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Presence, induction and possible role of glucose 6-phosphatase in mammalian pancreatic islets.


ABSTRACT: 1. Pancreatic islets from several mammalian species were investigated for hydrolytic activity towards glucose 6-phosphate. Both the total phosphatase activity towards this substrate and the proportion cleaving glucose 6-phosphate in preference to beta-glycerophosphate varied widely between species. In pancreatic-islet homogenates prepared from mice and guinea pigs there was a higher rate of liberation of P(i) at pH6.7 from glucose 6-phosphate than from beta-glycerophosphate. In these two species cortisone treatment enhanced the enzyme activity towards glucose 6-phosphate but not that towards beta-glycerophosphate. Simultaneous injections of ethionine or puromycin blocked this stimulating effect of cortisone. 2. With whole homogenates of mouse pancreatic islets, inverse plots of the relationship between glucose 6-phosphate concentration and enzyme activity suggested the simultaneous action of two enzymes with different K(m) values. After fractionation of islets from obese-hyperglycaemic mice by differential centrifugation, one of these enzymes could be shown to be localized in the microsome fraction. It had K(m) for glucose 6-phosphate about 0.5mm and optimum pH6.7. It split glucose 6-phosphate in preference to beta-glycerophosphate, glucose 1-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate and fructose 1,6-diphosphate. Incubation of the microsomes at pH5.0 and 37 degrees for 15min. decreased the enzyme activity by about 80%. Glucose was a potent inhibitor, the type of inhibition being neither strictly competitive nor non-competitive. It is suggested that the results indicate the presence of glucose 6-phosphatase in mammalian endocrine pancreas, and that this enzyme may play a role in the metabolic regulation of release of insulin.

SUBMITTER: TaljedalIB  

PROVIDER: S-EPMC1184866 | biostudies-other | 1969 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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