首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
1. A method is described for measuring the rate of phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase activity for a variety of hexoses in toluene-treated suspensions of Escherichia coli. 2. The specific activities of the phosphotransferases that catalyse the phosphorylation of hexoses are greatly affected by the carbon source for growth. 3. In all strains of E. coli tested, fructose phosphotransferase activity is induced by growth on fructose. 4. Strains of E. coli differ greatly in the rate at which they phosphorylate glucose, but all strains possess at least a low glucose phosphotransferase activity under any tested condition of growth. Glucose phosphotransferase activity is further induced by growth on glucose; this does not occur in a mutant that lacks the ability to take up methyl alpha-d-[(14)C]glucopyranoside and hence grows poorly on glucose. 5. When growing on fructose, two strains of E. coli synthesize the inducible glucose phosphotransferase system gratuitously, and to specific activities higher than observed during growth on glucose. A phosphotransferase catalysing the phosphorylation of mannose is similarly induced.  相似文献   

2.
Transport and phosphorylation of glucose via enzymes II-A/II-B and II-BGlc of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system are tightly coupled in Salmonella typhimurium. Mutant strains (pts) that lack the phosphorylating proteins of this system, enzyme I and HPr, are unable to transport or to grow on glucose. From ptsHI deletion strains of S. typhimurium, mutants were isolated that regained growth on and transport of glucose. Several lines of evidence suggest that these Glc+ mutants have an altered enzyme II-BGlc as follows. (i) Insertion of a ptsG::Tn10 mutation (resulting in a defective II-BGlc) abolished growth on and transport of glucose in these Glc+ strains. Introduction of a ptsM mutation, on the other hand, which abolishes II-A/II-B activity, had no effect. (ii) Methyl alpha-glucoside transport and phosphorylation (specific for II-BGlc) was lowered or absent in ptsH+,I+ transductants of these Glc+ strains. Transport and phosphorylation of other phosphoenolpyurate:sugar phosphotransferase system sugars were normal. (iii) Membranes isolated from these Glc+ mutants were unable to catalyze transphosphorylation of methyl alpha-glucoside by glucose 6-phosphate, but transphosphorylation of mannose by glucose 6-phosphate was normal. (iv) The mutation was in the ptsG gene or closely linked to it. We conclude that the altered enzyme II-BGlc has acquired the capacity to transport glucose in the absence of phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system-mediated phosphorylation. However, the affinity for glucose decreased at least 1,000-fold as compared to the wild-type strain. At the same time the mutated enzyme II-BGlc lost the ability to catalyze the phosphorylation of its substrates via IIIGlc.  相似文献   

3.
1. Pullulanase synthesis was studied in 16 classified (N.C.I.B.) strains and in an industrial strain (R) of Klebsiella aerogenes grown in chemostats containing maltose as inducer and sole carbon source. 2. Maximum synthesis was associated with carbon-limited growth at a low dilution rate (about 0.2h(-1)). The enzyme remained firmly cell-bound and seemed to be located on the cell surface. 3. Three strains had high activity (R, N.C.I.B. 5938, 8017), twelve were intermediate, and two (N.C.I.B. 8153, 9146) had negligible activity but were inducible with pullulan. 4. Pullulan similarly induced low, but adequate, activity in the other strains in conditions (nutrient limitation other than carbon-limitation) in which pullulanase was otherwise very seriously repressed. Nevertheless, in carbon limitation pullulan induced no more enzyme than did maltose, maltotriose or oligosaccharide mixtures, and ;hyperactivity' never developed on protracted culture. 5. Cyclic AMP relieved the transient repression produced by adding glucose to maltose-limited cultures and a further change to glucose-limited conditions led to constitutive pullulanase synthesis. 6. Amylomaltase and alpha-glucosidase activities were also examined but in less detail. 7. The presence of pullulanase in maltose-limited growth is discussed, but no clear function can be assigned to it at present. The molar growth yields for all the strains were very similar, and no correlation was found between the overgrowth of one strain by another and pullulanase activity. Further, any function as a general branching enzyme in polysaccharide synthesis seems unlikely.  相似文献   

4.
A number of species of lactobacilli were examined for their ability to ferment both the glucose and galactose moieties of lactose. Lactobacillus helveticus strains metabolized both the glucose and galactose moieties, whereas L. bulgaricus, L. lactis, and L. acidophilus strains metabolized only the glucose moiety and released galactose into the growth medium. All four species tested contained β-galactosidase activity, and no significant phospho-β-galactosidase activity was observed. L. bulgaricus and L. helveticus had a phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP):glucose phosphotransferase system for the uptake of glucose, but no evidence for a PEP:lactose phosphotransferase or PEP:galactose phosphotransferase system was obtained.  相似文献   

5.
We compared the metabolism of [1-13C]glucose by wild type cells of Neurospora crassa at normal growth temperature and at heat shock temperatures, using nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of cell extracts. High temperature led to increased incorporation of 13C into trehalose, relative to all other metabolites, and there was undetectable synthesis of glycerol, which was a prominent metabolite of glucose at normal temperature (30 degrees C). Heat shock strongly reduced formation of tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates, approximately 10-fold, and mannitol synthesis was severely depressed at 46 degrees C, but only moderately reduced at 45 degrees C. A mutant strain of N. crassa that lacks the small alpha-crystallin-related heat shock protein, Hsp30, shows poor survival during heat shock on a nutrient medium with restricted glucose. An analysis of glucose metabolism of this strain showed that, unlike the wild type strain, Hsp30-deficient cells may accumulate unphosphorylated glucose at high temperature. This suggestion that glucose-phosphorylating hexokinase activity might be depressed in mutant cells led us to compare hexokinase activity in the two strains at high temperature. Hexokinase was reduced more than 35% in the mutant cell extracts, relative to wild type extracts. alpha-Crystallin and an Hsp30-enriched preparation protected purified hexokinase from thermal inactivation in vitro, supporting the proposal that Hsp30 may directly stabilize hexokinase in vivo during heat shock.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The purification to homogeneity of hexokinases B and C from the cytosol of rat Novikoff hepatoma was achieved by a protocol using an initial chromatography on Blue 2-agarose to separate the isoenzymes from each other. After that step each hexokinase was subjected to chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, hydroxyapatite and Sephacryl S-300, followed by re-chromatography on hydroxyapatite. The final preparations of hexokinases B and C had specific activities of 86 and 23.5 units/mg of protein respectively, and gave single bands on electrophoresis under non-denaturing conditions or in SDS/polyacrylamide gels. Mr values of about 100,000 were found for both isoenzymes either by Sephacryl S-300 chromatography or by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Values of apparent Km for glucose and ATP of pure hexokinase B were similar to those reported for the enzyme from other sources. The apparent Km value for glucose of hexokinase C was 0.025 mM. Marked inhibition of hexokinase C by glucose concentrations above 0.2 mM was found. The effect was partially relieved by ATP concentrations above 1 mM and was independent of pH. Glucose 6-phosphate was inhibitory, but the Ki value (0.18 mM) is higher than those reported for other animal hexokinases. The amino acid composition of hexokinase C was found to be similar to those reported for hexokinases B and D. Also, an immune serum directed against hexokinase A was able, at low dilutions, to bind hexokinases B and C. An immune serum directed against hexokinase C was able, at low dilutions, to bind hexokinase B and also, but weakly, hexokinase A.  相似文献   

8.
Escherichia coli NZN111 is blocked in the ability to grow fermentatively on glucose but gave rise spontaneously to a mutant that had this ability. The mutant carries out a balanced fermentation of glucose to give approximately 1 mol of succinate, 0. 5 mol of acetate, and 0.5 mol of ethanol per mol of glucose. The causative mutation was mapped to the ptsG gene, which encodes the membrane-bound, glucose-specific permease of the phosphotransferase system, protein EIICB(glc). Replacement of the chromosomal ptsG gene with an insertionally inactivated form also restored growth on glucose and resulted in the same distribution of fermentation products. The physiological characteristics of the spontaneous and null mutants were consistent with loss of function of the ptsG gene product; the mutants possessed greatly reduced glucose phosphotransferase activity and lacked normal glucose repression. Introduction of the null mutant into strains not blocked in the ability to ferment glucose also increased succinate production in those strains. This phenomenon was widespread, occurring in different lineages of E. coli, including E. coli B.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The glucose analog 2-deoxyglucose (2dGlc) inhibits the growth and multicellular development of Myxococcus xanthus. Mutants of M. xanthus resistant to 2dGlc, designated hex mutants, arise at a low spontaneous frequency. Expression of the Escherichia coli glk (glucokinase) gene in M. xanthus hex mutants restores 2dGlc sensitivity, suggesting that these mutants arise upon the loss of a soluble hexokinase function that phosphorylates 2dGlc to form the toxic intermediate, 2-deoxyglucose-6-phosphate. Enzyme assays of M. xanthus extracts reveal a soluble hexokinase (ATP:D-hexose-6-phosphotransferase; EC 2.7.1.1) activity but no phosphotransferase system activities. The hex mutants have lower levels of hexokinase activities than the wild type, and the levels of hexokinase activity exhibited by the hex mutants are inversely correlated with the ability of 2dGlc to inhibit their growth and sporulation. Both 2dGlc and N-acetylglucosamine act as inhibitors of glucose turnover by the M. xanthus hexokinase in vitro, consistent with the finding that glucose and N-acetylglucosamine can antagonize the toxic effects of 2dGlc in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
We have cloned the hexokinase [E.C. 2.7.1.1] gene of Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoite and obtained an active recombinant enzyme with a calculated molecular mass of 51,465Da and an isoelectric point of 5.82. Southern blot analysis indicated that the hexokinase gene existed as a single copy in the tachyzoites of T. gondii. The sequence of T. gondii hexokinase exhibited the highest identity (44%) to that of Plasmodium falciparum hexokinase and lower identity of less than 35% to those of hexokinases from other organisms. The specific activity of the homogeneously purified recombinant enzyme was 4.04 micromol/mg protein/min at 37 degrees C under optimal conditions. The enzyme could use glucose, fructose, and mannose as substrates, though it preferred glucose. Adenosine triphosphate was exclusively the most effective phosphorus donor, and pyrophosphate did not serve as a substrate. K(m) values for glucose and adenosine triphosphate were 8.0+/-0.8 microM and 1.05+/-0.25mM, respectively. No allosteric effect of substrates was observed, and the products, glucose 6-phosphate and adenosine diphosphate, had no inhibitory effect on T. gondii hexokinase activity. Other phosphorylated hexoses, fructose 6-phosphate, trehalose 6-phosphate which is an inhibitor of yeast hexokinase, and pyrophosphate, also did not affect T. gondii hexokinase activity. Native hexokinase activity was recovered in both the cytosol and membrane fractions of the whole lysate of T. gondii tachyzoites. This result suggests that T. gondii hexokinase weakly associates with the membrane or particulate fraction of the tachyzoite cell.  相似文献   

12.
Maltose uptake and its regulation in Bacillus subtilis   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Extracts prepared from cultures of Bacillus subtilis, grown on maltose as the sole carbon source, lacked maltose phosphotransferase system activity. There was, however, evidence for a maltose phosphorylase activity, and such extracts also possessed both glucokinase and glucose phosphotransferase system activities. Maltose was accumulated by whole cells of B. subtilis by an energy-dependent mechanism. This uptake was sensitive to the effects of uncouplers, suggesting a role for the proton-motive force in maltose transport. Accumulation of maltose was inhibited in the presence of glucose, and there was no accumulation of maltose by a strain carrying the ptsI6 null-mutation. A strain carrying the temperature-sensitive ptsI1 mutation accumulated maltose normally at 37 degrees C but, in contrast to the wild-type, was devoid of maltose transport activity at 47 degrees C. The results indicate a role for the phosphotransferase system in the regulation of maltose transport activity in this organism.  相似文献   

13.
Insulin on Escherichia coli was studied using wild type E. coli B/r and K12 strains and a number of phosphoenolpyruvate phosphotransferase mutants. In vivo, the effects of insulin on the differential rate of tryptophanase synthesis, the rate of alpha-methylglucoside uptake and the rate of growth on glucose were determined in E. coli B/r. In vitro, the effect of insulin on the adenylate cyclase and the phosphotransferase activities was determined using toluenized cell preparations of E. coli B/r, E. coli K12 and phosphotransferase mutant strains. The specificity of insulin action on E. coli was determined using glucagon, vasopressin and somatropin as well as insulin antisera. Results show the specific action of insulin on E. coli, inhibiting tryptophanase induction and adenylate cyclase activity, while stimulating growth on glucose and uptake and phosphorylation of alpha-methylglucoside.  相似文献   

14.
The proportion of hexokinase that is bound to the outer mitochondrial membrane is tissue specific and metabolically regulated. This study examined the role of the N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-binding domain of mitochondrial porin in binding to hexokinase I. Selective proteolytic cleavage of porin protein was performed and peptides were assayed for their, effect on hexokinase I binding to isolated mitochondria. Specificity of DCCD-reactive domain binding to hexokinase I was demonstrated by competition of the peptides for porin binding sites on hexokinase as well as by blockage hexokinase binding by N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. One of the peptides, designated as 5 kDa (the smallest of the porin peptides, which contains a DCCD-reactive site), totally blocked binding of the enzyme to the mitochondrial membrane, and significantly enhanced the release of the mitochondrially bound enzyme. These experiments demonstrate that there exists a direct and specific interaction between the DCCD-reactive domain of VDAC and hexokinase I. The peptides were further characterized with respect to their effects on certain functional properties of hexokinase I. None had any detectable effect on catalytic properties, including inhibition by glucose 6-phosphate. To evaluate further the outer mitochondrial membranes role in the hexokinase binding, insertion of VDAC was examined using isolated rat mitochondria. Pre-incubation of mitochondria with purified porin strongly increases hexokinase I binding to rat liver mitochondria. Collectively, the results imply that the high hexokinase-binding capability of porin-enriched mitochondria was due to a quantitative difference in binding sites.  相似文献   

15.
Changes in the activities and isoenzyme distribution of hexokinase were determined in a number of tissues during the development of the guinea pig. The total activity in the fetal liver showed a large fall during the second half of gestation to reach adult values by term. With normal diet the fetal, neonatal, and adult livers had isoenzymes I and III but little or no detectable IV (glucokinase). The fetal liver had predominantly type I, but the proportion of type III increased during development. The kinetics of the guinea pig isoenzymes were similar to those reported for the rat. Two additional isoenzymes with mobility between I and II were detected in the fetal liver and blood. They appear to have kinetic properties similar to type I. Detectable liver glucokinase activity was induced by glucose administration to adult guinea pigs. The total activity in kidney, brain and skeletal muscle showed a postnatal rise while in the fetal heart it was high and declined after birth. These tissues contained predominantly type I with varying proportions of type III hexokinase. The ratio of particulate-bound to soluble hexokinase varied from tissue to tissue. All except the liver showed a significant increase in binding after birth. The changes are discussed in relation to the control of glucose utilization in the fetal and neonatal periods.  相似文献   

16.
Improved methods are described for the preparation of hexokinase from baker's yeast. The isolation procedure is designed to avoid proteolysis, by using mechanical disintegration of the yeast cells, by organophosphate inhibition of the serine-dependent proteases, and by removal of all other proteases by gel filtration.

Three isoenzymes, A, B and C, can be obtained thus. For hexokinase A, the ratio of activity in phosphorylating fructose as compared to glucose is about twice that of B or C. Hexokinase C is very similar in properties to B, but is separable by ion-exchange chromatography and appears to be a conformational isoenzyme of B. In the final purified state, the specific activity on glucose (27 mM, pH 8.3, 25.0) is 275 international units per mg for A, 900 for B and 750 for C, these values being higher than those for previously reported forms.  相似文献   

17.
The presence of phospho-beta-glucosidases and beta-glucoside permeases was found in strains of Streptococcus, Bacillus, and Staphylococcus. In streptococci, the phospho-beta-glucosidase activity depends on the antigenic group. The highest activity was found in strains of group D. In group D strains, phospho-beta-glucosidase activity is induced by beta-methyl glucoside and cellobiose but not by thiophenyl beta-glucoside (TPG). With the exception of four strains isolated in Japan, all strains of B. subtilis tested possess an inducible phospho-beta-glucosidase activity, beta-methyl glucoside, cellobiose, and TPG acting as inducers. S. aureus strains possess phospho-beta-glucosidase A but not phospho-beta-glucosidase B, whereas most S. albus strains show no detectable phospho-beta-glucosidase activity. The prompt fermentation of beta-methyl glucoside by S. aureus strains could serve as an additional criterion for their differentiation from S. albus. A comparative investigation of the active uptake of (14)C-TPG showed that a Streptococcus group D strain and a B. subtilis strain posses two inducible permeases with characteristics similar to the beta-glucoside permeases I and II of Enterobacteriaceae. In S. aureus, TPG is accumulated by a constitutive permease with high affinity for aromatic beta-glucosides and glucose. The active uptake of TPG by S. aureus appears to depend on the activity of the phosphoenol pyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system.  相似文献   

18.
Escherichia coli NZN111 is blocked in the ability to grow fermentatively on glucose but gave rise spontaneously to a mutant that had this ability. The mutant carries out a balanced fermentation of glucose to give approximately 1 mol of succinate, 0.5 mol of acetate, and 0.5 mol of ethanol per mol of glucose. The causative mutation was mapped to the ptsG gene, which encodes the membrane-bound, glucose-specific permease of the phosphotransferase system, protein EIICBglc. Replacement of the chromosomal ptsG gene with an insertionally inactivated form also restored growth on glucose and resulted in the same distribution of fermentation products. The physiological characteristics of the spontaneous and null mutants were consistent with loss of function of the ptsG gene product; the mutants possessed greatly reduced glucose phosphotransferase activity and lacked normal glucose repression. Introduction of the null mutant into strains not blocked in the ability to ferment glucose also increased succinate production in those strains. This phenomenon was widespread, occurring in different lineages of E. coli, including E. coli B.  相似文献   

19.
Glucokinase is a hexokinase isoform with low affinity for glucose that has previously been identified as a cytosolic enzyme. A recent report claims that glucokinase physically associates with liver mitochondria to form a multi-protein complex that may be physiologically important in apoptotic signaling [N.N. Danial, C.F. Gramm, L. Scorrano, C.Y. Zhang, S. Krauss, A.M. Ranger, S.R. Datta, M.E. Greenberg, L.J. Licklider, B.B. Lowell, S.P. Gygi, S.J. Korsmeyer, Nature 424 (2003) 952-956]. Here, we re-examined the association of glucokinase with isolated mouse liver mitochondria. When glucokinase activity was measured by coupled enzyme assay, robust activity was present in whole liver homogenates and their 9500 g supernatants (cytosol), but activity in the purified mitochondrial fraction was below detection (<0.2% of homogenate). Furthermore, addition of 45 mM glucose in the presence of ATP did not increase mitochondrial respiration, indicating the absence of ADP formation by glucokinase or any other hexokinase isoform. Immunoblots of liver homogenates and cytosol revealed strong glucokinase bands, but no immunoreactivity was detected in mitochondria. In conclusion, mouse liver mitochondria lack measurable glucokinase. Thus, functional linkage of glucokinase to mitochondrial metabolism and apoptotic signaling is unlikely to be mediated by the physical association of glucokinase with mitochondria.  相似文献   

20.
Significance of the binding of hexokinase to mitochondria was examined with respect to stabilization of the enzyme by the binding. Stability during the incubation of the mitochondria-bound forms of hexokinases I and II, both prepared from Ehrlich-Lettre ascites hyperdiploid tumor cells (ELD cells), were compared with that of the corresponding free forms. During the incubation at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C up to 60 min, hexokinase activities decreased gradually, and the decrease in the activity of the free form was much more marked than that of the bound form for both hexokinases. Hexokinase II was much less stable than I, and the activity of the free form of the former was almost lost by the incubation for 15 min. But, more than a half of the original activity of hexokinase II was retained even after 60 min of the incubation when the enzyme was bound to mitochondria. Addition of 50 mM glucose increased the stability of hexokinase II, but the stabilizing effect was less marked for hexokinase I. On the other hand, addition of 28 mg/ml of bovine serum albumin markedly stabilized hexokinase I to almost the same extent as was observed with mitochondria. On the contrary, the serum albumin had little stabilizing effect on hexokinase II. These findings indicate that the binding to mitochondria stabilizes the hexokinases of ELD cells, though the stability is different by nature between hexokinases I and II.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号