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1.
1. The properties of phosphofructokinase after its slight purification from the mucosa of rat jejunum were studied. 2. The enzyme is inhibited by almost 100% by an excess of ATP (1.6mm), with 0.2mm-fructose 6-phosphate. AMP, ADP, P(i) and NH(4) (+) at 0.2, 0.76, 1.0 and 2mm respectively do not individually prevent the inhibition of phosphofructokinase activity by 1.6mm-ATP with 0.2mm-fructose 6-phosphate to any great extent, but all of them together completely prevent the inhibition of phosphofructokinase by ATP. 3. One of the effects of high concentrations of ATP on the enzyme was to increase enormously the apparent K(m) value for the other substrate fructose 6-phosphate, and this increase is largely counteracted by the presence of AMP, ADP, P(i) and NH(4) (+). At low concentrations of ATP the above effectors individually decrease the concentration of fructose 6-phosphate required for half-maximum velocity and when present together they decrease it further, in a more than additive way. 4. When fructose 6-phosphate is present at a saturating concentration (5mm), 0.3mm-NH(4) (+) increases the maximum velocity of the reaction 3.3-fold; with 0.5mm-fructose 6-phosphate, 4.5mm-NH(4) (+) is required for maximum effect. The other effectors do not change the maximum reaction velocity. 5. The results presented here suggest that NH(4) (+), AMP, ADP and P(i) synergistically decrease the inhibition of phosphofructokinase activity at high concentrations of ATP by decreasing the concentration of fructose 6-phosphate required for half-maximum velocity. Such synergism among the effectors and an observed, low ;energy charge' [(ATP+(1/2)ADP)/(AMP+ADP+ATP)] in conjunction with the possibility of a relatively high NH(4) (+) and fructose 6-phosphate concentration in this tissue, may keep the mucosal phosphofructokinase active and uninhibited by ATP under aerobic conditions, thus explaining the high rate of aerobic glycolysis and the lack of Pasteur effect in this tissue.  相似文献   

2.
A steady-state kinetic analysis of plastid phosphofructokinase at pH 8.2 is consistent with the enzyme having a sequential reaction mechanism. Cytosolic phosphofructokinase probably has a similar mechanism. At pH 7.0 plastid phosphofructokinase shows cooperative binding of fructose 6-phosphate and is inhibited by higher concentrations of ATP. In contrast cytosolic phosphofructokinase shows normal kinetics at both pH 8.2 and 7.0 with respect to fructose 6-phosphate and is not inhibited by ATP. In the case of plastid phosphofructokinase the affinity for fructose 6-phosphate increases as the pH is raised from 7 to 8.2 whereas cytosolic phosphofructokinase is affected in an opposite manner. Phosphate is the principal activator of plastid phosphofructokinase since the cooperative kinetics toward fructose 6-phosphate are shifted toward Michaelis-Menten kinetics by 1 mm sodium phosphate and this concentration of phosphate relieves the inhibition by ATP. Both isoenzymes are inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate, 2-phosphoglycerate, and 3-phosphoglycerate at pH 7.2. Plastid phosphofructokinase is most strongly inhibited by phosphoenol pyruvate with the I0.5 value varying from 0.08 to 0.5 μm depending on substrate concentrations; phosphate reverses this inhibition. In contrast cytosolic phosphofructokinase is much less inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate with an I0.5 approximately 1000-fold higher. Cytosolic phosphofructokinase is powerfully inhibited by 3-phosphoglycerate with an I0.5 value of 60 μm and this appears to be the principal regulator of this isoenzyme. The two isoenzymes of phosphofructokinase in the endosperm appear, therefore, to be regulated differently. Plastid phosphofructokinase is inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate and ATP and is activated by phosphate; whereas the cytosolic enzyme is inhibited principally by 3-phosphoglycerate and this inhibition is only partially relieved by phosphate. Some of the differences reported previously for phosphofructokinases from different plant tissues may, therefore, be due to varying ratios of the cytosolic and plastid isoenzymes.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetic behaviour of human erythrocyte phosphofructokinase has been analyzed over a relative wide range of enzyme concentration (0.01 -- 1.7 mug/ml). The kinetic cooperativity which becomes apparent when the enzymic reaction rate is plotted versus the fructose 6-phosphate concentration decreases with increasing enzyme concentration. Simultaneously, a decrease of the half-saturation concentration for fructose 6-phosphate [S]0.5 is observed. Maximum velocity passes through a maximum at increasing enzyme concentrations. Sets of curves representing specific enzymic activity of phosphofructokinase versus enzyme concentration obtained at various fixed concentrations of fructose 6-phosphate and ATP are analyzed. The shapes of these curves are interpreted in terms of an association model of human erythrocyte phosphofructokinase, in which an inactive dimer (Mr 190000) and active multimers of the dimeric form are involved. The conclusion is drawn that the sigmoidal shape of the plots of the enzymic reaction rate versus fructose 6-phosphate concentration is partially caused by a displacement of the equilibrium between different states of association of phosphofructokinase to multimers by this substrate. On the other hand, the inhibition of the enzyme by high concentrations of ATP may be partially caused by a shift of this equilibrium to the state of the inactive dimer.  相似文献   

4.
1. Phosphofructokinase from rat kidney cortex has been partially purified by using a combination of isoelectric and ammonium sulphate precipitation. This preparation was free of enzymes which interfered with the measurement of either product of phosphofructokinase. 2. At concentrations greater than the optimum, ATP caused inhibition which was decreased by raising the fructose 6-phosphate concentration. This suggested that ATP reduced the affinity of phosphofructokinase for the other substrate. Citrate potentiated the ATP inhibition. 3. AMP and fructose 1,6-diphosphate relieved the inhibition by ATP or citrate by increasing the affinity of the enzyme for fructose 6-phosphate. 4. K(+) is shown to stimulate and Ca(2+) to inhibit phosphofructokinase. 5. The similarity between the complex properties of phosphofructokinase from kidney cortex and other tissues (e.g. cardiac and skeletal muscle, brain and liver) suggests that the enzyme in kidney cortex tissue is normally subject to metabolic control, similar to that in other tissues.  相似文献   

5.
Kinetic properties of spermine synthase from bovine brain.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Phosphofructokinase (EC 2.7.1.11) from a citric acid-producing strain of Aspergillus niger was partially purified by the application of affinity chromatography on Blue Dextran--Sepharose and the use of fructose 6-phosphate and glycerol as stabilizers in the working buffer. The resulting preparation was still impure, but free of enzyme activities interfering with kinetic investigations. Kinetic studies showed that the enzyme exhibits high co-operativity with fructose 6-phosphate, but shows Michaelis--Menten kinetics with ATP, which inhibits at concentrations higher than those for maximal activity. Citrate and phosphoenolpyruvate inhibit the enzyme; citrate increases the substrate (fructose 6-phosphate) concentration for half-maximal velocity, [S]0.5, and the Hill coefficient, h. The inhibition by citrate is counteracted by NH4+, AMP and phosphate. Among univalent cations tested only NH4+ activates by decreasing the [S]0.5 for fructose 6-phosphate and h, but has no effect on Vmax. AMP and ADP activate at low and inhibit at high concentrations of fructose 6-phosphate, thereby decreasing the [S]0.5 for fructose 6-phosphate. Phosphate has no effect in the absence of citrate. The results indicate that phosphofructokinase from A. niger is a distinct species of this enzyme, with some properties similar to those of the yeast enzyme and in some other properties resembling the mammalian enzyme. The results of determinations of activity at substrate and effector concentrations resembling the conditions that occur in vivo support the hypothesis that the apparent insensitivity of the enzyme to citrate during the accumulation of citric acid in the fungus is due to counteraction of citrate inhibition by NH4+.  相似文献   

6.
Chloroplast phosphofructokinase from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) was purified approximately 40-fold by a combination of fractionations with ammonium sulfate and acetone followed by chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex A-50. Positive cooperative kinetics was observed for the interaction between the enzyme and the substrate fructose 6-phosphate. The optimum pH shifted from 7.7 toward 7.0 as the fructose 6-phosphate concentration was taken below 0.5 mm. The second substrate was MgATP(2-) (Michaelis constant 30 mum). Free ATP inhibited the enzyme. Chloroplast phosphofructokinase was sensitive to inhibition by low concentration of phosphoenolpyruvate and glycolate 2-phosphate (especially at higher pH); these compounds inhibited in a positively cooperative fashion. Inhibitions by glycerate 2-phosphate (and probably glycerate 3-phosphate), citrate, and inorganic phosphate were also recorded; however, inorganic phosphate effectively relieved the inhibitions by phosphoenolpyruvate and glycolate 2-phosphate. These regulatory properties are considered to complement those of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase and fructosebisphosphatase in the regulation of chloroplast starch metabolism.  相似文献   

7.
To clarify the physiological role of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate in the perinatal switching of myocardial fuels from carbohydrate to fatty acids, the kinetic effects of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate on phosphofructokinase purified from fetal and adult rat hearts were compared. For both enzymes at physiological pH and ATP concentrations, 1 microM fructose 2,6-bisphosphate induced a greater than 10-fold reduction in S0.5 for fructose 6-phosphate and it completely eliminated subunit cooperativity. Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate may thereby reduce the influence of changes in fructose 6-phosphate concentration on phosphofructokinase activity. Based on double-reciprocal plots and ATP inhibition studies, adult heart phosphofructokinase activity is more sensitive to physiological changes in ATP and citrate concentrations than to changes in fructose 2,6-bisphosphate concentrations. Fetal heart phosphofructokinase is less sensitive to ATP concentration above 5 mM and equally sensitive to citrate inhibition. The fetal enzyme has up to a 15-fold lower affinity for fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, rendering it more sensitive to changes in fructose 2,6-bisphosphate concentration than adult heart phosphofructokinase. Together, these factors allow greater phosphofructokinase activity in fetal heart while retaining sensitive metabolic control. In both fetal and adult heart, fructose 2,6-bisphosphate is primarily permissive: it abolishes subunit cooperativity and in its presence phosphofructokinase activity is extraordinarily sensitive to both the energy balance of the cell as reflected in ATP concentration and the availability of other fuels as reflected in cytosolic citrate concentration.  相似文献   

8.
D E Hill  G G Hammes 《Biochemistry》1975,14(2):203-213
Equilibrium binding studies of the interaction of rabbit muscle phosphofructokinase with fructose 6-phosphate and fructose 1,6-bisphosphate have been carried out at 5 degrees in the presence of 1-10 mM potassium phosphate (pH 7.0 and 8.0), 5 mM citrate (pH 7.0), or 0.22 mm adenylyl imidodiphosphate (pH 7.0 and 8.0). The binding isotherms for both fructose 6-phosphate and fructose 1,6-bisphosphate exhibit negative cooperativity at pH 7.0 and 8.0 in the presence of 1-10 mM potassium phosphate at protein concentrations where the enzyme exists as a mixture of dimers and tetramers (pH 7.0) or as tetramers (pH 8.0) and at pH 7.0 in the presence of 5 mM citrate where the enzyme exists primarily as dimers. The enzyme binds 1 mol of either fructose phosphate/mol of enzyme monomer (molecular weight 80,000). When enzyme aggregation states smaller than the tetramer are present, the saturation of the enzyme with either ligand is paralleled by polymerization of the enzyme to tetramer, by an increase in enzymatic activity and by a quenching of the protein fluorescence. At protein concentrations where aggregates higher than the tetramer predominate, the fructose 1,6-bisphosphate binding isotherms are hyperbolic. These results can be quantitatively analyzed in terms of a model in which the dimer is associated with extreme negative cooperativity in binding the ligands, the tetramer is associated with less negative cooperativity, and aggregates larger than the tetramer are associated with little or no cooperativity in the binding process. Phosphate is a competitive inhibitor of the fructose phosphate sites at both pH 7.0 and 8.0, while citrate inhibits binding in a complex, noncompetitive manner. In the presence of the ATP analog adenylyl imidodiphosphate, the enzyme-fructose 6-phosphate binding isotherm is sigmoidal at pH 7.0, but hyperbolic at pH 8.0. The characteristic sigmoidal initial velocity-fructose 6-phosphate isotherms for phosphofructokinase at pH 7.0, therefore, are due to an heterotropic interaction between ATP and fructose 6-phosphate binding sites which alters the homotropic interactions between fructose 6-phosphate binding sites. Thus the homotropic interactions between fructose 6-phosphate binding sites can give rise to positive, negative, or no cooperativity depending upon the pH, the aggregation state of the protein, and the metabolic effectors present. The available data suggest the regulation of phosphofructokinase involves a complex interplay between protein polymerization and homotropic and heterotropic interactions between ligand binding sites.  相似文献   

9.
Experiments performed at micromolar concentrations of inorganic phosphate support the conclusion that liver phosphofructokinase 2 would be completely inactive in the absence of inorganic phosphate or arsenate. The concentration of inorganic phosphate that allowed half-maximal activity decreased with increasing pH, being approximately 0.11 mM at pH 6.5 and 0.05 mM at pH 8. The effect of phosphate was to increase V and to decrease Km for fructose 6-phosphate, without affecting Km for ATP. Citrate and P-enolpyruvate inhibited the enzyme non-competitively with fructose 6-phosphate and independently of the concentration of inorganic phosphate. Phosphorylation of the enzyme by the catalytic subunit of cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase did not markedly modify the phosphate requirement and its effect of inactivating phosphofructokinase 2 could not be counteracted by excess phosphate. A nearly complete phosphate dependency was also observed with phosphofructokinase 2 purified from Saccharomyces cerevisiae or from spinach leaves. By contrast, the fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase activity of the liver bifunctional enzyme was not dependent on the presence of inorganic phosphate. Phosphate increased this activity about threefold when measured in the absence of added fructose 6-phosphate and a half-maximal effect was reached at approximately 0.5 mM phosphate. Like glycerol phosphate, phosphate counteracted the inhibition of fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase by fructose 6-phosphate, but a much higher concentration of phosphate than of glycerol phosphate was required to reach this effect.  相似文献   

10.
Under conditions used previously for demonstrating glycolytic oscillations in muscle extracts (pH 6.65, 0.1 to 0.5 mM ATP), phosphofructokinase from rat skeletal muscle is strongly activated by micromolar concentrations of fructose diphosphate. The activation is dependent on the presence of AMP. Activation by fructose diphosphate and AMP, and inhibition by ATP, is primarily due to large changes in the apparent affinity of the enzyme for the substrate fructose 6-phosphate. These control properties can account for the generation of glycolytic oscillations. The enzyme was also studied under conditions approximating the metabolite contents of skeletal muscle in vivo (pH 7.0, 10mM ATP, 0.1 mM fructose 6-phosphate). Under these more inhibitory conditions, phosphofructokinase is strongly activated by low concentrations of fructose diphosphate, with half-maximal activation at about 10 muM. Citrate is a potent inhibitor at physiological concentrations, whereas AMP is a strong activator. Both AMP and citrate affect the maximum velocity and have little effect on affinity of the enzyme for fructose diphosphate.  相似文献   

11.
The regulatory kinetic properties of phosphofructokinase partially purified from the livers of C57BL/KsJ mice were studied. The fructose 6-phosphate saturation curves were highly pH dependent. At a fixed MgATP concentration (1 mM), allosteric kinetics was observed in the range of pH studied (7.3 to 8.3) and the S0.5 values for fructose 6-phosphate decreased by about 0.2 to 0.3 mM for each 0.1-unit increment in pH. Allosteric effects on the sigmoidal response to fructose 6-phosphate: activation by AMP, NH4+, and glucose 1,6-bisphosphate, inhibition by MgATP2-, and synergistic inhibition between ATP and citrate, were all present at pH 8.0 to 8.2. Comparative kinetic studies with liver phosphofructokinase isolated from both the normal (C57BL/KsJ) and the genetically diabetic (C57BL/KsJ-db) mice of 9 to 10 and 15 to 16 weeks of age showed that the enzyme from the livers of diabetic mice exhibited decreased activity at subsaturating concentrations of fructose 6-phosphate. However, phosphofructokinase isolated from the livers of normal and genetically diabetic mice of 4 to 5 weeks of age showed no difference in kinetic properties. Thus, there appears to be a correlation between the change in properties of liver phosphofructokinase and the expression of hyperglycemia and obesity in the genetically diabetic mice. The decreased activity of liver phosphofructokinase in the older diabetic animals may well be one of the causes of the increased blood glucose levels. The results are also discussed in a general context with regard to the possible role of phosphofructokinase in the regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
1. To investigate the mechanism of the reversible inactivation of pig spleen phosphofructokinase by ATP, the effect of order of addition of reactants (substrates, effectors and enzyme solution) was studied by preincubating the enzyme before assay with various combinations of its substrates and effectors. 2. Preincubation of the enzyme with MgATP or ATP at pH7.0 before addition of fructose 6-phosphate caused a rapid and much greater inhibition of activity than that observed when the reaction (carried out at identical substrate concentrations) was initiated with enzyme. 3. The rapid inhibition caused by preincubation with ATP, together with the sigmoidal response to fructose 6-phosphate and activation by AMP, were all blocked by prior photo-oxidation of the enzyme with Methylene Blue, which selectively destroys the inhibitory binding site for ATP [Ahlfors & Mansour (1969) J. Biol. Chem.244, 1247-1251]. 4. Fructose 6-phosphate, but not Mg(2+), protected phosphofructokinase from inhibition during preincubation with ATP in a manner that was sigmoidally dependent on the fructose 6-phosphate concentration. 5. Mg(2+), by protecting the enzyme from the inhibitory effect of preincubation at low pH (7.0) and by preventing its activation during preincubation with fructose 6-phosphate, demonstrated both a weak activating effect in the absence of the other substrates and a stronger inhibitory effect in the presence of fructose 6-phosphate. 6. Positive effectors (K(+), NH(4) (+), AMP and aspartate) protected the enzyme from inhibition during preincubation with MgATP in proportion to their potency as activators, but citrate potentiated the ATP inhibition. P(i) significantly slowed the inactivation process without itself acting as a positive effector. 7. The non-linear dependence of the initial rate of the unmodified enzyme on protein concentration (associated with increased positive homotropic co-operativity to fructose 6-phosphate) was intensified by preincubation with ATP and abolished by photo-oxidation. 8. The results are interpreted in terms of an association-dissociation model which postulates that protonation, at low pH, of a photo-oxidation-sensitive inhibitory site for ATP allows more rapid dissociation of an active tetramer to an inactive dimeric species.  相似文献   

13.
The rate of glucose and fructose 6-phosphate phosphorylation in islet homogenates is reduced by prior fasting of the donor rats. In fed rats, the velocity of glucose phosphorylation at increasing glucose concentrations (0.1 to 100 mM) is compatible with the presence of two enzyme activities. A preferential effect of fasting upon the high Km enzyme activity can be documented either at low ATP concentration which enhances the fractional contribution of the high Km enzyme activity, or in the presence of glucose 6-phosphate, which suppresses the low Km enzyme activity. Islet phosphofructokinase activity was characterized by inhibition by citrate or high ATP concentrations, and relief from ATP inhibition by AMP. Fasting reduces the activity of phosphofructokinase without altering its sensitivity to ATP and AMP. Cyclic AMP fails to overcome the effect of fasting upon phosphofructokinase. The activity of phosphoglucoisomerase is unaffected by fasting. The fasting-induced adaptation of key glycolytic enzymes could account, in part at least, for reduced metabolism of glucose in islets from fasted rats.  相似文献   

14.
Phosphofructokinase from oyster (Crassostrea virginica) adductor muscle occurs in a single electrophorectic form at an activity of 8.1 mumol of product formed per minute per gram wet weight. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity by a novel method involving extraction in dilute ethanol and subsequent precipitation with polyethylene glycol. Oyster adductor phosphofructokinase has a molecular weight of 3400000 +/- 20000 as measured by Sephadex gel chromatography. Mg2+ or Mn2+ can satisfy the divalent ion requirement while ATP, GTP, or ITP can serve as phosphate donors for the reaction. Oyster adductor phosphofructokinase displays hyperbolic saturation kinetics with respect to all substrates (fructose 6-phosphate, ATP, and Mg2+) at either pH 7.9 OR PH 6.8. The Michaelis constant for fructose 6 phosphate at pH 6.8, the cellular pH of anoxic oyster tissues, is 3.5 mM. In the presence of AMP, by far the most potent activator and deinhibitor of the enzyme, this drops to 0.70 mM. Many traditional effectors of phosphofructokinase including citrate, NAD(P)H,Ca2+, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, 3-phosphoglycerate, ADP, and phosphoenolpyruvate do not alter enzyme activity when tested at their physiological concentrations. Monovalent ions (K +, NH4+) are activators of the enzyme. ATP and arginine phosphate are the only compounds found to inhibit the adductor enzyme. The inhibitory action of both can be reversed by physiological concentrations of AMP(0.2- 1.0mM) and to a lesser extent by high concentrations of Pi (20 mM) and adenosine 3' :5'-monophosphate (0.1 mM). The two inhibitors exhibit very different pH versus inhibition profiles. The Ki (ATP) decreases from 5.0 mM to 1.3 mM as the pH decreases from 7.9 to 6.8, whereas the Ki for arginine phosphate increases from 1.3 mM to 4.5 mM for the same pH drop. Of all compounds tested, only AMP, within its physiological range, activated adductor phosphofructokinase significantly at low pH values. The kinetic data support the proposal that arginine phosphate, not ATP or citrate, is the most likely regulator of adductor phosphofructokinase in vivo under aerobic, high tissue pH, conditions. In anoxia, the depletion of arginine phosphate reserves and the increase in AMP concentrations in the tissue, coupled with the increase in the Ki for arginine phosphate brought about by low pH conditions, serves to activate phosphofructokinase to aid maintenance of anaerobic energy production.  相似文献   

15.
1. Attempts were made to define the role of phosphofructokinase in glycolytic control and the factors regulating the concentration of l-glycerol 3-phosphate in rat epididymal fat pads incubated in vitro. 2. Glycolysis rates were altered by anoxia or by additions of insulin, adrenaline or both to the incubation medium, and the changes in rate were related to changes in the steady-state concentrations of hexose phosphates, adenine nucleotides, l-glycerol 3-phosphate and citrate in the whole tissue. Measurements were also made of the lactate/pyruvate concentration ratio in the medium after incubation. 3. The mass-action ratios of phosphofructokinase, calculated from the whole-tissue concentrations of products and substrates, were less than 0.1% of the value of the ratio at pH7.4 at equilibrium. 4. Only in the presence of adrenaline could the observed stimulation of glycolytic flux be related to a possible activation of phosphofructokinase since, in this situation, the concentration of one substrate, fructose 6-phosphate, was not altered and the concentration of the other, ATP, was decreased. Increased glycolytic flux in the presence of insulin may be explained by an observed increase in the concentration of the substrate, fructose 6-phosphate. Under anaerobic conditions, glycolytic flux was decreased but this did not appear to be the result of inhibition of phosphofructokinase, since the concentrations of both substrates, fructose 6-phosphate and ATP, were decreased. The changes in glycolytic flux with insulin and anoxia may be secondary to changes in the rate of glucose uptake. 5. Changes in l-glycerol 3-phosphate concentration appear to be related both to changes in the concentration of dihydroxyacetone phosphate and to changes in the NADH/NAD(+) concentration ratio in the cytoplasm. They do not seem to be related directly to alterations in glycolytic rate.  相似文献   

16.
Human erythrocyte phosphofructokinase was purified 150 fold by DEAE cellulose adsorption and ammonium sulfate precipitation.At pH 7,5 the enzyme exhibits allosteric kinetics with respect to ATP, fructose 6 phosphate, and Mg2+.ATP at high concentration acted as an inhibitor and ADP, 5′AMP, 3′,5′, AMP, acted as activators. Both effectors seemed to decrease the homotropic interactions beetween the fructose 6 phosphate molecules.The activators increased the affinity of phosphofructokinase for the substrate (F6P), the inhibitor decreased it.These ligands had no effect on the maximum velocity of the reaction except in the case of ADP.Interactions between the substrates and the effector ligands on the enzyme were considered in terms of the Monod - Changeux - Wyman model for allosteric proteins.With GTP and ITP, no inhibition was observed. At saturing concentration of GTP, ATP still inhibited phosphofructokinase.Both 3′5′ AMP and fructose 6 phosphate increased the concentration of ATP required to produce an inhibition of 50 %.Citrate, like ATP, inhibited phosphofructokinase by binding most likely at the same allosteric site. Erythrocyte phosphofructokinase is inhibited by 2–3 DPG.The study of the relation log V max = f (pH) suggested, that the active center contains at least one imidazole and one sulfhydryl group.  相似文献   

17.
Low phosphate and high phosphate forms of phosphofructokinase (Furuya, E., and Uyeda, K. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 11656-11659) from rat liver were purified to homogeneity and various properties were compared. The specific activities of these enzymes and their electrophoretic mobilities on polyacrylamide in sodium dodecyl sulfate are the same. A limited tryptic digestion yields products with no change in the enzyme activity but with a reduction in the molecular weight of about 2000. Both low and high phosphate enzymes can be phosphorylated by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and approximately twice as much [32P]phosphate is incorporated into the low phosphate than the high phosphate enzyme. A comparison of their allosteric kinetic properties reveal that the high phosphate enzyme is much more sensitive to inhibition by ATP and citrate and shows a higher K0.5 for fructose 6-phosphate than the low phosphate enzyme, and the difference in the K0.5 values becomes greater at lower pH values. Furthermore, the high phosphate phosphofructokinase is less sensitive to activation by AMP and fructose 2,6-bisphosphate. Moreover, when the low phosphate enzyme is phosphorylated by protein kinase, the resulting phosphorylated enzyme exhibits a higher K0.5 for fructose 2,6-bisphosphate than does the untreated enzyme. These results demonstrate that the phosphorylation affects the allosteric kinetic properties of the enzyme and results in a less active form of phosphofructokinase.  相似文献   

18.
Fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase from rat liver   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
An enzyme that catalyzes the stoichiometric conversion of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate into fructose 6-phosphate and inorganic phosphate has been purified from rat liver. This fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase copurified with phosphofructokinase 2 (ATP: D-fructose 6-phosphate 2-phosphotransferase) in the several separation procedures used. The enzyme was active in the absence of Mg2+ and was stimulated by triphosphonucleotides in the presence of Mg2+ and also by glycerol 3-phosphate, glycerol 2-phosphate and dihydroxyacetone phosphate. It was strongly inhibited by fructose 6-phosphate at physiological concentrations and this inhibition was partially relieved by glycerol phosphate and dihydroxyacetone phosphate. The activity of fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase was increased severalfold upon incubation in the presence of cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase and cyclic AMP. The activation resulted from an increase in V (rate at infinite concentration of substrate) and from a greater sensitivity to the stimulatory action of ATP and of glycerol phosphate at neutral pH. The activity of fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase could also be measured in crude liver preparations and in extracts of hepatocytes. It was then increased severalfold by treatment of the cells with glucagon, when measured in the presence of triphosphonucleotides.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphofructokinase has been purified from pig kidney by extraction with phosphate buffer at pH 8, followed by alcohol treatment, affinity chromatography on matrix-bound Cibacron blue F3G-A, and gel chromatography on Sepharose 6B. Using sodium dodecyl sulphate electrophoresis the enzyme was found to be homogeneous and to have a specific activity of about 80 units/mg protein. Like other phosphofructokinases, at pH 7.0 the enzyme exhibits a sigmoidal dependence in its activity on the fructose 6-phosphate concentration and is strongly inhibited by ATP. The degree of citrate inhibition is influenced by the concentration of the two substrates. ATP strengthens and fructose 6-phosphate relieves the inhibition by citrate. AMP and cAMP are able to overcome the ATP inhibition. The ADP activation curve is biphasic. The molecular weight of the subunit of pig kidney phosphofructokinase was determined to be 88 000 by means of sodium dodecyl sulphate electrophoresis.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphofructokinase (EC 2.7.1.11) is a major enzyme of the glycolytic pathway, catalyzing the conversion of fructose 6-phosphate to fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. In this study, we demonstrated the effect of ribose 1,5-bisphosphate on phosphofructokinase purified from rat kidney cortex. Ribose 1,5-bisphosphate relieved the phosphofructokinase from ATP inhibition and increased the affinity for fructose 6-phosphate at nanomolar concentrations. These activating effects of ribose 1,5-bisphosphate were enhanced in the presence of AMP. Ribose 1,5-bisphosphate reduced the inhibition of the phosphofructokinase induced by citrate. These results suggest that ribose 1,5-bisphosphate is an activator of rat kidney cortex phosphofructokinase and synergistically regulates the enzyme activity with AMP.  相似文献   

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