• Source: Glycogenin
  • Glycogenin is an enzyme involved in converting glucose to glycogen. It acts as a primer, by polymerizing the first few glucose molecules, after which other enzymes take over. It is a homodimer of 37-kDa subunits and is classified as a glycosyltransferase.
    It catalyzes the chemical reactions:

    UDP-alpha-D-glucose + glycogenin ⇌ UDP + alpha-D-glucosylglycogenin
    UDP-alpha-D-glucose + a glucosyl-glycogenin ⇌ (1,4-alpha-D-glucosyl)n-glucosyl glucogenin + UDP + H+
    Thus, the two substrates of this enzyme are UDP-alpha-D-glucose and glycogenin, whereas its two products are UDP and alpha-D-glucosylglycogenin.


    Nomenclature


    This enzyme belongs to the family of glycosyltransferases, specifically the hexosyltransferases. The systematic name of this enzyme class is UDP-alpha-D-glucose:glycogenin alpha-D-glucosyltransferase. Other names in common use include:

    glycogenin,
    priming glucosyltransferase, and
    UDP-glucose:glycogenin glucosyltransferase.
    One may also notice that the naming of glycogenin hints at its function, with the glyco prefix referring to a carbohydrate and the genin suffix derived from the Latin genesis meaning novel, source, or beginning. This hints at the role of glycogenin to simply start glycogen synthesis before glycogen synthase takes over.


    Discovery


    Glycogenin was discovered in 1984 by Dr. William J. Whelan, a fellow of the Royal Society of London and former professor of Biochemistry at the University of Miami.


    Function


    The main enzyme involved in glycogen polymerisation, glycogen synthase in the liver and in the muscle glycogen synthesis is initiated by UDP-Glucose, can only add to an existing chain of at least 3 glucose residues. Glycogenin acts as the primer, to which further glucose monomers may be added. It achieves this by catalyzing the addition of glucose to itself (autocatalysis) by first binding glucose from UDP-glucose to the hydroxyl group of Tyr-194. Seven more glucoses can be added, each derived from UDP-glucose, by glycogenin's glucosyltransferase activity. Once sufficient residues have been added, glycogen synthase takes over extending the chain. Glycogenin remains covalently attached to the reducing end of the glycogen molecule.
    Evidence accumulates that a priming protein may be a fundamental property of polysaccharide synthesis in general; the molecular details of mammalian glycogen biogenesis may serve as a useful model for other systems.
    Glycogenin is able to use the other two pyrimidine nucleotides as well, namely CDP-glucose and TDP-glucose, in addition to its native substrate, UDP-glucose.


    Structure




    Isozymes


    In humans, there are two isoforms of glycogeninglycogenin-1, encoded by GYG1, and expressed in muscle; and glycogenin-2, encoded by GYG2, and expressed in the liver and cardiac muscle, but not skeletal muscle. Patients have been found with defective GYG1, resulting in muscle cells with the inability to store glycogen, and consequential weakness and heart disease.


    References




    Further reading




    External links



    glycogenin at the U.S. National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
    molbio.med.miami.edu

Kata Kunci Pencarian: