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1.
Lactate output from the alpha and beta anomers of glucose was measured in intact human erythrocytes at 37 degrees C; and glucose anomer phosphorylation, in human erythrocyte homogenates. The rates of both glucose metabolism (lactate output) and phosphorylation were higher in the presence of beta-D-glucose as distinct from alpha-D-glucose at three glucose concentrations used (2, 5, and 10 mM). Thus, the v beta/v alpha ratios of metabolism and phosphorylation of glucose at 2 mM were 1.24 and 1.22, respectively. The results indicate that the beta preference of hexokinase, a rate-limiting enzyme in glycolysis, is reflected in beta-preferential glycolysis.  相似文献   

2.
The phosphorylation of D-glucose (1.0mM) was measured in homogenates of tumoral islet cells incubated at 7 degrees C in the presence of labelled alpha- and/or beta-D-glucose, with or without exogenous glucose 6-phosphate. The close-to-maximal reaction velocity of hexokinase was higher with beta- than alpha-D-glucose. The latter anomer inhibited beta-D-glucose phosphorylation more than the beta-anomer decreased the phosphorylation of alpha-D-glucose. This behaviour was accounted for by the higher affinity of hexokinase for alpha- than for beta-D-glucose. These direct measurements of the relative contribution of each anomer to the overall rate of glucose phosphorylation in the presence of mixed populations of alpha- and beta-D-glucose validate the concept that the phosphorylation of D-glucose displays anomeric specificity even when the hexose is used at anomeric equilibrium. Glucose 6-phosphate inhibited the phosphorylation of the two anomers more severely when alpha-D-glucose rather than beta-D-glucose was the most abundant anomer.  相似文献   

3.
The anomeric specificity of D-glucose phosphorylation by hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase was examined in rat liver microsomes incubated in the presence of carbamoyl phosphate. At 10 degrees C, the Km for the equilibrated hexose and phosphate donor was close to 56 mM and 11 mM, respectively. The enzymic activity, which was increased in diabetic rats, was about 40% lower in untreated than in sonicated microsomes. No anomeric difference in affinity was found in sonicated microsomes. In untreated microsomes, however, the Km for beta-D-glucose was slightly lower than that for alpha-D-glucose. The maximal velocity was higher with beta- than alpha-D-glucose in both untreated and sonicated microsomes. These data indicate that the phosphotransferase activity of glucose-6-phosphatase cannot account for the higher rate of glycolysis and glycogen synthesis found in hepatocytes exposed to alpha- rather than beta-D-glucose.  相似文献   

4.
D-Glucose was recently reported to stimulate d-fructose phosphorylation by human B-cell glucokinase. The present study aims at investigating the anomeric specificity of such a positive cooperativity. The alpha-anomer of D-glucose was found to increase much more markedly than beta-D-glucose the phosphorylation of D-fructose by human liver glucokinase. Such an anomeric preference diminished at high concentrations of the D-glucose anomers, i.e. when the effect of the aldohexose upon d-fructose phosphorylation became progressively less marked. A comparison between the effects of the two anomers of D-glucose and those of equilibrated D-glucose upon D-fructose phosphorylation by human liver glucokinase indicated that the results obtained with the equilibrated aldohexose were not significantly different from those expected from the combined effects of each anomers of D-glucose. In isolated rat islets incubated for 60 min at 4 degrees C, alpha-D-glucose (5.6 mm), but not beta-D-glucose (also 5.6 mm), augmented significantly the conversion of D-[U-(14)C]fructose (5.0 mm) to acidic radioactive metabolites. Likewise, in islets prelabeled with (45)Ca and perifused at 37 degrees C, D-fructose (20.0 mm) augmented (45)Ca efflux and provoked a biphasic stimulation of insulin release from islets exposed to alpha-D-glucose (5.6 mm), while inhibiting (45)Ca efflux and causing only a sluggish and modest increase in insulin output from islets exposed to beta-D-glucose (also 5.6 mm). The enhancing action of D-glucose upon D-fructose phosphorylation by glucokinase thus displays an obvious anomeric preference for alpha-D-glucose, and such an anomeric specificity remains operative in intact pancreatic islets.  相似文献   

5.
In rat pancreatic islets and erythrocytes, alpha-D-glucose (2.8-5.6 mM) is better metabolized than beta-D-glucose, as judged from the conversion of D-[5-3H]glucose to 3H2O, augmentation in lactic acid production (or output) or oxidation of D-[U-14C]glucose. In tumoral cells, however, whether of the insulin-producing or lymphocytic leukemia type, the anomeric preference for alpha-D-glucose utilization is no longer present when the cells are incubated at comparable glucose concentrations (2.8-4.0 mM). Nevertheless, the tumoral insulin-producing cells are able to display preference for either alpha-D-glucose (at very low glucose concentrations in the 0.14-0.82 mM range) or beta-D-glucose (in the presence of 16.7 mM glucose). These findings indicate that the anomeric specificity of glucose metabolism may differ in distinct cell types, and can be modulated by the ambient glucose concentration. ambient glucose concentration.  相似文献   

6.
This study aims at establishing the contribution of alpha- and beta-D-glucose to the total generation of (3)HOH by rat pancreatic islets exposed to D-[2 - (3)H]glucose or D-[5 - (3)H] glucose at anomeric equilibrium. The islets were incubated for 60 min at 4 degrees C in the presence of equilibrated D-glucose (2.8 and 8.3 mM) mixed with tracer amounts of either alpha- or beta-D-glucose labelled with tritium on either the C (2) or C (5) of the hexose. Relative to their respective concentrations, (3)HOH generation from the anomers labelled with tritium on the C (2) or C (5) of the hexose provided beta/alpha ratios comparable to those previously found at both 2.8 and 8.3 mM, when the islets were exposed to each anomer separately. The relative contributions of each anomer to the total generation of (3)HOH was also close to the theoretical values derived from mathematical models for the catabolism of D-glucose at anomeric equilibrium in rat islets at both 2.8 and 8.3 mM and in the case of both D-[2 - (3)H]glucose and D-[5 - (3)H]glucose. Thus, even in islets exposed to D-glucose at anomeric equilibrium, the metabolic fate of alpha-D-glucose differs vastly from that of beta-D-glucose, the enzyme-to-enzyme channelling between hexokinase isoenzymes, especially glucokinase, and phosphoglucoisomerase being restricted to alpha-D-glucose 6-phosphate.  相似文献   

7.
Zhang Y  Courtois P  Sener A  Malaisse WJ 《Biochimie》2004,86(12):913-918
The anomeric specificity of D-[U-14C]glucose incorporation into glycogen in rat hemidiaphragms was investigated. For this purpose, the hemidiaphragms were preincubated for 30 min at 37 degrees C and then incubated for 5 min at the same temperature in the presence of alpha- or beta-D-[U-14C]glucose. The concentrations of D-glucose (5.6 or 8.8 mM) and insulin (0 or 10 mU/ml) were identical during the preincubation and incubation periods. The incubation medium was prepared in D2O/H2O (3:1, v/v) in order to delay the interconversion of the D-glucose anomers. In addition to glycogen labelling, the output of radioactive acidic metabolites was also measured. Insulin caused a preferential stimulation of glycogen labelling relative to glycolysis. Such was not the case in response to a rise in D-glucose concentration. At 5.6 mM D-glucose and whether in the presence or absence of insulin, both glycogen labelling and glycolysis were lower with alpha-D-glucose than with beta-D-glucose suggesting a higher rate of beta-D-glucose than alpha-D-glucose transport across the plasma membrane. A mirror image was found at 8.8 mM D-glucose, especially in the absence of insulin. At this close-to-physiological hexose concentration, insulin lowered the alpha/beta ratio for glycogen labelling. On the contrary, the rise in D-glucose concentration increased such a ratio. Since such a rise is probably little affected by any possible anomeric difference in D-glucose transport across the plasma membrane, the present results strongly suggest that the intracellular factors regulating net glycogen synthesis, as well as glycolytic flux, display obvious preference for alpha-D-glucose.  相似文献   

8.
The anomeric specificity of D-glucose metabolism was investigated in rat adipocytes exposed for 60 min at 8 degrees C to pure alpha- or beta-D-glucose or to equilibrated D-glucose. The rate of D-[5-3H]glucose utilization was higher with alpha- than beta-D-glucose. However, as judged from the oxidation of D-[1-14C]glucose and D-[6-14C]glucose anomers, the fraction of D-glucose catabolism occurring via the pentose cycle was higher with beta- than alpha-D-glucose. In the presence of equilibrated D-glucose, the utilization of alpha-D-[5-3H]glucose and the oxidation of both alpha-D-[1-14C]glucose and alpha-D-[6-14C]glucose were higher, relative to the anomer concentration, than the corresponding values for beta-D-glucose. It is concluded that the anomeric specificity of D-glucose metabolism is operative in adipocytes, even when they are exposed to equilibrated D-glucose.  相似文献   

9.
We determined the anomeric preference of glucose phosphorylation by islet glucokinase, glucose utilization by pancreatic islets, and insulin secretion induced by glucose over a wide range of glucose concentrations. alpha-D-Glucose was phosphorylated faster than beta-D-glucose by islet glucokinase at lower glucose concentrations (5 and 10 mM), whereas the opposite anomeric preference was observed at higher glucose concentrations (40 and 60 mM). At 20 mM, there was no significant difference in phosphorylation rate between the two anomers. Similar patterns of anomeric preference were observed both in islet glucose utilization and in glucose-induced insulin secretion. The present study affords strong evidence that glucokinase is responsible for the anomeric preference of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion through anomeric discrimination in islet glucose utilization.  相似文献   

10.
Conflicting data have been reported concerning the anomeric specificity of glucokinase. In the present study, liver hexokinase (Km for D-glucose 0.4 mM) displayed a higher affinity for but lower Vmax. with alpha- than with beta-D-glucose. The velocity of the reaction catalysed by liver glucokinase was higher with with beta- than with alpha-D-glucose, whatever the glucose concentration. The apparent Km of glucokinase was somewhat lower, however, with alpha- than with beta-D-glucose. Comparable results were obtained for the high-Km glucokinase-like enzymic activity present in normal pancreatic islets or insulin-producing tumoral cells. These results suggest that the anomeric specificity of glucokinase cannot account for the higher rate of glycolysis found in islets exposed to alpha- as distinct from beta-D-glucose.  相似文献   

11.
Phosphorylation of alpha- and beta-D-glucose by glucokinase from rat liver or a radiation-induced, transplantable insulinoma was investigated. Glucokinase partially purified by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Cibacron blue F3GA agarose was incubated for brief periods (1 or 3 min) with glucose anomers. Glucokinase from both liver and insulinoma tissue had a higher affinity for alpha-D-glucose (S0.5 = 6-7 mM) than beta-D-glucose (S0.5 = 12-14 mM). The maximum velocity was 15-20% lower for alpha-D-glucose than beta-D-glucose. Cooperative rate dependence with respect to glucose concentration was observed with both anomers (nH = 1.4). These kinetic data imply that both anomers of glucose are phosphorylated by glucokinase, however, at the physiological range of glucose concentrations below 15 mM, the higher affinity of alpha-D-glucose results in higher rates than with beta-D-glucose. At clearly pathological glucose concentrations exceeding 20 mM, the observed velocities are slightly higher with beta- than alpha-D-glucose. Glucokinase is thought to be the glucose sensor of pancreatic beta cells. The present data indicating a preferential phosphorylation of alpha-D-glucose compared to beta-D-glucose by glucokinase, supports the glucokinase-glucose sensor hypothesis, because it parallels the well established greater potency of alpha-D-glucose as a stimulant of insulin release.  相似文献   

12.
The phosphorylation of alpha- and beta-D-glucose by either yeast hexokinase or beef heart hexokinase was measured at both 10 and 30 degrees C. At 30 degrees C, the anomeric specificity of yeast hexokinase represented a mirror image of that of bovine hexokinase, in terms of both maximal velocity and affinity. A decrease in temperature apparently accentuated the anomeric difference in both maximal velocity and affinity of bovine hexokinase. Such a difference consisted in a higher maximal velocity with beta- than alpha-D-glucose, but a greater affinity for the alpha- than beta-anomer. In yeast hexokinase, however, the decrease in temperature suppressed the anomeric difference in maximal velocity and inversed the anomeric difference in affinity. In the case of both enzymes, the fall in temperature decreased more the maximal velocity recorded with alpha-D-glucose than that measured with beta-D-glucose, and severely lowered the Km for alpha-D-glucose, whilst failing to affect significantly the Km for beta-D-glucose. These findings, which allow to reconcile prior apparently conflicting data, reveal that the anomeric behaviour of hexokinase is affected by the ambient temperature. Our data also support the view that hexokinase underwent a phylogenic evolution in terms of its anomeric specificity.  相似文献   

13.
The anomeric preference in the influx and efflux of D-glucose across the human erythrocyte membrane was studied. beta-D-Glucose was transported 1.5 times faster than alpha-D-glucose into the cells, when washed cells were incubated at 20 degrees C in medium containing either alpha- or beta-D-glucose (100 mM). On the other hand, no difference between half-times of efflux of the two anomers was distinguishable. The result demonstrates the presence of influx-efflux asymmetry in anomeric preference in D-glucose transport across the human erythrocyte membrane, and is consistent with the view (Barnett et al., Biochem. J. 145, 417-429, 1975) that the C-1 hydroxyl group of D-glucose interacts with the D-glucose transport protein only in the influx, but not in the efflux.  相似文献   

14.
It was recently proposed that alpha-D-glucose 6-phosphate may undergo enzyme-to-enzyme channelling between glucokinase and phosphoglucoisomerase in rat pancreatic islets. The present study aims at exploring whether a different situation prevails in cells deprived of glucokinase, namely in erythrocytes. At anomeric equilibrium, the ratio between D-[2-3H]glucose and D-[5-3H]glucose conversion to 3HOH was lower in rat erythrocytes incubated for 60 min at 4 degrees C in the presence of 2.8 mM, rather than 8.3 mM, D-glucose. This coincided with both a greater relative increase in beta-D-[5-3H]glucose, as compared to alpha-D-[5-3H]glucose, conversion to 3HOH and an increase in the beta/alpha ratio for 3HOH generation from D-[5-3H]glucose in response to an increase in the anomeric concentration from 2.8 to 8.3 mM, the suppression of the difference between the beta/alpha ratios for 3HOH generation from D-[2-3H]glucose and D-[5-3H]glucose in the erythrocytes incubated at 8.3 mM, as distinct from 2.8 mM, alpha- and beta-D-glucose, and a [2-3H]/[5-3H] ratio for 3HOH generation lower than unity in erythrocytes exposed to alpha-D-glucose but not significantly different from unity in the presence of beta-D-glucose. These findings emphasize the relevance of alpha-D-glucose 6-phosphate channelling between hexokinase and phosphoglucoisomerase as a determinant of the difference between D-[2-3H]glucose and D-[5-3H]glucose conversion to 3HOH, and reveal that the regulation of such a tunnelling process by the concentration of the D-glucose represents, in rat erythrocytes, a mirror image of that observed in rat pancreatic islets. The regulation of this process thus tightly depends on the identity of the hexokinase enzyme mainly responsible for the phosphorylation of D-glucose in distinct cell types.  相似文献   

15.
The substrate specificity of immobilized D-glucose isomerase (EC 5.3. 1.5) is investigated with an immobilized enzyme-packed reactor. A series of isomerization experiments with alpha-, beta-, and equilibrated D-glucose solutions indicates that beta anomer as well as alpha anomer is a substrate of the glucose isomerase at pH 7.5 and 60 degrees C. For substrate concentration of 0.028 mol l(-1) (1% w/v), the initial conversion rate of alpha-D-glucose was 43% higher than that with equilibrated glucose at the same concentration and 113% higher than beta-D-glucose conversion rate. This anomeric reactivity of glucose isomerase is mathematically described with a set of kinetic equations based on the reaction steps complying with Briggs-Haldane mechanism and the experimentally determined kinetic constants. The proposed reaction mechanism includes the mutarotation and the isomerization reactions of alpha- and beta-D-glucose with different rate constants.  相似文献   

16.
The metabolism of D-glucose displays anomeric specificity in rat pancreatic islets. The aim of the present report is to investigate whether such a situation implies enzyme-to-enzyme tunnelling of metabolites in the early steps of glycolysis. For such a purpose, the modelling of alpha- and beta-D-glucose catabolism, itself based on available information concerning both the utilisation of these two anomers and the intrinsic properties of phosphoglucoisomerase, was first examined. According to a theoretical model with enzyme-to-enzyme channelling, the generation of 3HOH from D-[2-3H]glucose should be higher in islets exposed to beta-D-glucose rather than alpha-D-glucose, whilst the opposite situation should prevail in the case of D-[5-3H]glucose conversion to 3HOH. Experimental data collected in rat islets incubated for 60 min at 4 degrees C in the presence of either alpha- or beta-D-glucose mixed with tracer amounts of either alpha- or beta-D-[2- 3H]glucose and alpha- or beta-D-[5-3H]glucose indicate that the beta/alpha ratio for D-[2-3H]glucose conversion to 3HOH is indeed higher than the beta/alpha ratio for D-[5-3H]glucose conversion to 3HOH. These findings are consistent with the postulated enzyme-to-enzyme tunnelling of glycolytic intermediates between hexokinase isoenzyme(s), phosphoglucoisomerase and, possibly, phosphofructokinase.  相似文献   

17.
The anomeric form of glucose produced by glucose-6-phosphatase was studied using an apparatus that specifically measures beta-D-glucose. The time course of beta-D-glucose formation from glucose-6-P by glucose-6-phosphatase is essentially linear. In the presence of mutarotase, this rate is reduced to 70% of that obtained in the absence of mutarotase. When detergent treated microsomes were used, the rate of beta-D-glucose formation is unaffected by mutarotase. These results suggest that only beta-anomer of glucose is produced by microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase and this specificity is determined by translocase for glucose-6-P or glucose. It was also demonstrated that alpha-D-glucose is the substrate for glucokinase.  相似文献   

18.
Mild hyperglycemia was induced in normal rats by oral administration of both diazoxide and D-glucose. After 48 hours of such a treatment, the insulin and glucagon secretory responses of the perfused pancreas to alpha- and beta-D-glucose (3.3 mM) were examined in the presence of 10.0 mM L-leucine. The output of insulin, but not that of glucagon, and the perfusion pressure were higher in treated than control rats. The alpha-anomer of D-glucose was a more potent insulin secretagogue than beta-D-glucose in both control and treated rats. However, the alpha/beta ratio in insulin output was twice higher in control than treated rats. By analogy with other experimental models of diabetes, the attenuation in the anomeric difference of glucose-stimulated insulin output in the treated rats could reflect an altered secretory response to alpha- rather than beta-D-glucose. These findings suggest that hyperglycemia provokes, as a function of its severity and duration, first attenuation and then suppression, if not inversion, of the anomeric preference for alpha-D-glucose in insulin release. They are also compatible with the hypothesis that the anomeric malaise, associated with B-cell glucotoxicity, is caused by a progressive accumulation of glycogen in this cell.  相似文献   

19.
At a low concentration of D-glucose (3.3 mM), the phosphorylation rate of this hexose in rat pancreatic islet homogenates incubated at 8 degrees C is higher with the beta- than with the alpha-anomer, as expected from the anomeric specificity of hexokinase. In the presence of a high concentration of glucose 6-phosphate (3.0 mM), which inhibits hexokinase but not glucokinase, the phosphorylation rates of the two anomers are not significantly different from one another. Nevertheless, in intact islets exposed at 8 degrees C to the same low concentration of D-glucose, the alpha-anomer augments, more than the beta-anomer, the production of lactic acid and net uptake of 45Ca. At the same concentration (3.3 mM), the alpha-anomer is also more potent than the beta-anomer in enhancing insulin release from perfused pancreases stimulated at 37 degrees C by L-leucine or by the combination of Ba2+ and theophylline. It is concluded that the participation of glucokinase is not essential for the anomeric specificity of glycolysis and insulin release in rat pancreatic islets.  相似文献   

20.
Maltose phosphorylase, long considered strictly specific for beta-D-glucopyranosyl phosphate (beta-D-glucose 1-P), was found to catalyze the reaction beta-D-glucosyl fluoride + alpha-D-glucose----alpha-maltose + HF, at a rapid rate, V = 11.2 +/- 1.2 mumol/(min.mg), and K = 13.1 +/- 4.4 mM with alpha-D-glucose saturating, at 0 degrees C. This reaction is analogous to the synthesis of maltose from beta-D-glucose 1-P + D-glucose (the reverse of maltose phosphorolysis). In acting upon beta-D-glucosyl fluoride, maltose phosphorylase was found to use alpha-D-glucose as a cosubstrate but not beta-D-glucose or other close analogs (e.g., alpha-D-glucosyl fluoride) lacking an axial 1-OH group. Similarly, the enzyme was shown to use alpha-maltose as a substrate but not beta-maltose or close analogs (e.g., alpha-maltosyl fluoride) lacking an axial 1-OH group. These results indicate that interaction of the axial 1-OH group of the disaccharide donor or sugar acceptor with a particular protein group near the reaction center is required for effective catalysis. This interaction appears to be the means that leads maltose phosphorylase to promote a narrowly defined set of glucosyl transfer reactions with little hydrolysis, in contrast to other glycosylases that catalyze both hydrolytic and nonhydrolytic reactions.  相似文献   

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