Abstract

The phosphorylation of glucose by different sugar kinases plays an essential role in Archaea because of the absence of a phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent transferase system characteristic for Bacteria. In the genome of the hyperthermophilic Archaeon Thermoproteus tenax a gene was identified with sequence similarity to glucokinases of the so-called ROK family (repressor protein, open reading frame, sugar kinase). The T. tenax enzyme, like the recently described ATP-dependent "glucokinase" from Aeropyrum pernix, shows the typical broad substrate specificity of hexokinases catalyzing not only phosphorylation of glucose but also of other hexoses such as fructose, mannose, or 2-deoxyglucose, and thus both enzymes represent true hexokinases. The T. tenax hexokinase shows strikingly low if at all any regulatory properties and thus fulfills no important control function at the beginning of the variant of the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway in T. tenax. Transcript analyses reveal that the hxk gene of T. tenax is cotranscribed with an upstream located orfX, which codes for an 11-kDa protein of unknown function. Growth-dependent studies and promoter analyses suggest that post-transcriptional RNA processing might be involved in the generation of the monocistronic hxk message, which is observed only under heterotrophic growth conditions. Data base searches revealed T. tenax hexokinase homologs in some archaeal, few eukaryal, and many bacterial genomes. Phylogenetic analyses confirm that the archaeal hexokinase is a member of the so-called ROK family, which, however, should be referred to as ROK group because it represents a group within the bacterial glucokinase fructokinase subfamily II of the hexokinase family. Thus, archaeal hexokinases represent a second major group of glucose-phosphorylating enzymes in Archaea beside the recently described archaeal ADP-dependent glucokinases, which were recognized as members of the ribokinase family. The distribution of the two types of sugar kinases, differing in their cosubstrate as well as substrate specificity, within Archaea is discussed on the basis of physiological constraints of the respective organisms.

Highlights

  • The phosphorylation of glucose by different sugar kinases plays an essential role in Archaea because of the absence of a phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent transferase system characteristic for Bacteria

  • Phylogenetic analyses confirm that the archaeal hexokinase is a member of the so-called ROK family, which, should be referred to as ROK group because it represents a group within the bacterial glucokinase fructokinase subfamily II of the hexokinase family

  • To address the questions about the dominant phenotype(s) of nucleotide-dependent glucose-phosphorylating enzymes and their metabolic function in Archaea we focused on the ATP-dependent glucokinases (ATP)-dependent hexokinase of the hyperthermophilic Archaeon T. tenax

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Summary

The Hexokinase of the Hyperthermophile Thermoproteus tenax

ATP-DEPENDENT HEXOKINASES AND ADP-DEPENDENT GLUCOKINASES, TWO ALTERNATIVES FOR GLUCOSE PHOSPHORYLATION IN ARCHAEA*. Archaeal hexokinases represent a second major group of glucose-phosphorylating enzymes in Archaea beside the recently described archaeal ADP-dependent glucokinases, which were recognized as members of the ribokinase family. The characterized archaeal ADP-dependent glucokinases represent homodimeric (P. furiosus, 47-kDa subunit (1, 2)) or monomeric (T. litoralis, kDa (2); M. jannaschii, kDa (3)) proteins and seem to exhibit no obvious regulatory potential, inhibition by the reaction product AMP (Ki ϭ 0.06 mM (14)) is described for the P. furiosus enzyme. The scarce knowledge about archaeal sugar kinases, especially hexokinases and glucokinases, motivates intense studies to get more insight into the evolution of these enzymes, their diversification with respect to substrate specificity, the physiological background of cosubstrate specificity (ATP versus ADP), and their regulatory potential for directing the carbon flux through the various pathways. ATP-dependent phosphorylation of glucose was demonstrated in T. tenax (28), so far no information was available about the enzyme, which catalyzes the first committed step of the pathway and represents an important control point in many organisms

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Archaeal Hexokinase
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Bacteria Eukarya
Oligomeric state
NDe NDe
Full Text
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