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Activators and Inhibitors of Hexokinase in Human Blood

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

H. Weil-Malherbe
Affiliation:
Runwell Hospital, Wickford, Essex
A. D. Bone
Affiliation:
Runwell Hospital, Wickford, Essex

Extract

The endocrine system is one of the foremost links in the psychosomatic relationship, and its special significance in the study of mental disease needs no emphasis. Compared with our knowledge of the chemistry and basic functions of the hormones very little is known about their more intimate mechanisms of action. It has been possible to assign to some hormones the function of controlling the rate of specific metabolic processes, but whether they do so by a direct reaction with a component of one or more enzyme systems or indirectly by influencing the mutual accessibility of enzyme and substrate is still a matter of discussion. The latter mechanism would depend on a spatial organization involving membrane barriers, phase boundaries or similar discontinuities and, in fact, many hormonal effects which can be demonstrated in vitro with the aid of intact or sliced tissues disappear when the structural organization of the cell is destroyed. It is, however, well to remember that synthetic and other energy-consuming reactions were believed until recently to depend on the integrity of the cellular organization, but when some insight was gained into the mechanism of biological energy transformation and the function of labile phosphate bonds in these processes, it was possible to demonstrate many such reactions in homogeneous systems. Similarly, the interactions of hormones and enzymes may require the intervention of unstable mediators, and control of these factors might allow their reconstruction in cell-free extracts. In any case, it is more satisfying to account for the great specificity of hormonal action on the basis of a chemical reaction with specific enzymes than by a mechanism leading to predominantly physical changes.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1951 

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