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1.
The ability of glucose 6-phosphate and carbamyl phosphate to serve as substrates for glucose-6-phosphatase (D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase; EC 3.1.3.9) of intact and disrupted microsomes from rat liver was compared at pH 7.0. Results support carbamyl phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate as effective substrates with both. Km values for carbamyl phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate were greater with intact than with disrupted microsomes, but Vmax values were higher with the latter. The substrate translocase-catalytic unit concept of glucose-6-phosphatase function is thus confirmed. The Km values for 3-O-methyl-D-glucose and D-glucose were larger when determined with intact than with disrupted microsomes. This observation is consistent with the involvement of a translocase specific for hexose substrate as a rate-influencing determinant in phosphotransferase activity of glucose-6-phosphatase.  相似文献   

2.
We have compared the characteristics of glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) in the envelope of purified nuclei and microsomes from rat liver. The latency of mannose-6-P hydrolysis, permeability to EDTA, and susceptibility of the enzyme to protease-mediated inactivation all indicated that the permeability barrier defined by the envelope in situ is significantly disrupted in isolated nuclei (i.e. in vitro). Latency of mannose-6-P hydrolysis was demonstrated to provide a quantitative measure of the degree of nuclear membrane disruption. Electron micrographs confirmed the existence of substantial regions of the envelope in vitro where the permeability barrier to EDTA was intact (i.e. an "intact component"). The kinetics of glucose-6-phosphatase catalyzed by the intact component was obtained by subtracting the contribution of enzyme in disrupted regions from the total enzymic activity of untreated nuclei. The characteristics of glucose-6-phosphatase in intact and fully disrupted membranes of nuclei were indistinguishable from microsomes with respect to (a) the kinetics of glucose-6-P hydrolysis, (b) the effects of incubations with mannose-6-P, N-ethylmaleimide, and protease from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens, (c) the extremely high latency of carbamyl phosphate:glucose phosphotransferase activity, and (d) both the patterns of response of activity and the change in latency of glucose-6-phosphatase induced by fasting, experimental diabetes, and cortisol injection. Our results show clearly that apparent differences in the glucose-6-phosphatase activity of untreated preparations of nuclei and microsomes are simply expressions of significant differences in the degree of intactness of their respective permeability barriers. Since flattened cisternae, characteristic of the rough endoplasmic reticulum in situ, are preserved in intact regions of the envelope of isolated nuclei, the present findings constitute the most direct and definitive evidence to date that the properties of glucose-6-phosphatase in the endoplasmic reticulum in situ are faithfully reproduced with intact microsomes.  相似文献   

3.
The phosphohydrolase component of the microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase system has been identified as a 36.5-kDa polypeptide by 32P-labeling of the phosphoryl-enzyme intermediate formed during steady-state hydrolysis. A 36.5-kDa polypeptide was labeled when disrupted rat hepatic microsomes were incubated with three different 32P-labeled substrates for the enzyme (glucose-6-P, mannose-6-P, and PPi) and the reaction terminated with trichloroacetic acid. Labeling of the phosphoryl-enzyme intermediate with [32P]glucose-6-P was blocked by several well-characterized competitive inhibitors of glucose-6-phosphatase activity (e.g. Al(F)-4 and Pi) and by thermal inactivation, and labeling was not seen following incubations with 32Pi and [U-14C]glucose-6-P. In agreement with steady-state dictates, the amount of [32P]phosphoryl intermediate was directly and quantitatively proportional to the steady-state glucose-6-phosphatase activity measured under a variety of conditions in both intact and disrupted hepatic microsomes. The labeled 36.5-kDa polypeptide was specifically immunostained by antiserum raised in sheep against the partially purified rat hepatic enzyme, and the antiserum quantitatively immunoprecipitated glucose-6-phosphatase activity from cholate-solubilized rat hepatic microsomes. [32P]Glucose-6-P also labeled a similar-sized polypeptide in hepatic microsomes from sheep, rabbit, guinea pig, and mouse and rat renal microsomes. The glucose-6-phosphatase enzyme appears to be a minor protein of the hepatic endoplasmic reticulum, comprising about 0.1% of the total microsomal membrane proteins. The centrifugation of sodium dodecyl sulfate-solubilized membrane proteins was found to be a crucial step in the resolution of radiolabeled microsomal proteins by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

4.
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.  相似文献   

5.
Radiation inactivation analysis was utilized to estimate the sizes of the units catalyzing the various activities of hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase. This technique revealed that the target molecular weights for mannose-6-P phosphohydrolase, glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase, and carbamyl-P:glucose phosphotransferase activities were all about Mr 75,000. These results are consistent with the widely held view that all of these activities are catalyzed by the same protein or proteins. Certain observations indicate that the molecular organization of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase is better described by the conformational hypothesis which envisions the enzyme as a single covalent structure rather than by the substrate transport model which requires the participation of several physically separate polypeptides. These include the findings: 1) that the target sizes for glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase and carbamyl-P:glucose phosphotransferase activities were not larger than that for mannose-6-P phosphohydrolase in intact microsomes and 2) that the target size for glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase in disrupted microsomes was not less than that observed in intact microsomes. These findings are most consistent with a model for glucose-6-phosphatase of a single polypeptide or a disulfide-linked dimer which spans the endoplasmic reticulum with the various activities of this multifunctional enzyme residing in distinct protein domains.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism of activation of hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) in vitro by pentamidine has been investigated in both intact and fully disrupted microsomes. The major effect of pentamidine is a 4.7-fold reduction in the Km of glucose-6-phosphatase activity in intact diabetic rat liver microsomes. The site of action of pentamidine is T1 the hepatic microsomal glucose 6-phosphate transport protein. The activation of T1 by pentamidine may contribute to the disturbed blood glucose homeostasis seen in many patients after the administration of the drug pentamidine.  相似文献   

7.
Hepatomas tend to have a decreased glucose-6-phosphatase activity. We have observed phenotypic stability for this change in Morris hepatomas transplanted in rats. To determine if this decrease is selective for translocase functions or the hydrolase activity associated with glucose-6-phosphatase, we have compared activities in liver and hepatomas with glucose-6-phosphate or mannose-6-phosphate as substrates and with intact or histone-disrupted microsomes. In five out of seven subcutaneously transplanted rat hepatoma lines, the microsomal mannose-6-phosphatase activity was lower than in preparations from liver of normal or tumor-bearing rats. With liver microsomes and with most hepatoma microsomes, preincubation with calf thymus histones caused a greater increase in mannose-6-phosphatase than in glucose-6-phosphatase activity. In studies with liver and hepatoma microsomes there were similar increases in mannose-6-phosphatase activity with total calf thymus histones and arginine-rich histones. A smaller increase was seen with lysine-rich histones. The effect of polylysine was similar to the action of lysine-rich histones. There was only a small effect with protamine at the same concentration (1 mg/ml). Rat liver or hepatoma H1 histones gave only about half the activation seen with core nucleosomal histones. Our data suggested that microsomes of rat hepatomas tend to have decreased translocase and hydrolase functions of glucose-6-phosphatase relative to activities in untransformed liver. (Mol Cell Biochem122: 17–24, 1993)  相似文献   

8.
The transport model of glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) was recently challenged by a report that detergent treatment had no effect on the presteady state kinetics of glucose-6-P hydrolysis catalyzed at 0 degree C by the enzyme in liver microsomes previously frozen in 0.25 M mannitol (Zakim, D., and Edmondson, D. E. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 1145-1148). The lack of response to detergent is shown to be the expected consequence of the conditions used in the presteady state measurements. First, when the assay temperature was reduced from 30 to 0 degree C the depression in the glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase activity of intact microsomes (i.e. the system) was much greater than that of fully disrupted microsomes (i.e. enzyme). This indicates that temperature influences transport much more than hydrolysis of glucose-6-P. As a result, the contribution of a small fraction of enzyme associated with disrupted structures is markedly exaggerated, so it becomes the predominant hydrolytic activity before detergent treatment. Second, freezing microsomes in 0.25 M mannitol caused such extensive disruption that all of the activity manifest at 0 degree C could be attributed to enzyme in disrupted structures. The present findings underscore the importance of assessing the state of intactness of "untreated" microsomes and quantifying the contribution of the disrupted component in kinetic analyses of the glucose-6-phosphatase system. The proposition that the detergent-induced changes in the kinetic properties of glucose 6-phosphatase represent removal of constraints imposed on the enzyme by the membrane environment rather than increased access of enzyme to substrate is critically analyzed.  相似文献   

9.
We have proposed that glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) is a two-component system consisting of (a) a glucose-6-P-specific transporter which mediates the movement of the hexose phosphate from the cytosol to the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (or cisternae of the isolated microsomal vesicle), and (b) a nonspecific phosphohydrolase-phosphotransferase localized on the luminal surface of the membrane (Arion, W.J., Wallin, B.K., Lange, A.J., and Ballas, L.M. (1975) Mol. Cell. Biochem. 6, 75-83). Additional support for this model has been obtained by studying the interactions of D-mannose-6-P and D-mannose with the enzyme of untreated (i.e. intact) and taurocholate-disrupted microsomes. An exact correspondence was shown between the mannose-6-P phosphohydrolase activity at low substrate concentrations and the permeability of the microsomal membrane to EDTA. The state of intactness of the membrane influenced the kinetics of mannose inhibition of glucose-6-P hydrolysis; uncompetitive and noncompetitive inhibitions were observed for intact and disrupted microsomes, respectively. The apparent Km for glucose-6-P was smaller with intact preparations at mannose concentrations above 0.3 M. Mannose significantly inhibited total glucose-6-P utilization by intact microsomes, whereas D-glucose had a stimulatory effect. Both hexoses markedly enhanced the rate of glucose-6-P utilization by disrupted microsomes. The actions of mannose on the glucose-6-phosphatase of intact microsomes fully support the postulated transport model. They are predictable consequences of the synthesis and accumulation of mannose-6-P in the cisternae of microsomal vesicles which possess a nonspecific, multifunctional enzyme on the inner surface and a limiting membrane permeable to D-glucose, D-mannose, glucose-6-P, but impermeable to mannose-6-P. The latency of the mannose-6-P phosphohydrolase activity is proposed as a reliable, quantitative index of microsomal membrane integrity. The inherent limitations of the use of EDTA permeability for this purpose are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Twenty-five metabolites of glucose, gluconeogenic substrates, and related compounds were examined as potential inhibitors of glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) catalytic unit and substrate transport function, using disrupted and intact rat liver microsomes. Inhibitions (competitive) were noted with six. Calculated per cent inhibitions with presumed near-physiologic concentrations of inhibitor and substrate were small. However, when hepatic fructose-1-P concentration is elevated in response to a fructose load, inhibition of glucose-6-phosphatase by fructose-1-P may play a regulatory role, along with fructose-1-P-associated deinhibition of glucokinase, by directing glucose-6-P away from glucose formation and towards glycogen synthesis and glycolysis.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanism of activation of hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) in vitro by pentamidine has been investigated in both intact and fully disrupted microsomes. The major effect of pentamidine is a 4.7-fold reduction in the Km of glucose-6-phosphatase activity in intact diabetic rat liver microsomes. The site of action of pentamidine is T1 the hepatic microsomal glucose 6-phosphate transport protein. The activation of T1 by pentamidine may contribute to the disturbed blood glucose homeostasis see in many patients after administration of the drug pentamidine.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Glucose-6-phosphatase activity was measured in rat liver or pancreatic islet crude homogenates and microsomes. The data recorded in the liver were comparable to those reported in prior studies. However, in the islets, the hydrolysis of D-glucose 6-phosphate by disrupted microsomes represented, when expressed relative to the protein content, less than 2% of the value recorded in liver microsomes. Moreover, no phosphotransferase activity was detected in the islets. These findings impose reservation on both the presence of glucose-6-phosphatase in rat islets and its participation to stimulus-secretion coupling.  相似文献   

13.
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.  相似文献   

14.
Membrane effects on hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
1) Rat liver microsomes exhibit only a weak hydrolyzing activity towards galactose 6-phosphate. Disruption of the microsomal vesicles does not change the apparent Michaelis constant for this substrate but enhances the apparent maximum velocity. 2) The inhibition of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) by galactose 6-phosphate is of the competitive type in intact and disrupted microsomal vesicles, suggesting that both substrates are hydrolyzed by the same enzyme. 3) The high degree of latency found for the hydrolysis of galactose 6-phosphate compared to glucose 6-phosphate indicates the presence of a carrier for glucose 6-phosphate in the microsomal membrane. 4) Since glucose as a product is not trapped inside the microsomal vesicles, this sugar probably is able to penetrate the microsomal membrane.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of 1-cyclohexyl-3-(2-morpholinoethyl)carbodiimide (CMC) on the reactions catalyzed by the glucose-6-phosphatase system of rat liver microsomes was studied. Modification of the intact microsomes by CMC leads to the inhibition of the glucose-6-phosphatase, pyrophosphate:glucose and carbamoyl-phosphate : glucose phosphotransferase activities of the system. The activities are restored by the disruption of the microsomal permeability barrier. The mannose-6-phosphate, pyrophosphate, and carbamoyl-phosphate phosphohydrolase activities of the intact as well as the disrupted microsomes were not affected by CMC. It follows from the results obtained that CMC inactivates the microsomal glucose-6-phosphate translocase, the inactivation is a result of the modification of a single sulfhydryl or amino group of the translocase; pyrophosphate, carbamoyl phosphate and inorganic phosphate are transported across the microsomal membrane without participation of the glucose-6-phosphate translocase; pyrophosphate and carbamoyl phosphate may act as the phosphate donors in the glucose phosphorylation reactions in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Controlled proteolytic digestion by trypsin or bacterial proteases limited to the cytosolic side of the native microsomal membrane is not efficient to inhibit glucose-6-phosphate hydrolysis. Modification of the microsomes with deoxycholate prior to protease treatment is prerequisite to allow accessibility of the integral protein and inhibition of enzyme activity. Glucose-6-phosphatase of native microsomes, however, is rapidly inactivated by micromolar concentrations of TPCK as well as TLCK. In deoxycholate-modified microsomes both reagents do not affect glucose-6-phosphate hydrolysis. These results indicate that in the native, intact microsomal membrane glucose-6-phosphatase is not accessible to proteolytic attack from the cytoplasmic surface. The putative inhibitory effect of some trypsin or bacterial protease preparations on glucose-6-phosphatase of native microsomes observed most possibly is a result of contaminating agents as TPCK or TLCK.  相似文献   

17.
The interactions of Pi, PPi, and carbamyl-P with the hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase system were studied in intact and detergent-disrupted microsomes. Penetration of PPi and carbamyl-P into intact microsomes was evidenced by their reactions with the enzyme located exclusively on the luminal surface. Lack of effects of carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone and valinomycin + KCl indicated that pH gradients and/or membrane potentials that could influence the kinetics of the system are not generated during metabolism of PPi and glucose-6-P by intact microsomes. With disrupted microsomes, only competitive interactions were seen among glucose-6-P, Pi, PPi, and carbamyl-P. With intact microsomes, Pi, PPi, and carbamyl-P were relatively weak, noncompetitive inhibitors of glucose-6-phosphatase, and PPi hydrolysis was inhibited competitively by Pi and carbamyl-P but noncompetitively by glucose-6-P. Analysis of the kinetic data in combination with findings from other studies that a variety of inhibitors of the glucose-6-P translocase (T1) does not affect PPi hydrolysis provide compelling evidence that permeability of microsomes to Pi, PPi, and carbamyl-P is mediated by a second translocase (T2). Some properties of the microsomal anion transporters are described. If the characteristics of the glucose-6-phosphatase system as presently defined in intact microsomes apply in vivo, glucose-6-P hydrolysis appears to be the predominant, if not the exclusive, physiologic function of the system. Both the "noncompetitive character" and the relative ineffectiveness of Pi as an inhibitor of glucose-6-phosphatase of intact microsomes result from the rate limitation imposed by T1 that prevents equilibration of glucose-6-P across the membrane. In microsomes from fed rats, where T1 is less rate restricting, about one-half as much Pi was required to give 50% inhibition compared with microsomes from fasted or diabetic rats. Thus, any treatment or agent that alters the kinetic relationship between transport and hydrolysis of glucose-6-P (e.g. endocrine or nutritional status) is an essential consideration in analyses of kinetic data for the glucose-6-phosphatase system.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of liver lipid-exchange proteins to introduce foreign phospholipids into microsomes was used in a study of the lipid dependence of glucose-6-phosphatase. Supplementation of intact rat liver and hepatoma microsomes with exogeneous aminophospholipids prevents the decline of glucose-6-phosphatase activity during incubation, whereas the introduction of exogeneous phosphatidylcholine has no protective effect. On the contrary with deoxycholate-disrupted hepatoma microsomes, introduction of additional phosphatidylcholine causes activation while phosphatidylethanolamine has only little effect. The results are explained by assuming that the transport unit and the catalytic moiety of the glucose-6-phosphatase system have different lipid requirements, the activity of the former protein depending mainly on phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine and that of the catalytic protein depending on phosphatidylcholine. In deoxycholate-disrupted liver microsomes (in which both the glucose-6-phosphatase activity and the phosphatidylcholine content are much higher than in hepatoma microsomes) incubation with phosphatidylcholine and lipid-exchange proteins alters neither the phospholipid composition nor the enzyme activity. THis suggests that the diminished activity of glucose-6-phosphatase in hepatomas may be partly due to a low level of phosphatidylcholine.  相似文献   

19.
The kinetics of rat liver glucose-6-phosphatase (D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.9) were studied with intact and detergent-disrupted microsomes from normal and diabetic rats. Glucose-6-P concentrations employed (12 microM to 1.0 mM) spanned the physiologic range. With the enzyme of intact microsomes from both groups, plots of v versus [glucose-6-P] were sigmoid. Hanes plots (i.e. [glucose-6-P]/v versus [glucose-6-P]) were biphasic (concave upwards). A Hill coefficient of 1.45 was determined with substrate concentrations between 12 and 133 microM. Disruption of microsomal integrity abolished these departures from classic kinetic behavior, indicating that sigmoidicity may result from cooperative interaction of glucose-6-P with the glucose-6-phosphatase system at the substrate translocase specific for glucose-6-P. With the enzyme from normal rats the [glucose-6-P] at which the enzyme was maximally sensitive to variations in [glucose-6-P] (which we term "Smax"), determined from plots of dv/d [glucose-6-P] versus [glucose-6-P], was in the physiologic range. The Smax of 0.13 mM corresponded well with the normal steady-state hepatic [glucose-6-P] of 0.16 mM, consistent with glucose-6-phosphatase's function as a regulatory enzyme. With the diabetic enzyme, in contrast, values were 0.30 and 0.07 mM for the Smax and steady-state level, respectively. We suggest that the decreasing sensitivity of glucose-6-phosphatase activity to progressively diminishing glucose-6-P concentration, inherent in its sigmoid kinetics, constitutes a mechanism for the preservation of a residual pool of glucose-6-P for other hepatic metabolic functions in the presence of elevated concentrations of glucose-6-phosphatase such as in diabetes.  相似文献   

20.
The kinetics of rat liver glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) were studied in intact and detergent-disrupted microsomes from normal and diabetic rats at pH 7.0 using two buffer systems (50 mM Tris-cacodylate and 50 mM 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid) and glucose-6-P varied from 20 microM to 10 mM. Identical data were obtained when the phosphohydrolase activity was quantified by a colorimetric determination of Pi or by measuring 32Pi formed during incubations with [32P]glucose-6-P. In every instance the initial rate data displayed excellent concordance with that expected for a reaction obeying Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The present findings agree with recently reported results of Traxinger and Nordlie (Traxinger, R. R., and Nordlie, R. C. 1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 10015-10019) that glucose-6-phosphatase activity in intact microsomes exhibits hyperbolic kinetics at concentrations of glucose-6-P above 133 microM, but fail to confirm their finding of sigmoid kinetics at substrate concentrations below 133 microM. We conclude that glucose-6-P hydrolysis conforms to a hyperbolic function at concentrations of glucose-6-P existing in livers of normal and diabetic rats in vivo.  相似文献   

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