose also induced a time- and concentration-dependent increase of glycogen content, whereas incubation with 2 mM glucose for 30 min showed that the majority of the population (81.2%) had the glycogen distributed throughout either the midpiece or the midpiece and the post-acrosomal zones together. There were practically no cells with a uniform glycogen distribution. Similar results were obtained after incubation with 10-mM glucose, whereas glycogen synthase suffered a similar glucose-induced distribution change. These results indicate that dog-sperm glycogen metabolism is modulated by changes in the activity of their controlling enzymes and also by changes in the specific location places where glycogen synthesis is produced.
Mol Reprod Dev 2003 Mar
PMID:Glucose- and fructose-induced dog-sperm glycogen synthesis shows specific changes in the location of the sperm glycogen deposition. 1254 67


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