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1.
1. Pigeon erythrocyte was found to depend on the glycolytic and pentose phosphate pathway for most of its energy production in the form of adenosine triphosphate and reducing potential, since there was no detectable activity of any of the citric acid cycle (TCA) cycle enzymes measured. 2. The absence of detectable amounts of 2,3-diphosphoglyceric acid (2-3-DPG) indicated that there is no direct relationship between the active glycolytic system and the function of these cells. 3. A comparison of the mass action ratios with the equilibrium constants of the glycolytic reactions showed that hexokinase, phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase reactions are displaced from equilibrium, implying that these are the key regulatory enzymes of glycolysis in pigeon erythrocytes. 4. The changes in the concentrations of the glycolytic metabolites under hypoxic conditions that stimulate the flux through the glycolytic pathway were found to be consistent with the above hypothesis. 5. Flux measurements of the pentose phosphate pathway showed that it metabolizes only 3.4% of the total glucose consumed by the resting erythrocyte. 6. Hypoxic conditions resulted in a stimulation of the pentose phosphate pathway by as much as four-fold, whilst the glycolytic pathway was not stimulated by more than about twice.  相似文献   

2.
An electrophoretic method has been devised to investigate the changes in the enzymes and isoenzymes of carbohydrate metabolism, upon adding glucose to derepressed yeast cell. (i) Of the glycolytic enzymes tested, enolase II, pyruvate kinase and pyruvate decarboxylase were markedly increased. This increase was accompanied by an overall increase in glycolytic activity and was prevented by cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis. (ii) In contrast, respiratory activity decreased after adding glucose. This decrease was clearly shown to be the result of repression of respiratory enzymes. A rapid decrease within a few minutes of adding glucose, by analogy with the so-called ‘Crabtree effect’, was not observed in yeast. (iii) The gluconeogenic enzymes, fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and malate dehydrogenase, which are inactivated after adding glucose, showed no significant changes in electrophoretic mobilities. Hence, there was no evidence of enzyme modifications, which were postulated as initiating degradation. However, it was possible to investigate cytoplasmic and mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase isoenzymes separately. Synthesis of the mitochondrial isoenzyme was repressed, whereas only cytoplasmic malate hydrogenase was subject to glucose inactivation.  相似文献   

3.
An electrophoretic method has been devised to investigate the changes in the enzymes and isoenzymes of carbohydrate metabolism, upon adding glucose to derepressed yeast cells. (i) Of the glycolytic enzymes tested, enolase II, pyruvate kinase and pyruvate decarboxylase were markedly increased. This increase was accompanied by an overall increase in glycolytic activity and was prevented by cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis. (ii) In contrast, respiratory activity decreased after adding glucose. This decrease was clearly shown to be the result of repression of respiratory enzymes. A rapid decrease within a few minutes of adding glucose, by analogy with the so-called ' Crabtree effect', was not observed in yeast. (iii) The gluconeogenic enzymes, fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and malate dehydrogenase, which are inactivated after adding glucose, showed no significant changes in electrophoretic mobilities. Hence, there was no evidence of enzyme modifications, which were postulated as initiating degradation. However, it was possible to investigate cytoplasmic and mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase isoenzymes separately. Synthesis of the mitochondrial isoenzyme was repressed, whereas only cytoplasmic malate dehydrogenase was subject to glucose inactivation.  相似文献   

4.
1. Measurements were made of the activities of nine glycolytic enzymes in epididymal adipose tissues obtained from rats that had undergone one of the following treatments: starvation; starvation followed by re-feeding with bread or high-fat diet; feeding with fat without preliminary starvation; alloxan-diabetes; alloxan-diabetes followed by insulin therapy. 2. In general, the activities of the glycolytic enzymes of adipose tissue, unlike those of liver, were not greatly affected by the above treatments. 3. The ;key' glycolytic enzymes, phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase, were generally no more adaptive in response to physiological factors than other glycolytic enzymes such as glucose phosphate isomerase, fructose diphosphate aldolase, triose phosphate isomerase, glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate kinase and lactate dehydrogenase. 4. Adiposetissue pyruvate kinase did not respond to feeding with fat in a manner similar to the liver enzyme. 5. Glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase had a behaviour pattern unlike the other eight glycolytic enzymes studied in that its activity was depressed by feeding with fat and was not restored to normal by re-feeding with a high-fat diet after starvation. These results are discussed in relation to the requirements of adipose tissue for glycerol phosphate in the esterification of fatty acids. 6. A statistical analysis of the results permitted the writing of linear equations describing the relationships between the activities of eight of the enzymes studied. 7. Evidence is presented for the existence of two constant-proportion groups amongst the enzymes studied, namely (i) glucose phosphate isomerase, phosphoglycerate kinase and lactate dehydrogenase, and (ii) triose phosphate isomerase, fructose diphosphate aldolase and pyruvate kinase. 8. Mechanisms for maintaining the observed relationships between the activities of the enzymes in the tissue are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
A mitochondrial fraction prepared from calf brain cortex possessed negligible glycolytic activity in the absence of the enzymes of the high speed supernatant fraction. When mitochondria were added to a supernatant system supplemented with optimal amounts of crystalline hexokinase, a 20 per cent stimulation of glycolysis was observed. The supernatant fraction produced minimal amounts of lactate in the absence of exogenous hexokinase; the addition of mitochondria doubled the lactate production. The substitution of glycolytic intermediates for glucose as substrates as well as the addition of exogenous glycolytic enzymes to the supernatant fraction or supernatant fraction plus mitochondria indicated that the mitochondria contributed mainly hexokinase and phosphofructokinase. By direct assay of all of the enzymes of the glycolytic pathway, only hexokinase and phosphofructokinase were shown to be concentrated in the mitochondrial fraction. All other glycolytic enzymes were found to exhibit higher total and specific activities in the supernatant fraction.  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of fatty acyl CoA and carnitine esters on the glycolytic system of the rat heart. Using a respiring incubation mixture containing a whole-heart homogenate it was observed that oleoyl-CoA slowed down the glucose disappearance whereas lactate accumulation did not change. Experiments were also performed by means of an incubation mixture prepared with a soluble heart extract, considered to contain all glycolytic enzymes present in heart fibres. Palmitoyl-CoA or oleoyl-CoA as well as palmitoyl carnitine, added separately or together, were unable to alter the glucose disappearance and lactate accumulation in this mixture. These data suggest that long chain acyl-esters have not direct inhibitory actions on the heart glycolytic activity. However, CoA esters seem to exert indirect inhibitory effects which may be relevant to the myocardium under oxygen restriction situations.  相似文献   

7.
The addition of glucose to Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells causes reprogramming of gene expression. Glucose is sensed by membrane receptors as well as (so far elusive) intracellular sensing mechanisms. The availability of four yeast strains that display different hexose uptake capacities allowed us to study glucose-induced effects at different glycolytic rates. Rapid glucose responses were observed in all strains able to take up glucose, consistent with intracellular sensing. The degree of long-term responses, however, clearly correlated with the glycolytic rate: glucose-stimulated expression of genes encoding enzymes of the lower part of glycolysis showed an almost linear correlation with the glycolytic rate, while expression levels of genes encoding gluconeogenic enzymes and invertase (SUC2) showed an inverse correlation. Glucose control of SUC2 expression is mediated by the Snf1-Mig1 pathway. Mig1 dephosphorylation upon glucose addition is known to lead to repression of target genes. Mig1 was initially dephosphorylated upon glucose addition in all strains able to take up glucose, but remained dephosphorylated only at high glycolytic rates. Remarkably, transient Mig1-dephosphorylation was accompanied by the repression of SUC2 expression at high glycolytic rates, but stimulated SUC2 expression at low glycolytic rates. This suggests that Mig1-mediated repression can be overruled by factors mediating induction via a low glucose signal. At low and moderate glycolytic rates, Mig1 was partly dephosphorylated both in the presence of phosphorylated, active Snf1, and unphosphorylated, inactive Snf1, indicating that Mig1 was actively phosphorylated and dephosphorylated simultaneously, suggesting independent control of both processes. Taken together, it appears that glucose addition affects the expression of SUC2 as well as Mig1 activity by both Snf1-dependent and -independent mechanisms that can now be dissected and resolved as early and late/sustained responses.  相似文献   

8.
1. Lactic acid formation in supernatant fractions of homogenates of cat or rat small-intestinal mucosa was measured under optimum conditions with glucose, fructose, glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 1,6-diphosphate or 3-phosphoglycerate as substrate. 2. Between 80 and 107% of the glycolytic activity of the homogenate was recovered in these particle-free preparations when glucose, fructose, glucose 6-phosphate or fructose 1,6-diphosphate was used as substrate. 3. Evidence was obtained that hexokinase and phosphofructokinase were the rate-limiting enzymes in the initial sequence of glycolytic reactions. The limitation of rate by hexokinase was much more pronounced in preparations from the cat than in those from the rat. 4. With subcellular preparations from cat or rat small intestine lactic acid was also formed from ribose 5-phosphate and at rates similar to those observed with glucose. 5. A higher rate of glycolysis was observed with glucose 6-phosphate as substrate with preparations from the proximal half of the small intestine of the rat as compared with the distal half. 6. Mucosal preparations from rats starved for 24-48hr. exhibited only about one-quarter of the glycolytic activity of those of fed control groups. The decreased rate of formation of lactic acid from either glucose or fructose was mainly due to a decrease in the activity of hexokinase(s). The activities of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and a number of other enzymes were not significantly decreased by starvation. 7. The results are discussed in relation to metabolic control of glycolysis in other mammalian tissues.  相似文献   

9.
Unlike other eukaryotic cells, trypanosomes possess a compartmentalized glycolytic pathway. The conversion of glucose into 3-phosphoglycerate takes place in specialized peroxisomes, called glycosomes. Further conversion of this intermediate into pyruvate occurs in the cytosol. Due to this compartmentation, many regulatory mechanisms operating in other cell types cannot work in trypanosomes. This is reflected by the insensitivity of the glycosomal enzymes to compounds that act as activity regulators in other cell types. Several speculations have been raised about the function of compartmentation of glycolysis in trypanosomes. We calculate that even in a noncompartmentalized trypanosome the flux through glycolysis should not be limited by diffusion. Therefore, the sequestration of glycolytic enzymes in an organelle may not serve to overcome a diffusion limitation. We also search the available data for a possible relation between compartmentation and the distribution of control of the glycolytic flux among the glycolytic enzymes. Under physiological conditions, the rate of glycolytic ATP production in the bloodstream form of the parasite is possibly controlled by the oxygen tension, but not by the glucose concentration. Within the framework of Metabolic Control Analysis, we discuss evidence that glucose transport, although it does not qualify as the sole rate-limiting step, does have a high flux control coefficient. This, however, does not distinguish trypanosomes from other eukaryotic cell types without glycosomes.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
Whole filaments of autotrophically grown Anabaena cylindrica and heterocysts isolated from them will assimilate and metabolise exogenous glucose. Radiorespirometric experiments suggest the operation of the pentose phosphate pathway. Glucose-6-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase are present in heterocysts at 6–8 times the levels found in vegetative cells whereas enzymes of the reductive pentose phosphate and glycolytic pathways are barely or not detectable. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in vegetative cells, but not in heterocysts is subject to inhibition by ribulose diphosphate.  相似文献   

13.
32P-labeled glucose 6-phosphate and phosphoenolpyruvate were injected into oocytes, fertilized eggs, and early embryos of Xenopus laevis, and the 32P label was followed into glycolytic enzymes and acid-soluble metabolites. The kinetics of labeling of phosphoglucomutase and phosphoglyceromutase and the formation of specific metabolites were used to measure carbon flux through glycolytic intermediates in these cells. In full-grown stage VI oocytes, fertilized eggs, and cells of cleaving embryos, carbon metabolism is in the glycogenic direction. Glycolytic intermediates injected into these cells were metabolized into UDP-glucose and then presumably into glycogen. Carbon flow between phosphoenolpyruvate and glucose 6-phosphate does not utilize fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase; rather, it may depend largely on enzymes of the pentose phosphate pathway. Maturation and fertilization of the oocyte did not result in a change in the qualitative pattern of metabolites formed. Pyruvate kinase, although abundant in oocytes and embryos, is essentially inactive in these cells. Pyruvate kinase also appears to be inactive in small previtellogenic stage II oocytes; however, in these cells injected glycolytic intermediates were not metabolized to UDP-glucose.  相似文献   

14.
The regulation of glycolysis in perfused locust flight muscle   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Concentrations of glycolytic intermediates, amino acids and possible regulator substances were measured in extracts from locust thoracic muscles perfused under different conditions. The conversion of [(14)C]glucose into intermediates and CO(2) by muscle preparations was also followed. When muscles perfused with glucose were made anaerobic changes in metabolite concentrations occurred that could be accounted for by an activation of phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase. When butyrate and glucose were present in the perfusion medium the rate of glycolytic flux was lower than with glucose alone, and the aldolase reaction appeared to be inhibited. When butyrate alone was supplied to the muscle the concentrations of most glycolytic intermediates were similar to those found when glucose was supplied. Iodoacetate caused changes in concentrations of intermediates that appeared to result from inhibition of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Fluoroacetate-poisoned muscles showed a high citrate concentration, but no obvious site of inhibition by citrate was apparent in the glycolytic pathway. Mechanisms for control of glycolysis in locust flight muscle are discussed and related to the known properties of isolated enzymes. It is proposed that trehalase, hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, aldolase, and pyruvate kinase may be control enzymes in this tissue.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Enolase enzymes are abundantly expressed, cytosolic carbon-oxygen lyases known for their role in glucose metabolism. Recently, enolase has been shown to possess a variety of different regulatory functions, beyond glycolysis and gluconeogenesis, associated with hypoxia, ischemia, and Alzheimer's disease (AD). AD is an age-associated neurodegenerative disorder characterized pathologically by elevated oxidative stress and subsequent damage to proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids, appearance of neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques, and loss of synapse and neuronal cells. It is unclear if development of a hypometabolic environment is a consequence of or contributes to AD pathology, as there is not only a significant decline in brain glucose levels in AD, but also there is an increase in proteomics identified oxidatively modified glycolytic enzymes that are rendered inactive, including enolase. Previously, our laboratory identified α-enolase as one the most frequently up-regulated and oxidatively modified proteins in amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI), early-onset AD, and AD. However, the glycolytic conversion of 2-phosphoglycerate to phosphoenolpyruvate catalyzed by enolase does not directly produce ATP or NADH; therefore it is surprising that, among all glycolytic enzymes, α-enolase was one of only two glycolytic enzymes consistently up-regulated from MCI to AD. These findings suggest enolase is involved with more than glucose metabolism in AD brain, but may possess other functions, normally necessary to preserve brain function. This review examines potential altered function(s) of brain enolase in MCI, early-onset AD, and AD, alterations that may contribute to the biochemical, pathological, clinical characteristics, and progression of this dementing disorder.  相似文献   

17.
To understand the effects of bcl-2 on glucose metabolism and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) mediated cytotoxicity, the activities of glycolytic enzymes (hexokinase, 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase, and pyruvate kinase), lactate dehydrogenase, pyruvate carboxylase, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase were examined with or without TNF-alpha treatment in TNF-alpha sensitive L929 cells and TNF-alpha resistant bcl-2 transfected L929 cells. In TNF-alpha-treated L929 cells, the activities of the glycolytic enzymes and lactate dehydrogenase greatly increased, but there was no detectable change in phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Pyruvate carboxylase activity decreased by about 25% between 6 and 12 h after TNF-alpha treatment. The activities of the glycolytic enzymes and lactate dehydrogenase in bcl-2 transfected L929 cells were lower than in L929 cells upon TNF-alpha treatment. On the other hand, the activity of pyruvate carboxylase was 20-100% greater after 6 h of TNF-alpha treatment than in the L929 cells. The activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase of bcl-2 trasfected L929 cells was lower by up to 25% than in L929 cells after 12 h. The increase of pyruvate carboxylase activity and decrease of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase activity in bcl-2 transfected L929 cells may contribute to the protective effects of bcl-2 against TNF-alpha mediated cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The mycelial sugar composition and changes in specific activities of phosphofructokinase (PFK) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, the key enzymes of the glycolytic and pentose-phosphate pathway of glucose catabolism, were followed throughout submerged fermentation of a high-yielding Claviceps purpurea L17 strain. Experimental data indicate that the pentose-phosphate pathway in glucose breakdown prevails during the vegetative phase of fermentation, the share of the glycolytic pathway becoming more pronounced during alkaloid synthesis. Both enzymes exhibit hyperbolic saturation kinetics, which is not usual for the PFK of eukaryotes. Offprint requests to: V. Gaberc-Porekar  相似文献   

19.
Summary Yeast mutants with glucose-insensitive formation of mitochondrial enzymes were isolated starting with a strain completely lacking alcohol dehydrogenase activity. The mutations could uniquely be attributed to a single nuclear gene, designated CCR80. They were largely dominant. Glucose-resistant enzyme formation was most prominent with regard to mitochondrial enzymes succinate dehydrogenase and NADH: cytochrome c oxidoreductase. The effect of CCR80 r mutations was rather small but significant on the gluconeogenetic enzymes isocitrate lyase, malate synthase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and on invertase synthesis. The repressive effect of maltose in CCR80 r mutants was also reduced showing that glucose-resistance is not caused by a mere hexose uptake defect. This regulatory disorders were not accompanied by reduced levels of glycolytic enzymes or drastically altered levels of glycolytic intermediates.Aerobic fermentation of glucose was almost completely inhibited in the mutants; anaerobic glucose degradation was reduced but not completely abolished. Therefore, the mutants appear to be altered in the regulation of glycolysis. A largely glucose-resistant synthesis of respiratory enzymes is obviously a corollary of this alteration.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCKase) and pyruvate kinase (PKase) were measured in Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown in the presence of glycolytic and gluconeogenic carbon sources. The PEPCKase activity was highest in ethanol-grown cells. However, high PEPCKase activity was also observed in cells grown in 1% glucose, especially as compared with the activity of sucrose-, maltose-, or galactose-grown cells. Activity was first detected after 12 h when glucose was exhausted from the growth medium. The PKase activity was very high in glucose-grown cells; considerable activity was also present in ethanol- and pyruvate-grown cells. The absolute requirement of respiration for gluconeogenesis was demonstrated by the absence or significantly low levels of PEPCKase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase activities observed in respiratory deficient mutants, as well as in wild-type S. cerevisiae cells grown in the presence of glucose and antimycin A or chloramphenicol. Obligate glycolytic and gluconeogenic enzymes were present simultaneously only in stationary phase cells, but not in exponential phase cells; hence futile cycling could not occur in log phase cells regardless of the presence of carbon source in the growth medium.  相似文献   

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