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  • Title: Different developmental changes in latency for two functions of a single membrane bound enzyme: glucose-6-phosphatase activities as a function of age.
    Author: Goldsmith PK, Stetten MR.
    Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta; 1979 Mar 07; 583(2):133-47. PubMed ID: 221037.
    Abstract:
    (1). The capacity for the synthesis of glucose 6-phosphate from PPi and glucose as well as for glucose-6-P hydrolysis, catalyzed by rat liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase, increases rapidly from low prenatal levels to a maximum between the second and fifth day, then slowly decreases to reach adult levels. When measured in enzyme preparations optimally activated by hydroxyl ions, the maximum neonatal activities were 4--5-fold higher than in adult animals and several-fold higher than had previously been observed for the unactivated enzyme. (2) The latencies of two catalytic activities associated with the same membrane-bound enzyme show strikingly different age-related changes. The latency of PPi-glucose phosphotransferase activity reaches high levels (60--80% latent) soon after birth and remains high throughout life, while the latency of glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase decreases with age. The phosphohydrolase is 2--3 times more latent in the liver of the neonatal animal than in the adult. (3). The well established neonatal overshoot of liver glucose-6-phosphatase is almost entirely due to changes in the enzyme in the rough microsomal membranes. The enzyme activity in the rough membrane reaches a maximum and then decreases after day 2, while that in the smooth membrane is still slowly increasing. Despite the great differences in absolute specific activities and in the pattern of early enzyme development between the rough and smooth microsomes, enzyme latency in the two subfractions remains parallel, glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase being only slightly more latent, while PPi-glucose phospho-transferase is much more latent in smooth than in rough membranes throughout life. (4). Kidney glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase and PPi-glucose phosphotransferase activities were found to change in a parallel fashion with age, showing a small neonatal peak between days 2 and 7 before rising to adult levels. Kidney phosphotransferase activity, like that of liver, remained highly latent throughout life. In contrast to liver, the glucose-6-P phosphohydrolase of kidney did not show a characteristic decrease in latency with age and in the adult remained appreciably more latent than in liver. (5). An improved method was devised for the separation of smooth microsomes from liver homogenates.
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