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1.
Enteric bacteria have been previously shown to regulate the uptake of certain carbohydrates (lactose, maltose, and glycerol) by an allosteric mechanism involving the catalytic activities of the phosphoenolpyruvate-sugar phosphotransferase system. In the present studies, a ptsI mutant of Bacillus subtilis, possessing a thermosensitive enzyme I of the phosphotransferase system, was used to gain evidence for a similar regulatory mechanism in a gram-positive bacterium. Thermoinactivation of enzyme I resulted in the loss of methyl alpha-glucoside uptake activity and enhanced sensitivity of glycerol uptake to inhibition by sugar substrates of the phosphotransferase system. The concentration of the inhibiting sugar which half maximally blocked glycerol uptake was directly related to residual enzyme I activity. Each sugar substrate of the phosphotransferase system inhibited glycerol uptake provided that the enzyme II specific for that sugar was induced to a sufficiently high level. The results support the conclusion that the phosphotransferase system regulates glycerol uptake in B. subtilis and perhaps in other gram-positive bacteria.  相似文献   

2.
The deoxypyrimidine kinase induced in mouse fibroblasts, strain CLID (TK-) infected with either herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 1 or type 2, possesses besides deoxypyrimidine kinase (ATP:dThd/dCyd phosphotransferase) two further enzyme activities: an AMP:dThd phosphotransferase and an ADP:dThd phosphotransferase. The latter enzyme activity, described in this report, was found to be inhibited by antiserum against the HSV deoxypyrimidine kinase and to be absent after infection with TK- mutant MDK 10 (B 2006). The ADP:dThd phosphotransferase, which had been purified approx. 340-fold, differs by a series of physicochemical properties from the viral AMP:dThd- and ATP:dThd phosphotransferase.  相似文献   

3.
Inhibition of cellular adenylate cyclase activity by sugar substrates of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system was reliant on the activities of the protein components of this enzyme system and on a gene designated crrA. In bacterial strains containing very low enzyme I activity, inhibition could be elicited by nanomolar concentrations of sugar. An antagonistic effect between methyl alpha-glucoside and phosphoenolpyruvate was observed in permeabilized Escherichia coli cells containing normal activities of the phosphotransferase system enzymes. In contrast, phosphoenolpyruvate could not overcome the inhibitory effect of this sugar in strains deficient for enzyme I or HPr. Although the in vivo sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to inhibition correlated with sensitivity of carbohydrate permease function to inhibition in most strains studied, a few mutant strains were isolated in which sensitivity of carbohydrate uptake to inhibition was lost and sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to regulation was retained. These results are consistent with the conclusions that adenylate cyclase and the carbohydrate permeases were regulated by a common mechanism involving phosphorylation of a cellular constituent by the phosphotransferase system, but that bacterial cells possess mechanisms for selectively uncoupling carbohydrate transport from regulation.  相似文献   

4.
R C Nordlie 《Life sciences》1979,24(26):2397-2404
Glucose-6-phosphatase is a multifunctional enzyme, displaying potent ability to synthesize as well as hydrolyze Glc-6-P. These multifunctional characteristics have been exploited in studies of the extended distribution of the enzyme, and their physiological significance has been examined. The enzyme is considerably more widely distributed than previously suspected. It has been found in pancreas, adrenals, lung, testes, spleen, and brain as well as in liver, kidney, and mucosa of small intestine. Approximately 15–20% of total hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase-phosphotransferase is present in nuclear membrane, 75–80% is found in endoplasmic reticulum, and small amounts have been detected also in plasma membrane and repeatedly-washed mitochondria. Both hydrolytic and synthetic functions, in constant proportions, have been found in livers of 21 species of birds, amphibia, reptiles, crustacea, fishes, and mammals (including man) studied. With 5 mM phosphoryl donor and 100 mM D-glucose as substrates, carbamyl-P:glucose phosphotransferase activity of glucose-6-phosphatase exceeded that of glucokinase by 5–50 fold. While latencies of activities of isolated microsomal preparations are extensive, those of nuclear membranes are not. Latencies of activities of intact endoplasmic reticulum of permeable hepatocytes are 28% for Glc-6-P phosphohydrolase and 56% for carbamyl-P:glucose phosphotransferase. Studies with isolated perfused livers from fasted rats suggest rather convincingly that such phosphotransferase activities may function as an hepatic glucose-phosphorylating system supplemental to glucokinase and hexokinase. This conclusion is based both on comparisons of rates of glucose uptake with hepatic enzyme levels (glucokinase, hexokinase, phosphotransferase), and on observed inhibitibility of glucose uptake by ornithine and 3-0-methyl-D-glucose. The question of availability of adequate concentrations of suitable phosphoryl donor(s) in cytosol of the liver cell constitutes a principal focus for continuing studies regarding physiological functions of this enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
The presence of carbamyl-phosphate:glucose phosphotransferase in liver nuclei of five species of mammals and birds is demonstrated. The activity is confined to nuclear membranes and is due exclusively to multifunctional glucose-6-phosphatase-phosphotransferase (D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase; EC 3.1.3.9). The nuclear enzyme constitutes approximately 16 to 19 percent of total hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase-phosphotransferase. Carbamyl-phosphate:glucose phosphotransferase and glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase activities of membrane of chicken liver nuclei are shown to be catalytically identical with the maximally activated microsomal enzyme. A correspondence is seen in two-substrate kinetic double reciprocal plots, K-m or apparent K-m values for the various substrates, K-i values for the competitive inhibitors P-i and ATP, and pH-activity profiles. Comparative studies were carried out with various intact, disrupted, and detergent-dispersed membranous preparations by a combination of enzyme kinetic and electron microscopic techniques. It is concluded that (a) intimate interrelationships exists between catalytic behavior of this enzyme and morphological integrity of membranes of which the enzyme is a part; (b) activities of the enzyme of nuclear membrane appear quite available for physiological phosphorylative functions; and (c) interrelationships between membrane morphology and catalytic behavior of this membrane-bound enzyme may well be involved in the bioregulation of this complex, multifunctional enzyme system.  相似文献   

6.
1. Extracts of several plant species contained nucleoside-AMP phosphotransferase activity. The ratio of activity with thymidine to that with uridine as nucleoside substrate was essentially constant, both between species and throughout plant development. Evidence is presented that the total thymidine-AMP phosphotransferase activity of the leaves of Asplenium nidus (bird's-nest fern) and of Helianthus tuberosus (Jerusalem artichoke) increases during maturation. 2. Thymidine-AMP phosphotransferase was purified 22-fold from a very rich source of this activity, extracts of A. nidus. 3. A broad specificity towards both nucleoside and nucleoside 5'-monophosphate substrates is displayed by this preparation, and the evidence suggests that all could be due to a single enzyme. 4. Nucleosides that act as substrates will also inhibit phosphotransfer to other nucleosides, with Ki values close to the corresponding Km values found when utilized as substrates. 5. Ca2+-activated ATP phosphohydrolase was separated from the phosphotransferase by differential complexing to Blue Dextran in the presence of urea, whereas an AMP phosphohydrolase activity was closely associated with thymidine-AMP phosphotransferase through all separation techniques used. 6. Metal ions did not activate either of the latter two activities, and 1,10-phenanthroline was found to inhibit the phosphotransferase. 7. Km values for AMP for the respective activities were 0.11 mM (thymidine phosphotransferase) and 0.20 mM (AMP phosphohydrolase) and for thymidine (phosphotransferase only) 0.88 mM. 8. 3':5'-Cyclic AMP was found to inhibit both phosphotransferase and AMP phosphohydrolase activities, with Ki values of 0.056 mM and 0.15 mM respectively. It is suggested that this inhibitor would be of value in revealing the existence of thymidine kinase in plant extracts with high thymidine phosphotransferase activity.  相似文献   

7.
8.
(1). The capacity for the synthesis of glucose 6-phosphate from PPi and glucose as well as for glucose-6-P hydrolysis, catalyzed by rat liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase, increases rapidly from low prenatal levels to a maximum between the second and fifth day, then slowly decreases to reach adult levels. When measured in enzyme preparations optimally activated by hydroxyl ions, the maximum neonatal activities were 4--5-fold higher than in adult animals and several-fold higher than had previously been observed for the unactivated enzyme. (2) The latencies of two catalytic activities associated with the same membrane-bound enzyme show strikingly different age-related changes. The latency of PPi-glucose phosphotransferase activity reaches high levels (60--80% latent) soon after birth and remains high throughout life, while the latency of glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase decreases with age. The phosphohydrolase is 2--3 times more latent in the liver of the neonatal animal than in the adult. (3). The well established neonatal overshoot of liver glucose-6-phosphatase is almost entirely due to changes in the enzyme in the rough microsomal membranes. The enzyme activity in the rough membrane reaches a maximum and then decreases after day 2, while that in the smooth membrane is still slowly increasing. Despite the great differences in absolute specific activities and in the pattern of early enzyme development between the rough and smooth microsomes, enzyme latency in the two subfractions remains parallel, glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase being only slightly more latent, while PPi-glucose phospho-transferase is much more latent in smooth than in rough membranes throughout life. (4). Kidney glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase and PPi-glucose phosphotransferase activities were found to change in a parallel fashion with age, showing a small neonatal peak between days 2 and 7 before rising to adult levels. Kidney phosphotransferase activity, like that of liver, remained highly latent throughout life. In contrast to liver, the glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase of kidney did not show a characteristic decrease in latency with age and in the adult remained appreciably more latent than in liver. (5). An improved method was devised for the separation of smooth microsomes from liver homogenates.  相似文献   

9.
L P Ermolaeva 《Ontogenez》1983,14(5):503-509
Glucose-6-phosphatase was shown to be polyfunctional in the liver of the developing chick embryo. Changes in the activity of glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase did not correlate with the rate of gluconeogenesis. The activity of this enzyme increased from the 16th to the 20th day of embryogenesis. The activities of pyrophosphate-glucose phosphotransferase, carbamyl-phosphate-glucose phosphotransferase did not change during embryogenesis. The ratio of the activities of phosphohydrolase and phosphotransferases was characterized by the predominance of the phosphohydrolase activity. The values of latency of phosphohydrolase and phosphotransferases did not correlate with the rate of gluconeogenesis. Glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase was found not only in the microsomal, but in the nuclear fraction as well. KM(G6P) of the enzyme of the nuclear fraction differed from KM of the microsomal enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Copper deficiency has been reported to cause glucose intolerance in rats by interfering with normal glucose utilization. Accordingly, copper deficiency was produced in rats to study its effects on glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase and carbamyl-P: glucose phosphotransferase activities of hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9), a major enzyme involved in maintaining glucose homeostasis. When measured in homogenates treated with deoxycholate, total glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase was 23% lower and total carbamyl-P:glucose phosphotransferase was 17% lower in copper-deficient rats compared to controls. Latency, or that portion of total activity that is not manifest unless the intact membranous components are disrupted with deoxycholate also was lower in copper-deficient rats. Glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase was 5% latent in copper-deficient rats compared to 24% in controls and carbamyl-P : glucose phosphotransferase was 55% latent in copper-deficient rats compared to 65% in controls. The decrease in latency appears to compensate for the lower total enzyme activities in such a manner as to allow the net expression of these activities in the intact membranous components of the homogenate to remain unaltered by copper deficiency. It thus appears unlikely that copper deficiency affects glucose homeostasis in vivo by altering the net rate of glucose-6-P hydrolysis or synthesis by glucose-6-phosphatase. These observations are interpreted on the basis of a multicomponent glucose-6-phosphatase system in which the total enzyme activity expressed in intact membranous preparation is limited by substrate specific translocases that transport substrate to the membrane-bound catalytic unit. A decrease in latency can then be interpreted as a functional increase in translocase activity and may constitute a compensating mechanism for maintaining constant glucose homeostasis when glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic activity is depressed as it is in copper deficiency.  相似文献   

11.
Hexokinase is a phosphotransferase that catalyzes phosphoryl transfer from ATP to glucose much more rapidly than the transfer from ATP to water (i.e., hydrolysis). Dimethyl sulfoxide has opposite effects on these two phosphotransferase activities: it enhances ATP hydrolysis and inhibits glucose phosphorylation. Xylose, a sugar that is non-phosphorylatable by hexokinase, enhances ATPase activity which is additive to activation by dimethyl sulfoxide, indicating that the mechanism of activation by dimethyl sulfoxide is different from that of xylose. These results suggest that it is possible to change the specificity of the enzyme in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide.  相似文献   

12.
The activation of a cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase by an endogenous protease is described. The H4 phosphotransferase (Masaracchia, R. A., Kemp, B., and Walsh, D. A. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 7109-7117) from lymphosarcoma cells was isolated in a nonactive form. Activation required ATP and Mg2+ and was shown to be time-dependent. Although Mn2+ was capable of substituting for Mg2+ in the protein kinase reaction, no activation was observed when Mn2+ replaced Mg2+. The protein substrate histone H4 inhibited phosphotransferase activation at concentrations greater than 60 microM. The inhibition was complete in the presence of 100 microM H4. Comparable concentrations of bovine serum albumin did not inhibit the activation. The selective dependence on Mg2+ suggested separate activating and phosphotransferase activities. This was confirmed by heat denaturation in which the activation reaction was shown to be more sensitive to heat inactivation than was the phosphotransferase reaction. The activating enzyme was separated from the protein kinase by column chromatofocusing in the pH range 7-4. The pI of the activating enzyme was greater than 7.0. The pI values of the activated and nonactivated phosphotransferase were 4.8 and 5.3, respectively. The apparent molecular weight of the nonactivated phosphotransferase was 68,000; the activated enzyme was eluted from an S-200 Sephadex column with an apparent Mr = 52,000. Despite many similarities to a protease-activated Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent enzyme isolated from lymphocytes (Ogawa, Y., Takai, Y., Kawahara, Y., Kimura, S., and Nishizuka, Y. (1981) J. Immunol. 127, 1369-1374), the H4 phosphotransferase was not activated by Ca2+, phospholipids, or any combination thereof.  相似文献   

13.
Human lymphoblast and fibroblast cell lines from a patient with I-cell disease and normal individuals were characterized with respect to certain properties of UDP-N-acetylglucosamine:lysosomal enzyme precursor N-acetylglucosamine phosphotransferase. The enzyme isolated from normal lymphoblast and fibroblast cell lines expressed similar kinetic properties, substrate specificities and subcellular localizations. Coincident with the severe reduction of N-acetylglucosamine phosphotransferase activity in both I-cell fibroblast and lymphoblast cell lines, there was an increased secretion of several lysosomal enzymes compared to normal controls. Subsequent examination of N-acetyl-beta-D-hexosaminidase secreted by the I-cell lymphoblasts demonstrated a significant increase in adsorption of the I-cell enzyme to Ricinus communis agglutinin, a galactose-specific lectin. However, the I-cell lymphoblasts did not exhibit the significant decrease in intracellular lysosomal activities seen in I-cell fibroblasts. Our results suggest that lymphoblasts not only represent an excellent source for the purification of N-acetylglucosamine phosphotransferase, but in addition, represent a unique system for studying alternate mechanisms involved in the targeting of lysosomal enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
Ethanolamine phosphotransferase (EPT) is a key enzyme responsible for the synthesis of ethanolamine glycerophospholipids. Plasmenylethanolamine is a predominant molecular subclass of ethanolamine glycerophospholipids in the heart. The present study was designed to identify the selective use of 1-O-alk-1'-enyl-2-acyl-sn-glycerol as a substrate for EPT as a mechanism responsible for the predominance of plasmenylethanolamine in the rabbit heart. EPT activity in rabbit myocardial membranes using 1,2-diacyl-sn-glycerol as substrate is activated by Mn2+, inhibited by dithiobisnitrobenzoic acid (DTNB) and is unaffected by Ca2+. In contrast, ethanolamine phosphotransferase activity using 1-O-alk-1'-enyl-2-acyl-sn-glycerol as substrate is inhibited by Mn2+ and Ca2+, but is activated by DTNB. Additionally, ethanolamine phosphotransferase activity using 1-O-alk-1'-enyl-2-acyl-sn-glycerol substrate was more sensitive to thermal denaturation compared with that of 1,2-diacyl-sn-glycerol. Taken together, these results suggest that separate ethanolamine phosphotransferase activities are present in heart membranes that are responsible for the synthesis of phosphatidylethanolamine and plasmenylethanolamine.  相似文献   

15.
The overall stereochemical course of the reactions leading to the phosphorylation of methyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside by the glucose-specific enzyme II (enzyme IIGlc) of the Escherichia coli phosphotransferase system has been investigated. With [(R)-16O,17O,18O]phosphoenolpyruvate as the phosphoryl donor and in the presence of enzyme I, HPr, and enzyme IIIGlc of the phosphotransferase system, membranes from E. coli containing enzyme IIGlc catalyzed the formation of methyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside 6-phosphate with overall inversion of the configuration at phosphorus (with respect to phosphoenolpyruvate). It has previously been shown that sequential covalent transfer of the phosphoryl group of phosphoenolpyruvate to enzyme I, to HPr, and to enzyme IIIGlc occurs before the final transfer from phospho-enzyme IIIGlc to the sugar, catalyzed by enzyme IIGlc. Because overall inversion of the configuration of the chiral phospho group of phosphoenolpyruvate implies an odd number of transfer steps, the phospho group has been transferred at least five times, and transfer from phospho-enzyme IIIGlc to the sugar must occur in two steps (or a multiple thereof). On the basis that no membrane protein other than enzyme IIGlc is directly involved in the final phospho transfer steps, our results imply that a covalent phospho-enzyme IIGlc is an intermediate during transport and phosphorylation of glucose by the E. coli phosphotransferase system.  相似文献   

16.
Nucleoside-diphosphate (NDP) kinase (NTP:nucleoside-diphosphate phosphotransferase) catalyzes the reversible transfer of gamma-phosphates from nucleoside triphosphates to nucleoside diphosphates through an invariant histidine residue. It has been reported that the high-energy phosphorylated enzyme intermediate exhibits a protein phosphotransferase activity toward the protein histidine kinases CheA and EnvZ, members of the two-component signal transduction systems in bacteria. Here we demonstrate that the apparent protein phosphotransferase activity of NDP kinase occurs only in the presence of ADP, which can mediate the phosphotransfer from the phospho-NDP kinase to the target enzymes in catalytic amounts (approximately 1 nm). These findings suggest that the protein kinase activity of NDP kinase is probably an artifact attributable to trace amounts of contaminating ADP. Additionally, we show that Escherichia coli NDP kinase, like its human homologue NM23-H2/PuF/NDP kinase B, can bind and cleave DNA. Previous in vivo functions of E. coli NDP kinase in the regulation of gene expression that have been attributed to a protein phosphotransferase activity can be explained in the context of NDP kinase-DNA interactions. The conservation of the DNA binding and DNA cleavage activities between human and bacterial NDP kinases argues strongly for the hypothesis that these activities play an essential role in NDP kinase function in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
Boehr DD  Daigle DM  Wright GD 《Biochemistry》2004,43(30):9846-9855
The most common determinant of aminoglycoside antibiotic resistance in Gram positive bacterial pathogens, such as Staphylococcus aureus, is a modifying enzyme, AAC(6')-APH(2' '), capable of acetylating and phosphorylating a wide range of antibiotics. This enzyme is unique in that it is composed of two separable modification domains, and although a number of studies have been conducted on the acetyltransferase and phosphotransferase activities in isolation, little is known about the role and impact of domain interactions on antibiotic resistance. Kinetic analysis and in vivo assessment of a number of N- and C-terminal truncated proteins have demonstrated that the two domains operate independently and do not accentuate one another's resistance activity. However, the two domains are structurally integrated, and mutational analysis has demonstrated that a predicted connecting alpha-helix is especially critical for maintaining proper structure and function of both activities. AAC(6')-APH(2' ') detoxifies a staggering array of aminoglycosides, where one or both activities make important contributions depending on the antibiotic. Thus, to overcome antibiotic resistance associated with AAC(6')-APH(2' '), aminoglycosides resistant to modification and/or inhibitors against both activities must be employed. Domain-domain interactions in AAC(6')-APH(2' ') offer a unique target for inhibitor strategies, as we show that their disruption simultaneously inhibits both activities >90%.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Two assay protocols are described for enzyme activities known to reside in the endoplasmic reticulum of a wide variety of species and tissue types, with the intent that they be used as marker enzyme assays in subcellular fractionations. The enzyme activities assayed are choline phosphotransferase and dolichol-P-mannosyl synthase, both of which result in synthesis of lipid products. The assays are constructed to make them easy to perform and sensitive enough to detect enzyme activity even using microgram quantities of cell protein. The assay methodologies are effective not only in vertebrate cells, but in insect cells and yeast cells as well. This implies that these assays should be useful as marker enzyme assays for a wide variety of eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

20.
Purified isoenzymes of human alkaline phosphatase from placenta, intestine and liver were investigated as catalysts for phosphotransferase activity, using the phosphoacceptors Tris, 2-amino-2-methyl-1-propanol, 2-amino-2-methyl-1,3-propanediol, diethanolamine, 2-(ethylamino)ethanol, ethanolamine, and N-methyl-D-glucamine. All of the compounds supported phosphotransferase catalysis, conforming to saturation kinetics. There was little difference among the isoenzymes with respect to Km values of the acceptors, but the liver form was the most efficient (highest Vmax/Km) in forming phosphoacceptors; it was also the most efficient (highest Vamax/Ka) when the phosphoacceptors were considered as activators. At Vmax the isoenzymes differed little in their support of phosphotransferase activity relative to phosphohydrolysis, although the intestinal enzyme tended to be the poorest. The two best acceptors were diethanolamine, providing the highest phosphotransferase velocity, and 2-(ethylamino)ethanol, having the lowest Km. The phosphoaceptors that bound Zn2+ tightly did not function well in the phosphotransferase reaction, and vice versa. However, temporal assessment of the phosphohydrolytic and phosphotransferase activities during removal of Zn2+ from the enzyme with 1,10-phenanthroline revealed no evidence of a special role for Zn2+ in the latter activity.  相似文献   

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