Xylosyl transfer to an endogenous renal acceptor. Purification of the transferase and the acceptor and their identification as glycogenin
A xylosyltransferase in rat kidney, tentatively identified as glycogenin (Meezan, E., Ananth, S., Manzella, S., Campbell, P., Siegal, S., Pillion, D. J., and Rodén, L. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 11503-11508), was purified by a procedure in which affinity chromatography on UDP-glucuronic acid-agaros...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1994-04, Vol.269 (15), p.11509-11513 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A xylosyltransferase in rat kidney, tentatively identified as glycogenin (Meezan, E., Ananth, S., Manzella, S., Campbell,
P., Siegal, S., Pillion, D. J., and Rodén, L. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 11503-11508), was purified by a procedure in which
affinity chromatography on UDP-glucuronic acid-agarose was a particularly useful step. The purified material was nearly homogeneous,
as shown by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining, and had an electrophoretic mobility corresponding
to a M(r) of 32,000. The purified enzyme possessed both glucosyl- and xylosyltransferase activity, and incubation with UDP-[3H]xylose
or UDP-[3H]glucose yielded a single macromolecular product, which had the same electrophoretic mobility as the major silver-stained
component. These results indicate that the kidney transferase was indeed glycogenin and that it was functionally analogous
to the larger glycogenin species previously isolated from rabbit muscle. Further examination of the properties of the rat
kidney enzyme showed, i.a., that it was inhibited strongly by cytidine 5'-diphosphate. This effect was used to advantage in
an alternative purification procedure, which was applied to beef kidney and involved adsorption of the enzyme to UDP-glucuronic
acid-agarose and subsequent elution with cytidine 5'-diphosphate. In contrast to glycogenin, glycogen synthase did not catalyze
transfer from UDP-xylose, and it is suggested that the incorporation of xylose into glycogen observed by other investigators
was due to glycogenin-catalyzed xylosyl transfer and subsequent chain elongation by glycogen synthase. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0021-9258(19)78153-8 |