Glycogenesis

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'''Step 4'''
'''Step 4'''
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The enzyme glycogenin is needed to create initial short glycogen chains, which are then lengthened and branched by the other enzymes of glycogenesis. Glycogenin, a homodimer, has a tyrosine residue on each subunit that serves as the anchor for the reducing end of glycogen. Initially, about seven UDP-glucose molecules are added to each tyrosine residue by glycogenin, forming α(1→4) bonds.
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The enzyme [[glycogenin]] is needed to create initial short glycogen chains, which are then lengthened and branched by the other enzymes of glycogenesis. Glycogenin, a homodimer, has a tyrosine residue on each subunit that serves as the anchor for the reducing end of glycogen. Initially, about seven UDP-glucose molecules are added to each tyrosine residue by glycogenin, forming α(1→4) bonds.
</StructureSection>
</StructureSection>
== References ==
== References ==
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<references/>

Revision as of 15:19, 15 December 2022

Hexokinase I complex with ATP analog, glucose, glucose-phosphate and Mg+2 ion (PDB code 1qha)

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References

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Alexander Berchansky

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