A. Berteloot et al., EVIDENCE FOR A MEMBRANE EXCHANGEABLE GLUCOSE POOL IN THE FUNCTIONING OF RAT-LIVER GLUCOSE-6-PHOSPHATASE, The Journal of biological chemistry, 270(36), 1995, pp. 21098-21102
We have investigated the kinetics of tracer uptake into rat liver micr
osomes in relation to [C-14]glucose 6-phosphate (Glu-6-P) hydrolysis b
y glucose 6-phosphatase (Glu-6-Pase). 1) The steady-state levels of in
travesicular tracer accumulated during the rapid (AMP(1)) and slow (AM
P(2)) phases of uptake both demonstrate Michaelis-Menten kinetics rela
tive to outside Glu-6-P concentrations with K-m values similar to thos
e observed for the initial burst (V-i) and steady-state (V-ss) rates o
f Glu-6-P hydrolysis. 2) The AMP(1)/AMP(2) ratio is constant (mean val
ue = 0.105 +/- 0.018) over the whole range of outside Glu-6-P concentr
ations and is equal to the AMP(1max)/AMP(2max) ratio (0.109 +/- 0.032)
, 3) Linear relationships are observed between the initial rates of gl
ucose transport during the slow uptake phase (V-a2) and [AMP(1)], and
between [V-ss] and [AMP(2)]. 4) The value of V-ss max exceeds by more
than 10-fold that of V-a2 max. 5) It is concluded that the substrate t
ransport model is incompatible with those results and that AMP, repres
ents a membrane exchangeable glucose pool. 6) We propose a new version
of the conformational model in which the catalytic site lies deep wit
hin a hydrophilic pocket of an intrinsic membrane protein and communic
ates with the extra- and intravesicular spaces through channels with d
ifferent glucose permeabilities.