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1.
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   

2.
Glucose catabolism in brain. Intracellular localization of hexokinase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A major energy source in brain is glucose, which is committed to metabolism by hexokinase (Type I isozyme), an enzyme usually considered to be bound to the outer mitochondrial membrane. In this study, the subcellular location of hexokinase in brain has been rigorously investigated. Mitochondrial fractions containing hexokinase (greater than 500 milliunits/mg protein) were prepared by two different procedures, and then subjected to density gradient centrifugation before and after loading with barium phosphate, a technique designed to increase the density of the mitochondria. The gradient distribution patterns of both unloaded and loaded preparations show that brain hexokinase does not distribute exclusively with mitochondrial marker enzymes. This is particularly evident in the loaded preparations where there is a clear distinction between the peak activities of hexokinase and mitochondrial markers. The same observation was made when the mitochondrial fraction of either untreated or barium phosphate-loaded mitochondria was subjected to titration with digitonin. In fact, at concentrations of digitonin, which almost completely solubilize marker enzymes for both the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes, a significant fraction of the total hexokinase remains particulate bound. Electron microscopy confirmed that particulate material is still present under these conditions. Significantly, hexokinase is released from particulate material only at high concentrations of digitonin which solubilize the associated microsomal marker NADPH-cytochrome c reductase. Glucose 6-phosphate, which is known to release hexokinase from the brain "mitochondrial fraction" also releases hexokinase from this unidentified particulate component. These results on brain, a normal glucose utilizing tissue, differ from those obtained previously on highly glycolytic tumor cells where identical subfractionation procedures revealed a strictly outer mitochondrial membrane location for particulate hexokinase (Parry, D. M., and Pedersen, P. L. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 10904-10912). It is concluded that in brain, hexokinase has a greater propensity to localize at nonmitochondrial receptor sites than to those known to be associated with the outer mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Mitochondrial hexokinase from small-intestinal mucosa and brain   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
1. The submitochondrial localization of hexokinase activity in preparations of mitochondria from the small intestine of the guinea pig was studied by conventional methods. 2. Hexokinase activity in this tissue was predominantly associated with the outer mitochondrial membrane. 3. The inactivation of mitochondrial enzymes by trypsin in iso-osmotic and hypo-osmotic conditions was also used to determine the submitochondrial localization of hexokinase activity. 4. Hexokinase activity was found to be on the outside of the outer mitochondrial membrane. 5. It was shown that both type I and type II hexokinase activities are bound to the outside of the outer mitochondrial membrane. The types are present in the same ratio as that in which they occur in the cytosol of the cell. 6. Mitochondrial hexokinase from the small intestine did not show the latency phenomenon demonstrated by mitochondrial hexokinase from brain when subjected to a variety of treatments. However, hexokinase activity was solubilized from preparations of mitochondria from the small intestine by the same treatments as for mitochondrial hexokinase from brain. 7. The submitochondrial distribution of hexokinase activity in mitochondrial preparations from rat brain was determined by the trypsin inactivation method. 8. Hexokinase activity in preparations of mitochondria from rat brain was found on the outside of the outer membrane, between the mitochondrial membranes, and within the inner mitochondrial membrane. 9. Hexokinase from rat brain showed latency properties irrespective of its submitochondrial location.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of insulin on the intracellular localization of rat skeletal muscle hexokinase isozyme II (hexokinase II) was studied in vivo. It was found that after injection of the hormone the glucose concentration in the muscle gradually increases in parallel with the hexokinase II redistribution between the cytosol and the mitochondrial fraction in the direction of the bound form of the enzyme. This effect of insulin is due to glucose, an indispensable participant of the complex formation between the enzyme and the mitochondrial membrane. It was shown that the effect of glucose as a hexokinase II adsorbing reagent is a highly specific one. The hexokinase II binding to mitochondria in the presence of glucose is accompanied by changes in some kinetic properties of the enzyme. A kinetic analysis of catalytic efficiency of the free and bound hexokinase II forms revealed that the catalytic efficiency of hexokinase II within the composition of the enzyme-membrane complex exceeds by two orders of magnitude that of the free enzyme. The data obtained are discussed in the framework of an adsorption mechanism of hexokinase activity regulation in the cell.  相似文献   

5.
The N-terminal sequence of rat brain hexokinase (ATP: D-hexose-6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1) has been determined to be X-NH-Met-Ile-(Ala, Gln)-Ala-Leu-Leu-Ala-Tyr-, where X is a blocking group on the N-terminal methionine, probably an N-acetyl group. Modification of this hydrophobic N-terminal segment by endogenous proteases in crude brain extracts resulted in loss of the ability to bind to mitochondria, but had no effect on catalytic activity, resulting in the appearance of nonbindable enzyme reported by several previous investigators to be present in purified hexokinase preparations. Similar results can be obtained by deliberate limited digestion with chymotrypsin (cleavage points marked by arrows in sequence above). Both bindable and nonbindable enzyme, the latter generated either by endogenous proteases or with chymotrypsin, have an identical C-terminal dipeptide sequence, Ile-Ala. The great susceptibility of the N-terminus to proteolysis plus the marked effect that its proteolytic modification has on binding of hexokinase to anion exchange or hydrophobic (phenyl-Sepharose) matrices suggest that this N-terminal segment is prominently displayed at the enzyme surface. Epitopes recognized by two monoclonal antibodies which block binding of hexokinase to mitochondria (but have no effect on catalytic activity) have been mapped to a 10K fragment cleaved from the N-terminus by limited tryptic digestion. Thus the binding of hexokinase to mitochondria appears to occur via a "binding domain" constituting the N-terminal region of the molecule, with maintenance of an intact hydrophobic sequence at the extreme N-terminus being critical to this interaction. A resulting specific orientation of the molecule on the mitochondrial surface is considered to be a prerequisite for the observed coupling of hexokinase activity and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation.  相似文献   

6.
Hexokinase in mammalian brain is particulate and usually considered to be bound to the outer mitochondrial membrane. Investigation of rabbit brain mitochondria prepared either by differential centrifugation and discontinuous density gradient centrifugation has provided evidence that this particulate fraction also contains endoplasmic vesicles and synaptosomes. Solubilization of the bound hexokinase by different combinations of detergents and metabolites has proved the existence of different hexokinase binding sites. Electron microscopic examination of hexokinase location by immuno-gold labelling techniques confirmed, that hexokinase is indeed predominantly bound to mitochondria but that a significant proportion is also bound to non-mitochondrial membranes. Attempts to quantify this distribution were unsuccessful since different figures were obtained using anti-hexokinase IgG affinity purified on immobilized native or denatured hexokinase. Binding studies of the purified rabbit brain mitochondrial hexokinase to rabbit liver mitochondria and microsomes confirmed that in addition to a binding site on mitochondria there is another binding site on microsomes. The N-terminal sequence of hexokinase has been shown to be important for mitochondria binding and also for microsome binding. These results suggest that the intracellular localization of hexokinase in rabbit brain is not exclusively mitochondrial and that the metabolic role of this enzyme should be reconsidered by including a binding site on the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

7.
Previous studies from this laboratory have shown that mitochondrial bound hexokinase is markedly elevated in highly glycolytic hepatoma cells (Parry, D. M., and Pedersen, P.L. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 10904-10912). A pore-forming protein, porin, within the outer membrane appears to comprise at least part of the receptor site (Nakashima, R.A., Mangan, P.S., Colombini, M., and Pedersen, P.L. (1986). Biochemistry 25, 1015-1021). In studies reported here experiments were carried out to assess the functional significance of mitochondrial bound tumor hexokinase. Two approaches were used to determine whether the bound enzyme has preferred access to mitochondrially generated ATP relative to cytosolic ATP. The first approach compared the time course of glucose 6-phosphate formation by AS-30D hepatoma mitochondria under conditions where ATP was regenerated endogenously via oxidative phosphorylation or exogenously by added pyruvate kinase and phosphoenolpyruvate. The second approach involved the measurement of the specific radioactivity of glucose 6-phosphate formed following the addition of [gamma-32P]ATP to either phosphorylating or nonphosphorylating AS-30D mitochondria. Both approaches provided results which show that the source of ATP for bound hexokinase is derived preferentially from the ATP synthase residing within the inner mitochondrial membrane compartment rather than from the medium (i.e. from the cytosolic compartment). These results provide the first direct demonstration that the exceptionally high level of hexokinase bound to mitochondria of highly glycolytic tumor cells has preferred access to mitochondrially generated ATP, a finding that may have rather profound metabolic significance for such tumors.  相似文献   

8.
Type II hexokinase is overexpressed in most neoplastic cells, and it mainly localizes on the outer mitochondrial membrane. Hexokinase II dissociation from mitochondria triggers apoptosis. The prevailing model postulates that hexokinase II release from its mitochondrial interactor, the voltage-dependent anion channel, prompts outer mitochondrial membrane permeabilization and the ensuing release of apoptogenic proteins, and that these events are inhibited by growth factor signalling. Here we show that a hexokinase II N-terminal peptide selectively detaches hexokinase II from mitochondria and activates apoptosis. These events are abrogated by inhibiting two established permeability transition pore modulators, the adenine nucleotide translocator or cyclophilin D, or in cyclophilin D knock-out cells. Conversely, insulin stimulation or genetic ablation of the voltage-dependent anion channel do not affect cell death induction by the hexokinase II peptide. Therefore, hexokinase II detachment from mitochondria transduces a permeability transition pore opening signal that results in cell death and does not require the voltage-dependent anion channel. These findings have profound implications for our understanding of the pathways of outer mitochondrial membrane permeabilization and their inactivation in tumors.  相似文献   

9.
In rabbit heart, results show that two isoenzymes of hexokinase (HK) are present. The enzymatic activity associated with mitochondria consists of only one isoenzyme; according to its electrophoretic mobility and its apparent Km for glucose (0.065 mm), it has been identified as type I isoenzyme. The bound HK I exhibits a lower apparent Km for ATPMg than the solubilized enzyme, whereas the apparent Km for glucose is the same for bound and solubilized HK. Detailed studies have been performed to investigate the interactions which take place between the enzyme and the mitochondrial membrane. Neutral salts efficiently solubilize the bound enzyme. Digitonin induces only a partial release of the enzyme bound to mitochondria; this result could be explained by the existence of contacts between the outer and the inner mitochondrial membranes [C. R. Hackenbrock (1968)Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA61, 598–605]. Furthermore, low concentrations (0.1 mm) of glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) or ATP4? specifically solubilize hexokinase. The solubilizing effect of G6P and ATP4?, which are potent inhibitors of the enzyme, can be prevented by incubation of mitochondria with Pi or Mg2+. In addition, enzyme solubilization by G6P can be reversed by Mg2+ only when the proteolytic treatment of the heart homogenate is omitted during the course of the isolation of mitochondria. These results concerning the interaction of rabbit heart hexokinase with the outer mitochondrial membrane agree with the schematic model proposed by Wilson [(1982) Biophys. J.37, 18–19] for the brain enzyme. This model involves the existence of two kinds of interactions between HK and mitochondria; a very specific one with the hexokinase-binding protein of the outer mitochondrial membrane, which is suppressed by glucose 6-phosphate, and a less specific, cation-mediated one.  相似文献   

10.
Brown fat mitochondria have [3H]casein-hydrolyzing activity at pH 8.0 associated with both membrane and soluble fractions. An ATP-stimulated proteolytic activity inhibited by vanadate and N-ethylmaleimide was found in the soluble fraction. Membrane-associated proteolytic activity was inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and trypsin inhibitor, suggesting that it is a serine protease. A 24-h fast in mice caused a significant loss of mitochondrial proteins from the tissue, but had no effect on protease activity of isolated mitochondria with or without ATP. The ATP-stimulated release of amino acids or peptides from isolated mitochondria, as measured with fluorescamine, was not influenced by food deprivation. Thus, brown fat mitochondria possess an ATP-stimulated proteolytic pathway that does not appear to be involved in the bulk removal of mitochondrial proteins from brown fat of fasting mice.  相似文献   

11.
Rabbit antiserum was prepared against hexokinase isoenzyme type I which was purified from rat brain mitochondria. The antiserum inhibited the activity of the mitochondrial hexokinase type I as well as that of the cytosolic type I enzyme prepared from rat brain, kidney and spleen. It did not, however, inhibit the activity of type II hexokinase from muscle and spleen or that of the type III enzyme from spleen. The results suggest that all hexokinase type I isoenzymes may have a common antigenic site irrespective of their sources, though their responses to a thiol inhibitor are different.  相似文献   

12.
Trypanosoma brucei procyclic trypomastigotes and T. cruzi epimastigotes (both Tulahuen and Y strains) were permeabilized by incubation with increasing amounts of digitonin, causing enzymes to be released from different intracellular compartments. After 10 min incubation with digitonin, the cells were centrifuged and the activity of marker enzymes (aspartate-dependent malic enzyme for cytoplasm, hexokinase for glycosomes and either isocitrate dehydrogenase or citrate synthase for mitochondria) was analyzed in the supernatant. The results were compared with the release of NADH-fumarate reductase in order to determine if this enzyme was preferentially released with a specific intracellular marker. Fumarate reductase was released at lower digitonin concentration than those required to either release isocitrate dehydrogenase or citrate synthase. Similarly, Leishmania donovani promastigotes (S-2 strain) were exposed to a single concentration of digitonin (200 micro M) but in this case we monitored the release of fumarate reductase and hexokinase, while monitoring the mitochondrial membrane potential (using safranine O). Again, substantial fumarate reductase and hexokinase activities were released without loss of mitochondrial membrane potential indicating that part of the enzyme was released while the inner mitochondrial membrane remained intact. These results suggest that, in the three species of trypanosomatids the enzyme fumarate reductase is, at least in part, located outside the mitochondrial matrix.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: While studying the delivery of cytoplasmic proteins to the presynaptic terminals of CNS neurons, we discovered unique characteristics of one protein (p118) conveyed in slow component b (SCb) of axonal transport, the large group of proteins representing the cytoplasmic matrix. Alone among the SCb group, p118 coisolated with the synaptic junctional complex on biochemical fractionation of the radiolabeled synaptic regions. Purification and amino acid sequencing of this protein revealed it is most likely the guinea pig form of type I (brain) hexokinase (ATP: d -hexose 6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1). Further biochemical treatments were consistent with this identity. The majority of type I brain hexokinase has been thought to be associated primarily with membranes, in particular the mitochondrial outer membrane. We found that the majority of type I hexokinase is transported toward the terminals at a rate at least 10 times slower than that exhibited by the maximal or average rate of mitochondria. This suggests that, in the axon, the enzyme exhibits transient or dynamic interactions with mitochondria that are moving more rapidly. It is not clear whether hexokinase binds exclusively to mitochondria, or also exhibits association with nonmitochondrial membranes. The unexpected enrichment of hexokinase during synaptic junctional complex purification may result from its strong association with the presynaptic membrane portion of the synapse.  相似文献   

14.
The subcellular localization of hexose phosphorylating activity in extracts of pea stems has been studied by differential centrifugation and sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1) was associated with the mitochondria, whereas fructokinase (EC 2.7.1.4) was in the cytosolic fraction. Some properties of the mitochondrial hexokinase were studied. The enzyme had a high affinity for glucose (Km 76 micromolar) and mannose (Km 71 micromolar) and a relatively low affinity for fructose (Km 15.7 millimolar). The Km for MgATP was 180 micromolar. The addition of salts stimulated the activity of the hexokinase. Al3+ was a strong inhibitor at pH 7 but not at the optimum pH (8.2). The enzyme was not readily solubilized but, in experiments with intact mitochondria, was susceptible to proteolysis. A location on the outer mitochondrial membrane is suggested for the hexokinase of pea stems.  相似文献   

15.
(1) The mitochondrial ATPase (EC 3.6.1.3) Ehrlich ascites cell mitochondria, was inhibited by D-glucose under physiological concentrations of ATP. The generation of ADP by the mitochondrial bound hexokinase, seems to be the reason for the D-glucose inhibitory effect. Reversal of the inhibitory effect of ADP on Ehrlich ascites cell mitochondria ATPase by an ATP-regenerating system was achieved. (2) Dissociation of mitochondrial bound hexokinase from the mitochondria eliminated the inhibitory effect of D-glucose. Rebinding of the hexokinase to the mitochondria regenerated the D-glucose inhibitory effect on Ehrlich ascites cell mitochondria ATPase. (3) Bioflavonoids such as quercetin inhibit the mitochondrial hexokinase activity, but do not change the mitochondrial ATPase activity of isolated Ehrlich ascites tumor cell mitochondria. (4) The inhibitory effect of bioflavonoids on mitochondrial bound hexokinase activity is shown to be dissociable from the ascites tumor cell mitochondria and seems to be associated with regulatory rather than catalitic sites of the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Brain hexokinase is associated with the outer membrane of mitochondria, and its activity has been implicated in the regulation of ATP synthesis and apoptosis. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are by-products of the electron transport chain in mitochondria. Here we show that the ADP produced by hexokinase activity in rat brain mitochondria (mt-hexokinase) controls both membrane potential (Deltapsi(m)) and ROS generation. Exposing control mitochondria to glucose increased the rate of oxygen consumption and reduced the rate of hydrogen peroxide generation. Mitochondrial associated hexokinase activity also regulated Deltapsi(m), because glucose stabilized low Deltapsi(m) values in state 3. Interestingly, the addition of glucose 6-phosphate significantly reduced the time of state 3 persistence, leading to an increase in the Deltapsi(m) and in H(2)O(2) generation. The glucose analogue 2-deoxyglucose completely impaired H(2)O(2) formation in state 3-state 4 transition. In sharp contrast, the mt-hexokinase-depleted mitochondria were, in all the above mentioned experiments, insensitive to glucose addition, indicating that the mt-hexokinase activity is pivotal in the homeostasis of the physiological functions of mitochondria. When mt-hexokinase-depleted mitochondria were incubated with exogenous yeast hexokinase, which is not able to bind to mitochondria, the rate of H(2)O(2) generation reached levels similar to those exhibited by control mitochondria only when an excess of 10-fold more enzyme activity was supplemented. Hyperglycemia induced in embryonic rat brain cortical neurons increased ROS production due to a rise in the intracellular glucose 6-phosphate levels, which were decreased by the inclusion of 2-deoxyglucose, N-acetyl cysteine, or carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone. Taken together, the results presented here indicate for the first time that mt-hexokinase activity performed a key role as a preventive antioxidant against oxidative stress, reducing mitochondrial ROS generation through an ADP-recycling mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
The location of hexokinase at the surface of brain mitochondria was investigated by electron microscopy using immuno-gold labelling techniques. The enzyme was located where the two mitochondrial limiting membranes were opposed and contact sites were possible. Disruption of the outer membrane by digitonin did not remove bound hexokinase and creatine kinase from brain mitochondria, although the activity of outer membrane markers and adenylate kinase decreased, suggesting a preferential location of both enzymes in the contact sites. In agreement with that, a membrane fraction was isolated from osmotically lysed rat brain mitochondria in which hexokinase and creatine kinase were concentrated. The density of this kinase-rich fraction was specifically increased by immuno-gold labelling of hexokinase, allowing a further purification by density gradient centrifugation. The fraction was composed of inner and outer limiting membrane components as shown by the specific marker enzymes, succinate dehydrogenase and NADH-cytochrome-c-oxidase (rotenone insensitive). As reported earlier for the enriched contact site fraction of liver mitochondria the fraction from brain mitochondria contained a high activity of glutathione transferase and a low cholesterol concentration. Moreover, the contacts showed a higher Ca2+ binding capacity in comparison to outer and inner membrane fractions. This finding may have regulatory implications because glucose phosphorylation via hexokinase activated the active Ca2+ uptake system and inhibited the passive efflux, resulting in an increase of intramitochondrial Ca2+.  相似文献   

18.
Rat brain hexokinase (ATP:D-hexose-6-phosphotransferase; EC 2.7.1.1) was derivatized with sulfosuccinimidyl-2-(m-azido-o-nitrobenzamido)ethyl-1,3'-dithiopro pionate (SAND), a photosensitive and cleavable crosslinking agent. The catalytic activity and mitochondrial binding properties of the enzyme were only marginally affected by reaction with SAND. When the derivatized enzyme was bound to liver mitochondria, photolysis resulted in extensive formation of a single crosslinked species with estimated molecular mass 460 kDa. This was determined to contain only hexokinase and thus represents a tetramer of the 116 kDa (apparent molecular mass in gel system used) monomeric enzyme. Although small amounts of tetramer were detected after photolysis of relatively high concentrations of derivatized enzyme in free solution, tetramer formation was greatly enhanced when the enzyme was bound to mitochondria. No evidence of dimeric or trimeric structures was seen even when only a small fraction of the available binding sites on the mitochondrial membrane were occupied. It is thus concluded that tetramer formation is closely linked with binding of the enzyme to the outer mitochondrial membrane and, more specifically, to the pore structure through which metabolites traverse this membrane. It is speculated that a tetrameric structure surrounding the mitochondrial pores may facilitate interactions between the hexokinase reaction and oxidative phosphorylation, mediated by the adenine nucleotides which are common intermediates in these reactions.  相似文献   

19.
Many nuclear-coded mitochondrial proteins are synthesized as larger precursor polypeptides that are proteolytically processed during import into the mitochondrion. This processing appears to be catalyzed by a soluble, metal-dependent protease localized in the mitochondrial matrix. In this report we employ an in vitro system to investigate the role of processing in protein import. Intact Neurospora crassa mitochondria were incubated with radiolabeled precursors in the presence of the chelator o-phenanthroline. Under these conditions, the processing of the precursors of the beta-subunit of F1-ATPase (F1 beta) and subunit 9 of the F0F1-ATPase was strongly inhibited. Protease-mapping studies indicated that import of the precursor proteins into the mitochondria continued in the absence of processing. Upon readdition of divalent metal to the treated mitochondria, the imported precursors were quantitatively converted to their mature forms. This processing of imported precursors occurred in the absence of a mitochondrial membrane potential and was extremely rapid even at 0 degrees C. This suggests that all or part of the polypeptide chain of the imported precursors had been translocated into the matrix location of the processing enzyme. Localization experiments suggested that the precursor to F1 beta is peripherally associated with the mitochondrial membrane while the precursor to subunit 9 appeared to be tightly bound to the membrane. We conclude that proteolytic processing is not necessary for the translocation of precursor proteins across mitochondrial membranes, but rather occurs subsequent to this event. On the basis of these and other results, a hypothetical pathway for the import of F1 beta and subunit 9 is proposed.  相似文献   

20.
Hexokinase plays an important role in normal glucose-utilizing tissues like brain and kidney, and an even more important role in highly malignant cancer cells where it is markedly overexpressed. In both cell types, normal and transformed, a significant portion of the total hexokinase activity is bound to particulate material that sediments upon differential centrifugation with the crude mitochondrial fraction. In the case of brain, particulate binding may constitute most of the total hexokinase activity of the cell, and in highly malignant tumor cells as much as 80 percent of the total. When a variety of techniques are rigorously applied to better define the particulate location of hexokinase within the crude mitochondrial fraction, a striking difference is observed between the distribution of hexokinase in normal and transformed cells. Significantly, particulate hexokinase found in rat brain, kidney, or liver consistently distributes with nonmitochondrial membrane markers whereas the particulate hexokinase of highly glycolytic hepatoma cells distributes with outer mitochondrial membrane markers. These studies indicate that within normal tissues hexokinase binds preferentially to non-mitochondrial receptor sites but upon transformation of such cells to yield poorly differentiated, highly malignant tumors, the overexpressed enzyme binds preferentially to outer mitochondrial membrane receptors. These studies, taken together with the well-known observation that, once solubilized, the particulate hexokinase from a normal tissue can bind to isolated mitochondria, are consistent with the presence in normal tissues of at least two different types of particulate receptors for hexokinase with different subcellular locations. A model which explains this unique transformation-dependent shift in the intracellular location of hexokinase is proposed.  相似文献   

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