Glucokinase: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
Cleaned up the format. Added in a lot of missing links.
Line 1: Line 1:
Glucokinase is an enzyme that phosphorylates glucose to become glucose-6-phosphate. It is an isozyme of hexokinase (hexokinase IV) that is present in hepatocytes. Compared to the other forms of hexokinase, glucokinase has a low affinity for glucose. This means that when glucose levels in the body are low, glucose isn't phosphorylated to become glucose-6-phosphate, and it goes to other tissues that have a greater need for the glucose. Furthermore, glucokinase is not inhibited by the product glucose-6-phosphate. This allows the enzyme to continually phosphorylate glucose, even when the concentration of glucose-6-phosphate is very high<ref>Lehninger, A. L. Nelson, D. L. Cox, M. M. (2000) Principles of Biochemistry, 6th edition, New York: Worth Publishers. Chapter 15, page 578.</ref>.&nbsp;  
Glucokinase is an [[enzyme|enzyme]] that [[Phosphorylation|phosphorylates]] [[glucose|glucose]] to become [[Glucose-6-phosphate|glucose-6-phosphate]]. It is an [[isozyme|isozyme]] of [[hexokinase|hexokinase]] ([[hexokinase IV|hexokinase IV]]) that is present in [[hepatocytes|hepatocytes]]. Compared to the other forms of hexokinase, glucokinase has a low affinity for glucose. This means that when glucose levels in the body are low, glucose isn't phosphorylated to become glucose-6-phosphate, and it goes to other tissues that have a greater need for the glucose. Furthermore, glucokinase is not inhibited by the product glucose-6-phosphate. This allows the enzyme to continually phosphorylate glucose, even when the concentration of glucose-6-phosphate is very high<ref>Lehninger, A. L. Nelson, D. L. Cox, M. M. (2000) Principles of Biochemistry, 6th edition, New York: Worth Publishers. Chapter 15, page 578.</ref>.&nbsp;<span>
 
</span><br>  
<span>
</span>  
 
<br>


=== <span>References&nbsp;</span>&nbsp;  ===
=== <span>References&nbsp;</span>&nbsp;  ===


<references />
<references />

Revision as of 08:15, 21 October 2016

Glucokinase is an enzyme that phosphorylates glucose to become glucose-6-phosphate. It is an isozyme of hexokinase (hexokinase IV) that is present in hepatocytes. Compared to the other forms of hexokinase, glucokinase has a low affinity for glucose. This means that when glucose levels in the body are low, glucose isn't phosphorylated to become glucose-6-phosphate, and it goes to other tissues that have a greater need for the glucose. Furthermore, glucokinase is not inhibited by the product glucose-6-phosphate. This allows the enzyme to continually phosphorylate glucose, even when the concentration of glucose-6-phosphate is very high[1]

References  

  1. Lehninger, A. L. Nelson, D. L. Cox, M. M. (2000) Principles of Biochemistry, 6th edition, New York: Worth Publishers. Chapter 15, page 578.