نتایج جستجو برای: khk,

تعداد نتایج: 109  

Journal: :Physiological genomics 2010
C P Diggle M Shires C McRae D Crellin J Fisher I M Carr A F Markham B E Hayward A Asipu D T Bonthron

Dietary fructose intake has dramatically increased over recent decades and is implicated in the high rates of obesity, hypertension, and type 2 diabetes (metabolic syndrome) in Western societies. The molecular determinants of this epidemiologic correlation are incompletely defined, but high-flux fructose catabolism initiated by ketohexokinase (Khk, fructokinase) is believed to be important. The...

2009
Chi H. Trinh Aruna Asipu David T. Bonthron Simon E. V. Phillips

A molecular understanding of the unique aspects of dietary fructose metabolism may be the key to understanding and controlling the current epidemic of fructose-related obesity, diabetes and related adverse metabolic states in Western populations. Fructose catabolism is initiated by its phosphorylation to fructose 1-phosphate, which is performed by ketohexokinase (KHK). Here, the crystal structu...

Journal: :Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography 2001
M Kozak B Hayward D Borek D T Bonthron M Jaskólski

Ketohexokinase (KHK; E.C. 2.7.1.3) catalyses the (reversible) phosphorylation of fructose to fructose-1-phosphate. KHK is the first enzyme in a specialized catabolic pathway metabolizing dietary fructose to the glycolytic intermediate glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate. Mutations inactivating KHK underlie the metabolic disorder essential fructosuria. The primary structure of KHK shows no significant ho...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology 2015
Chirag Patel Keiichiro Sugimoto Veronique Douard Ami Shah Hiroshi Inui Toshikazu Yamanouchi Ronaldo P Ferraris

Elevated blood fructose concentrations constitute the basis for organ dysfunction in fructose-induced metabolic syndrome. We hypothesized that diet-induced changes in blood fructose concentrations are regulated by ketohexokinase (KHK) and the fructose transporter GLUT5. Portal and systemic fructose concentrations determined by HPLC in wild-type mice fed for 7 days 0% free fructose were <0.07 mM...

Journal: :Diabetes 2015
George Marek Varinderpal Pannu Prashanth Shanmugham Brianna Pancione Dominic Mascia Sean Crosson Takuji Ishimoto Yuri Y Sautin

An epidemic of obesity and type 2 diabetes is linked with the increase in consumption of fructose-containing sugars, such as sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup. In mammalian cells, fructose is metabolized predominantly via phosphorylation to fructose-1 phosphate by ketohexokinase (KHK) or by alternative pathways. Here we demonstrate that a KHK-dependent pathway mediates insulin resistance and...

Journal: :Bio Systems 2015
Rengarajan Kavitha Subramanian Karunagaran Subramaniam Subhash Chandrabose Keun Woo Lee Chandrasekaran Meganathan

Fructose catabolism starts with phosphorylation of d-fructose to fructose 1-phosphate, which is performed by ketohexokinase (KHK). Fructose metabolism may be the key to understand the long-term consumption of fructose in human's obesity, diabetes and metabolic states in western populations. The inhibition of KHK has medicinally potential roles in fructose metabolism and the metabolic syndrome. ...

Journal: :Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN 2009
Pietro Cirillo Michael S Gersch Wei Mu Philip M Scherer Kyung Mee Kim Loreto Gesualdo George N Henderson Richard J Johnson Yuri Y Sautin

Increased consumption of fructose may play an important role in the epidemic of metabolic syndrome and may presage the development of diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and chronic kidney disease. Once in the cell, fructose is phosphorylated by ketohexokinase (KHK), leading to consumption of ATP, formation of AMP, and generation of uric acid through xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR). This study aime...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology 2015
Chirag Patel Veronique Douard Shiyan Yu Phuntila Tharabenjasin Nan Gao Ronaldo P Ferraris

Marked increases in fructose consumption have been tightly linked to metabolic diseases. One-third of ingested fructose is metabolized in the small intestine, but the underlying mechanisms regulating expression of fructose-metabolizing enzymes are not known. We used genetic mouse models to test the hypothesis that fructose absorption via glucose transporter protein, member 5 (GLUT5), metabolism...

2012
Miguel A. Lanaspa Laura G. Sanchez-Lozada Christina Cicerchi Nanxing Li Carlos A. Roncal-Jimenez Takuji Ishimoto Myphuong Le Gabriela E. Garcia Jeffrey B. Thomas Christopher J. Rivard Ana Andres-Hernando Brandi Hunter George Schreiner Bernardo Rodriguez-Iturbe Yuri Y. Sautin Richard J. Johnson

Excessive dietary fructose intake may have an important role in the current epidemics of fatty liver, obesity and diabetes as its intake parallels the development of these syndromes and because it can induce features of metabolic syndrome. The effects of fructose to induce fatty liver, hypertriglyceridemia and insulin resistance, however, vary dramatically among individuals. The first step in f...

Journal: :MMW - Fortschritte der Medizin 2009

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