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1.
Glycogenin acts in the initiation step of glycogen biosynthesis by catalyzing a self-glucosylation reaction. In a previous work [de Paula et al., Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 435 (2005) 112-124], we described the isolation of the cDNA gnn, which encodes the protein glycogenin (GNN) in Neurospora crassa. This work presents a set of biochemical and functional studies confirming the GNN role in glycogen biosynthesis. Kinetic experiments showed a very low GNN K(m) (4.41 microM) for the substrate UDP-glucose. Recombinant GNN was produced in Escherichia coli and analysis by mass spectroscopy identified a peptide containing an oligosaccharide chain attached to Tyr196 residue. Site-directed mutagenesis and functional complementation of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant strain confirmed the participation of this residue in the GNN self-glucosylation and indicated the Tyr198 residue as an additional, although less active, glucosylation site. The physical interaction between GNN and glycogen synthase (GSN) was analyzed by the two-hybrid assay. While the entire GSN was required for full interaction, the C-terminus in GNN was more important. Furthermore, mutation in the GNN glucosylation sites did not impair the interaction with GSN.  相似文献   

2.
In eukaryotic cells, glycogenin is a self-glucosylating protein that primes glycogen synthesis. In yeast, the loss of function of GLG1 and GLG2, which encode glycogenin, normally leads to the inability of cells to synthesize glycogen. In this report, we show that a small fraction of colonies from glg1glg2 mutants can switch on glycogen synthesis to levels comparable to wild-type strain. The occurrence of glycogen positive glg1glg2 colonies is strongly enhanced by the presence of a hyperactive glycogen synthase and increased even more upon deletion of TPS1. In all cases, this phenotype is reversible, indicating the stochastic nature of this synthesis, which is furthermore illustrated by colour-sectoring of colonies upon iodine-staining. Altogether, these data suggest that glycogen synthesis in the absence of glycogenin relies on a combination of several factors, including an activated glycogen synthase and as yet unknown alternative primers whose synthesis and/or distribution may be controlled by TPS1 or under epigenetic silencing.  相似文献   

3.
Glycogen, a branched polymer of glucose, is a storage molecule whose accumulation is under rigorous nutritional control in many cells. We report the identification of two Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes, GLG1 and GLG2, whose products are implicated in the biogenesis of glycogen. These genes encode self-glucosylating proteins that in vitro can act as primers for the elongation reaction catalyzed by glycogen synthase. Over a region of 258 residues, the Glg proteins have 55% sequence identify to each other and approximately 33% identity to glycogenin, a mammalian protein postulated to have a role in the initiation of glycogen biosynthesis. Yeast cells defective in either GLG1 or GLG2 are similar to the wild type in their ability to accumulate glycogen. Disruption of both genes results in the inability of the cells to synthesize glycogen despite normal levels of glycogen synthase. These results suggest that a self-glucosylating protein is required for glycogen biosynthesis in a eukaryotic cell. The activation state of glycogen synthase in glg1 glg2 cells is suppressed, suggesting that the Glg proteins may additionally influence the phosphorylation state of glycogen synthase.  相似文献   

4.
Glycogenin is a self-glucosylating protein involved in the initiation reactions of glycogen synthesis. Initiation occurs in two stages, requiring first the covalent attachment of a glucose residue to Tyr-194 of glycogenin and then elongation to form an oligosaccharide chain. The latter reaction is known to be catalyzed by glycogenin itself. The glycogenin sequence determined from the protein by Campbell and Cohen (Campbell, D. G., and Cohen, P. (1989) Eur. J. Biochem. 185, 119-125) was used to design oligonucleotide probes to screen a rabbit muscle lambda gt11 library. A cDNA was isolated that predicted an amino acid sequence identical to that of Campbell and Cohen, except that Cys residues replaced Ser-88 and Leu-97. Northern analysis indicated a strongly hybridizing message of 1.8 kilobases, present in most tissues including skeletal muscle, but much weaker in kidney and scarcely detectable in liver. A much weaker 3-kilobase message was also detected in muscle. Polymerase chain reaction was used to isolate DNA fragments encoding a portion of glycogenin from rat and cow. The sequence of this segment was > 90% identical at the amino acid level across the three species, indicating that glycogenin is a highly conserved protein. Using the pET-8c vector, the glycogenin protein was expressed in Escherichia coli. Incubation of the recombinant glycogenin with UDP-[14C]glucose and Mn2+ resulted in labeling of the glycogenin protein, indicating that the recombinant glycogenin was enzymatically active and capable of self-glucosylation. Furthermore, after incubation with UDP-glucose, the recombinant glycogenin could serve as a substrate for glycogen synthase, leading to the production of high M(r) polysaccharide. Therefore, production of functional glycogenin did not require the intervention of any other mammalian protein.  相似文献   

5.
Glycogenin is a self-glucosylating protein involved in the initiation of glycogen biosynthesis. Self-glucosylation leads to the formation of an oligosaccharide chain, which, when long enough, supports the action of glycogen synthase to elongate it and form a mature glycogen molecule. To identify possible regulators of glycogenin, the yeast two-hybrid strategy was employed. By using rabbit skeletal muscle glycogenin as a bait, cDNAs encoding three different proteins were isolated from the human skeletal muscle cDNA library. Two of the cDNAs encoded glycogenin and glycogen synthase, respectively, proteins known to be interactors. The third cDNA encoded a polypeptide of unknown function and was designated GNIP (glycogenin interacting protein). Northern blot analysis revealed that GNIP mRNA is highly expressed in skeletal muscle. The gene for GNIP generates at least four isoforms by alternative splicing. The largest isoform GNIP1 contains, from NH(2)- to COOH-terminal, a RING finger, a B box, a putative coiled-coil region, and a B30.2-like motif. The previously identified protein TRIM7 (tripartite motif containing protein 7) is also derived from the GNIP gene and is composed of the RING finger, B box, and coiled-coil regions. The GNIP2 and GNIP3 isoforms consist of the coiled-coil region and B30.2-like domain. Physical interaction between GNIP2 and glycogenin was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation, and in addition GNIP2 was shown to stimulate glycogenin self-glucosylation 3-4-fold. GNIPs may represent a novel participant in the initiation of glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Glycogenin, a Mn2+-dependent, self-glucosylating protein, is considered to catalyze the initial glucosyl transfer steps in glycogen biogenesis. To study the physiologic significance of this enzyme, measurements of glycogenin mediated glucose transfer to endogenous trichloroacetic acid precipitable material (protein-bound glycogen, i.e., glycoproteins) in human skeletal muscle were attempted. Although glycogenin protein was detected in muscle extracts, activity was not, even after exercise that resulted in marked glycogen depletion. Instead, a MnSO4-dependent glucose transfer to glycoproteins, inhibited by glycogen and UDP-pyridoxal (which do not affect glycogenin), and unaffected by CDP (a potent inhibitor of glycogenin), was consistently detected. MnSO4-dependent activity increased in concert with glycogen synthase fractional activity after prolonged exercise, and the MnSO4-dependent enzyme stimulated glucosylation of glycoproteins with molecular masses lower than those glucosylated by glucose 6-P-dependent glycogen synthase. Addition of purified glucose 6-P-dependent glycogen synthase to the muscle extract did not affect MnSO4-dependent glucose transfer, whereas glycogen synthase antibody completely abolished MnSO4-dependent activity. It is concluded that: (1) MnSO4-dependent glucose transfer to glycoproteins is catalyzed by a nonglucose 6-P-dependent form of glycogen synthase; (2) MnSO4-dependent glycogen synthase has a greater affinity for low molecular mass glycoproteins and may thus play a more important role than glucose 6-P-dependent glycogen synthase in the initial stages of glycogen biogenesis; and (3) glycogenin is generally inactive in human muscle in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Glycogenin is a dimeric self-glucosylating protein involved in the initiation phase of glycogen biosynthesis. As an enzyme, glycogenin has the unusual property of transferring glucose residues from UDP-glucose to itself, forming an alpha-1,4-glycan of around 10 residues attached to Tyr194. Whether this self-glucosylation reaction is inter- or intramolecular has been debated. We used site-directed mutagenesis of recombinant rabbit muscle glycogenin-1 to address this question. Mutation of highly conserved Lys85 to Gln generated a glycogenin mutant (K85Q) that had only 1-2% of the self-glucosylating activity of wild-type enzyme. Consistent with previous work, mutation of Tyr194 to Phe in a GST-fusion protein yielded a mutant, Y194F, that was catalytically active but incapable of self-glucosylation. The Y194F mutant was able to glucosylate the K85Q mutant. However, there was an initial lag in the self-glucosylation reaction that was abolished by preincubation of the two mutant proteins. The interaction between glycogenin subunits was relatively weak, with a dissociation constant inferred from kinetic experiments of around 2 microM. We propose a model for the glucosylation of K85Q by Y194F in which mixing of the proteins is followed by rate-limiting formation of a species containing both subunit types. The results provide the most direct evidence to date that the self-glucosylation of glycogenin involves an inter-subunit reaction.  相似文献   

8.
In this paper we elucidate part of the mechanism of the early stages of the biosynthesis of glycogen. This macromolecule is constructed by covalent apposition of glucose units to a protein, glycogenin, which remains covalently attached to the mature glycogen molecule. We have now isolated, in a 3500-fold purification, a protein from rabbit muscle that has the same Mr as glycogenin, is immunologically similar, and proves to be a self-glucosylating protein (SGP). When incubated with UDP-[14C]glucose, an average of one molecular proportion of glucose is incorporated into the protein, which we conclude is the same as glycogenin isolated from native glycogen. The native SGP appears to exist as a high-molecular-weight species that contains many identical subunits. Because the glucose that is self-incorporated can be released almost completely from the acceptor by glycogenolytic enzymes, the indication is that it was added to a preformed chain or chains of 1,4-linked alpha-glucose residues. This implies that SGP already carries an existing maltosaccharide chain or chains to which the glucose is added, rather than glucose being added directly to protein. The putative role of SGP in glycogen synthesis is confirmed by the fact that glucosylated SGP acts as a primer for glycogen synthase and branching enzyme to form high-molecular-weight material. SGP itself is completely free from glycogen synthase. The quantity of SGP in muscle is calculated to be about one-half the amount of glycogenin bound in glycogen.  相似文献   

9.
Purified preparations of glycogen synthase are a complex of two proteins, the catalytic subunit of glycogen synthase and glycogenin, present in a 1:1 molar ratio [J. Pitcher, C. Smythe, D. G. Campbell & P. Cohen (1987) Eur. J. Biochem. 169, 497-502]. This complex has now been found to contain a further glucosyltransferase activity that catalyses the transfer of glucose residues from UDP-Glc to glucosylated-glycogenin. The glucosyltransferase, which is of critical importance in forming the primer required for de novo glycogen biosynthesis, is distinct from glycogen synthase in several ways. It has an absolute requirement for divalent cations, a 1000-fold lower Km for UDP-Glc and its activity is unaffected by incubation with UDP-pyridoxal or exposure to 2 M LiBr, which inactivate glycogen synthase by 95% and 100%, respectively. The priming glucosyltransferase and glycogen synthase activities coelute on Superose 6, and the rate of glycosylation of glycogenin is independent of enzyme concentration, suggesting that the reaction is catalysed intramolecularly by a subunit of the glycogen synthase complex. This component has been identified as glycogenin, following dissociation of the subunits in 2 M LiBr and their separation on Superose 12. The glycosylation of isolated glycogenin reaches a plateau when five additional glucose residues have been added to the protein, and digestion with alpha-amylase indicates that all the glycogenin molecules contain at least one glucosyl residue prior to autoglucosylation. The priming glucosyltransferase activity of glycogenin is unaffected by either glucose 6-phosphate or by phosphorylation of the catalytic subunit of glycogen synthase. The mechanism of primer formation is discussed in the light of the finding that glycogenin is an enzyme that catalyses its own autoglucosylation.  相似文献   

10.
The discovery of glycogenin and the priming mechanism for glycogen biogenesis   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
The biogenesis of glycogen in skeletal muscle requires a priming mechanism that has recently been elucidated. The first step is catalysed by a protein tyrosine glucosyltransferase and involves the formation of a novel glycosidic linkage, namely the covalent attachment of glucose to a single tyrosine residue (Tyr194) on a priming protein, termed glycogenin. The next stage is the extension of the glucan chain from Tyr194 and involves the sequential addition of up to seven further glucosyl residues. This reaction is brought about autocatalytically by glycogenin itself, which is a Mn2+/Mg(2+)-dependent UDP-Glc-requiring glucosyltransferase. The glucan primer is elongated by glycogen synthase, but only when glycogenin and glycogen synthase are complexed together. Glycogen synthase dissociates from glycogenin during the synthesis of a glycogen molecule, enabling glycogen molecules to reach their maximum theoretical size. Each mature glycogen beta particle in muscle contains one molecule of glycogenin attached covalently, and an average one glycogen synthase catalytic subunit bound non-covalently. As evidence accumulates that a priming protein may be a fundamental property of polysaccharide synthesis in general, the molecular details of mammalian glycogen biogenesis may serve as a useful model for other systems.  相似文献   

11.
The glucosylation site on glycogenin, the protein primer required for de novo glycogen synthesis, has been identified. The glucose is attached at position C1 in a glycosidic linkage with a unique tyrosine, and the sequence surrounding this residue was found to be: His-Leu-Pro-Phe-Ile-Tyr-Asn-Leu-Ser-Ser-Ile-Ser-Ile-Tyr(Glc)-Ser-Tyr-Leu -Pro- Ala-Phe-Lys. The same tyrosine residue is glycosylated whether glycogenin is isolated as a complex with the catalytic subunit of glycogen synthase, or covalently attached to glycogen. The possibility that insulin and growth factors may enhance glycogen synthesis via stimulation of the priming reaction is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Glycogen synthase plays a key role in regulating glycogen metabolism. In a search for regulators of glycogen synthase, a yeast two-hybrid study was performed. Two glycogen synthase-interacting proteins were identified in human skeletal muscle, glycogenin-1, and nebulin. The interaction with glycogenin was found to be mediated by the region of glycogenin which contains the 33 COOH-terminal amino acid residues. The regions in glycogen synthase containing both NH2- and COOH-terminal phosphorylation sites are not involved in the interaction. The core segment of glycogen synthase from Glu21 to Gly503 does not bind COOH-terminal fragment of glycogenin. However, this region of glycogen synthase binds full-length glycogenin indicating that glycogenin contains at least one additional interacting site for glycogen synthase besides the COOH-terminus. We demonstrate that the COOH-terminal fragment of glycogenin can be used as an effective high affinity reagent for the purification of glycogen synthase from skeletal muscle and liver.  相似文献   

13.
Rabbit skeletal muscle glycogen previously has been shown to be covalently bound to a 40,000-Da protein ("glycogenin") via a novel glucosyl-tyrosine linkage [I.R. Rodriguez and W.J. Whelan (1985) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 132, 829-836]. Antibodies raised against rabbit skeletal muscle glycogenin cross-react with a similar protein present in rabbit heart and liver glycogens, as well as with a 42,000-Da "acceptor protein" present in high-speed supernatants of rabbit muscle, heart, retina, and liver. This 42,000-Da protein incorporates [U-14C]Glc when an ammonium sulfate fraction prepared from the tissue supernatants is incubated with UDP-[U-14C]Glc. The [U-14C]Glc incorporated can be removed quantitatively by treatment with amylolytic enzymes, indicating that the [U-14C]Glc incorporation represents elongation of a preexisting glucan attached to the acceptor protein. Furthermore, a commercial preparation of rabbit skeletal muscle glycogen synthase contains this 42,000-Da protein. We propose that the 42,000-Da protein represents the free form of glycogenin in tissues, with its covalently attached glucan chain(s) providing a "primed" elongation site for glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Structural and functional studies on rabbit liver glycogenin   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Glycogenin, the protein primer required for the biogenesis of muscle glycogen, has been isolated from rabbit liver glycogen. The protein comprised 0.0025% of liver glycogen by mass, 200-fold lower than the glycogenin content of muscle glycogen. Structural analyses, including determination of the amino acid sequence surrounding the glucosylated-tyrosine residue, showed identity with muscle glycogenin. Catalytically active liver glycogenin was partially purified and, like the skeletal muscle protein, catalysed an intramolecular, Mn2+- and UDP-Glc-dependent autoglucosylation reaction, forming a primer on which glycogen synthase could act. The results demonstrate that hepatic and muscle glycogenins are almost certainly identical proteins and that liver and skeletal muscle share a common mechanism for the biogenesis of glycogen molecules. The results also indicate that there is about one glycogenin molecule/liver glycogen alpha particle.  相似文献   

15.
Glycogenin initiates the biosynthesis of proteoglycogen, the mammalian glycogenin-bound glycogen, by intramolecular autoglucosylation. The incubation of glycogenin with UDP-glucose results in formation of a tyrosine-bound maltosaccharide, reaching maximum polymerization degree of 13 glucose units at cessation of the reaction. No exhaustion of the substrate donor occurred at the autoglucosylation end and the full autoglucosylated enzyme continued catalytically active for transglucosylation of the alternative substrate dodecyl-maltose. Even the autoglucosylation cessation once glycogenin acquired a mature maltosaccharide moiety, proteoglycogen and glycogenin species ranging rM 47-200 kDa, derived from proteoglycogen, showed to be autoglucosylable. The results describe for the first time the ability of polysaccharide-bound glycogenin for intramolecular autoglucosylation, providing evidence for cessation of the glucose polymerization initiated into the tyrosine residue, by inaccessibility of the acquired maltosaccharide moiety to further autoglucosylation.  相似文献   

16.
Mutants with deletion mutations in the glg and mal gene clusters of Escherichia coli MC4100 were used to gain insight into glycogen and maltodextrin metabolism. Glycogen content, molecular mass, and branch chain distribution were analyzed in the wild type and in ΔmalP (encoding maltodextrin phosphorylase), ΔmalQ (encoding amylomaltase), ΔglgA (encoding glycogen synthase), and ΔglgA ΔmalP derivatives. The wild type showed increasing amounts of glycogen when grown on glucose, maltose, or maltodextrin. When strains were grown on maltose, the glycogen content was 20 times higher in the ΔmalP strain (0.97 mg/mg protein) than in the wild type (0.05 mg/mg protein). When strains were grown on glucose, the ΔmalP strain and the wild type had similar glycogen contents (0.04 mg/mg and 0.03 mg/mg protein, respectively). The ΔmalQ mutant did not grow on maltose but showed wild-type amounts of glycogen when grown on glucose, demonstrating the exclusive function of GlgA for glycogen synthesis in the absence of maltose metabolism. No glycogen was found in the ΔglgA and ΔglgA ΔmalP strains grown on glucose, but substantial amounts (0.18 and 1.0 mg/mg protein, respectively) were found when they were grown on maltodextrin. This demonstrates that the action of MalQ on maltose or maltodextrin can lead to the formation of glycogen and that MalP controls (inhibits) this pathway. In vitro, MalQ in the presence of GlgB (a branching enzyme) was able to form glycogen from maltose or linear maltodextrins. We propose a model of maltodextrin utilization for the formation of glycogen in the absence of glycogen synthase.  相似文献   

17.
The purpose of this study was to explore the role of glycogen and trehalose in the ability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to respond to a sudden rise of the carbon flux. To this end, aerobic glucose-limited continuous cultures were challenged with a sudden increase of the dilution rate from 0.05 to 0.15 h(-1). Under this condition, a rapid mobilization of glycogen and trehalose was observed which coincided with a transient burst of budding and a decrease of cell biomass. Experiments carried out with mutants defective in storage carbohydrates indicated a predominant role of glycogen in the adaptation to this perturbation. However, the real importance of trehalose in this response was veiled by the unexpected phenotypes harboured by the tps1 mutant, chosen for its inability to synthesize trehalose. First, the biomass yield of this mutant was 25% lower than that of the isogenic wild-type strain at dilution rate of 0.05 h(-1), and this difference was annulled when cultures were run at a higher dilution rate of 0.15 h(-1). Second, the tps1 mutant was more effective to sustain the dilution rate shift-up, apparently because it had a faster glycolytic rate and an apparent higher capacity to consume glucose with oxidative phosphorylation than the wild type. Consequently, a tps1gsy1gsy2 mutant was able to adapt to the dilution rate shift-up after a long delay, likely because the detrimental effects from the absence of glycogen was compensated for by the tps1 mutation. Third, a glg1Deltaglg2Delta strain, defective in glycogen synthesis because of the lack of the glycogen initiation protein, recovered glycogen accumulation upon further deletion of TPS1. This recovery, however, required glycogen synthase. Finally, we demonstrated that the rapid breakdown of reserve carbohydrates triggered by the shift-up is merely due to changes in the concentrations of hexose-6-phosphate and UDPglucose, which are the main metabolic effectors of the rate-limiting enzymes of glycogen and trehalose pathways.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The ability of monomeric glycogenin to autoglucosylate by an intramolecular mechanism of reaction is described using non-glucosylated and partially glucosylated recombinant glycogenin. We determined that monomer glycogenin exists in solution at concentration below 0.60-0.85 μM. The specific autoglucosylation rate of non-glucosylated and glucosylated monomeric glycogenin represented 50 and 70% of the specific rate of the corresponding dimeric glycogenin species. The incorporation of a unique sugar unit into the tyrosine hydroxyl group of non-glucosylated glycogenin, analyzed by autoxylosylation, occurred at a lower rate than the incorporation into the glucose hydroxyl group of the glucosylated enzyme. The intramonomer autoglucosylation mechanism here described for the first time, confers to a just synthesized glycogenin molecule the capacity to produce maltosaccharide primer for glycogen synthase, without the need to reach the concentration required for association into the more efficient autoglucosylating dimer. The monomeric and dimeric interconversion determining the different autoglucosylation rate, might serve as a modulation mechanism for the de novo biosynthesis of glycogen at the initial glucose polymerization step.  相似文献   

20.
Glycogenin initiates glycogen synthesis in an autocatalytic reaction in which individual glucose residues are covalently linked to Tyrosine 194 in order to form a short priming chain of glucose residues that is a substrate for glycogen synthase which, combined with the branching enzyme, catalyzes the bulk synthesis of glycogen. We sought to develop a new enzymatic assay to better characterize both the chemical and enzymatic characteristics of this unusual reaction. By directly detecting the reaction products using electrospray mass spectrometry this procedure permits both the visualization of the intact individual reaction species produced as a function of time and quantitation of the levels of each of species. The quantitation of the reaction agrees well with previous measurements of both catalytic rate and the change in rate as a function of average glucosylation. The results from this assay provide new insight into the mechanism by which glycogenin catalyzes the initiation reaction.  相似文献   

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