Characterization of rabbit skeletal muscle glycogenin. Tyrosine 194 is essential for function
The biogenesis of glycogen involves a specific initiation event mediated by the initiator protein, glycogenin, which undergoes self-glucosylation to generate an oligosaccharide primer from which the glycogen molecule grows. Rabbit muscle glycogenin was expressed at high levels in Escherichia coli an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1993-07, Vol.268 (20), p.14687-14693 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The biogenesis of glycogen involves a specific initiation event mediated by the initiator protein, glycogenin, which undergoes
self-glucosylation to generate an oligosaccharide primer from which the glycogen molecule grows. Rabbit muscle glycogenin
was expressed at high levels in Escherichia coli and purified close to homogeneity in a procedure that involved binding to
a UDP-agarose affinity column. The resulting protein had subunit molecular weight of 38,000 as judged by polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Analysis of peptide fragments by mass spectroscopy indicated that
the recombinant glycogenin was already glucosylated at Tyr-194 and contained from 1 to 8 glucose residues attached. The enzyme
was active as a glucosyl transferase and could incorporate a further approximately 5 mol of glucose/mol. The apparent Km for
the glucosyl donor UDP-glucose was 4.5 microM, and the pH optimum was pH 8. Of a number of nucleotides and related compounds
surveyed, UDP and UTP were the most effective inhibitors. There was also a correlation between inhibition and the presence
of a pyrophosphate group. Of several oligosaccharides of glucose, only maltose caused significant inhibition. The glucosylation
reaction was first order with respect to glycogenin suggesting that it was intramolecular. The efficacy of the purified glycogenin
as a substrate for the elongation reaction catalyzed by glycogen synthase was significantly enhanced if glycogenin was first
allowed to undergo self-glucosylation. The length of the priming oligosaccharide is thus important for glycogen synthase action.
A mutant of glycogenin, in which Tyr-194 was changed to Phe, behaved identically to the wild-type through purification and
in particular bound to the UDP-agarose affinity matrix. Despite these indications of the protein's overall structural integrity,
it was unable to self-glucosylate. This result indicates that Tyr-194 is necessary for glycogenin function and is consistent
with Tyr-194 being the sole site of glucosylation. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0021-9258(18)82388-2 |