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1.
Vanadate: a potent inhibitor of multifunctional glucose-6-phosphatase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Vanadate has been found to be a potent inhibitor of both the hydrolytic and synthetic activities of the multifunctional enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase (D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.9). The enzyme, when studied in both microsomal preparations and in situ using permeable isolated hepatocytes, is inhibited by micromolar concentrations of vanadate. The inhibition by vanadate is greater in detergent-treated than in untreated microsomes. In both the microsomal preparations and permeable hepatocytes, the inhibition by vanadate is competitive with the phosphate substrate and is greater for the phosphotransferase than the hydrolase activity of the enzyme. The Ki values of vanadate for carbamyl-phosphate : glucose phosphotransferase and glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase determined with permeable hepatocytes are in good agreement with the values determined with detergent-dispersed microsomes. The previously described inhibition of glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase by ATP (Nordlie, R.C., Hanson, T.L., Johns, P.T. and Lygre, D.G. (1968) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 60, 590-597) can now be explained by the vanadium contamination of the commercially available ATP samples used. In contrast with glucose-6-phosphatase, hepatic glucokinase and hexokinase were not inhibited by vanadate. Physiological implications and utilitarian experimental applicability of vanadate as a selective metabolic probe, based on these observations, are suggested.  相似文献   

2.
Vanadate has been found to be a potent inhibitor of both the hydrolytic and synthetic activities of the multi- functional enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase (d-glucose-6-phosphatase phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.9). The enzyme, when studied in both microsomal preparations and in situ using permeable isolated hepatocytes, is inhibited by micromolar concentrations of vanadate. The inhibition by vanadate is greater in detergent-treated than in untreated microsomes. In both the microsomal preparations and permeable hepatocytes, the inhibition by vanadate is competitive with the phosphate substrate and is greater for the phosphotransferase than the hydrolase activity of the enzyme. The KI values of vanadate for carbamyl-phosphate : glucose phosphotransferase and glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase determined with permeable hepatocytes are in good agreement with the values determined with detergent-dispersed microsomes. The previously described inhibition of glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase by ATP (Nordlie, R.C., Hanson, T.L., Johns, P.T. and Lygre, D.G. (1968) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 60, 590–597) can now be explained by the vanadium contamination of the commercially available ATP samples used. In contrast with glucose-6-phosphatase, hepatic glucokinase and hexokinase were not inhibited by vanadate. Physiological implications and utilitarian experimental applicability of vanadate as a selective metabolic probe, based on these observations, are suggested.  相似文献   

3.
G Azzar  R Got 《FEBS letters》1978,96(1):164-166
Microsomal glucokinase is solubilized by incubation in the presence of several metabolites. After solubilization of the enzymes, the membranes present free sites for specific binding of glucokinase, therefore, they can be purified by affinity chromatography on Sepharose--ATP-glucokinase. This method yields membranous vesicles which contain, in addition to glucokinase, uridylyl-transferase, phosphoglucomutase, sialyl-transferase and adenylate cyclase. Galactosyl-transferase, glucose-6-phosphatase and NADPH cytochrome c reductase are absent. It appears that functionally related enzyme from UDP-glucose biosynthesis are aggregated onto specific patches of the membrane, most likely from Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

4.
Glucokinase catalyzes phosphoryl group transfer from ATP to glucose to form glucose-6-phosphate in the first step of cellular metabolism. While the location of the ATP-binding site of glucokinase was proposed recently, limited information exists on its conformation or the key amino acids involved in substrate binding. Affinity labeling with phenylglyoxal is used to probe possible Arg residues involved in ATP binding. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry indicates that reaction of purified glucokinase with phenylglyoxal results in as many as six or seven sites of modification, suggesting nonspecific modification. However, preincubation of glucokinase with glucose followed by reaction with phenylglyoxal reveals only two sites of modification. Glucokinase activity assays show that enzyme preincubated with glucose possesses residual activity corresponding to the fraction of unmodified enzyme observed by mass spectrometry, strongly suggesting that glucokinase preincubated with glucose is specifically labeled and inactivated upon modification by phenylglyoxal. The data support the existing conformational model of glucokinase.  相似文献   

5.
Incubation of microsomal vesicles with ATP and protein kinase results in a fivefold increased glucose-6-phosphatase activity. Evidence is presented that this effect is mediated via a moiety of the outer membrane surface. Evidence is also presented for the presence of an endogenous, peripheral membrane protein also capable of activating glucose-6-phosphatase in an ATP dependent reaction. It is suggested that the glucose-6-phosphate transmembrane carrier system may be the target of phosphorylation.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene 2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS) on microsomal glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis has been reinvestigated and characterized in order to elucidate the topological and functional properties of the interacting sites of the glucose-6-phosphatase. The studies were performed on microsomal membranes, partially purified and reconstituted glucose-6-phosphatase preparations and show the following. (a) DIDS inhibits activity of the glucose-6-phosphatase of native microsomes as well as the partially purified glucose-6-phosphatase. (b) Inhibition is reversed when the microsomes and the partially purified phosphohydrolase, incorporated into asolectin liposomes, are modified with Triton X-114. (c) Treatment of native microsomes with DIDS and the following purification of glucose-6-phosphatase from these labeled membranes leads to an enzyme preparation which is labeled and inhibited by DIDS. (d) Preincubation of native microsomes or partially purified glucose-6-phosphatase with a 3000-fold excess of glucose 6-phosphate cannot prevent the DIDS-induced inhibition. (e) Inhibition of glucose-6-phosphatase by DIDS is completely prevented when reactive sulfhydryl groups of the phosphohydrolase are blocked by p-mecuribenzoate. (f) Reactivation of enzyme activity is obtained when DIDS-labeled microsomes are incubated with 2-mercaptoethanol or dithiothreitol. Therefore, we conclude that inhibition of microsomal glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis by DIDS cannot result from binding of this agent to a putative glucose-6-phosphate-carrier protein. Our results rather suggest that inhibition is caused by chemical modification of sulfhydryl groups of the integral phosphohydrolase accessible to DIDS attack itself. An easy interpretation of these results can be obtained on the basis of a modified conformational model representing the glucose-6-phosphatase as an integral channel-protein located within the hydrophobic interior of the microsomal membrane [Schulze et al. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 16,571-16,578].  相似文献   

7.
Membrane effects on hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
1) Rat liver microsomes exhibit only a weak hydrolyzing activity towards galactose 6-phosphate. Disruption of the microsomal vesicles does not change the apparent Michaelis constant for this substrate but enhances the apparent maximum velocity. 2) The inhibition of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) by galactose 6-phosphate is of the competitive type in intact and disrupted microsomal vesicles, suggesting that both substrates are hydrolyzed by the same enzyme. 3) The high degree of latency found for the hydrolysis of galactose 6-phosphate compared to glucose 6-phosphate indicates the presence of a carrier for glucose 6-phosphate in the microsomal membrane. 4) Since glucose as a product is not trapped inside the microsomal vesicles, this sugar probably is able to penetrate the microsomal membrane.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Controlled proteolytic digestion by trypsin or bacterial proteases limited to the cytosolic side of the native microsomal membrane is not efficient to inhibit glucose-6-phosphate hydrolysis. Modification of the microsomes with deoxycholate prior to protease treatment is prerequisite to allow accessibility of the integral protein and inhibition of enzyme activity. Glucose-6-phosphatase of native microsomes, however, is rapidly inactivated by micromolar concentrations of TPCK as well as TLCK. In deoxycholate-modified microsomes both reagents do not affect glucose-6-phosphate hydrolysis. These results indicate that in the native, intact microsomal membrane glucose-6-phosphatase is not accessible to proteolytic attack from the cytoplasmic surface. The putative inhibitory effect of some trypsin or bacterial protease preparations on glucose-6-phosphatase of native microsomes observed most possibly is a result of contaminating agents as TPCK or TLCK.  相似文献   

10.
Modification of microsomal membranes in vivo and in vitro results in changes of the glucose-6-phosphate and inorganic pyrophosphate phosphohydrolase activities of liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase (EC 3.1.3.9). It was demonstrated that the glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase activity of glucose-6-phosphatase depends on the content of phosphatidylethanolamine in the microsomal membranes, whereas the inorganic pyrophosphate phosphohydrolase activity seems to be dependent on the phosphatidylserine content. It is assumed that the regulation of the corresponding enzyme activities by these phospholipids is performed by the same allosteric mechanism in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
An activity UTP : D-glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase is located in the microsomal membranes of conger liver. The properties of this enzyme are studied and compared to the soluble activity. The microsomal activity is partially liberated from the membrane by freezing and thawing and by the means of a neutral detergent, Triton X-100. The enzyme is latent in the membranes and totally inhibited by phospholipase A2. This microsomal enzyme could be the last of a membranous biosynthetic pathway for UDP-glucose, as conger liver microsomes contain also a membranous glucokinase and a membranous phosphoglucomutase.  相似文献   

12.
Gerin I  Van Schaftingen E 《FEBS letters》2002,517(1-3):257-260
The existence of glucose-6-phosphate transport across the liver microsomal membrane is still controversial. In this paper, we show that S3483, a chlorogenic acid derivative known to inhibit glucose-6-phosphatase in intact microsomes, caused the intravesicular accumulation of glucose-6-phosphate when the latter was produced by glucose-6-phosphatase from glucose and carbamoyl-phosphate. S3483 also inhibited the conversion of glucose-6-phosphate to 6-phosphogluconate occurring inside microsomes in the presence of electron acceptors (NADP or metyrapone). These data indicate that liver microsomal membranes contain a reversible glucose-6-phosphate transporter, which furnishes substrate not only to glucose-6-phosphatase, but also to hexose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

13.
Uptake of glucose-6-phosphate by microsomes of hepatocyte in rats, human controls and patients with glycogen storage disease type Ia and Ib was studied. In rat the uptake of glucose-6-phosphate increased rapidly and reached to a plateau, but mannose-6-phosphate was not accumulated. These findings indicate that a glucose-6-phosphate specific transport system exists in the microsomal membrane. In human controls and patients with glycogen storage disease type Ia the uptake of glucose-6-phosphate was clearly observed. On the other hand, no accumulation of it was detected in a patient with glycogen storage disease type Ib. These data provide a direct evidence of the defect in the glucose-6-phosphate transport system of hepatic microsomal membrane in glycogen storage disease type Ib.  相似文献   

14.
Two major species of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) differing in size, pyridine nucleotide specificity, and susceptibility to inhibition by adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) were detected in extracts of Pseudomonas multivorans (which has recently been shown to be synonymous with the species Pseudomonas cepacia) ATCC 17616. The large species (molecular weight ca. 230,000) was active with nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP) and was markedly inhibited by ATP, which decreased its affinity for glucose-6-phosphate and for pyridine nucleotides. This form of the enzyme exhibited homotropic effects for glucose-6-phosphate. The small species (molecular weight ca. 96,000) was active with NADP but not with NAD, was not inhibited by ATP, and exhibited no homotropic effects for glucose-6-phosphate. Under certain conditions multiplicity of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.43) activities was also noted. One form of the enzyme (80,000 molecular weight) was active with either NAD or NADP and was inhibited by ATP, which decreased its affinity for 6-phosphogluconate. The other form (120,000 molecular weight) was highly specific for NADP and was not susceptible to inhibition by ATP. Neither form of the enzyme exhibited homotropic effects for 6-phosphogluconate. The possible relationships between the different species of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Approximately the same levels of six of the seven enzymes catalyzing reactions of the pentose phosphate pathway are in the cisternae of washed microsomes from rat heart, spleen, lung, and brain. Renal and hepatic microsomes also have detectable levels of these enzymes except ribulose-5-phosphate epimerase and ribose-5-phosphate isomerase. Their location in the cisternae is indicated by their latencies, i.e. requirement for disruption of the membrane for activity. In addition, transketolase, transaldolase, and glucose-6-phosphatase, a known cisternal enzyme, are inactivated by chymotrypsin and subtilisin only in disrupted hepatic microsomes under conditions in which NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, an enzyme on the external surface, is inactivated equally in intact and disrupted microsomes. The failure to detect the epimerase and isomerase in hepatic microsomes is due to inhibition of their assays by ketopentose-5-phosphatase. Xylulose 5-phosphate is hydrolyzed faster than ribulose 5-phosphate. A mild heat treatment destroys hepatic xylulose-5-phosphatase and glucose-6-phosphatase without affecting acid phosphatase. These results plus the established wide distribution of glucose dehydrogenase, the microsomal glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and its localization to the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum suggest that most mammalian cells have two sets of enzymes of the pentose phosphate pathway: one is cytoplasmic and the other is in the endoplasmic reticulum. The activity of the microsomal pentose phosphate pathway is estimated to be about 1.5% that of the cytoplasmic pathway.  相似文献   

16.
Hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase is a multicomponent system composed of substrate/product translocases and a catalytic subunit. Previously we (Foster et al. (1996) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 12, 244-254) demonstrated that N-bromoacetylethanolamine phosphate (BAEP) is a time-dependent, irreversible inhibitor of glucose-6-phosphate hydrolysis in intact but not disrupted microsomes. We proposed that BAEP manifests its inhibitory effect by binding with a glucose-6-phosphate translocase protein of the glucose-6-phosphatase system. Here we provide additional evidence that BAEP inhibits glucose-6-phosphate transport in microsomal vesicles and utilize [(32)P]BAEP as an affinity label in the identification of a glucose-6-phosphate transport protein. In this study, we identify 51-kDa rat and mouse liver microsomal proteins involved in glucose-6-phosphate transport into and out of microsomal vesicles by utilizing (1) an Ehrlich ascites tumor-bearing mouse model, which displays a decreased sensitivity to the time-dependent inhibitory effect of BAEP, and (2) another glucose-6-phosphate translocase inhibitor, tosyl-lysine chloromethyl ketone, in conjunction with [(32)P]BAEP as an affinity label.  相似文献   

17.
L de Meis  M A Grieco  A Galina 《FEBS letters》1992,308(2):197-201
During steady-state, the Pi released in the medium is derived from glucose-6-phosphate which continuously regenerates the ATP hydrolyzed. A membrane potential (delta psi) can be built up in submitochondrial particles using glucose-6-phosphate and hexokinase as an ATP-regenerating system. The energy derived from the membrane potential thus formed, can be used to promote the energy-dependent transhydrogenation from NADH to NADP+ and the uphill electron transfer from succinate to NAD+. In spite of the large differences in the energies of hydrolysis of ATP (delta G degrees = -7.0 to -9.0 kcal/mol) and of glucose-6-phosphate (delta G degrees = -2.5 kcal/mol), the same ratio between Pi production and either NADPH or NADH formation were measured regardless of whether millimolar concentrations of ATP or a mixture of ADP, glucose-6-phosphate and hexokinase were used. Rat liver mitochondria were able to accumulate Ca2+ when incubated in a medium containing hexokinase, ADP and glucose-6-phosphate. The different reaction measured with the use of glucose-6-phosphate and hexokinase were inhibited by glucose concentrations varying from 0.2 to 2 mM. Glucose shifts the equilibrium of the reaction towards glucose-6-phosphate formation thus leading to a decrease of the ATP concentration in the medium.  相似文献   

18.
A highly active and soluble glucose-6-phosphatase has been purified to near homogeneity from rat liver. Successful purification has been initiated by covalent labeling of the enzyme in native rat liver microsomes with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate and NaBH4, followed by solubilization of the microsomes with Triton X-100, chromatography on phenyl-Sepharose, hydroxyapatite, DEAE-Sephacel and a second chromatography step on hydroxyapatite. The final enzyme preparation obtained was approximately 700-fold purified over the activity of starting microsomes. As judged by SDS/PAGE the purified glucose-6-phosphatase is composed of a single protein with a molecular mass of 35 kDa. The present work demonstrates that the purified glucose-6-phosphatase must be arranged in the native microsomal membrane so that it is accessible to pyridoxal 5'-phosphate from the cytoplasmic side.  相似文献   

19.
Methylthioadenosine sulfoxide (MTAS), an oxidized derivative of the cell toxic metabolite methylthioadenosine has been used in elucidating the relevance of an interrelationship between the catalytic behavior and the conformational state of hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase and in characterizing the transmembrane orientation of the integral unit in the microsomal membrane. The following results were obtained: (1) Glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis at 37 degrees C is progressively inhibited when native microsomes are treated with MTAS at 37 degrees C. In contrast, glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis of the same MTAS-treated microsomes assayed at 0 degrees C is not inhibited. (2) Subsequent modification of the MTAS-treated microsomes with Triton X-114 reveals that glucose-6-phosphatase assayed at 37 degrees C as well as at 0 degrees C is inhibited. (3) Although excess reagent is separated by centrifugation and the MTAS-treated microsomes diluted with buffer before being modified with Triton the temperature-dependent effect of MTAS on microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase is not reversed at all. (4) In native microsomes MTAS is shown to inhibit glucose-6-phosphatase noncompetitively. The subsequent Triton-modification of the MTAS-treated microsomes, however, generates an uncompetitive type of inhibition. (5) Preincubation of native microsomes with MTAS completely prevents the inhibitory effect of 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene 2,2'-disulfonate (DIDS) as well as 4,4'-diazidostilbene 2,2'-disulfonate (DASS) on glucose-6-phosphatase. (6) Low molecular weight thiols and tocopherol protect the microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase against MTAS-induced inhibition. (7) Glucose-6-phosphatase solubilized and partially purified from rat liver microsomes is also affected by MTAS in demonstrating the same temperature-dependent behavior as the enzyme of MTAS-treated and Triton-modified microsomes. From these results we conclude that MTAS modulates the enzyme catalytic properties of hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase by covalent modification of reactive groups of the integral protein accessible from the cytoplasmic surface of the microsomal membrane. The temperature-dependent kinetic behavior of MTAS-modulated glucose-6-phosphatase is interpreted by the existence of distinct catalytically active enzyme conformation forms. Detergent-induced modification of the adjacent hydrophobic microenvironment additionally generates alterations of the conformational state leading to changes of the kinetic characteristics of the integral enzyme.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of 1-cyclohexyl-3-(2-morpholinoethyl)carbodiimide (CMC) on the reactions catalyzed by the glucose-6-phosphatase system of rat liver microsomes was studied. Modification of the intact microsomes by CMC leads to the inhibition of the glucose-6-phosphatase, pyrophosphate:glucose and carbamoyl-phosphate : glucose phosphotransferase activities of the system. The activities are restored by the disruption of the microsomal permeability barrier. The mannose-6-phosphate, pyrophosphate, and carbamoyl-phosphate phosphohydrolase activities of the intact as well as the disrupted microsomes were not affected by CMC. It follows from the results obtained that CMC inactivates the microsomal glucose-6-phosphate translocase, the inactivation is a result of the modification of a single sulfhydryl or amino group of the translocase; pyrophosphate, carbamoyl phosphate and inorganic phosphate are transported across the microsomal membrane without participation of the glucose-6-phosphate translocase; pyrophosphate and carbamoyl phosphate may act as the phosphate donors in the glucose phosphorylation reactions in vivo.  相似文献   

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