Phosphofructokinase (PFK) isozymes and their physiological significance have been the focus of extensive research. The majority of this work has been centered around the PFK isozymes of rat, human and rabbit tissues. Consequently, this review emphasizes these studies. Additionally, a review of PFK isozymes in chickens, mice, guinea pig, and pig is presented. The relationship of the properties of each PFK isozyme in different tissues to the rates of glycolysis and/or gluconeogenesis in those tissues is discussed where possible. Moreover, the contribution of the different PFK isoenzymes to alterations of the glycolytic rate in various tissues is discussed in relationship to variations in nutritional, hormonal, developmental or pathological status of the animal.
The 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase (PFK) subunits and isoenzymes were studied in human muscle, heart, brain, liver, platelets, fibroblasts, erythrocytes, placenta and umbilical cord. In each tissue, the subunit types in the native isoenzymes were characterized by immunological titration with subunit-specific antibodies and by column chromatography on QAE (quaternary aminoethyl)-Sephadex. Further, the subunits of the partially purified native isoenzymes were resolved by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, identified by immunoblotting, and quantified by scanning gel densitometry of silver-stained gels and immunoblots. Depending on the type of tissue, one to three subunits were detected. The Mr values of the L, M and C subunits regardless of tissue were 76,700 +/- 1400, 82,500 +/- 1640 and 86,500 +/- 1620. Of the tissues studied, only the muscle PFK isoenzymes exhibited one subunit, which was the M-type subunit. Of the other tissues studied, the PFK isoenzymes contained various amounts of all three subunits. Considering the properties of the native PFK isoenzymes, it is clear that, in human tissues, they are not simply various combinations of two or three homotetrameric isoenzymes, but complex mixtures of homotetramers and heterotetramers. The kinetic/regulatory properties of the various isoenzyme pools were found to be dependent on subunit composition.
. Regular exercise is associated with a protective metabolic phenotype in the rat heart. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 287: H1055-H1063, 2004. First published April 22, 2004 10.1152/ajpheart.00925.2003.-Adaptation of myocardial energy substrate utilization may contribute to the cardioprotective effects of regular exercise, a possibility supported by evidence showing that pharmacological metabolic modulation is beneficial to ischemic hearts during reperfusion. Thus we tested the hypothesis that the beneficial effect of regular physical exercise on recovery from ischemia-reperfusion is associated with a protective metabolic phenotype. Function, glycolysis, and oxidation of glucose, lactate, and palmitate were measured in isolated working hearts from sedentary control (C) and treadmill-trained (T: 10 wk, 4 days/wk) female Sprague-Dawley rats submitted to 20 min ischemia and 40 min reperfusion. Training resulted in myocardial hypertrophy (1.65 Ϯ 0.05 vs. 1.30 Ϯ 0.03 g heart wet wt, P Ͻ 0.001) and improved recovery of function after ischemia by nearly 50% (P Ͻ 0.05). Glycolysis was 25-30% lower in T hearts before and after ischemia (P Ͻ 0.05), whereas rates of glucose oxidation were 45% higher before ischemia (P Ͻ 0.01). As a result, the fraction of glucose oxidized before and after ischemia was, respectively, twofold and 25% greater in T hearts (P Ͻ 0.05). Palmitate oxidation was 50 -65% greater in T than in C before and after ischemia (P Ͻ 0.05), whereas lactate oxidation did not differ between groups. Alteration in content of selected enzymes and proteins, as assessed by immunoblot analysis, could not account for the reduction in glycolysis or increase in glucose and palmitate oxidation observed. Combined with the studies on the beneficial effect of pharmacological modulation of energy metabolism, the present results provide support for a role of metabolic adaptations in protecting the trained heart against ischemia-reperfusion injury. exercise training; cardiac hypertrophy; ischemia-reperfusion; energy metabolism EPIDEMIOLOGICAL DATA clearly show that regular physical exercise exerts a protective effect against the morbidity and mortality associated with ischemic heart disease (34, 38, 44). Regular physical activity decreases the incidence of myocardial infarction (34,38,44). Furthermore, the survival rate after a myocardial infarction is greater in active individuals compared with sedentary ones (34).Several studies using trained rat models have demonstrated that these epidemiological observations can be at least partly attributed to a decreased susceptibility of the heart to ischemia-reperfusion injury (4, 5). In isolated heart perfusions, this translates into an improved recovery of contractile function (4, 5) and a reduction of cytosolic enzyme release (20) during reperfusion after global ischemia. Similar protective effects are also observed in models of left coronary occlusion in vivo: myocardial infarct size is reduced (30), pressure work is maintained at higher levels during and after ischemia (16,39),...
Normal insulin secretion is oscillatory in vivo, and the oscillations are impaired in type II diabetes. We and others have shown oscillations in insulin secretion from isolated perifused islets stimulated with glucose, and in this study we show oscillations in insulin secretion from the glucose-sensitive clonal beta-cell line INS-1. We have proposed that the oscillatory insulin secretion may be caused by spontaneous oscillations of glycolysis and the ATP:ADP ratio in the beta-cell, analogous to those seen in glycolyzing muscle extracts. The mechanism of the latter involves autocatalytic activation of the key regulatory enzyme, phosphofructokinase (PFK), by its product fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (F16BP). However, of the three PFK subunit isoforms (M-[muscle], L-[liver], and C-type, predominant in fibroblasts), only M-type is activated by micromolar F16BP at near-physiological conditions. We therefore studied PFK isoforms in the beta-cell. Western analysis of PFK subunits in isolated rat islets and INS-1 cells showed the presence of M-type, as well as C-type and perhaps lesser amounts of L-type. Kinetic studies of PFK activity in INS-1 cell extracts showed strong activation by micromolar concentrations of F16BP at near-physiological concentrations of ATP (several millimolar) and AMP and fructose 6-phosphate (micromolar), indicative of the M-type isoform. Activation by submicromolar concentrations of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (F26BP) and potent inhibition by citrate were also observed. The F16BP-stimulatable activity was about one-half of the F26BP-stimulatable activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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