Transport of 4-deoxy- and 6-deoxy-D-glucose in baker's yeast
Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké Médium print
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
PubMed
287
DOI
10.1007/bf02891709
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- MeSH
- deoxycukry metabolismus MeSH
- deoxyglukosa chemická syntéza metabolismus MeSH
- dinitrofenoly farmakologie MeSH
- fruktosa metabolismus MeSH
- glukosa metabolismus MeSH
- hexokinasa metabolismus MeSH
- jodacetamid farmakologie MeSH
- koncentrace vodíkových iontů MeSH
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae enzymologie metabolismus MeSH
- teplota MeSH
- transport elektronů MeSH
- uran farmakologie MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Názvy látek
- deoxycukry MeSH
- deoxyglukosa MeSH
- dinitrofenoly MeSH
- fruktosa MeSH
- glukosa MeSH
- hexokinasa MeSH
- jodacetamid MeSH
- uran MeSH
Tritium-labelled 4-deoxy-D-glucose (4-dglc) and 6-deoxy-D-glucose (6-dgcl) were prepared by catalytic hydrogenolysis of the corresponding deoxyiodo derivatives with gaseous tritium. The two sugars are transported into Saccharomyces cerevisiae by both the constitutive glucose and the inducible galactose carrier. Uranyl ions are powerful inhibitors. The pH optimum in uninduced cells lies at 5.5 for both sugars, the apparent activation energies (between 15 and 35 degrees C) are 25.1 kJ/mol and 16.5 kJ/mol, respectively. The steady-state intracellular concentration of both sugars is less than the extracellular one (no uphill transport). Neither of them is a substrate of yeast hexokinase. 4-Deoxy-D-glucose undergoes a dinitrophenol-sensitive conversion to an unknown metabolite which is not phosphorylated and may represent one of its oxidation products.
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Effects of suspension density on microbial metabolic processes
Absence of glucose-stimulated transport in yeast protoplasts
Transport kinetics of 6-deoxy-D-glucose in Candida parapsilosis