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1.
A turbidimetric method has been developed for the continous monitoring of the enzyme reaction catalyzed by glycogen phosphorylase. This method is based on the registration of the turbidity of glycogen solution at wavelengths above 300 nm. It has been shown that increase in the turbidity is strictly proportional to the quantity of glucose 1-phosphate formed during the enzyme reaction. The method has the advantage of continuity, and it is suitable for determining the initial rate of catalytic synthesis or degradation of glycogen in a relatively simple and fast way. The kinetic experiments may be carried out under various conditions. The method of calculation of the overall equilibrium constant of the enzyme reaction catalyzed by glycogen phosphorylase has been elaborated. This method is based on the analysis of the dependence of the initial rate of the enzyme reaction on the proportiona of the substrate of the forward reaction: [Pi]/([Pi]+[G-1-P]).  相似文献   

2.
Glycogen synthase activation by sugars in isolated hepatocytes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We have investigated the activation by sugars of glycogen synthase in relation to (i) phosphorylase a activity and (ii) changes in the intracellular concentration of glucose 6-phosphate and adenine nucleotides. All the sugars tested in this work present the common denominator of activating glycogen synthase. On the other hand, phosphorylase a activity is decreased by mannose and glucose, unchanged by galactose and xylitol, and increased by tagatose, glyceraldehyde, and fructose. Dihydroxyacetone exerts a biphasic effect on phosphorylase. These findings provide additional evidence proving that glycogen synthase can be activated regardless of the levels of phosphorylase a, clearly establishing that a nonsequential mechanism for the activation of glycogen synthase occurs in liver cells. The glycogen synthase activation state is related to the concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate and adenine nucleotides. In this respect, tagatose, glyceraldehyde, and fructose deplete ATP and increase AMP contents, whereas glucose, mannose, galactose, xylitol, and dihydroxyacetone do not alter the concentration of these nucleotides. In addition, all these sugars, except glyceraldehyde, increase the intracellular content of glucose 6-phosphate. The activation of glycogen synthase by sugars is reflected in decreases on both kinetic constants of the enzyme, M0.5 (for glucose 6-phosphate) and S0.5 (for UDP-glucose). We propose that hepatocyte glycogen synthase is activated by monosaccharides by a mechanism triggered by changes in glucose 6-phosphate and adenine nucleotide concentrations which have been described to modify glycogen synthase phosphatase activity. This mechanism represents a metabolite control of the sugar-induced activation of hepatocyte glycogen synthase.  相似文献   

3.
We discovered a potassium ion-dependent trehalose phosphorylase (Bsel_1207) belonging to glycoside hydrolase family 65 from halophilic Bacillus selenitireducens MLS10. Under high potassium ion concentrations, the recombinant Bsel_1207 produced in Escherichia coli existed as an active dimeric form that catalyzed the reversible phosphorolysis of trehalose in a typical sequential bi bi mechanism releasing β-d-glucose 1-phosphate and d-glucose. Decreasing potassium ion concentrations significantly reduced thermal and pH stabilities, leading to formation of inactive monomeric Bsel_1207.  相似文献   

4.
Two substrains of the epithelial liver cell line C1I, one storing large amounts of glycogen, the other one being very poor in glycogen were used as a model for studying glycogen synthesis. The glycogen content of glycogen-rich cells doubled during the proliferative phase and remained high in plateau phase although glycogen synthase I activity was not significantly altered during growth cycle and was too low to account for the increase in glycogen. However, the activity of the glucose 6-phosphate (Glc6-P)-dependent synthase rose continuously during growth cycle, and intracellular Glc6-P-concentration increased about 10-fold in log phase cells to 0.72 mumol g-1 wet weight. A0.5 of synthase for Glc6-P was 0.79 mM. It was also found that in contrast to the enzyme from normal liver, glycogen phosphorylase a from C1I cells was inhibited by Glc6-P, the apparent Ki being 0.45 mM. It was concluded that glycogen accumulation in C1I cells was due to stimulation of synthase and inhibition of phosphorylase by Glc6-P. Findings from the glycogen-poor cell line which revealed similar specific activities of synthase and phosphorylase but only low Glc6-P (0.056 mumol g-1 wet weight) supported this conclusion. Addition of glucose to starved cells resulted in a transient activation of synthase in both cell lines. Net glycogen synthesis, was, however, only observed in the cells with a high Glc6-P-content. Thus, modulation of synthase and phosphorylase by Glc6-P and not activation/inactivation of the enzymes seems to play a predominant role in glycogen accumulation in this cell line.  相似文献   

5.
Traditionally, glycogen synthase (GS) has been considered to catalyze the key step of glycogen synthesis and to exercise most of the control over this metabolic pathway. However, recent advances have shown that other factors must be considered. Moreover, the control of glycogen deposition does not follow identical mechanisms in muscle and liver. Glucose must be phosphorylated to promote activation of GS. Glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) binds to GS, causing the allosteric activation of the enzyme probably through a conformational rearrangement that simultaneously converts it into a better substrate for protein phosphatases, which can then lead to the covalent activation of GS. The potency of Glc-6-P for activation of liver GS is determined by its source, since Glc-6-P arising from the catalytic action of glucokinase (GK) is much more effective in mediating the activation of the enzyme than the same metabolite produced by hexokinase I (HK I). As a result, hepatic glycogen deposition from glucose is subject to a system of control in which the 'controller', GS, is in turn controlled by GK. In contrast, in skeletal muscle, the control of glycogen synthesis is shared between glucose transport and GS. The characteristics of the two pairs of isoenzymes, liver GS/GK and muscle GS/HK I, and the relationships that they establish are tailored to suit specific metabolic roles of the tissues in which they are expressed. The key enzymes in glycogen metabolism change their intracellular localization in response to glucose. The changes in the intracellular distribution of liver GS and GK triggered by glucose correlate with stimulation of glycogen synthesis. The translocation of GS, which constitutes an additional mechanism of control, causes the orderly deposition of hepatic glycogen and probably represents a functional advantage in the metabolism of the polysaccharide.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract: The presence of glycogen in astroglia-rich primary cultures derived from the brains of newborn rats depends on the availability of glucose in the culture medium. On glucose deprivation, glycogen vanishes from the astroglial cultures. This decrease of glycogen content is completely prevented if 2-deoxyglucose in a concentration of > 1 m M or 1,5-gluconolactone (20 m M ) is present in the culture medium. 2-Deoxyglucose itself or 3- O -methylglucose, a glucose derivative that is not phosphorylated by hexokinase, does not reduce the activity of glycogen phosphorylase purified from bovine brain or in the homogenate of astroglia-rich rat primary cultures. In contrast, deoxyglucose-6-phosphate strongly inhibits the glycogen phosphorylase activities of the preparations. Half-maximal effects were obtained at deoxyglucose-6-phosphate concentrations of 0.75 (phosphorylase a, astroglial culture), 5 (phosphorylase b, astroglial culture), 2 (phosphorylase a, bovine brain), or 9 m M (phosphorylase b, bovine brain). Thus, the block of glycogen degradation in these cells appears to be due to inhibition of glycogen phosphorylase by deoxyglucose-6-phosphate rather than deoxyglucose itself. These results suggest that glucose-6-phosphate, rather than glucose, acts as a physiological negative feedback regulator of the brain isoenzyme of phosphorylase and thus of glycogen degradation in astrocytes.  相似文献   

7.
Kinetic analysis of the glycogen chain growth reaction catalyzed by glycogen phosphorylase b from rabbit skeletal muscle has been carried out over a wide range of AMP concentration under the saturation of the enzyme by glycogen. Applicability of some variants of the kinetic model involving the interaction of AMP- and glucose 1-phosphate-binding sites in the dimeric enzyme molecule is considered. A kinetic model of the enzymatic reaction describing adequately the activation of the enzyme by AMP and inhibition at sufficiently high concentrations of AMP is proposed.  相似文献   

8.
The kinetic analysis of the glycogen chain growth reaction catalyzed by glycogen phosphorylase b from rabbit skeletal muscle has been carried out over a wide range of concentrations of AMP under the saturation of the enzyme by glycogen. The applicability of 23 different variants of the kinetic model involving the interaction of AMP and glucose 1-phosphate binding sites in the dimeric enzyme molecule is considered. A kinetic model has been proposed which assumes: (i) the independent binding of one molecule of glucose 1-phosphate in the catalytic site on the one hand, and AMP in both allosteric effector sites and both nucleoside inhibitor sites of the dimeric enzyme molecule bound by glycogen on the other hand; (ii) the binding of AMP in one of the allosteric effector sites results in an increase in the affinity of other allosteric effector site to AMP; (iii) the independent binding of AMP to the nucleoside inhibitor sites of the dimeric enzyme molecule; (iv) the exclusive binding of the second molecule of glucose 1-phosphate in the catalytic site of glycogen phosphorylase b containing two molecules of AMP occupying both allosteric effector sites; and (v) the catalytic act occurs exclusively in the complex of the enzyme with glycogen, two molecules of AMP occupying both allosteric effector sites, and two molecules of glucose 1-phosphate occupying both catalytic sites.  相似文献   

9.
Purified glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase from Zymomonas mobilis was examined with respect to inhibition by phosphoenolpyruvate, ADP and ATP. Its molecular weight was 260,000 and the kinetics of substrate conversion indicated a random bi bi mechanism. This enzyme and the dehydrogenases from Z. anaerobia, Azotobacter chroococcum, A. vinelandii, and “Corynebacterium” autotrophicum strain 19/-/x were found to be allosterically inhibited by phosphoenolpyruvate, while those from several coryneform bacteria and from Escherichia coli or Pseudomonas fluorescens were not.  相似文献   

10.
The quenching of coenzyme fluorescence in glycogen phosphorylase b is reinvestigated. Data with anionic quenchers show deviations from the original Stern-Volmer kinetics. A kinetic analysis based on measured lifetime data indicates a collisional quenching process, which is, however, not diffusion-controlled. It is proposed, that the quenching takes place primarily by enzyme-bound quencher species. The observed inhibition of the enzyme reaction by I- and IO-3 is consistent with this hypothesis. The inhibition pattern and spectral investigation refer to a true competition with the substrate, glucose-1-phosphate. So, this dynamic quenching can be regarded as an indicator of rapid conformational fluctuations which bring the two important active-site groups in contact. Effect of ligand binding on the quenching of coenzyme fluorescence should also be revaluated according to these results.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of rabbit skeletal muscle phosphorylase kinase interaction with glycogen has been studied. At pH 6.8 the binding of phosphorylase kinase to glycogen proceeds only in the presence of Mg2+, whereas at pH 8.2 formation of the complex occurs even in the absence of Mg2+. On the other hand, the interaction of phosphorylase kinase with glycogen requires Ca2+ at both pH values. The initial rate of the complex formation is proportional to the enzyme and glycogen concentrations, suggesting the formation of the complex with stoichiometry 1:1 at the initial step of phosphorylase kinase binding by glycogen. According to the kinetic and sedimentation data, the substrate of the phosphorylase kinase reaction, glycogen phosphorylase b, favors the binding of phosphorylase kinase with glycogen. We suggest a model for the ordered binding of phosphorylase b and phosphorylase kinase to the glycogen particle that explains the increase in the tightness of phosphorylase kinase binding with glycogen in the presence of phosphorylase b.  相似文献   

12.
The kinetic model of carbohydrate metabolism has been expanded to include: (a) the accumulation of alpha and beta-cellulose, insoluble cell-wall glycogen and mucopolysaccharide; (b) the role of RNA turnover as a source of carbon for end-product synthesis and as a buffer regulating the level of uridine nucleotides in this metabolic network; and (c) the role of purine-nucleoside phosphorylase, 5'-AMP nucleotidase, nucleosidediphosphate kinase and polynucleotide phosphorylase. One of many predictions based on this model is that cells differentiating in the presence of glucose will produce sorocarps with an abnormally high trehalose to cellulose ratio. External perturbation of either the model or of developing cells by glucose increases the levels of sorocarp trehalose and glycogen, 5-fold and 6-fold respectively. Evaluation of the experimental data and the simulation analyses have allowed several predictions to be made concerning the compartmentation of metabolites and the permeability of cells to glucose during differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
The thermal stability of rabbit skeletal muscle glycogen phosphorylase b was characterized using enzymological inactivation studies, differential scanning calorimetry, and analytical ultracentrifugation. The results suggest that denaturation proceeds by the dissociative mechanism, i.e., it includes the step of reversible dissociation of the active dimer into inactive monomers and the following step of irreversible denaturation of the monomer. It was shown that glucose 1-phosphate (substrate), glucose (competitive inhibitor), AMP (allosteric activator), FMN, and glucose 6-phosphate (allosteric inhibitors) had a protective effect. Calorimetric study demonstrates that the cofactor of glycogen phosphorylase-pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-stabilizes the enzyme molecule. Partial reactivation of glycogen phosphorylase b preheated at 53 degrees C occurs after cooling of the enzyme solution to 30 degrees C. The fact that the rate of reactivation decreases with dilution of the enzyme solution indicates association of inactive monomers into active dimers during renaturation. The allosteric inhibitor FMN enhances the rate of phosphorylase b reactivation.  相似文献   

14.
The number of people suffering from diabetes is hastily increasing and the condition is associated with altered brain glucose homeostasis. Brain glycogen is located in astrocytes and being a carbohydrate reservoir it contributes to glucose homeostasis. Furthermore, glycogen has been indicated to be important for proper neurotransmission under normal conditions. Previous findings from our laboratory suggested that glucose metabolism was reduced in type 2 diabetes, and thus we wanted to investigate more specifically how brain glycogen metabolism contributes to maintain energy status in the type 2 diabetic state. Also, our objective was to elucidate the contribution of glycogen to support neurotransmitter glutamate and GABA homeostasis. A glycogen phosphorylase (GP) inhibitor was administered to Sprague-Dawley (SprD) and Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF) rats in vivo and after one day of treatment [1-13C]glucose was used to monitor metabolism. Brain levels of 13C labeling in glucose, lactate, alanine, glutamate, GABA, glutamine and aspartate were determined. Our results show that inhibition of brain glycogen metabolism reduced the amounts of glutamate in both the control and type 2 diabetes models. The reduction in glutamate was associated with a decrease in the pyruvate carboxylase/pyruvate dehydrogenase ratio in the control but not the type 2 diabetes model. In the type 2 diabetes model GABA levels were increased suggesting that brain glycogen serves a role in maintaining a proper ratio between excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters in type 2 diabetes. Both the control and the type 2 diabetic states had a compensatory increase in glucose-derived 13C processed through the TCA cycle following inhibition of glycogen degradation. Finally, it was indicated that the type 2 diabetes model might have an augmented necessity for compensatory upregulation at the glycolytic level.  相似文献   

15.
Two interconvertible forms of glycogen synthase and glycogen phosphorylase, one active (a) or the other less active (b), were predominantly present in a thermosensitive adenylate-cyclase-deficient mutant that had been preincubated at the restrictive temperature of 35 degrees C, either in the presence or in the absence of glucose. Glycogen phosphorylase was at least 20-fold less active after incubation of the cells in the presence of glucose, but this residual activity had kinetic properties identical to those of the active form of enzyme, obtained after incubation in the absence of glucose; this suggests that the b form might be completely inactive and that the low activity measured after glucose treatment must be attributed to a residual amount of phosphorylase a. By contrast, the kinetic properties of the two forms of glycogen synthase were very different. When measured in the absence of glucose 6-phosphate, the two forms of enzyme had a similar affinity for UDP-Glc but differed essentially by their Vmax. Glucose 6-phosphate had no effect on synthase a, but increased both Vmax and Km of synthase b; these effects, however, were in great part counteracted by sulfate and by inorganic phosphate, the latter also having the property of increasing the Km of the a form, without affecting Vmax. It was estimated that at physiological concentrations of substrates and effectors, synthase a was about 20-fold more active than synthase b. When an extract of cells that had been preincubated in the absence of glucose was gel-filtered and then incubated at 30 degrees C, phosphorylase was progressively fully inactivated and synthase was partially activated; these reactions were severalfold faster and, in the case of glycogen synthase, more complete in the presence of 10 mM glucose 6-phosphate. When a gel-filtered extract of cells that had been preincubated in the presence of glucose was incubated at 30 degrees C in the presence of ATP-Mg and EGTA, phosphorylase became activated and synthase was inactivated; the first of these two reactions was severalfold stimulated by micromolar concentrations of Ca2+, whereas both reactions were completely inhibited by 10 mM glucose 6-phosphate and only slightly and irregularly stimulated by cyclic AMP.  相似文献   

16.
We have examined the effect of glucose and caffeine inhibition on the activity of liver glycogen phosphorylase a from the freeze-tolerant frog Rana sylvatica. Kinetic studies indicate that this enzyme exhibits similar sensitivity to glucose inhibition (glucose dissociation constant = 12.5 mM) as the mammalian enzyme. Little inhibition (less than 25%) was observed at normal glucose concentrations (1-5 mM), while significant inhibition (60-95%) occurred at glucose concentrations (50-500 mM) present in freezing-exposed animals. These results favour the hypothesis that in the normal state glucose regulates phosphorylase activity primarily through the promotion of dephosphorylation of phosphorylase a, whereas during freezing regulation is achieved through phosphorylase a inactivation. The caffeine dissociation constant (0.93 mM) and the degree of synergism between caffeine and glucose (interaction factor, alpha = 0.14) were also similar to that observed for the mammalian enzyme. Hence, if a caffeine-like ligand exists in vivo, it must be in low enough amounts during freezing to allow sufficient phosphorylase a activity for high glucose production.  相似文献   

17.
The time course of glycogen changes in soleus muscle recovering from 3 days of nonweight bearing by hindlimb suspension was investigated. Within 15 min and up to 2 h, muscle glycogen decreased. Coincidentally, muscle glucose 6-phosphate and the fractional activity of glycogen phosphorylase, measured at the fresh muscle concentrations of AMP, increased. Increased fractional activity of glycogen synthase during this time was likely the result of greater glucose 6-phosphate and decreased glycogen. From 2 to 4 h, when the synthase activity remained elevated and the phosphorylase activity declined, glycogen levels increased (glycogen supercompensation). A further increase of glycogen up to 24 h did not correlate with the enzyme activities. Between 24 and 72 h, glycogen decreased to control values, possibly initiated by high phosphorylase activity at 24 h. At 12 and 24 h, the inverse relationship between glycogen concentration and the synthase activity ratio was lost, indicating that reloading transiently uncoupled glycogen control of this enzyme. These data suggest that the activities of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase, when measured at physiological effector levels, likely provide the closest approximation to the actual enzyme activities in vivo. Measurements made in this way effectively explained the majority of the changes in the soleus glycogen content during recovery from nonweight bearing.  相似文献   

18.
The cellular slime mold was exposed to exogenous glucose, uracil, and inorganic phosphate for either 900 or 90 min to determine their effects on the cellular levels of glucose 6-phosphate (glucose-6-P), UDP-glucose, glycogen, trehalose, and cellulose. Glucose, and phosphate to a lesser extent, increase the levels of glucose-6-P and trehalose, whereas glycogen levels are increased only by glucose. Uracil inhibits glucose-6-P and trehalose accumulation, and this inhibition is reversed by glucose or phosphate. Uracil, especially in the presence of glucose, stimulates the accumulation of UDP-glucose and cellulose. In an attempt to understand the dynamics of the biochemical mechanisms underlying these experimental observations, fluxes of the same metabolites were imposed on a kinetic model of this system. The effects of glucose, uracil, and phosphate either singly or in various combinations on the accumulation of glycogen and trehalose can be predicted quantitatively by applying the appropriate external flux(es) of these additives to the model; the predicted effects on glucose-6-P levels are qualitatively consistent with the observations, but are greater in magnitude, suggesting compartmentation of glucose-6-P. Matching the observed and simulated results requires a lower level of additive in the simulated system than in the actual experiment, which is consistent with earlier studies on the cellular permeability of these metabolites.It is concluded that the complex of flux changes induced in the model by the perturbing metabolites may also occur in vivo, and that endogenous glucose availability is a critical variable controlling the rate and cessation of differentiation as well as the relative amounts of the saccharide end products of differentiation.  相似文献   

19.
1.The two forms of glycogen phosphorylase were purified from human liver, and some kinetic properties were examined in the direction of glycogen synthesis. The b form has a limited catalytic capacity, resembling that of the rabbit liver enzyme. It is characterized by a low affinity for glucose 1-phosphate, which is unaffected by AMP, and a low V, which becomes equal to that of the a form in the presence of the nucleotide. Lyotropic anions stimulate phosphorylase b and inhibit phosphorylase a by modifying the affinity for glucose 1-phosphate. Both enzyme forms are easily saturated with glycogen. 2. These kinetic properties have allowed us to design a simple assay method for total (a + b) phosphorylase in human liver. It requires only 0.5 mg of tissue, and its average efficiency is 90% when the enzyme is predominantly in the b form. 3. The assay of total phosphorylase allows the unequivocal diagnosis of hepatic glycogen-storage disease caused by phosphorylase deficiency. One patient with a complete deficiency is reported. 4. The assay of human liver phosphorylase a is based on the preferential inhibition of the b form by caffeine. The a form displays the same activity when measured by either of the two assays.  相似文献   

20.
Glycogen synthesis by rat hepatocytes.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
J Katz  S Golden    P A Wals 《The Biochemical journal》1979,180(2):389-402
1. Hepatocytes from starved rats or fed rats whose glycogen content was previously depleted by phlorrhizin or by glucagon injections, form glycogen at rapid rates when incubated with 10mM-glucose, gluconeogenic precursors (lactate, glycerol, fructose etc.) and glutamine. There is a net synthesis of glucose and glycogen. 14C from all three types of substrate is incorporated into glycogen, but the incorporation from glucose represents exchange of carbon atoms, rather than net incorporation. 14C incorporation does not serve to measure net glycogen synthesis from any one substrate. 2. With glucose as sole substrate net glucose uptake and glycogen deposition commences at concentrations of about 12--15mM. Glycogen synthesis increases with glucose concentrations attaining maximal values at 50--60mM, when it is similar to that obtained in the presence of 10mM glucose and lactate plus glutamine. 3. The activities of the active (a) and total (a+b) forms of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase were monitored concomitant with glycogen synthesis. Total synthase was not constant during a 1 h incubation period. Total and active synthase activity increased in parallel with glycogen synthesis. 4. Glycogen phosphorylase was assayed in two directions, by conversion of glycose 1-phosphate into glycogen and by the phosphorylation of glycogen. Total phosphorylase was assyed in the presence of AMP or after conversion into the phosphorylated form by phosphorylase kinase. Results obtained by the various methods were compared. Although the rates measured by the procedures differ, the pattern of change during incubation was much the same. Total phosphorylase was not constant. 5. The amounts of active and total phosphorylase were highest in the washed cell pellet. Incubation in an oxygenated medium, with or without substrates, caused a prompt and pronounced decline in the assayed amounts of active and total enzyme. There was no correlation between phosphorylase activity and glycogen synthesis from gluconeogenic substrates. With fructose, active and total phosphorylase activities increased during glycogen syntheses. 6. In glycogen synthesis from glucose as sole substrate there was a decline in phosphorylase activities with increased glucose concentration and increased rates of glycogen deposition. The decrease was marked in cells from fed rats. 7. To determine whether phosphorolysis and glycogen synthesis occur concurrently, glycogen was prelabelled with [2-3H,1-14C]-galactose. During subsequent glycogen deposition there was no loss of activity from glycogen in spite of high amounts of assayable active phosphorylase.  相似文献   

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