Parry D M, Pedersen P L
Department of Biological Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205.
J Biol Chem. 1990 Jan 15;265(2):1059-66.
A major energy source in brain is glucose, which is committed to metabolism by hexokinase (Type I isozyme), an enzyme usually considered to be bound to the outer mitochondrial membrane. In this study, the subcellular location of hexokinase in brain has been rigorously investigated. Mitochondrial fractions containing hexokinase (greater than 500 milliunits/mg protein) were prepared by two different procedures, and then subjected to density gradient centrifugation before and after loading with barium phosphate, a technique designed to increase the density of the mitochondria. The gradient distribution patterns of both unloaded and loaded preparations show that brain hexokinase does not distribute exclusively with mitochondrial marker enzymes. This is particularly evident in the loaded preparations where there is a clear distinction between the peak activities of hexokinase and mitochondrial markers. The same observation was made when the mitochondrial fraction of either untreated or barium phosphate-loaded mitochondria was subjected to titration with digitonin. In fact, at concentrations of digitonin, which almost completely solubilize marker enzymes for both the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes, a significant fraction of the total hexokinase remains particulate bound. Electron microscopy confirmed that particulate material is still present under these conditions. Significantly, hexokinase is released from particulate material only at high concentrations of digitonin which solubilize the associated microsomal marker NADPH-cytochrome c reductase. Glucose 6-phosphate, which is known to release hexokinase from the brain "mitochondrial fraction" also releases hexokinase from this unidentified particulate component. These results on brain, a normal glucose utilizing tissue, differ from those obtained previously on highly glycolytic tumor cells where identical subfractionation procedures revealed a strictly outer mitochondrial membrane location for particulate hexokinase (Parry, D. M., and Pedersen, P. L. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 10904-10912). It is concluded that in brain, hexokinase has a greater propensity to localize at nonmitochondrial receptor sites than to those known to be associated with the outer mitochondrial membrane.
大脑中的主要能量来源是葡萄糖,它通过己糖激酶(I型同工酶)进入代谢过程,该酶通常被认为与线粒体外膜结合。在本研究中,已对大脑中己糖激酶的亚细胞定位进行了严格调查。通过两种不同的方法制备了含有己糖激酶(大于500毫单位/毫克蛋白质)的线粒体组分,然后在加载磷酸钡(一种旨在增加线粒体密度的技术)之前和之后进行密度梯度离心。未加载和加载制剂的梯度分布模式表明,大脑己糖激酶并非仅与线粒体标记酶一起分布。这在加载制剂中尤为明显,其中己糖激酶和线粒体标记物的峰值活性之间存在明显差异。当用洋地黄皂苷滴定未处理或加载磷酸钡的线粒体的线粒体组分时,也得到了相同的观察结果。事实上,在洋地黄皂苷浓度下,线粒体内外膜的标记酶几乎完全溶解,但总己糖激酶的很大一部分仍与颗粒结合。电子显微镜证实,在这些条件下颗粒物质仍然存在。值得注意的是,只有在高浓度的洋地黄皂苷下,己糖激酶才会从颗粒物质中释放出来,而这种高浓度的洋地黄皂苷会溶解相关的微粒体标记物NADPH-细胞色素c还原酶。已知能从大脑“线粒体组分”中释放己糖激酶的6-磷酸葡萄糖,也能从这种未鉴定的颗粒成分中释放己糖激酶。这些关于大脑(一种正常利用葡萄糖的组织)的结果与先前在高度糖酵解的肿瘤细胞上获得的结果不同,在肿瘤细胞中,相同的亚分级程序显示颗粒己糖激酶严格定位于线粒体外膜(Parry, D. M., and Pedersen, P. L. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 10904 - 10912)。结论是,在大脑中,己糖激酶更倾向于定位于非线粒体受体位点,而不是那些已知与线粒体外膜相关的位点。