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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
The phosphohydrolase component of the microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase system has been identified as a 36.5-kDa polypeptide by 32P-labeling of the phosphoryl-enzyme intermediate formed during steady-state hydrolysis. A 36.5-kDa polypeptide was labeled when disrupted rat hepatic microsomes were incubated with three different 32P-labeled substrates for the enzyme (glucose-6-P, mannose-6-P, and PPi) and the reaction terminated with trichloroacetic acid. Labeling of the phosphoryl-enzyme intermediate with [32P]glucose-6-P was blocked by several well-characterized competitive inhibitors of glucose-6-phosphatase activity (e.g. Al(F)-4 and Pi) and by thermal inactivation, and labeling was not seen following incubations with 32Pi and [U-14C]glucose-6-P. In agreement with steady-state dictates, the amount of [32P]phosphoryl intermediate was directly and quantitatively proportional to the steady-state glucose-6-phosphatase activity measured under a variety of conditions in both intact and disrupted hepatic microsomes. The labeled 36.5-kDa polypeptide was specifically immunostained by antiserum raised in sheep against the partially purified rat hepatic enzyme, and the antiserum quantitatively immunoprecipitated glucose-6-phosphatase activity from cholate-solubilized rat hepatic microsomes. [32P]Glucose-6-P also labeled a similar-sized polypeptide in hepatic microsomes from sheep, rabbit, guinea pig, and mouse and rat renal microsomes. The glucose-6-phosphatase enzyme appears to be a minor protein of the hepatic endoplasmic reticulum, comprising about 0.1% of the total microsomal membrane proteins. The centrifugation of sodium dodecyl sulfate-solubilized membrane proteins was found to be a crucial step in the resolution of radiolabeled microsomal proteins by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

4.
Hepatomas tend to have a decreased glucose-6-phosphatase activity. We have observed phenotypic stability for this change in Morris hepatomas transplanted in rats. To determine if this decrease is selective for translocase functions or the hydrolase activity associated with glucose-6-phosphatase, we have compared activities in liver and hepatomas with glucose-6-phosphate or mannose-6-phosphate as substrates and with intact or histone-disrupted microsomes. In five out of seven subcutaneously transplanted rat hepatoma lines, the microsomal mannose-6-phosphatase activity was lower than in preparations from liver of normal or tumor-bearing rats. With liver microsomes and with most hepatoma microsomes, preincubation with calf thymus histones caused a greater increase in mannose-6-phosphatase than in glucose-6-phosphatase activity. In studies with liver and hepatoma microsomes there were similar increases in mannose-6-phosphatase activity with total calf thymus histones and arginine-rich histones. A smaller increase was seen with lysine-rich histones. The effect of polylysine was similar to the action of lysine-rich histones. There was only a small effect with protamine at the same concentration (1 mg/ml). Rat liver or hepatoma H1 histones gave only about half the activation seen with core nucleosomal histones. Our data suggested that microsomes of rat hepatomas tend to have decreased translocase and hydrolase functions of glucose-6-phosphatase relative to activities in untransformed liver. (Mol Cell Biochem122: 17–24, 1993)  相似文献   

5.
K Narisawa  Y Igarashi  K Tada 《Enzyme》1987,38(1-4):177-183
Glycogen storage diseases (GSD) type 1b is the first example of a genetic disorder involving the transport system of an intracellular membrane. It was revealed that the primary defect in GSD type 1b was a deficiency in the microsomal glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) translocase, based on the findings that the glucose-6-phosphatase activity was highly latent in the fresh liver homogenates. Further evidence of this defect in GSD type 1b has been provided by a membrane filter method which measures the uptake of 14C-G6P by microsomes. The clinical symptoms and enzymatic studies in our patients suggest that there is genetic heterogeneity in GSD 1b and the clinical severity depends on the level of residual activities of G6P translocase.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism of activation of hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) in vitro by amiloride has been investigated in both intact and fully disrupted microsomes. The major effect of amiloride is a 4.5-fold reduction in the Km of glucose-6-phosphatase activity in intact diabetic rat liver microsomes. Amiloride also decreased the Km of glucose-6-phosphatase activity in intact liver microsomes isolated from starved rats 2.5-fold. Kinetic calculations, direct enzyme assays and direct transport assays all demonstrated that the site of amiloride action was T1, the hepatic microsomal glucose 6-phosphate transport protein. This is, to our knowledge, the first report of an activation of any of the proteins of the multimeric hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase complex.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of rat liver glucose-6-phosphatase (D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.9) were studied with intact and detergent-disrupted microsomes from normal and diabetic rats. Glucose-6-P concentrations employed (12 microM to 1.0 mM) spanned the physiologic range. With the enzyme of intact microsomes from both groups, plots of v versus [glucose-6-P] were sigmoid. Hanes plots (i.e. [glucose-6-P]/v versus [glucose-6-P]) were biphasic (concave upwards). A Hill coefficient of 1.45 was determined with substrate concentrations between 12 and 133 microM. Disruption of microsomal integrity abolished these departures from classic kinetic behavior, indicating that sigmoidicity may result from cooperative interaction of glucose-6-P with the glucose-6-phosphatase system at the substrate translocase specific for glucose-6-P. With the enzyme from normal rats the [glucose-6-P] at which the enzyme was maximally sensitive to variations in [glucose-6-P] (which we term "Smax"), determined from plots of dv/d [glucose-6-P] versus [glucose-6-P], was in the physiologic range. The Smax of 0.13 mM corresponded well with the normal steady-state hepatic [glucose-6-P] of 0.16 mM, consistent with glucose-6-phosphatase's function as a regulatory enzyme. With the diabetic enzyme, in contrast, values were 0.30 and 0.07 mM for the Smax and steady-state level, respectively. We suggest that the decreasing sensitivity of glucose-6-phosphatase activity to progressively diminishing glucose-6-P concentration, inherent in its sigmoid kinetics, constitutes a mechanism for the preservation of a residual pool of glucose-6-P for other hepatic metabolic functions in the presence of elevated concentrations of glucose-6-phosphatase such as in diabetes.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
Glucose-6-phosphatase is a multicomponent system located in the endoplasmic reticulum, involving both a catalytic subunit (G6PC) and several substrate and product carriers. The glucose-6-phosphate carrier is called G6PT1. Using light scattering, we determined K(D) values for phosphate and glucose transport in rat liver microsomes (45 and 33mM, respectively), G6PT1 K(D) being too low to be estimated by this technique. We provide evidence that phosphate transport may be carried out by an allosteric multisubunit translocase or by two distinct proteins. Using chemical modifications by sulfhydryl reagents with different solubility properties, we conclude that in G6PT1, one thiol group important for activity is facing the cytosol and could be Cys(121) or Cys(362). Moreover, a different glucose-6-phosphate translocase, representing 20% of total glucose-6-phosphate transport and insensitive to N-ethylmaleimide modification, could coexist with liver G6PT1. In the G6PC protein, an accessible thiol group is facing the cytosol and, according to structural predictions, could be Cys(284).  相似文献   

11.
The change in the activity of several hepatic enzymes during hepatocarcinogenesis suggests a pattern of dedifferentiation. This category of enzymes includes glucose-6-phosphatase and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT). A detailed kinetic analysis of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase activity revealed that both the translocase and phosphohydrolase activities were markedly reduced in Morris 7777 hepatoma transplanted in male Buffalo rats. In addition, the activity of the translocase component increased 2.4-fold, while the phosphohydrolase activity decreased 1.6-fold in the liver of tumor-bearing animals. GGT activity in the host liver was not effected by the presence of the tumor. These results suggest differences in the effect of Morris 7777 hepatoma on: the phosphohydrolase and translocase activities of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase and the sensitivity of glucose-6-phosphatase and GGT activities in the host liver.  相似文献   

12.
A phosphate-linked antiporter activity of the glucose-6-phosphate transporter (G6PT) has been recently described in liposomes including the reconstituded transporter protein. We directly investigated the mechanism of glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) transport in rat liver microsomal vesicles. Pre-loading with inorganic phosphate (Pi) did not stimulate G6P or Pi microsomal inward transport. Pi efflux from pre-loaded microsomes could not be enhanced by G6P or Pi addition. Rapid G6P or Pi influx was registered by light-scattering in microsomes not containing G6P or Pi. The G6PT inhibitor, S3483, blocked G6P transport irrespectively of experimental conditions. We conclude that hepatic G6PT functions as an uniporter.  相似文献   

13.
We studied the effects of various glucocorticoids, glucagon and insulin on the activity of rat liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase. Preincubation of microsomes with corticosterone, cortisone, cortisol and dexamethasone as well as glucagon increased the rate of glucose-6-phosphate hydrolysis by about 1.5 fold relative to the controls. The maximum activation occurred at about 10 nM steroids and 0.3 nM glucagon, respectively. On the other hand, increasing concentrations (8.3 – 50 nM) of insulin progressively inhibited glucose-6-phosphatase up to 26%; the activity of which, however, remains completely in a latent state within the microsomal membrane and can be released from it by Triton treatment. In terms of the substrate transport hypothesis, the results are interpreted as evidence that regulation of glucose-6-phosphate hydrolysis is achieved by direct interactions either of the hormones themselves or of a possible second messenger with the carrier moiety of the rat liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase system.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
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   

17.
The action of thyroid hormones on hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase was studied in rats. Fed and 24-h fasted rats received T3 (10 micrograms/day) or T4 (25 micrograms/day) 1 h, 1 or 3 days before sacrificing. In addition a group of fed rats was treated with T4 for 7 and 14 days. The glucose-6-phosphatase activity was measured in the isolated microsomes prepared from the liver. The intactness of the microsomal preparation was checked using 2 mM mannose-6-phosphate as a substrate. In fed rats a single injection of T3 or T4 augmented the activities of the translocase and hydrolase components of glucose-6-phosphatase provided that the rats were killed 24 h after the administration of hormone. This effect was more pronounced in animals treated for 3-14 days. As expected, fasting per se increased the activities of both components of the enzyme. Moreover, in fasted rats treatment with T3 and T4 for 3 days further augmented the activities of the translocase and the hydrolase components of glucose-6-phosphatase. In fed animals T3 and T4 increased the latency of the enzyme whereas in fasted animals thyroid hormones increased the activities of the translocase and hydrolase components in parallel, maintaining the level of latency of the enzyme system. Administration of T3 and T4 increased blood glucose level in fasted rats after one day, while in fed rats a significant hyperglycaemia appeared after 7-14 days of treatment. In conclusion, T3 and T4 increase the activities of the translocase and hydrolase components of hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase in fed and fasted rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The mechanism of activation of hepatic microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) in vitro by pentamidine has been investigated in both intact and fully disrupted microsomes. The major effect of pentamidine is a 4.7-fold reduction in the Km of glucose-6-phosphatase activity in intact diabetic rat liver microsomes. The site of action of pentamidine is T1 the hepatic microsomal glucose 6-phosphate transport protein. The activation of T1 by pentamidine may contribute to the disturbed blood glucose homeostasis seen in many patients after the administration of the drug pentamidine.  相似文献   

19.
Microsomal vesicles were centrifuged through sucrose density gradients containing deoxycholate. With 0.15% detergent electron transport enzymes and phosphatases could be separated. Increasing the deoxycholate concentration to 0.19% resulted in separation of the microsomal material into five bands containing (in order from the top of the gradient) adenosine monophosphatase, inosine diphosphatase and some glucose-6-phosphatase (band 1); NADH-linked (band 2) and NADH-linked (band 3) electron transport enzymes; and glucose-6-phosphatase (bands 4 and 5). It appears that enzymes are arranged in specialized patches in the microsomal membrane.  相似文献   

20.
Mechanisms regulating the energy-dependent calcium sequestering activity of liver microsomes were studied. The possibility for a physiologic mechanism capable of entrapping the transported Ca2+ was investigated. It was found that the addition of glucose 6-phosphate to the incubation system for MgATP-dependent microsomal calcium transport results in a marked stimulation of Ca2+ uptake. The uptake at 30 min is about 50% of that obtained with oxalate when the incubation is carried out at pH 6.8, which is the pH optimum for oxalate-stimulated calcium uptake. However, at physiological pH values (7.2-7.4), the glucose 6-phosphate-stimulated calcium uptake is maximal and equals that obtained with oxalate at pH 6.8. The Vmax of the glucose 6-phosphate-stimulated transport is 22.3 nmol of calcium/mg protein per min. The apparent Km for calcium calculated from total calcium concentrations is 31.9 microM. After the incubation of the system for MgATP-dependent microsomal calcium transport in the presence of glucose 6-phosphate, inorganic phosphorus and calcium are found in equal concentrations, on a molar base, in the recovered microsomal fraction. In the system for the glucose 6-phosphate-stimulated calcium uptake, glucose 6-phosphate is actively hydrolyzed by the glucose-6-phosphatase activity of liver microsomes. The latter activity is not influenced by concomitant calcium uptake. Calcium uptake is maximal when the concentration of glucose 6-phosphate in the system is 1-3 mM, which is much lower than that necessary to saturate glucose-6-phosphatase. These results are interpreted in the light of a possible cooperative activity between the energy-dependent calcium pump of liver microsomes and the glucose-6-phosphatase multicomponent system. The physiological implications of such a cooperation are discussed.  相似文献   

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