glikojenin
Glycogenin, sometimes rendered as glikojenin in some languages, is a cytosolic enzyme that serves as the primer for glycogen biosynthesis in animals and fungi. In humans, two glycogenin genes have been described: GYG1, encoding glycogenin-1, and GYG2, encoding glycogenin-2. The protein initiates glycogen synthesis by autoglucosylation: it transfers glucose from UDP-glucose to a specific tyrosine residue on itself, forming a covalently attached glucose at the tyrosine. This reaction repeats to build a short glucose chain that acts as the starter primer for glycogen synthase.
Once a sufficient primer length is reached, glycogen synthase extends the chain and branching enzyme introduces
Biochemically, glycogenin functions as a glycosyltransferase with an active site that recognizes UDP-glucose. It is generally
Genetic mutations in GYG1 or GYG2 can disrupt normal primer formation and have been linked to inherited