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1.
An Escherichia coli B mutant, CL1136 accumulates glycogen at 3.4 to 4 times the rate observed for the parent E. coli B strain. The glycogen accumulated in the mutant is similar to the glycogen isolated from the parent strain with respect to α- and β-amylolysis, chain length determination and I2-complex absorption spectra. The CL1136 mutant contains normal glycogen synthase and branching enzyme activity but has an ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase with altered kinetic and allosteric properties. The mutant enzyme has been partially purified and in contrast to the present strain enzyme studied previously, is highly active in the absence of the allosteric activator. The response of the CL1136 enzyme to energy charge has been determined and this enzyme shows appreciable activity at low energy charge values where the E. coli B enzyme is inactive. The response to energy charge for the CL1136 and E. coli B enzymes are correlated with the rates of glycogen accumulation observed in the microorganisms. The regulation of glycogen synthesis in E. coli is to a great extent at the level of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase; varying concentrations of fructose-P2 and energy charge determine the rate of ADPglucose and glycogen synthesis. Both the allosteric regulation of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase as well as the genetic regulations of the synthesis of glycogen biosynthetic enzymes (glycogen synthase and ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase) are involved in the regulation of glycogen accumulation in E. coli B.  相似文献   

2.
Inorganic pyrophosphate is a potent inhibitor of the enzyme that catalyzes synthesis of the glucosyl donor for Escherichia coli glycogen synthesis, ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. The Ki is determined to be 40 microM and the substrate ATP, the activator, fructose 1,6-P2 or the allosteric inhibitor, AMP do not greatly affect the inhibition. PPi exhibits mixed type inhibition with the other substrate, glucose 1-P. The potential regulation of glycogen synthesis by PPi is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
A mutant strain of Escherichia coli K-12, designated 618, accumulates glycogen at a faster rate than wild-type strain 356. The mutation affects the ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase regulatory properties (N. Creuzat-Sigal, M. Latil-Damotte, J. Cattaneo, and J. Puig, p. 647-680, in R. Piras and H. G. Pontis, ed., Biochemistry of the Glycocide Linkage, 1972). The enzyme is less dependent on the activator, fructose 1,6 bis-phosphate for activity and is less sensitive to inhibition by the inhibitor, 5'-AMP. The structural gene, glgC, for this allosteric mutant enzyme was cloned into the bacterial plasmid pBR322 by inserting the chromosomal DNA at the PstI site. The glycogen biosynthetic genes were selected by cotransformation of the neighboring asd gene into an E. coli mutant also defective in branching enzyme (glgB) activity. Two recombinant plasmids, pEBL1 and pEBL3, that had PstI chromosomal DNA inserts containing glgC and glgB were isolated. Branching enzyme and ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase activities were increased 240- and 40-fold, respectively, in the asd glgB mutant, E. coli K-12 6281. The E. coli K-12 618 mutant glgC gene product was characterized after transformation of an E. coli B ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase mutant with the recombinant plasmid pEBL3. The kinetic properties of the cloned ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase were similar to those of the E. coli K-12 618 enzyme. The inserted DNA in pEBL1 was arranged in opposite orientation to that in pEBL3.  相似文献   

4.
An Escherichia coli B mutant, SG14, accumulates glycogen at 28% the rate observed for the parent E. coli B strain. The glycogen accumulated in the mutant is similar to the glycogen isolated from the parent strain with respect to alpha- and beta-amylosis, chain length determination, and I2-complex absorption spectra. The SG14 mutant contains normal glycogen synthase and branching enzyme activity but has an ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase with altered kinetic and allosteric properties. The mutant enzyme has been partially purified and requires a 12-fold higher concentration of fructose-P2 or a 26 fold higher concentration of pyridoxal-P than the parent type enzyme for 50% of maximal allosteric activation. TPNH, an effective activator of the E. coli B enzyme, does not activate the SG14 ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. Other studies show that for the SG14 enzyme the concentrations of ATP and Mg2+ in the synthesis direction and the concentrations of ADP-glucose and PPi in the pyrophosphorolysis direction required to give 50% of maximal activity are 3- to 6-fold higher than those observed for the parent E. coli B ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. The Km for alpha-glucose-1-P at saturating to half-saturating concentrations of the activator, fructose-P2, are about the same for both enzymes. However, in the presence of no activator, the concentration of glucose-1-P required for half-maximal activity is about 1.8-fold higher for the SG14 enzyme. Thus SG14 ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase has lower affinity for its substrates than does the parent enzyme. Previously the SG14 enzyme had been shown to be less sensitive to inhibition by 5'-AMP than the E. coli B enzyme. This ensensitivity to inhibition renders the SG14 enzyme less responsive to energy charge than the E. coli B ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. On the basis of the above results and taking into account the reported concentrations of fructose-P2, of pyridoxal-P, and of the adenine nucleotide pool and its energy charge in E. coli strains, it is concluded that furctose-P2 is the important physiological allosteric activator of E. coli ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. Furthermore, the 1.7-fold increased rate of accumulation of glycogen observed when E. coli B or SG14 shifts from exponential phase to stationary phase of growth in nitrogen-limiting media can be accounted for by the 2.4-fold increase of the levels of the glycogen biosynthetic enzymes, glycogen synthase, and ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. Thus both allosteric regulation of the ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase as well as the genetic regulation of the biosynthesis of the glycogen biosynthetic enzymes are involved in the regulation of glycogen accumulation in E. coli B.  相似文献   

5.
ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase catalyzes the regulatory step in the pathway for bacterial glycogen synthesis. The enzymes from different organisms exhibit distinctive regulatory properties related to the main carbon metabolic pathway. Escherichia coli ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase is mainly activated by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP), whereas the Agrobacterium tumefaciens enzyme is activated by fructose 6-phosphate (F6P) and pyruvate. Little is known about the regions determining the specificity for the allosteric regulator. To study the function of different domains, two chimeric enzymes were constructed. "AE" contains the N-terminus (271 amino acids) of the A. tumefaciens ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase and the C-terminus (153 residues) of the E. coli enzyme, and "EA", the inverse construction. Expression of the recombinant wild-type and chimeric enzymes was performed using derivatives of the pET24a plasmid. Characterization of the purified chimeric enzymes showed that the C-terminus of the E. coli enzyme is relevant for the selectivity by FBP. However, this region seems to be less important for the specificity by F6P in the A. tumefaciens enzyme. The chimeric enzyme AE is activated by both FBP and F6P, neither of which affect EA. Pyruvate activates EA with higher apparent affinity than AE, suggesting that the C-terminus of the A. tumefaciens enzyme plays a role in the binding of this effector. The allosteric inhibitor site is apparently disrupted, as a marked desensitization toward AMP was observed in the chimeric enzymes.  相似文献   

6.
We studied the functional role of the Escherichia coli ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase's N-terminus in allosteric regulation, and the particular effects caused by its length. Small truncated mutants were designed, and those lacking up to 15-residues were active and highly purified for further kinetic analyses. Ndelta3 and Ndelta7 did not change the kinetic parameters with respect to the wild-type. Ndelta11 and Ndelta15 enzymes were insensitive to allosteric regulation and highly active in the absence of the activator. Co-expression of two polypeptides corresponding to the N- and C-termini generated an enzyme with activation properties lower than those of the wild-type [C.M. Bejar, M.A. Ballicora, D.F. Gómez Casati, A.A. Iglesias, J. Preiss, The ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase from Escherichia coli comprises two tightly bound distinct domains, FEBS Lett. 573 (2004) 99-104]. Here, we characterized a Ndelta15 co-expression mutant, in which the allosteric regulation was restored to wild-type levels. Unusual allosteric effects caused by either an N-terminal truncation or co-expression of individual domains may respond to structural changes favoring an up-regulated or a down-regulated conformation rather than specific activator or inhibitor sites' disruption.  相似文献   

7.
The structural genes of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase (glgC) and glycogen synthase (glgA) from Salmonella typhimurium LT2 were cloned on a 5.8-kilobase-pair insert in the SalI site of pBR322. A single strand specific radioactive probe containing the N terminus of the Escherichia coli K-12 glgC gene in M13mp8 was used to hybridize against a S. typhimurium genomic library in lambda 1059. DNA from a plaque showing a positive hybridization signal was isolated, subcloned into pBR322, and transformed into E. coli K-12 RR1 and E. coli G6MD3 (a mutant with a deletion of the glg genes). Transformants were stained with iodine for the presence of glycogen. E. coli K-12 RR1 transformants stained dark brown, whereas G6MD3 transformants stained greenish yellow, and they both were shown to contain a 5.8-kilobase-pair insert in the SalI site of pBR322, designated pPL301. Enzyme assays of E. coli K-12 G6MD3 harboring pPL301 restored ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase and glycogen synthase activities. The specific activities of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase and glycogen synthase in E. coli K-12 RR1(pPL301) were increased 6- to 7-fold and 13- to 15-fold, respectively. Immunological and kinetic studies showed that the expressed ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase activity in transformed E. coli K-12 G6MD3 cells was very similar to that of the wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
The Escherichia coli B mutant strain CL1136 accumulates glycogen at a 3.4- to 4-fold greater rate than the parent E. coli B strain and contains an ADPglucose synthetase with altered kinetic and allosteric properties. The enzyme from CL1136 is less dependent on the allosteric activator, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, for activity and less sensitive to inhibition by AMP than the parent strain enzyme. The structural gene, glgC, for the allosteric mutant enzyme was selected by colony hybridization and cloned into the bacterial plasmid pBR322 by insertion of the chromosomal DNA at the PstI site. One recombinant plasmid, designated pKG3, was isolated from the genomic library of CL1136 containing glgC. The cloned ADPglucose synthetase from the mutant CL1136 was expressed and characterized with respect to kinetic and allosteric properties and found to be identical to the enzyme purified from the CL1136 strain. The mutant glgC was then subcloned into pUC118/119 for dideoxy sequencing of both strands. The mutant glgC sequence was found to differ from the wild-type at the deduced amino acid residue 67 where a single point mutation resulted in a change from arginine to cysteine.  相似文献   

9.
The properties of the enzymes involved in the initiation of glycogen biosynthesis in Escherichia coli were studied. It was found that the enzymic activities which transfer the glycosyl residues from UDPglucose or ADPglucose for the glucoprotein synthesis had differing stabilities upon storage at 4 degrees C. The small amount of glycogen and the saccharide firmly bound to the membrane preparation, were degraded during the storage period. The activity measured in fresh and in stored preparations gave different time dependence curves. The stored preparation had a lag period which could be due to the transfer of the first glucose units to the protein. Both UDPglucose and ADPglucose : protein glucosyltransferases were affected in different ways by detergents. Based on the results presented, it may be concluded that both enzymatic activities are due to different enzymes. Furthermore, both enzymatic activities are different from that which transfers glucose from ADPglucose to glycogen. The following mechanism for the de novo synthesis is suggested. Glycogen in E. coli could be initiated by two different enzymes which transfer glucose to a protein acceptor either from UDPglucose or ADPglucose. Once the saccharide linked to the protein has reached a certain size it is almost exclusively enlarged by another ADPglucose-dependent enzyme. The participation of branching enzyme will produce a polysaccharide with the characteristics of glycogen.  相似文献   

10.
Truncated forms of Escherichia coli ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase were constructed using recombinant DNA techniques. A truncated form of the enzyme having the first 11 amino acid residues from the N-terminus and 2 amino acid residues from the C-terminus deleted was found to be highly active in absence of activator. A 1.6-fold activation by 1.5 mM fructose 1,6 bis-phosphate was observed for the truncated enzyme as compared to the 30-fold activation seen for the intact enzyme. Inhibition of the truncated enzyme by AMP was less than that seen with the intact enzyme. Similar properties were displayed by an enzyme truncated only at the N-terminal. Conversely, the C-terminal truncated enzyme shortened by 2 amino acid residues at the C-terminus is as sensitive as the intact enzyme to activation and inhibition. These results suggest that the N-terminal region is required for allosteric regulation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Treatment of nitrogen-starved cultures of Escherichia coli W4597(K) with sodium azide results in simultaneous changes in both glucose 6-phosphate and fructose 1,6-diphosphate as well as in the rate of glycogen synthesis. Based on these observations, a comprehensive equation was developed which relates the cellular levels of both of these hexose phosphates with the rate of glycogen synthesis. This relationship apparently represents the interaction in vivo between the rate-limiting enzyme of bacterial glycogen synthesis, glucose 1-phosphate adenylyltransferase (adenosine diphosphoglucose synthetase, EC 2.7.7.27), and its substrate glucose 1-phosphate (reflected by glucose 6-phosphate) and its major allosteric activator fructose diphosphate. The form of the equation that describes this relationship was determined from studies presented here of the kinetic properties of the E. coli W4597(K) enzyme in the presence of physiological concentrations of its substrates and modulators. We show here and in subsequent reports of this series that the comprehensive relationship between glycogen synthesis and hexose phosphates can serve as a reference to evaluate the possible participation of new factors in the regulation of glycogen synthesis. Treatment with NaN3 did not change the cellular level of glucose 1-phosphate adenylyltransferase. The value of the adenylate energy charge, (ATP + 1/2 ADP)/(ATP + ADP + AMP), was maintained despite losses of up to 35% in cellular adenylates. The quantitative co-variance between hexose phosphates and the cellular rate of glucose utilization that we previously described for other metabolic conditions was also observed in the azide-treated cultures. We integrate the new information into the system of coordinated regulation of glycogen synthesis, glycolysis, and glucose utilization that we proposed previously.  相似文献   

12.
The nucleotide sequence of a 1.4-kilobase-pair fragment containing the Salmonella typhimurium LT2 glgC gene coding for ADPglucose synthetase was determined. The glgC structural gene contains 1,293 base pairs, having a coding capacity of 431 amino acids. The amino acid sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence shows that the molecular weight of ADPglucose synthetase is 45,580. Previous results of the total amino acid composition analysis and amino acid sequencing (M. Lehmann and J. Preiss, J. Bacteriol. 143:120-127, 1980) of the first 27 amino acids from the N terminus agree with that deduced from nucleotide sequencing data. Comparison of the Escherichia coli K-12 and S. typhimurium LT2 ADPglucose synthetase shows that there is 80% homology in their nucleotide sequence and 90% homology in their deduced amino acid sequence. Moreover, the amino acid residues of the putative allosteric sites for the physiological activator fructose bisphosphate (amino acid residue 39) and inhibitor AMP (amino acid residue 114) are identical between the two enzymes. There is also extensive homology in the putative ADPglucose binding site. In both E. coli K-12 and S. typhimurium LT2, the first base of the translational start ATG of glgA overlaps with the third base TAA stop codon of the glgC gene.  相似文献   

13.
Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate activates ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase and the synthesis of glycogen in Escherichia coli. Here, we show that although pyruvate is a weak activator by itself, it synergically enhances the fructose-1,6-bisphosphate activation. They increase the enzyme affinity for each other, and the combination increases V max, substrate apparent affinity, and decreases AMP inhibition. Our results indicate that there are two distinct interacting allosteric sites for activation. Hence, pyruvate modulates E. coli glycogen metabolism by orchestrating a functional network of allosteric regulators. We postulate that this novel dual activator mechanism increases the evolvability of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase and its related metabolic control.  相似文献   

14.
ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase) is a key regulatory enzyme of bacterial glycogen and plant starch synthesis as it controls carbon flux via its allosteric regulatory behavior. Unlike the bacterial enzyme that is composed of a single subunit type, the plant AGPase is a heterotetrameric enzyme (alpha2beta2) with distinct roles for each subunit type. The large subunit (LS) is involved mainly in allosteric regulation through its interaction with the catalytic small subunit (SS). The LS modulates the catalytic activity of the SS by increasing the allosteric regulatory response of the hetero-oligomeric enzyme. To identify regions of the LS involved in binding of effector molecules, a reverse genetics approach was employed. A potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) AGPase LS down-regulatory mutant (E38A) was subjected to random mutagenesis using error-prone polymerase chain reaction and screened for the capacity to form an enzyme capable of restoring glycogen production in glgC(-) Escherichia coli. Dominant mutations were identified by their capacity to restore glycogen production when the LS containing only the second site mutations was co-expressed with the wild-type SS. Sequence analysis showed that most of the mutations were decidedly nonrandom and were clustered at conserved N- and C-terminal regions. Kinetic analysis of the dominant mutant enzymes indicated that the K(m) values for cofactor and substrates were comparable with the wild-type AGPase, whereas the affinities for activator and inhibitor were altered appreciably. These AGPase variants displayed increased resistance to P(i) inhibition and/or greater sensitivity toward 3-phosphoglyceric acid activation. Further studies of Lys-197, Pro-261, and Lys-420, residues conserved in AGPase sequences, by site-directed mutagenesis suggested that the effectors 3-phosphoglyceric acid and P(i) interact at two closely located binding sites.  相似文献   

15.
The synthesis of glycogen in bacteria and starch in plants is allosterically controlled by the production of ADP-glucose by ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. Using computational studies, site-directed mutagenesis, and kinetic characterization, we found a critical region for transmitting the allosteric signal in the Escherichia coli ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. Molecular dynamics simulations and structural comparisons with other ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylases provided information to hypothesize that a Pro103–Arg115 loop is part of an activation path. It had strongly correlated movements with regions of the enzyme associated with regulation and ATP binding, and a network analysis showed that the optimal network pathways linking ATP and the activator binding Lys39 mainly involved residues of this loop. This hypothesis was biochemically tested by mutagenesis. We found that several alanine mutants of the Pro103–Arg115 loop had altered activation profiles for fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. Mutants P103A, Q106A, R107A, W113A, Y114A, and R115A had the most altered kinetic profiles, primarily characterized by a lack of response to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. This loop is a distinct insertional element present only in allosterically regulated sugar nucleotide pyrophosphorylases that could have been acquired to build a triggering mechanism to link proto-allosteric and catalytic sites.  相似文献   

16.
The regulatory properties of partially purified adenosine 5'-diphosphate-(ADP) glucose pyrophosphorylase from two Serratia marcescens strains (ATCC 274 and ATCC 15365) have been studied. Slight or negligible activation by fructose-P2, pyridoxal-phosphate, or reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) was observed. These compounds were previously shown to be potent activators of the ADPglucose pyrophosphorylases from the enterics, Salmonella typhimurium, Enterobacter aerogenes, Enterobacter cloacae, Citrobacter freundii, Escherichia aurescens, Shigella dysenteriae, and Escherichia coli. Phosphoenolpyruvate stimulated the rate of ADPglucose synthesis catalyzed by Serratia ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase about 1.5- to 2-fold but did not affect the S0.5 values (concentration of substrate required for 50% maximal stimulation) of the substrates, alpha-glucose-1-phosphate, and adenosine 5'-triphosphate. Adenosine 5'-monophosphate (AMP), a potent inhibitor of the enteric ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase, is an effective inhibitor of the S. marcescens enzyme. ADP also inhibits but is not as effective as AMP. Activators of the enteric enzyme counteract the inhibition caused by AMP. This is in contrast to what is observed for the S. marcescens enzyme. Neither phosphoenolpyruvate, fructose-diphosphate, pyridoxal-phosphate, NADPH, 3-phosphoglycerate, fructose-6-phosphate, nor pyruvate effect the inhibition caused by AMP. The properties of the S. marcescens HY strain and Serratia liquefaciens ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase were found to be similar to the above two S. marcescens enzymes with respect to activation and inhibition. These observations provide another example where the properties of an enzyme found in the genus Serratia have been found to be different from the properties of the same enzyme present in the enteric genera Escherichia, Salmonella, Shigella, Citrobacter, and Enterobacter.  相似文献   

17.
Previous reports implicate UDPglucose as an active glucosyl donor for the unprimed reaction and “glucoprotein” formation in glycogen biosynthesis in Escherichia coli. Results presented here indicate that UDPglucose and GDPglucose are glucosyl donors in the primed and unprimed reactions catalyzed by purified E. coli B glycogen synthase at less than 5% the rate observed when ADPglucose is the donor. The unprimed reaction is stimulated by 0.25 m citrate and a high molecular weight product is formed similar to that produced when ADPglucose is the glucosyl donor. Physiological amounts of branching enzyme and high concentrations of glycogen inhibit transfer from UDPglucose and GDPglucose. In addition, transfer from UDPglucose is inhibited by ADPglucose. These results strongly suggest that ADPglucose is the physiological donor in both the primed and unprimed reactions. Furthermore, these and previously reported results suggest that one enzyme is involved in the catalysis of the primed, unprimed, and TCA-insoluble product formation reactions. Antiserum prepared against purified E. coli B glycogen synthase inactivates transfer of glucose from either ADPglucose or UDPglucose in the above reactions catalyzed by E. coli B crude extracts. Purified E. coli B glycogen synthase preparations contain significant amounts of α-glucan primer. Evidence shows that this glucan is not covalently attached to the enzyme. Results presented show that formation of material insoluble in TCA and previously considered to be due to “glucoprotein” formation, is in fact due to the generation of long chain length glucan molecules intrinsically acid insoluble. The data suggest that previous results purported to be de novo synthesis of glycogen are due to glucan associated with the glycogen synthase and not to formation of a “glucoprotein” intermediate which then acts as primer for further oligosaccharide synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Streptomyces coelicolor exhibits a major secondary metabolism, deriving important amounts of glucose to synthesize pigmented antibiotics. Understanding the pathways occurring in the bacterium with respect to synthesis of oligo- and polysaccharides is of relevance to determine a plausible scenario for the partitioning of glucose-1-phosphate into different metabolic fates. We report the molecular cloning of the genes coding for UDP- and ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylases as well as for glycogen synthase from genomic DNA of S. coelicolor A3(2). Each gene was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli cells to produce and purify to electrophoretic homogeneity the respective enzymes. UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (UDP-Glc PPase) was characterized as a dimer exhibiting a relatively high V(max) in catalyzing UDP-glucose synthesis (270 units/mg) and with respect to dTDP-glucose (94 units/mg). ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (ADP-Glc PPase) was found to be tetrameric in structure and specific in utilizing ATP as a substrate, reaching similar activities in the directions of ADP-glucose synthesis or pyrophosphorolysis (V(max) of 0.15 and 0.27 units/mg, respectively). Glycogen synthase was arranged as a dimer and exhibited specificity in the use of ADP-glucose to elongate α-1,4-glucan chains in the polysaccharide. ADP-Glc PPase was the only of the three enzymes exhibiting sensitivity to allosteric regulation by different metabolites. Mannose-6-phosphate, phosphoenolpyruvate, fructose-6-phosphate, and glucose-6-phosphate behaved as major activators, whereas NADPH was a main inhibitor of ADP-Glc PPase. The results support a metabolic picture where glycogen synthesis occurs via ADP-glucose in S. coelicolor, with the pathway being strictly regulated in connection with other routes involved with oligo- and polysaccharides, as well as with antibiotic synthesis in the bacterium.  相似文献   

19.
The accumulation of alpha-1,4-polyglucans is an important strategy to cope with transient starvation conditions in the environment. In bacteria and plants, the synthesis of glycogen and starch occurs by utilizing ADP-glucose as the glucosyl donor for elongation of the alpha-1,4-glucosidic chain. The main regulatory step takes place at the level of ADP-glucose synthesis, a reaction catalyzed by ADP-Glc pyrophosphorylase (PPase). Most of the ADP-Glc PPases are allosterically regulated by intermediates of the major carbon assimilatory pathway in the organism. Based on specificity for activator and inhibitor, classification of ADP-Glc PPases has been expanded into nine distinctive classes. According to predictions of the secondary structure of the ADP-Glc PPases, they seem to have a folding pattern common to other sugar nucleotide pyrophosphorylases. All the ADP-Glc PPases as well as other sugar nucleotide pyrophosphorylases appear to have evolved from a common ancestor, and later, ADP-Glc PPases developed specific regulatory properties, probably by addition of extra domains. Studies of different domains by construction of chimeric ADP-Glc PPases support this hypothesis. In addition to previous chemical modification experiments, the latest random and site-directed mutagenesis experiments with conserved amino acids revealed residues important for catalysis and regulation.  相似文献   

20.
Bacteria sense continuous changes in their environment and adapt metabolically to effectively compete with other organisms for limiting nutrients. One system which plays an important part in this adaptation response is the phosphoenol-pyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Many proteins interact with and are regulated by PTS components in bacteria. Here we review the interaction with and allosteric regulation of Escherichia coli glycogen phosphorylase (GP) activity by the histidine phosphocarrier protein HPr, which acts as part of a phosphoryl shuttle between enzyme I and sugar-specific proteins of the PTS. HPr mediates crosstalk between PTS sugar uptake and glycogen breakdown. The evolution of the allosteric regulation of E. coli GP by HPr is compared to that of other phosphorylases.  相似文献   

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