Abstract

The distribution of hexokinase between bound and soluble forms was studied by digitonin fractionation of Zajdela hepatoma ascites cells maintained under various metabolic conditions. Addition of glucose to Zajdela cells respiring on endogenous substrates induces an immediate inhibition of respiration by 50-60% ( Crabtree effect), and a production of acid due to glycolysis. Acid production decreases abruptly after 60s to 50% of the initial rate. The ATP/ADP ratio is not altered by the addition of glucose or by different rates of glycolysis. The uncoupling agent carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone decreases the ATP/ADP ratio by 10-fold in cells respiring on endogenous substrate, but has little effect on cells oxidizing glucose. Rapid fractionation of the cells under these various metabolic conditions revealed no change in the distribution of hexokinase. Approx. 75% of hexokinase is bound in all cases, in contrast with lactate dehydrogenase, 95% of which was in the soluble form. Longer-term incubations (to 20 min) revealed only slight (10-15%) increases in soluble hexokinase in cells incubated with glucose. Various metabolic inhibitors had little additional affect on the subcellular distribution of hexokinase. Thus a rapid release of hexokinase from mitochondrial membrane is not a mechanism by which glycolysis is regulated in rapidly growing Zajdela hepatoma.

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