Literature DB >> 8224611

Glycogen synthesis in the astrocyte: from glycogenin to proglycogen to glycogen.

J Lomako1, W M Lomako, W J Whelan, R S Dombro, J T Neary, M D Norenberg.   

Abstract

The astrocyte of the newborn rat brain has proven to be a versatile system in which to study glycogen biogenesis. We have taken advantage of the rapid stimulation of glycogen synthesis that occurs when glucose is fed to astrocytes, and the marked limitation on this synthesis that occurs in astrocytes previously exposed to ammonium ions. These observations have been related to our earlier reports of the initiation of glycogen synthesis on a protein primer, glycogenin, and the discovery of a low-molecular-weight form of glycogen, proglycogen. The following conclusions have been drawn: 1) In the ammonia-treated astrocytes starved of glucose, free glycogenin is present. 2) When these astrocytes are fed with glucose, proglycogen is synthesized from the glycogenin primer by a glycogen-synthase-like UDPglucose transglucosylase activity (proglycogen synthase) distinct from the well-recognized glycogen synthase, and synthesis stops at this point. 3) Proglycogen is the precursor of macromolecular glycogen, which is synthesized from proglycogen by glycogen synthase when glucose is fed to untreated astrocytes, accounting for the much greater accumulation of total glycogen. 4) The stimulus to proglycogen and macroglycogen synthesis that occurs on feeding glucose to untreated or ammonia-treated astrocytes is the result of the activation of proglycogen synthase, not of glycogen synthase. 5) Therefore, in the synthesis of macromolecular glycogen from glycogenin via proglycogen, the step between glycogenin and proglycogen is rate-limiting. 6) The discovery of additional potential control points in glycogen synthesis, now emerging, may assist the identification of so-far-unexplained aberrations of glycogen metabolism.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8224611     DOI: 10.1096/fasebj.7.14.8224611

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FASEB J        ISSN: 0892-6638            Impact factor:   5.191


  15 in total

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3.  Astrocytic glycogen influences axon function and survival during glucose deprivation in central white matter.

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7.  Metabolic response of the cerebral cortex following gentle sleep deprivation and modafinil administration.

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8.  Functional interactions between heterologously expressed starch-branching enzymes of maize and the glycogen synthases of Brewer's yeast.

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Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2008-07-11       Impact factor: 11.277

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