Litcius/Paper detail

Regulatory phosphorylation event of phosphoglucomutase 1 tunes its activity to regulate glycogen metabolism

Sofía Doello, Niels Neumann, Karl Forchhammer

2022FEBS Journal21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Regulation of glycogen metabolism is of vital importance in organisms of all three kingdoms of life. Although the pathways involved in glycogen synthesis and degradation are well known, many regulatory aspects around the metabolism of this polysaccharide remain undeciphered. Here, we used the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis as a model to investigate how glycogen metabolism is regulated in nitrogen-starved dormant cells, which entirely rely on glycogen catabolism to resume growth upon nitrogen repletion. We identified phosphoglucomutase 1 (PGM1) as a key regulatory point in glycogen metabolism, and post-translational modification as an essential mechanism for controlling its activity. We could show that PGM1 is phosphorylated ata residue in the regulatory latch domain (Ser 47) during nitrogen starvation, which inhibits its activity. Inactivation of PGM1 by phosphorylation at Ser 47 prevents premature degradation of the glycogen stores and appears to be essential for survival of Synechocystis in the dormant state. Remarkably, this regulatory mechanism seems to be evolutionary conserved in PGM1 enzymes, from bacteria to humans.

Topics & Concepts

PhosphoglucomutaseGlycogenBiochemistryBiologyCatabolismGlycogen synthaseGlycogen debranching enzymePhosphorylationMetabolismGlycogen branching enzymeGlycogen phosphorylaseEnzymeProtist diversity and phylogenyAlgal biology and biofuel productionGenetic and Kidney Cyst Diseases