首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Transport rates of the nonphosphorylated D-glucose analogs 6-deoxy-D-glucose and D-xylose were measured in quiescent and serum-stimulated cultures of mouse 3T3 cells, in SV40-transformed 3T3 cells (SV101), and in a density revertant cell line derived from SV101 (Fl-SV101). Initial rates of both entry and exit of 6-deoxy-D-glucose and D-xylose were more than threefold higher in serum-stimulated 3T3 and in SV101 cells than they were in quiescent 3T3 cells, but transport rates were not higher in the transformed cells (SV101) than they were in serum-stimulated 3T3. Confluent cultures of Fl-SV101 showed lower rates of transport than serum-stimulated Fl-SV101, but not as low as quiescent 3T3 cells. These data confirm previous findings of others with other analogs that glucose transport is one of the cell functions that is depressed when 3T3 cells enter the quiescent G0 state, but emphasize that SV40-transformed 3T3 cells do not show higher activity of the D-glucose carrier than do actively growing 3T3 cells. Thus, enhanced glucose transport appears not to be a specific consequence of transformation, but a reflection of the active growth state of the cell.  相似文献   

2.
Transport regulation by different metabolizable and nonmetabolizable sugars was studied in human fibroblasts. Sugars were classed as glucose-like (D-mannose, 3-0-methyl-D-glucose, thio-D-glucose, and D-allose) and starvation-like (D-galactose, D-fructose, L-glucose, D-xylose, 6-deoxy-D-glucose and 2-deoxy-D-glucose) based on their competence in curbing glucose starvation enhanced transport. No significant correlation existed between the ability of a sugar to curb hexose transport and the KI of that sugar in inhibiting hexose transport. Independence of the transport curb from glucose metabolism was observed since nonmetabolizable analogs of D-glucose when substituted for D-glucose in the culture medium effected glucose [i.e. 3-0-methyl-D-glucose (3-OMG)] and starvation-like (i.e. 6- and 2-deoxy-D-glucose) effects. The KI of inhibition pf 2-deoxy-D-glucose transport for 3-OMG was 8.5 mM, similar to those obtained for 6-deoxyglucose and 2-deoxyglucose on 2-deoxyglycose transport (7.5 and 3.5 mM, respectively) and on 3-0-methylglucose transport (3.5 and 2.5 mM, respectively). An equimolar mixture of D-glucose and 3-OMG (5.55 mM each) was more effective than 11.1 mM D-glucose or 3-OMG alone in curbing hexose transport or reversing hexose starvation induced increases in transport. The effect of 3-OMG may be independent of glucose metabolism but it is possible that 3-OMG structurally mimics a metabolite of glucose that may interact with intracellular regulators of carrier degradation and or expression.  相似文献   

3.
The objective of this investigation was to determine whether the rate of glucose uptake by mouse 3T3 cells was a primary determinant of growth rate. The experimental approach was to control the rate of glucose uptake into intracellular pools by supplying this sugar at varying concentration in minimal Eagle's medium with dialyzed serum in the absence and presence of 6-deoxy-D-glucose, a metabolically inert homomorphic analog of D-glucose that competitively inhibits the uptake of D-glucose. Total hexose (D-glucose and 6-deoxy-D-glucose) concentration was maintained at the physiological concentration of 5.5 mM, in order to maintain saturation and maximum activity of the D-glucose transport system; thus the flux of D-glucose into the cell was controlled by adjusting its concentration relative to its competing nonmetabolizable analog. It was found that even when the concentration of D-glucose was reduced to 0.7 mM, one eighth of the “normal” level of 5.5 mM. and 6-deoxy-D-glucose was present in sevenfold excess (4.8 mM), conditions under which glucose uptake was reduced to 20% of that shown by cells in the presence of 5.5 mM D-glucose, and intracellular pools of glucose and phosphorylated sugars derived from glucose were reduced to approximately 14% of normal, there was not a significant decrease in growth rate. These data support the view that the rate of glucose uptake is not a primary determinant of growth rate under the usual conditions of cell culture.  相似文献   

4.
Protoplasts ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae prepared by snail-gut juice treatment were compared in their transport properties with intact cells. 1. Constitutive monosaccharide transport (D-xylose, 6-deoxy-D-glucose), as well as inducible transport of D-galactose, were unaltered. 2. Phosphorylation-associated transport of 2-deoxy-D-glucose was enhanced in protoplasts, possibly as a consequence of removal of the unstirred layer of the cell wall. 3. Proton-driven transports of trehalose, L-leucine, L-proline and monophosphate could not be activated by preincubation with D-glucose, apparently owing to lack of proton —solute coupling in transport. Utilization of glucose was not depressed but respiration was reduced by about 50% while acidification of the external medium after glucose addition was inhibited by more than 90%. This may be related to the inability of protoplast plasma membrane H-ATPase to be activated by glucose and hence to impaired proton-translocating capacity. Uranyl ions inhibited generally much less in protoplasts than in intact cells although their binding to protoplasts was greater (maximum 0.68 fmol per cell but 3.2 fmol per protoplast).  相似文献   

5.
We have recently demonstrated that two hexose-transport systems are present in undifferentiated rat L6 myoblasts: D-glucose and 2-deoxy-D-glucose are preferentially transported by the high-affinity system, whereas 3-O-methyl-D-glucose is transported primarily by the low-affinity system. Mutant D23 is found to be defective only in the high-affinity hexose-transport system. The low-affinity transport system is much more sensitive to inhibition by cytochalasin B (CB). The present study examines the identity, properties and regulation of the CB-binding sites by measuring CB binding to both whole cells and plasma membrane. Scatchard analysis of the binding data revealed the presence of two CB-binding sites, namely CBH and CBL. These two sites differ not only in their affinity for CB, but their levels can also be differentially altered by various biochemical, physiological and genetic manipulations. CBL resembles the high-affinity hexose-transport system in that it is absent in mutant D23 and is present in larger quantities in glucose-starved cells. Moreover, CB binding to this site is inhibited by D-glucose and 2-deoxy-D-glucose, the preferred substrates of the high-affinity hexose-transport system. On the other hand, CBH is found to be unaltered in mutant D23, which also retains the normal low-affinity hexose-transport system. CBH also resembles the low-affinity transport system in that it is not elevated in glucose-starved cells. Furthermore, binding of CB to this site can be inhibited by 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, the preferred substrate of the low-affinity transport system. It should be noted that 2-deoxy-D-glucose does not have much effect on CBH, and vice versa. Studies with purified membrane preparations indicate that both CB-binding sites are present in similar ratios in the plasma membrane and the low-density microsomal fraction. Plasma-membrane studies also reveal that D-glucose 6-phosphate, but not 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate, is very effective in activating CB binding. Data presented suggest that CB binding may be regulated by sugar analogues in an allosteric manner.  相似文献   

6.
D-Glucose transport was studied with isolated brush border membrane vesicles from guinea pig jejunum. Saturation curves were carried out at either 25 or 35 degrees C in buffers containing Na+, Li+, K+ (100 mM chloride salt), or sorbitol (200 mM). Uncorrected uptake rates were fitted by nonlinear regression analysis to an equation involving one diffusional and two saturable terms. In the presence of Na+ at 35 degrees C, two saturable systems (Km = 0.4 and 24 mM, respectively) were evident, as well as a diffusion component quantitatively identical with that measured with L-glucose in separate experiments. In contrast, at 25 degrees C only one saturable system was apparent (Km = 1.2 mM): the second exhibited diffusion-like kinetics. In the presence of Na+ at 35 degrees C, D-glucose uptake was fully inhibited by both D-glucose and D-galactose, whereas alpha-methylglucoside gave kinetics of partial inhibition. We conclude that in the presence of Na+ there are at least two distinct D-glucose transport systems: 1) System I, a low temperature-sensitive system, fully inhibited by D-glucose, D-galactose, and alpha-methylglucoside; we identify it as the "classical" D-glucose/Na+ cotransport system, insensitive to inhibition by cytochalasin B and obligatorily dependent on Na+; and 2) System II, a high temperature-sensitive system where D-glucose and D-galactose inhibit but alpha-methylglucoside is inert. Its cation specificity is unclear but it appears to be sensitive to cytochalasin B inhibition. When Li+ or K+ substituted for Na+, only one transport system was apparent. The Li+-activated transport was: independent of the incubation temperature; inhibited by D-glucose and D-galactose but not by alpha-methylglucoside, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, D-mannose, and D-xylose; and sensitive to cytochalasin B inhibition. The exact nature of the system (or systems) involved in D-glucose transport in the absence of sodium remains to be established.  相似文献   

7.
1. The cyanobacterium Aphanocapsa 6714 which grow in the dark on D-glucose, will take up D-glucose and the analogue 3-O-methyl-D-glucose; uptake of each of these compounds was inhibited competitively by the other and by 6-deoxy-D-glucose. 2. This cyanobacterium accumulated 3-O-methyl-D-glucose up to 100-fold relative to the medium but did not modify or metabolize it to a significant degree. 3. Intracellular 3-O-methyl-D-glucose was rapidly displaced from Aphanocapsa 6714 by exogenous D-glucose and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose. 4. Although not characterized to the same extent, D-glucose and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake by Nostoc strain Mac, another cyanobacterium capable of growth in the dark on D-glucose, was similar. 5. Other cyanobacteria that do not grow on D-glucose take up this compound at much lower rates which were unaffected by analogues of D-glucose that greatly reduced carbohydrate uptake by Aphanocapsa 6714 and Nostoc strain Mac. 6. It is therefore proposed that Aphanocapsa 6714 and Nostoc strain Mac possess a mechanism for the active transport of D-glucose. The absence of this transport mechanism is suggested as the reason why other strains fail to grow in the dark on this substrate. These latter organisms are therefore naturally cryptic with respect to D-glucose as a growth substrate.  相似文献   

8.
Measurements of basal and insulin-stimulated uptake of D-glucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose were determined in isolated fat cells from young and adult rats by an oil-centrifugation technique. At low sugar concentrations, uptake of D-glucose and 2-deoxy-D-glucose was greater in large cells from older animals than in small cells from young rats while at higher concentrations (3.0 mM–5.0 mM) uptake was similar. Insulin enhanced uptake of both sugars and the amounts accumulated by the two cell types were not significantly different. Also no difference was noted in basal rate of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake or when uptake was accelerated by insulin stimulation. These findings suggest that large adipocytes from adult rats are not as insulin-resistant as previously suggested but, instead, have an efficient D-glucose transport system which is responsive to insulin stimulation.  相似文献   

9.
We have identified and characterized the D-xylose transport system of Lactobacillus pentosus. Uptake of D-xylose was not driven by the proton motive force generated by malolactic fermentation and required D-xylose metabolism. The kinetics of D-xylose transport were indicative of a low-affinity facilitated-diffusion system with an apparent K(m) of 8.5 mM and a V(max) of 23 nmol min(-1) mg of dry weight(-1). In two mutants of L. pentosus defective in the phosphoenolpyruvate:mannose phosphotransferase system, growth on D-xylose was absent due to the lack of D-xylose transport. However, transport of the pentose was not totally abolished in a third mutant, which could be complemented after expression of the L. curvatus manB gene encoding the cytoplasmic EIIB(Man) component of the EII(Man) complex. The EII(Man) complex is also involved in D-xylose transport in L. casei ATCC 393 and L. plantarum 80. These two species could transport and metabolize D-xylose after transformation with plasmids which expressed the D-xylose-catabolizing genes of L. pentosus, xylAB. L. casei and L. plantarum mutants resistant to 2-deoxy-D-glucose were defective in EII(Man) activity and were unable to transport D-xylose when transformed with plasmids containing the xylAB genes. Finally, transport of D-xylose was found to be the rate-limiting step in the growth of L. pentosus and of L. plantarum and L. casei ATCC 393 containing plasmids coding for the D-xylose-catabolic enzymes, since the doubling time of these bacteria on D-xylose was proportional to the level of EII(Man) activity.  相似文献   

10.
Cellobiose phosphorylase (CBP) catalyzes the reversible phosphorolysis of cellobiose to produce α-D-glucopyranosyl phosphate (Glc1P) and D-glucose. It is an essential enzyme for the metabolism of cello-oligosaccharides in a ruminal bacterium, Ruminococcus albus. In this study, recombinant R. albus CBP (RaCBP) produced in Escherichia coli was characterized. It showed highest activity at pH 6.2 at 50 °C, and was stable in a pH range of 5.5-8.8 and at below 40 °C. It phosphorolyzed only cellobiose efficiently, and the reaction proceeded through a random-ordered bi bi mechanism, by which inorganic phosphate and cellobiose bind in random order and D-glucose is released before Glc1P. In the synthetic reaction, RaCBP showed highest activity to D-glucose, followed by 6-deoxy-D-glucose. D-Mannose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, D-glucosamine, D-xylose, 1,5-anhydro-D-glucitol, and gentiobiose also served as acceptors, although the activities for them were much lower than for D-glucose. D-Glucose acted as a competitive-uncompetitive inhibitor of the reverse synthetic reaction, which bound not only the Glc1P site (competitive) but also the ternary enzyme-Glc1P-D-glucose complex (uncompetitive).  相似文献   

11.
Specificity and kinetics of hexose transport in Trypanosoma brucei   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Transport of 6-deoxy-D-glucose was studied in Trypanosoma brucei in order to characterise the kinetics of hexose transport in this organism using a nonphosphorylated sugar. Kinetic parameters for efflux and entry, measured using zero-trans and equilibrium exchange protocols, indicate that the transporter is probably kinetically symmetrical. Comparison of the kinetic constants of D-glucose metabolism with those for 6-deoxy-D-glucose transport shows that transport across the plasma membrane is likely to be the rate-limiting step of glucose utilisation. The transport rate is nevertheless very fast and 6-deoxy-D-glucose, at concentrations below Km, enters the cells with a half filling time of less than 2 s at 20 degrees C. Thus the high metabolic capacity of these organisms is matched by a high transport rate. The structural requirements for the trypanosome hexose transporter were explored by measuring inhibition constants (Ki) for a range of D-glucose analogues including fluoro and deoxy sugars as well as epimeric hexoses. The relative affinities shown by these analogues indicated H-bonds from the carrier to the C-3, C-4 and C-5 hydroxyl oxygens and from the C-1 and C-3 hydroxyl hydrogens to the binding site. Hydrophobic interactions are likely at the C-2 and C-6 regions of the glucose molecule. Spatial constraints appear to occur around C-4 indicating that the transport site at this position is not freely open to the external solution as is the case with the mammalian hexose transporter. However, the trypanosome transporter appears to accept D-fructose but the common mammalian (erythrocyte type) hexose transporter does not.  相似文献   

12.
A carbohydrate:acceptor oxidoreductase from Paraconiothyrium sp. was purified and characterized. The enzyme efficiently oxidized beta-(1-->4) linked sugars, such as lactose, xylobiose, and cellooligosaccharides. The enzyme also oxidized maltooligosaccharides, D-glucose, D-xylose, D-galactose, L-arabinose, and 6-deoxy-D-glucose. It specifically oxidized the beta-anomer of lactose. Molecular oxygen and 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol were reduced by the enzyme as electron acceptors. The Paraconiothyrium enzyme was identified as a carbohydrate:acceptor oxidoreductase according to its specificity for electron donors and acceptors, and its molecular properties, as well as the N-terminal amino acid sequence. Further comparison of the amino acid sequences of lactose oxidizing enzymes indicated that carbohydrate:acceptor oxidoreductases belong to the same group as glucooligosaccharide oxidase, while they differ from cellobiose dehydrogenases and cellobiose:quinone oxidoreductases.  相似文献   

13.
Transport of glucose by Leishmania tropica promastigotes was measured by the uptake of the nonutilizable glucose analog, 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DOG), using the rapid filtration method. Both D-glucose and 2-DOG show identical rates of initial uptake. Intracellular 2-DOG readily exchanges with extracellular D-glucose and 2-DOG uptake is competitively inhibited by D-glucose. These observations suggest that both sugars are taken up by the same system. Neither the glucose analog α-methyl-D-glucoside (α-MG) nor 3-0-methyl glucose (3-0-MG) is taken up to any appreciable extent. Transport of 2-DOG shows saturation kinetics with a Vmax of 3.2 nmoles/mg cells/min and a Km of 0.16 mM. There is thus a stereospecific, carrier-mediated transport system for glucose uptake in L. tropica. About 2/3 of the intracellular pool following transport consists of 2-deoxy-D-glucose phosphate (2-DOG-P) and the remainder is free, unaltered 2-DOG.  相似文献   

14.
Utilization and transport of glucose in Olea Europaea cell suspensions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cell suspensions of Olea europaea var. Galega Vulgar grown in batch culture with 0.5% (w/v) glucose were able to transport D-[(14)C]glucose according to Michaelis-Menten kinetics associated with a first-order kinetics. The monosaccharide carrier exhibited high affinity (K(m) approximately 50 micro M) and was able to transport D-glucose, D-fructose, D-galactose, D-xylose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, but not D-arabinose, D-mannitol or L-glucose. D-[(14)C]glucose uptake was associated with proton uptake, which also followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The transport of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose was accumulative (40-fold, at pH 5.0) and the protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone strongly inhibited sugar accumulation. The results were consistent with the involvement of a monosaccharide: proton symporter with a stoichiometry of 1 : 1. When cells were grown with 3% (w/v) glucose, the uptake of D-[(14)C]glucose followed first-order kinetics and monosaccharide:proton symporter activity was not detected. The value obtained for the permeability coefficient of hexoses in O. europaea cells supported the hypothesis that the first-order kinetics observed in 0.5% and 3% sugar-grown cells was produced exclusively by passive diffusion of the sugar. The results indicate that in O. europaea cells sugar levels have a regulatory effect on sugar transport, because the activity for monosaccharide transport was repressed by high sugar concentrations.  相似文献   

15.
The cepA putative gene encoding a cellobiose phosphorylase of Thermotoga maritima MSB8 was cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli BL21-codonplus-RIL and characterized in detail. The maximal enzyme activity was observed at pH 6.2 and 80 degrees C. The energy of activation was 74 kJ/mol. The enzyme was stable for 30 min at 70 degrees C in the pH range of 6-8. The enzyme phosphorolyzed cellobiose in an random-ordered bi bi mechanism with the random binding of cellobiose and phosphate followed by the ordered release of D-glucose and alpha-D-glucose-1-phosphate. The Km for cellobiose and phosphate were 0.29 and 0.15 mM respectively, and the kcat was 5.4 s(-1). In the synthetic reaction, D-glucose, D-mannose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, D-glucosamine, D-xylose, and 6-deoxy-D-glucose were found to act as glucosyl acceptors. Methyl-beta-D-glucoside also acted as a substrate for the enzyme and is reported here for the first time as a substrate for cellobiose phosphorylases. D-Xylose had the highest (40 s(-1)) kcat followed by 6-deoxy-D-glucose (17 s(-1)) and 2-deoxy-D-glucose (16 s(-1)). The natural substrate, D-glucose with the kcat of 8.0 s(-1) had the highest (1.1 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1)) kcat/Km compared with other glucosyl acceptors. D-Glucose, a substrate of cellobiose phosphorylase, acted as a competitive inhibitor of the other substrate, alpha-D-glucose-1-phosphate, at higher concentrations.  相似文献   

16.
The yeast Rhodotorula glutinis (Rhodosporidium toruloides) is capable of accumulative transport of a wide variety of monosaccharides. Initial velocity studies of the uptake of 2-deoxy-D-glucose were consistent with the presence of at least two carriers for this sugar in the Rhodotorula plasma membrane. Non-linear regression analysis of the data returned maximum velocities of 0.8 +/- 0.2 and 2.0 +/- 0.2 nmol/min per mg (wet weight) and Km values of 18 +/- 4 and 120 +/- 20 microM, respectively, for the two carriers. Kinetic studies of D-glucose transport also revealed two carriers with maximum velocities of 1.1 +/- 0.4 and 2.4 +/- 0.4 nmol/min per mg (wet weight) and Km values of 12 +/- 3 and 55 +/- 12 microM. As expected, 2-deoxy-D-glucose was a competitive inhibitor of D-glucose transport. Ki values for the inhibition were 16 +/- 8 and 110 +/- 40 microM. These Ki values were in good agreement with the Km values for 2-deoxy-D-glucose transport. D-Xylose, the 5-deoxymethyl analog of D-glucose, appears to utilize the D-glucose/2-deoxy-D-glucose carriers. This pentose was observed to be a competitive inhibitor of D-glucose (Ki values = 0.14 +/- 0.06 and 5.6 +/- 1.6 mM) and 2-deoxy-D-glucose (Ki values = 0.15 +/- 0.07 and 4.6 +/- 1.2 mM) transport.  相似文献   

17.
Poorly metabolized hexoses, such as 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose and D-galactose failed to reproduce the inhibition of 86Rb outflow, the early inhibition and secondary rise in 45Ca efflux and the stimulation of insulin release evoked by D-glucose in perifused rat islets. Insulin release induced by either D-glucose or 2-ketoisocaproate was also unaffected by 3-O-methyl-D-glucose. It is concluded that hexose transport in islet cells does not represent in itself a significant determinant of the cationic and secretory response to D-glucose.  相似文献   

18.
We report the kinetic characteristics for D-galactose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose transport in a galactokinase null-allele mutant of a Chinese hamster V79 cell line. GalKl cells exhibited a Km and Vmax for D-galactose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose transport of 8.6 +/- 2.6 mM and 26.1 +/- 7.2 nmol/mg p/min, 4.1 +/- 1.2 mM and 40.3 +/- 9.5 nmol/mg p/min, and 7.01 +/- .85 mM and 11.6 +/- 4.8 nmol/mg p/30 s, respectively. Nonsaturable hexose uptake was determined using cytochalasin B inhibition of galactose uptake (89.6 +/- 3.7% of galactose uptake was cytochalasin B inhibitable) and L-glucose uptake (7.5% of the galactose uptake). D-Galactose was not metabolized and effluxed rapidly from preloaded cells. The Kls for the inhibition of D-galactose transport were 4.5 +/- 2.5 mM for D-glucose, 7.0 +/- 2.0 mM for 2-deoxy-D-glucose, 6 mM for 2-deoxy-D-galactose and 6.0 +/- 0.6 mM for 3-O-methyl-D-glucose. This indicates the operation of a single common carrier. The hexose transport rate decreased 50-60% after 24 h serum deprivation. Addition of insulin was shown to increase hexose transport (more than twofold) in serum-deprived cells. Hexose transport rates increased substantially in glucose-deprived, D-fructose- or D-galactose-fed cells as compared to glucose-fed cells. Since GalKl does not metabolize galactose, the hexose transport increases induced by feeding cells galactose suggest that carrier interaction with ligand is not a significant factor in transport regulation in GalKl. The kinetic and regulatory characteristics of D-galactose transport in the GalKl cell line indicate that this system is a good model to study sugar transport from a mechanistic and regulatory point of view.  相似文献   

19.
Inositol 2-dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.18) activity appears during growth of Bacillus subtilis (strain 60015) in nutrient sporulation medium. Its synthesis is induced by myo-inositol and repressed by D-glucose. The enzyme has an apparent molecular weight of 155,000 to 160,000 as determined by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, and it is comprised of four subunits, each having a molecular weight of 39,000 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The isoelectric point of the enzyme is 4.4 as determined by column isoelectric focusing. The enzyme shows the highest Vmax and lowest Km with myo-inositol as substrate but does not react with scyllo-inositol; it also reacts with the alpha anomer (but not the beta anomer) of D-glucose and with D-xylose. Apparently, the enzyme can remove only the single equatorial hydrogen of the cyclitol or pyranose ring. In contrast to the glucose dehydrogenase of spores, which reacts with D-glucose or 2-deoxy-D-glucose and with NAD or NADP, inositol dehydrogenase requires NAD and does not react with 2-deoxy-D-glucose.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract: The major component of D-glucose transfer across the membranous sites of the blood-nerve barrier (BNB) occurs via a facilitative mechanism at a rate greater than twice the rate of D-glucose metabolism by nerve. To characterize further properties of monosaccharide transport at the BNB, unidirectional transfer constant (K) values were determined in vivo in tibial nerve of anesthetized rats for radiolabeled mannitol, L-glucose, and a series of D-glucose analogs. K values (× 10−4 ml s−1 g−l) equaled 4.8 for 2-deoxy-D-glucose, 3.7 for D-glucose, 2.3 for 3- O -methyl-D-glucose, 1.4 for D-man-nose, 0.6 for D-galactose, 0.2 for mannitol, and 0.19 for L-glucose. The rank order of ratios between K values of a D-hexose and D-glucose, which reflects the rank order of affinity of the system for individual sugars, was 2-deoxy-D-glucose > D-glucose > 3-O-methyl-D-glucose > D-mannose > D-galactose. The results demonstrate that the order of substrate affinity of the monosaccharide carrier at the BNB is similar to that at cerebral capillaries and at erythrocytes. At normal concentrations of plasma D-glucose, the contribution of simple passive diffusion to unidirectional D-glucose influx across the BNB equals 5%, which is greater than that at cerebral capillaries and reflects the greater permeability to hydrophilic nonelectrolytes of the endoneurial vasculature.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号