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1.
Three glucose-phosphorylating enzymes were separated from cell-free extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae by hydroxylapatite chromatography. Variations in the amounts of these enzymes in cells growing on glucose and on ethanol showed that hexokinase PI was a constitutive enzyme, whereas synthesis of hexokinase PII and glucokinase were regulated by the carbon source used. Glucokinase proved to be a glucomannokinase with Km values of 0.04 mM for both glucose and mannose. D-Xylose produced an irreversible inactivation of the three glucose-phosphorylating enzymes depending on the presence or absence of ATP. Hexokinase PI inactivation required ATP, while hexokinase PII was inactivated by D-xylose without ATP in the reaction mixture. Glucokinase was protected by ATP from this inactivation. D-Xylose acted as a competitive inhibitor of hexokinase PI and glucokinase and as a non-competitive inhibitor of hexokinase PII.  相似文献   

2.
The HXK2 gene product has an important role in controlling carbon catabolite repression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We have raised specific antibodies against the hexokinase PII protein and have demonstrated that it is a 58 kDa phosphoprotein with protein kinase activity. The predicted amino acid sequence of the HXK2 gene product has significant homology to the conserved catalytic domain of mammalian and yeast protein kinases. Protein kinase activity was located in a different domain of the protein from the hexose-phosphorylating activity. The hexokinase PII protein level remained unchanged in P2T22D mutant cells (hxk1 HXK2 glk1) growing in a complex medium with glucose. The protein kinase activity of hexokinase PII is regulated by the glucose concentration of the culture medium. Exit from the carbon catabolite repression phase and entry into derepression phase may be controlled, in part, by modulation of the 58 kDa protein kinase activity by changes in cyclic AMP concentration.  相似文献   

3.
The relationship between the xylose induced decrease in hexokinase PII activity and the derepression of invertase synthesis in yeast is described. When xylose was added to cells growing in a chemostat under nitrogen limitation, the catabolic repression was supressed as shown by the large increase on invertase levels even if glucose remained high. The glucose phosphorylating-enzymes were separated by hydroxylapatite chromatography and it is shown that the treatment with xylose is accompanied by a loss of 98% hexokinase PII and a 50% of the PI isoenzyme, whereas the levels of glucokinase as well as those of glucose-6-phosphate, fructose-6-phosphate, pyruvate and ATP remained unaffected.The analysis of the enzymes present in cells grown in ethanol, limiting glucose and high glucose, shows that hexokinase PII predominates in cells under catabolic repression, the opposite is true for glucokinase, whereas hexokinase PI remains unaffected.  相似文献   

4.
The regulatory hexokinase PII mutants isolated previously (K.-D. Entian and K.-U. Fröhlich, J. Bacteriol. 158:29-35, 1984) were characterized further. These mutants were defective in glucose repression. The mutation was thought to be in the hexokinase PII structural gene, but it did not affect the catalytic activity of the enzyme. Hence, a regulatory domain for glucose repression was postulated. For further understanding of this regulatory system, the mutationally altered hexokinase PII proteins were isolated from five mutants obtained independently and characterized by their catalytic constants and bisubstrate kinetics. None of these characteristics differed from those of the wild type, so the catalytic center of the mutant enzymes remained unchanged. The only noticeable difference observed was that the in vivo modified form of hexokinase PII, PIIM, which has been described recently (K.-D. Entian and E. Kopetzki, Eur. J. Biochem. 146:657-662, 1985), was absent from one of these mutants. It is possible that the PIIM modification is directly connected with the triggering of glucose repression. To establish with certainty that the mutation is located in the hexokinase PII structural gene, the genes of these mutants were isolated after transforming a hexokinaseless mutant strain and selecting for concomitant complementation of the nuclear function. Unlike hexokinase PII wild-type transformants, glucose repression was not restored in the hexokinase PII mutant transformants. In addition mating experiments with these transformants followed by tetrad analysis of sporulated diploids gave clear evidence of allelism to the hexokinase PII structural gene.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Carbon catabolite repression in yeast depends on catalytic active hexokinase isoenzyme PII (Entian 1980a). A yeast strain lacking hexokinase isoenzymes PI and PII was transformed, using a recombinant pool with inserts of yeast nuclear DNA up to 10 kbp in length. One hundred transformants for hexokinase were obtained. All selected plasmids coded for hexokinase isoenzyme PII, none for hexokinase isoenzyme PI, and carbon catabolite repression was restored in the transformants. Thirty-five independently isolated stable plasmids were investigated further. Analysis with the restriction enzyme EcoRI showed that these plasmids fell into two classes with different restriction behaviour. One representative of each class was amplified in Escherichia coli and transferred back into the yeast hexokinase-deficient strain with concomitant complementation of the nuclear mutation. The two types of insert were analysed in detail with 16 restriction enzymes, having 0–3 cleavage sites on transformant vector YRp7. The plasmids differed from each other by the orientation of the yeast insert in the vector. After yeast transformation with fragments of one plasmid the hexokinase PII gene was localised within a region of 1.65 kbp.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism of inactivation of hexokinase PII of Saccharomyces cerevisiae by D-xylose was characterized. Inactivation was dependent on the presence of MgATP and was irreversible. Inactivation involved phosphorylation of the protein. Observation of the carbon catabolite repression of selected enzymes showed that invertase and maltase synthesis were not repressed when hexokinase PII was phosphorylated.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Hexokinase isoenzyme PI was cloned using a gene pool obtained from a yeast strain having only one functional hexokinase, isoenzyme PI. The gene was characterized using 20 restriction enzymes and located within a region of 2.0 kbp. The PI plasmid strongly hybridized with the PII plasmids isolated previously (Fröhlich et al. 1984). Hence there was a close relationship between the two genes, one of which must have been derived from the other by gene duplication. In conrrast, glucose repression was restored only in hexokinase PII transformants; PI transformants remained non-repressible. This observation provided additional evidence for the hypothesis of Entian (1980) that only hexokinase PII is necessary for glucose repression. Furthermore, glucose phosphorylating activity in PI transformants exceeded that of wild-type cells, giving clear evidence that the phosphorylating capacity is not important for glucose repression.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of the association-dissociation equilibrium on the urea-induced inactivation and unfolding of the yeast hexokinase isoforms, PI and PII, showed that these enzymes are more stable as dimers. For the monomeric PII, the inactivation and unfolding processes occurred in parallel. However, inactivation precedes the unfolding of monomeric PI or dimeric PI and PII. The unfolding transitions are biphasic for PI indicating stable intermediates, whereas for the PII isoform the unfolding occurs in a single step. Our data suggests that although PI and PII present a 78% identity in their amino acid sequences, they probably have distinct inactivation and unfolding by urea behavior.  相似文献   

9.
The binding of glucose, ADP and AdoPP[NH]P, to the native PII dimer and PII monomer and the proteolytically-modified SII monomer of hexokinase (ATP:D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was monitored at pH 6.7 by the concomitant quenching of protein fluorescence. The data were analysed in terms of Qmax, the maximal quenching of fluorescence at saturating concentrations of ligand, and [L]0.5, the concentration of ligand at half-maximal quenching. No changes in fluorescence were observed with free enzyme and nucleotide alone. In the presence of saturating levels of glucose, Qmax induced by nucleotide was between 2 and 7%, and [L]0.5 was between 0.12 and 0.56 mM, depending on the nucleotide and enzyme species. Qmax induced by glucose alone was between 22 and 25%, while [L]0.5 was approx. 0.4 mM for either of the monomeric hexokinase forms and 3.4 for PII dimer. In the presence of 6 mM ADP or 2 mM AdoPP[NH]P, Qmax for glucose was increased by up to 4% and [L]0.5 was diminished 3-fold for hexokinase PII monomer, 6-fold for SII monomer, and 15-fold for PII dimer. The results are interpreted in terms of nucleotide-induced conformational change of hexokinase in the presence of glucose and synergistic binding interactions between glucose and nucleotide.  相似文献   

10.
Autophosphorylation of yeast hexokinase PII   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Autophosphorylation of hexokinase PII was studied using an enzyme purified from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Incubation of this enzyme preparation with [gamma-32P]ATP and Mn2+ or Mg2+ gave a phosphoprotein of molecular mass 58,000 which corresponded to hexokinase PII. D-Xylose stimulated autophosphorylation of hexokinase PII. Dilution of hexokinase PII over a 10-fold concentration range did not change the specific activity of hexokinase PII autophosphorylation suggesting that it may occur by an intramolecular mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
Yeast hexokinase PII is rapidly inactivated (assayed at pH 8.0) by either butanedione in borate buffer or phenylglyoxal, reagents which are highly selective for the modification of arginyl residues. MgATP alone offers no protection against inactivation, consistent with low affinity of hexokinase for this nucleotide in the absence of sugar. Glucose provides slight protection against inactivation, while the combined presence of glucose and MgATP gives significant protection, suggesting that modified arginyl residues may lie at the active site, possibly serving to bind the anionic polyphosphate of the nucleotide in the ternary enzyme:sugar:nucleotide complex. Extrapolation to complete inactivation suggests that inactivation by butanedione correlates with the modification of 4.2 arginyl residues per subunit, and complete protection against inactivation by the combined presence of glucose and MgATP correlates with the protection of 2 to 3 arginyl residues per subunit. When the modified enzyme is assayed at pH 6.5, significant activity remains. However, modification by butanedione in borate buffer abolishes the burst-type slow transient process, observed when the enzyme is assayed at pH 6.5, to such an extent that after extensive modification the kinetic assays are characterized by a lag-type slow transient process. But even after extensive modification, hexokinase PII still demonstrates negative cooperativity with MgATP and is still strongly activated by citrate when assayed at pH 6.5.  相似文献   

12.
Genetic and biochemical analyses showed that hexokinase PII is mainly responsible for glucose repression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, indicating a regulatory domain mediating glucose repression. Hexokinase PI/PII hybrids were constructed to identify the supposed regulatory domain and the repression behavior was observed in the respective transformants. The hybrid constructs allowed the identification of a domain (amino acid residues 102-246) associated with the fructose/glucose phosphorylation ratio. This ratio is characteristic of each isoenzyme, therefore this domain probably corresponds to the catalytic domain of hexokinases PI and PII. Glucose repression was associated with the C-terminal part of hexokinase PII, but only these constructs had high catalytic activity whereas opposite constructs were less active. Reduction of hexokinase PII activity by promoter deletion was inversely followed by a decrease in the glucose repression of invertase and maltase. These results did not support the hypothesis that a specific regulatory domain of hexokinase PII exists which is independent of the hexokinase PII catalytic domain. Gene disruptions of hexokinases further decreased repression when hexokinase PI was removed in addition to hexokinase PII. This proved that hexokinase PI also has some function in glucose repression. Stable hexokinase PI overproducers were nearly as effective for glucose repression as hexokinase PII. This showed that hexokinase PI is also capable of mediating glucose repression. All these results demonstrated that catalytically active hexokinases are indispensable for glucose repression. To rule out any further glycolytic reactions necessary for glucose repression, phosphoglucoisomerase activity was gradually reduced. Cells with residual phosphoglucoisomerase activities of less than 10% showed reduced growth on glucose. Even 1% residual activity was sufficient for normal glucose repression, which proved that additional glycolytic reactions are not necessary for glucose repression. To verify the role of hexokinases in glucose repression, the third glucose-phosphorylating enzyme, glucokinase, was stably overexpressed in a hexokinase PI/PII double-null mutant. No strong effect on glucose repression was observed, even in strains with 2.6 U/mg glucose-phosphorylating activity, which is threefold increased compared to wild-type cells. This result indicated that glucose repression is only associated with the activity of hexokinases PI and PII and not with that of glucokinase.  相似文献   

13.
Genes complementing the glucose-negative fructose-negative Saccharomyces cerevisiae triple mutant strain (hxkl hxk2 glk1), which lacks hexokinase PI, hexokinase PII, and glucokinase, were obtained from a pool of yeast DNA in the multicopy plasmid YEp13.  相似文献   

14.
A selection system has been devised for isolating hexokinase PII structural gene mutants that cause defects in carbon catabolite repression, but retain normal catalytic activity. We used diploid parental strains with homozygotic defects in the hexokinase PI structural gene and with only one functional hexokinase PII allele. Of 3,000 colonies tested, 35 mutants (hex1r) did not repress the synthesis of invertase, maltase, malate dehydrogenase, and respiratory enzymes. These mutants had additional hexokinase PII activity. In contrast to hex1 mutants (Entian et al., Mol. Gen. Genet. 156:99-105, 1977; F.K. Zimmermann and I. Scheel, Mol. Gen. Genet. 154:75-82, 1977), which were allelic to structural gene mutants of hexokinase PII and had no catalytic activity (K.-D. Entian, Mol. Gen. Gent. 178:633-637, 1980), the hex1r mutants sporulated hardly at all or formed aberrant cells. Those ascospores obtained were mostly inviable. As the few viable hex1r segregants were sterile, triploid cells were constructed to demonstrate allelism between hex1r mutants and hexokinase PII structural gene mutants. Metabolite concentrations, growth rate, and ethanol production were the same in hex1r mutants and their corresponding wild-type strains. Recombination of hexokinase and glucokinase alleles gave strains with different specific activities. The defect in carbon catabolite repression was strongly associated with the defect in hexokinase PII and was independent of the glucose phosphorylating capacity. Hence, a secondary effect caused by reduced hexose phosphorylation was not responsible for the repression defect in hex1 mutants. These results, and those with the hex1r mutants isolated, strongly supported our earlier hypothesis that hexokinase PII is a bifunctional enzyme with (i) catalytic activity and (ii) a regulatory component triggering carbon catabolite repression (Entian, Mol. Gen. Genet. 178:633-637, 1980; K.-D. Entian and D. Mecke, J. Biol. Chem. 257:870-874, 1982).  相似文献   

15.
Manipulation of cellular metabolism to maximize the yield and rate of formation of desired products may be achieved through genetic modification. Batch fermentations utilizing glucose as a carbon source were performed for three recombinant strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in which the glucose phosphorylation step was altered by mutation and genetic engineering. The host strain (hxk1 hxk2 glk) is unable to grow on glucose or fructose; the three plasmids investigated expressed hexokinase PI, hexokinase PII, or glucokinase, respectively, enabling more rapid glucose and fructose phosphorylation in vivo than that provided by wild-type yeast.Intracellular metabolic state variables were determined by 31P NMR measurements of in vivo fermentations under nongrowth conditions for high cell density suspensions. Glucose consumption, ethanol and glycerol production, and polysaccharide formation were determined by 13C NMR measurements under the same experimental conditions as used in the 31P NMR measurements. The trends observed in ethanol yields for the strains under growth conditions were mimicked in the nongrowth NMR conditions.Only the strain with hexokinase PI had higher rates of glucose consumption and ethanol production in comparison to healthy diploid strains in the literature. The hexokinase PII strain drastically underutilized its glucose-phosphorylating capacity. A regulation difference in the use of magnesium-free ATP for this strain could be a possible explanation. Differences in ATP levels and cytoplasmic pH values among the strains were observed that could not have been foreseen. However, cytoplasmic pH values do not account for the differences observed among in vivo and in vitro glucose phosphorylation activities of the three recombinant strains.  相似文献   

16.
Yeast hexokinase (ATP:D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1), a homodimer, was rapidly and irreversibly inactivated by o-phthalaldehyde at 25 degrees C (pH 7.3). The reaction followed pseudo-first-order kinetics over a wide range of the inhibitor concentration. The second-order-rate constant for the inactivation of hexokinase was estimated to be 45 M-1.s-1. Hexokinase was protected more by sugar substrates than by nucleoside triphosphates during inactivation by o-phthalaldehyde. Absorption spectrum (lambda max 338 nm), and fluorescence excitation (lambda max 363 nm) and emission (lambda max 403 nm) spectra of the hexokinase-o-phthalaldehyde adduct were consistent with the formation of an isoindole derivative. These results also suggest that sulfhydryl and epsilon-amino functions of the cysteine and lysine residues, respectively, participating in the isoindole formation are about 3 A apart in the native enzyme. About 2 mol of the isoindole per mol of hexokinase dimer were formed following complete loss of the phosphotransferase activity. Chemical modification of hexokinase by iodoacetamide in the presence of mannose resulted in the modification of six sulfhydryl groups per mol of hexokinase with retention of the phosphotransferase activity. Subsequent reaction of the iodoacetamide modified hexokinase with o-phthalaldehyde resulted in complete loss of the phosphotransferase activity with concomitant modification of the remaining two sulfhydryl groups of hexokinase. Chemical modification of hexokinase by iodoacetamide in the absence of mannose resulted in complete inactivation of the enzyme. The iodoacetamide inactivated hexokinase failed to react with o-phthalaldehyde as evidenced by the absence of a fluorescence emission maximum characteristic of the isoindole derivative. The holoenzyme failed to react with [5'-(p-fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine. The dissociated hexokinase could be inactivated by [5'-(p-fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine; the degree of inactivation paralleled the extent of reaction between o-phthalaldehyde and the nucleotide-analog modified enzyme. Thus, it is concluded that two cysteines and lysines at or near the active site of the hexokinase were involved in reaction with o-phthalaldehyde following complete loss of the phosphotransferase activity. An important finding of this investigation is that the lysines, involved in isoindole formation, located at or near the active site are probably buried.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Summary Mutants with reduced hexokinase activity previously isolated as resistant to carbon catabolite repression of invertase and maltase (Zimmermann and Scheel, 1977) were allele tested with mutant strains of Lobo and Maitra (1977) which had defects in one or several of the genes coding for glucokinase and the two unspecific hexokinases. It could be demonstrated, that the mutation abolishing carbon catabolite repression had occurred in a gene allelic to the structural gene of hexokinase PII. Moreover, the defective mutant allele for hexokinase PII isolated by Lobo and Maitra (1977) was also defective in carbon catabolite repression. Neither glucokinase nor hexokinase PI showed any effect on this regulatory system. Biochemical analysis in crude extracts also showed altered kinetic properties of hexokinases in the hex1 mutants. The results directly support the hypothesis previously put forward, that one of the hexokinases is not only active as a catalytic, but also as a regulatory protein.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Mutants were investigated that had elevated hexokinase activity and had been isolated previously as resistant to carbon catabolite repression (Zimmermann and Scheel 1977). They were allele tested with mutant strains of Lobo and Maitra (1977), which had defects in one or more of the genes coding for glucokinase and unspecific hexokinases. It was shown, that the mutation abolishing carbon catabolite repression had occured in a gene that was not allelic to any of the structural genes coding for hexokinases. This indicated that a regulatory defect was responsible for elevated hexokinase activity. This agreed with observations that hexokinase activities were like wild-type during growth on non-fermentable carbon sources in hex2 mutants. Recombination between the mutant allele hex2 and mutant alleles hxk1 and hxk2, coding for hexokinase PI and PII respectively, clearly demonstrated that only hexokinase PII was elevated in hex2 mutants. When hex2 mutant cells grown on YEP ethanol were shifted to YEP glucose media, hexokinase activity increased after 30min. This increase depended on de novo protein synthesis. hex2 mutants provide evidence, that carbon catabolite repression and synthesis of hexokinase PII are under common regulatory control.  相似文献   

19.
Comparison has been made of the effect of alloxan-diabetes on the multiple forms of hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1) in adipose tissue and lung. Types I and II hexokinase were distinguished in adipose tissue by their different stabilities to heat treatment, which made it possible to determine the activity of each form spectrophotometrically; additional confirmatory evidence was obtained from starch-gel electrophoresis. Type II hexokinase was markedly depressed in adipose tissue from alloxan-diabetic rats. Lung contained types I, II and III hexokinase, type I predominating. There was no significant change in the pattern of these multiple forms of hexokinase in lung from alloxan-diabetic rats. These results are discussed in relation to current ideas that the insulin-sensitivity of a tissue may be correlated with the content of type II hexokinase.  相似文献   

20.
Hexokinase is the first enzyme in the glycolytic pathway, catalyzing the transfer of a phosphoryl group from ATP to glucose to form glucose 6-phosphate and ADP. Two yeast hexokinase isozymes are known, namely PI and PII. The crystal structure of yeast hexokinase PII from Saccharomyces cerevisiae without substrate or competitive inhibitor is determined and refined in a tetragonal crystal form at 2.2-A resolution. The folding of the peptide chain is very similar to that of Schistosoma mansoni and previous yeast hexokinase models despite only 30% sequence identity between them. Distinct differences in conformation are found that account for the absence of glucose in the binding site. Comparison of the current model with S. mansoni and yeast hexokinase PI structures both complexed with glucose shows in atomic detail the rigid body domain closure and specific loop movements as glucose binds. A hydrophobic channel formed by strictly conserved hydrophobic residues in the small domain of the hexokinase is identified. The channel's mouth is close to the active site and passes through the small domain to its surface. The possible role of the observed channel in proton transfer is discussed.  相似文献   

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