Abstract

The incorporation of [ 14C]mannose from GDP-[ 14C]mannose into dolichyl mannosyl phosphate in rat liver microsomes showed a biphasic time-course; an initial rapid incorporation of mannose which ceased within 2 min and a much slower incorporation which continued for 30 min. In the presence of 0.18 mM (250 μg/ml) bacitracin, the rapid incorporation proceeded normally whereas the slow incorporation was inhibited by about 70%. Upon addition of dolichyl pyrophosphate, the microsomes catalyzed the dephosphorylation of the added compound which was also inhibited by bacitracin. The results, coupled with several other observations, suggest that the rapid reaction represents the transfer of mannose to endogenous dolichyl phosphate whereas the bacitracin-sensitive, slow reaction represents a more complex process in which the enzymatic dephosphorylation of dolichyl pyrophosphate is involved as a rate-limiting step.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call