C-chain-bound glycogenin is released from proteoglycogen by isoamylase and is able to autoglucosylate.

Biochem Biophys Res Commun

Centro de Investigaciones en Química Biológica de Córdoba, UNC-CONICET, Departamento de Química Biológica Dr. Ranwel Caputto, Facultad de Ciencias Químicas, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Ciudad Universitaria, 500 Córdoba, Argentina.

Published: June 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • Proteoglycogen glycogenin is linked to glycogen and can be released and isolated using isoamylase, revealing new insights about its structure.
  • The release of C-glycogenin shows different properties compared to a-glycogenin, particularly in terms of mobility and autoglucosylation capacity when analyzed through SDS-PAGE.
  • The findings suggest that C-glycogenin has a smaller C-chain length compared to other glycogen chains, while also indicating that the maltosaccharide-tyrosine linkage remains intact during the glycosylation process.

Article Abstract

Proteoglycogen glycogenin is linked to the glucose residue of the C-chain reducing end of glycogen. We describe for the first time the release by isoamylase and isolation of C-chain-bound glycogenin (C-glycogenin) from proteoglycogen. The treatment of proteoglycogen with alpha-amylase releases monoglucosylated and diglucosylated glycogenin (a-glycogenin) which is able to autoglucosylate. It had been described that isoamylase splits the glucose-glycogenin linkage of fully autoglucosylated glycogenin previously digested with trypsin, releasing the maltosaccharide moiety. It was also described that carbohydrate-free apo-glycogenin shows higher mobility in SDS-PAGE and twice the autoglucosylation capacity of partly glucosylated glycogenin. On the contrary, we found that the C-glycogenin released from proteoglycogen by isoamylolysis shows lower mobility in SDS-PAGE and about half the autoglucosylation acceptor capacity of the partly glucosylated a-glycogenin. This behavior is consistent with the release of maltosaccharide-bound glycogenin instead of apo-glycogenin. No label was split from auto-[14C]glucosylated C-glycogenin or fully auto-[14C]glucosylated a-glycogenin subjected to isoamylolysis without previous trypsinolysis, thus proving no hydrolysis of the maltosaccharide-tyrosine linkage. The ability of C-glycogenin for autoglucosylation would indicate that the size of the C-chain is lower than the average length of the other glycogen chains.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0006-291x(03)00861-1DOI Listing

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