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Hexokinase receptors: Preferential enzyme binding in normal cells to nonmitochondrial sites and in transformed cells to mitochondrial sites
Authors:Krishan K Arora  David M Parry  Peter L Pedersen
Institution:(1) Laboratory For Molecular and Cellular Bioenergetics, Department of Biological Chemistry, The Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, 21205 Baltimore, Maryland;(2) Present address: Department of Clinical Chemistry, St. Boniface Hospital, 409 Tache Ave., R2H 2A6 Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Abstract:Hexokinase plays an important role in normal glucose-utilizing tissues like brain and kidney, and an even more important role in highly malignant cancer cells where it is markedly overexpressed. In both cell types, normal and transformed, a significant portion of the total hexokinase activity is bound to particulate material that sediments upon differential centrifugation with the crude ldquomitochondrialrdquo fraction. In the case of brain, particulate binding may constitute most of the total hexokinase activity of the cell, and in highly malignant tumor cells as much as 80 percent of the total. When a variety of techniques are rigorously applied to better define the particulate location of hexokinase within the crude ldquomitochondrial fraction,rdquo a striking difference is observed between the distribution of hexokinase in normal and transformed cells. Significantly, particulate hexokinase found in rat brain, kidney, or liver consistently distributes with nonmitochondrial membrane markers whereas the particulate hexokinase of highly glycolytic hepatoma cells distributes with outer mitochondrial membrane markers. These studies indicate that within normal tissues hexokinase binds preferentially to non-mitochondrial receptor sites but upon transformation of such cells to yield poorly differentiated, highly malignant tumors, the overexpressed enzyme binds preferentially to outer mitochondrial membrane receptors. These studies, taken together with the well-known observation that, once solubilized, the particulate hexokinase from a normal tissue can bind to isolated mitochondria, are consistent with the presence in normal tissues of at least two different types of particulate receptors for hexokinase with different subcellular locations. A model which explains this unique transformation-dependent shift in the intracellular location of hexokinase is proposed.
Keywords:Mitochondria  hexokinase  normal and tumor cells  enzyme localization  subcellular fractionation  receptor for binding  monoamine oxidase  NADPH-cytochromec reductase  transformation
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