Abstract

Human erythrocytes were loaded with homogeneous rat liver glucokinase by an encapsulation method based on hypotonic hemolysis and isotonic resealing. As assayed at 10 mM glucose, glucokinase and hexokinase activities in glucokinase-loaded erythrocytes were 218 and 384 nmol/min/gHb, respectively; whereas hexokinase activity in both intact and unloaded red cells, which contain no glucokinase activity, was about 400 nmol/min/gHb. No difference in the rate of lactate production from glucose anomers between intact and unloaded erythrocytes suggested that the encapsulation procedure itself did not affect glucose utilization in red cells. Alpha-anomeric preference in lactate production from glucose was observed in glucokinase-loaded erythrocytes, whereas the beta anomer of glucose was more rapidly utilized than the alpha anomer in intact and unloaded erythrocytes. The results indicate that the step of glucose phosphorylation determines the anomeric preference in glucose utilization by human erythrocytes, since glucokinase and hexokinase are alpha- and beta-preferential, respectively, in glucose phosphorylation.

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