Hexokinase is the first enzyme in the glycolytic pathway catalyzing the reaction in which glucose is phosphorylated into glucose-6-phosphate. Mammals possess 4 isoforms of hexokinase; HK2 (hexokinase 2) is the predominant form in insulin-sensitive tissues such as adipocytes, as well as skeletal and cardiac muscle. In addition to its function in glucose metabolism, HK2 is associated with cardiomyocyte protection against mitochondrial-mediated apoptotic cell death; whether or not HK2 played a role in cardioprotective autophagy was yet to be discovered. However, in a recent study highlighted by a punctum in this issue of Autophagy, Roberts et al. addressed this possibility, uncovering a direct link between HK2, TORC1, and autophagy regulation.
Keywords: MTORC1; TOR signaling motif; autophagy; cardiomyocytes; hexokinase-II.