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1.
1. The fixation of CO(2) by pyruvate carboxylase in isolated rat brain mitochondria was investigated. 2. In the presence of pyruvate, ATP, inorganic phosphate and magnesium, rat brain mitochondria fixed H(14)CO(3) (-) into tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates at a rate of about 250nmol/30min per mg of protein. 3. Citrate and malate were the main radioactive products with citrate containing most of the radioactivity fixed. The observed rates of H(14)CO(3) (-) fixation and citrate formation correlated with the measured activities of pyruvate carboxylase and citrate synthase in the mitochondria. 4. The carboxylation of pyruvate by the mitochondria had an apparent K(m) for pyruvate of about 0.5mm. 5. Pyruvate carboxylation was inhibited by ADP and dinitrophenol. 6. Malate, succinate, fumarate and oxaloacetate inhibited the carboxylation of pyruvate whereas glutamate stimulated it. 7. The results suggest that the metabolism of pyruvate via pyruvate carboxylase in brain mitochondria is regulated, in part, by the intramitochondrial concentrations of pyruvate, oxaloacetate and the ATP:ADP ratio.  相似文献   

2.
Previous attempts to account for the labelling in vivo of liver metabolites associated with the citrate cycle and gluconeogenesis have foundered because proper allowance was not made for the heterogeneity of the liver. In the basal state (anaesthetized after 24h starvation) this heterogeneity is minimal, and we show that labelling by [14C]bicarbonate can be interpreted unambiguously. [14C]Bicarbonate was infused to an isotopic steady state, and measurements were made of specific radioactivities of blood bicarbonate, alanine, glycerol and lactate, of liver alanine and lactate, and of individual carbon atoms in blood glucose and liver aspartate, citrate and malate. (Existing methods for several of these measurements were extensively modified.) The results were combined with published rates of gluconeogenesis, uptake of gluconeogenic precursors by the liver, and citrate-cycle flux, all measured under similar conditions, and with estimates of other rates made from published data. To interpret the results, three ancillary measurements were made: the rate of CO2 exchange by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK; EC 4.1.1.32) under conditions that simulated those in vivo; the 14C isotope effect in the pyruvate carboxylase (EC 6.4.1.1) reaction (14C/12C = 0.992 +/- 0.008; S.E.M., n = 8); the ratio of labelling by [2-14C]- to that by [1-14C]-pyruvate of liver glutamate 1.5 min after injection. This ratio, 3.38, is a measure of the disequilibrium in the mitochondria between malate and oxaloacetate. The data were analysed with due regard to experimental variance, uncertainties in values of fluxes measured in vitro, hepatic heterogeneity and renal glucose output. The following conclusions were reached. The results could not be explained if CO2 fixation was confined to pyruvate carboxylase and there was only one, well-mixed, pool of oxaloacetate in the mitochondria. Addition of the other carboxylation reactions, those of PEPCK, isocitrate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.42) and malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40), was not enough. Incomplete mixing of mitochondrial oxaloacetate had to be assumed, i.e. that there was metabolic channelling of oxaloacetate formed from pyruvate towards gluconeogenesis. There was some evidence that malate exchange across the mitochondrial membrane might also be channelled, with incomplete mixing with that in the citrate cycle. Calculated rates of exchange of CO2 by PEPCK were in agreement with those measured in vitro, with little or no activation by Fe2+ ions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Quinolinic acid (Q.A.) which inhibits gluconeogenesis at the site of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) synthesis, reduced the content of PEP while elevating that of aspartate and malate in rat livers perfused with a medium containing 10 mM L-lactate. Glucagon at 10(-9) M did not affect Q.A. inhibition of lactate gluconeogenesis nor the depression of PEP level, but further elevated malate and aspartate accumulation. Exogenous butyrate had the same effect as glucagon on these parameters. Butylmalonate (BM), an inhibitor of mitochondrial malate transport, inhibited lactate and propionate gluconeogenesis to similar extents. The addition of 10(-9) M glucagon had no effect on BM inhibition of lactate gluconeogenesis, but almost completely reversed BM inhibition of propionate gluconeogenesis. These results suggest that glucagon may act on at least two sites, resulting in elevated hepatic gluconeogenesis. First, it may stimulate dicarboxylic acid synthesis (malate and oxaloacetate, specifically) through activation of pyruvate carboxylation. Secondly, it may stimulate synthesis of other dicarboxylic acids (fumarate, for example) by activating certain steps of the tricarboxylic acid cycle. The stimulatory effect of glucagon on gluconeogenesis in the perfused rat liver is well documented (1, 2). Exton et al., who earlier located the site of stimulation between pyruvate and PEP synthesis (3), proposed that glucagon stimulated PEP synthesis in the perfused rat liver (4), while reports from Williamson et al. (5) suggested the pyruvate-carboxylase reaction as the site of glucagon action. Stimulation at sites above PEP formation and of portions of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (4) by glucagon have also been suggested (6). In the present experiments, we have used substrates entering at different parts of the gluconeogenic pathway, and specific inhibitors to further resolve the action of glucagon.  相似文献   

4.
Synthesis of phosphoenolpyruvate from propionate in sheep liver   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
1. Utilization of propionate by sheep liver mitochondria was stimulated equally by pyruvate or alpha-oxoglutarate, with formation predominantly of malate. Pyruvate increased conversion of propionate carbon into citrate, whereas alpha-oxoglutarate increased formation of phosphoenolpyruvate. The fraction of metabolized propionate converted into phosphoenolpyruvate was about 17% in the presence or absence of alpha-oxoglutarate and about 7% in the presence of pyruvate. Pyruvate consumption was inhibited by 80% by 5mm-propionate. 2. Compared with rat liver, sheep liver was characterized by very high activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and moderately high activities of aconitase in the mitochondria and by low activities of ;malic' enzyme, pyruvate kinase and lactate dehydrogenase in the cytosol. Activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxy-kinase were similar in liver cytosol from rats and sheep. Activities of malate dehydrogenase and NADP-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase in sheep liver were about half those in rat liver. 3. The phosphate-dicarboxylate antiport was active in sheep liver mitochondria, but compared with rat liver mitochondria the citrate-malate antiport showed only low activity and mitochondrial aconitase was relatively inaccessible to external citrate. The rate of swelling of mitochondria induced by phosphate in solutions of ammonium malate was inversely related to the concentration of malate. 4. The results are discussed in relation to gluconeogenesis from propionate in sheep liver. It is proposed that propionate is converted into malate by the mitochondria and the malate is converted into phosphoenolpyruvate by enzymes in the cytosol. In this way sufficient NADH would be generated in the cytosol to convert the phosphoenolpyruvate into glucose.  相似文献   

5.
A scheme is presented that shows how the reactions involved in gluconeogenesis, glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle are linked in rat liver. Equations are developed that show how label is redistributed in aspartate, glutamate and phosphopyruvate when it is introduced as specifically labelled pyruvate or glucose either at a constant rate (steady-state theory) or at a variable rate (non-steady-state theory). For steady-state theory the fractions of label introduced as specifically labelled pyruvate that are incorporated into glucose and carbon dioxide are also given, and for both theories the specific radioactivities of aspartate and glutamate relative to the specific radioactivity of the substrate. The theories allow for entry of label into the tricarboxylic acid cycle via both oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA, for (14)CO(2) fixation and for loss of label from the tricarboxylic acid cycle in glutamate, but not for losses in citrate. They also allow for incomplete symmetrization of label in oxaloacetate due to incomplete equilibration with fumarate both in the extramitochondrial part of the cell and in the mitochondrion on entry of oxaloacetate into the tricarboxylic acid cycle. In the latter case failure both of oxaloacetate to equilibrate with malate and of malate to equilibrate with fumarate are considered.  相似文献   

6.
Pathway of Succinate and Propionate Formation in Bacteroides fragilis   总被引:12,自引:3,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Cell suspensions of Bacteroides fragilis were allowed to ferment glucose and lactate labeled with (14)C in different positions. The fermentation products, propionate and acetate, were isolated, and the distribution of radioactivity was determined. An analysis of key enzymes of possible pathways was also made. The results of the labeling experiments showed that: (i) B. fragilis ferments glucose via the Embden-Meyerhof pathway; and (ii) there was a randomization of carbons 1, 2, and 6 of glucose during conversion to propionate, which is in accordance with propionate formation via fumarate and succinate. The enzymes 6-phosphofrucktokinase (pyrophosphate-dependent), fructose-1,6-diphosphate aldolase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, malate dehydrogenase, fumarate reductase, and methylmalonyl-coenzyme A mutase could be demonstrated in cell extracts. Their presence supported the labeling results and suggested that propionate is formed from succinate via succinyl-, methylmalonyl-, and propionyl-coenzyme A. From the results it also is clear that CO(2) is necessary for growth because it is needed for the formation of C4 acids. There was also a randomization of carbons 1, 2, and 6 of glucose during conversion to acetate, which indicated that pyruvate kinase played a minor role in pyruvate formation from phosphoenolpyruvate. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, oxaloacetate decarboxylase, and malic enzyme (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent) were present in cell extracts of B. fragilis, and the results of the labeling experiments agreed with pyruvate synthesis via oxaloacetate and malate if these acids are in equilibrium with fumarate. The conversion of [2-(14)C]- and [3-(14)C]lactate to acetate was not associated with a randomization of radioactivity.  相似文献   

7.
1. The aim of this work was to investigate the role of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (ATP:oxaloacetate carboxy-lyase (transphosphorylating) EC 4.1.1.49) in the conversion of fat to sugar by the cotyledons of seedlings of Cucurbita pepo. 2. The enzyme was partially purified from the cotyledons of 5-day-old seedlings. The Michaelis constants for oxaloacetate and ATP were 56 and 119 micron, respectively. The decarboxylation reaction was optimum at pH 7.4. A range of intermediary metabolites did not affect the activity of the enzyme, but 3-mercaptopicolinic acid at micron concentrations was an effective inhibitor. 3. Centrifugation of extracts of 5-day-old cotyledons sedimented appreciable proportions of the ribuloseibisphosphate carboxylase, isocitrate lyase and fumarate hydratase present but very little of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. 4. Measurements of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase of cotyledons during germination showed that the maximum catalytic activity exceeded, and changed coincidently with, the rate of gluconeogenesis. 5. 3-Mercaptopicolinic acid inhibited gluconeogenesis from [1-14C]- and [2-14C]acetate supplied to excised cotyledons. The detailed distribution of 14C indicated inhibition of the conversion of oxaloacetate to phosphoenolpyruvate. 6. It is concluded that in marrow cotyledons phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase is in the soluble phase of the cytoplasm and catalyses a component reaction of gluconeogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
The development of gluconeogenesis in rat liver. Experiments in vivo   总被引:14,自引:12,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
1. The injection of substrate amounts of lactate into newborn rats produced an increase in the concentration of phosphoenolpyruvate in liver. Similar experiments with foetal rats showed no increase in phosphoenolpyruvate concentration although pyruvate formation was observed. 2. The administration of pyruvate to foetal rats was also without effect on the hepatic phosphoenolpyruvate concentration, although a 20-fold increase in this was observed when pyruvate was injected into newborn animals. 3. Analogous experiments with aspartate produced qualitatively similar differences between foetal and newborn rats. 4. When [(14)C]-lactate, -pyruvate or -aspartate was injected into foetal or newborn rats incorporation of radioactivity into liver glucose was observed only in the newborn animals. 5. Lactate/pyruvate ratios of 213 in foetal liver and 13.5 in the livers of newborn rats indicated a relatively reduced environment in the cytosol of foetal liver. This difference in redox state was illustrated experimentally by a greater conversion of pyruvate into lactate and an increased formation of malate in foetal liver. 6. Although both the substrate-loading and tracer experiments indicated a block in gluconeogenesis in foetal liver at the stage of conversion of oxaloacetate into phosphoenolpyruvate, gluconeogenesis was also hindered by a highly reduced environment.  相似文献   

9.
1. The equations derived by Heath (1968) were applied to data from experiments on rats in four metabolic states: fed, post-absorptive, starved and 2hr. after an eventually lethal injury. The data used were: (a) The fractions of label injected as C1-, C2- and C3-pyruvate (where the prefix indicates the position of labelling) that are incorporated into carbon dioxide and glucose in post-absorptive and injured rats (yields). Yields could be corrected to yields on label taken up by the liver. (b) The (C5-label in glutamate)/(total label in glutamate) ratio in the liver after C2-pyruvate in rats in all four states. (c) The distribution of label within glutamate after C2-pyruvate or C2-alanine in the livers of fed, post-absorptive and starved rats. (d) The distribution of label within glucose after C2-lactate or C2-pyruvate in starved rats. (e) The relative specific radioactivities of pyruvate, aspartate, glutamate and (in two states only) of glucose 6-phosphate after injection of [U-(14)C]glucose into rats in all four states. These data were previously published, except those after (e) and some after (b) above, which are given in this paper. 2. In addition the concentrations of pyruvate, citrate, glutamate and aspartate in the livers of post-absorptive and injured rats were found. Injury decreased glutamate and citrate concentrations and to a smaller extent aspartate and pyruvate concentrations. 3. Non-steady-state theory showed that most of the data could be used without serious error in steady-state theory. Steady-state theory correlated all but one observation (the relative yields of (14)CO(2) from C2- and C3-pyruvate) listed after (a)-(e) above within the experimental errors, and gave rough estimates of the rates of pyruvate carboxylation, conversion of pyruvate and fat into acetyl-CoA and utilization of glutamate. The main conclusions were: (a) symmetrization of label in oxaloacetate both in the mitochondrion and in the cytoplasm was far from complete, because oxaloacetate did not equilibrate with fumarate in either. From this and other findings it was deduced: (b) that malate or fumarate or both left the mitochondrion, and not oxaloacetate; (c) that there was a loss from the mitochondrion of a fraction of the malate or fumarate or both formed from succinate, and (d) the resulting deficiency of oxaloacetate for the perpetuation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle was made up from pyruvate in fed and post-absorptive rats, but (e) in the starved rat could only be made up by utilization of glutamate. (f) In the fed rat the tricarboxylic acid cycle ran mostly on pyruvate, but in the post-absorptive and starved rat mostly on fat. (g) In the injured rat the tricarboxylic acid cycle was slowed, label in oxaloacetate was completely symmetrized (cf. conclusion a), and the tricarboxylic acid cycle utilized glutamate. (h) The conclusions were not invalidated by isotopic exchange, i.e. flux of label without net flux of compound, nor by interaction with lipogenic processes. (i) In the kidneys interaction between the tricarboxylic acid cycle and gluconeogenesis was different from in the liver, and was much less. The effects on the theory were roughly assessed, and were small. 4. The experiments and optimum experimental conditions required to check the theory are listed, and several predictions, open to experimental confirmation, are made.  相似文献   

10.
1. The synthesis of phosphoenolpyruvate and the O(2) consumption from the tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates citrate, alpha-oxoglutarate, malate and succinate by guinea-pig mitochondria were compared. Malate was the most effective of these precursors; there was no synthesis of phosphoenolpyruvate from succinate. 2. The addition of palmitate, acetoacetate and ATP enhanced the synthesis of phosphoenolpyruvate from citrate and alpha-oxoglutarate. Palmitate and ATP increased the O(2) consumption, whereas acetoacetate had no effect on this parameter. 3. Octanoate depressed the synthesis of phosphoenolpyruvate from citrate, alpha-oxoglutarate and malate and increased the O(2) consumption. Pentenoic acid had no effect on phosphoenolpyruvate synthesis from any of the substrates used, although it increased the uptake of O(2). These findings might be relevant to the control of gluconeogenesis in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
1. Gluconeogenesis from lactate or pyruvate was studied in perfused livers from starved rats at perfusate pH7.4 or under conditions simulating uncompensated metabolic acidosis (perfusate pH6.7-6.8). 2. In 'acidotic' perfusions gluconeogenesis and uptake of lactate or pyruvate were decreased. 3. Measurement of hepatic intermediate metabolites suggested that the effect of acidosis was exerted at a stage preceding phosphoenolpyruvate. 4. Total intracellular oxaloacetate concentration was significantly decreased in the acidotic livers perfused with lactate. 5. It is suggested that decreased gluconeogenesis in acidosis is due to substrate limitation of phosphoenolypyruvate carboxykinase. 6. The possible reasons for the fall in oxaloacetate concentration in acidotic livers are discussed; two of the more likely mechanisms are inhibition of the pyruvate carboxylase system and a change in the [malate]/[oxaloacetate] ratio due to the fall in intracellular pH.  相似文献   

12.
A method is described by which the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial content of malate, oxaloacetate, aspartate, glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, isocitrate, and citrate can be calculated. The values so obtained confirm that oxaloacetate occurs mainly in the cytosol. Aspartate, glutamate, and 2-oxoglutarate appear to be mainly located in the cytosol. Considerable redistribution of these metabolites occurs in the different nutritional and hormonal states. The redox state of the nicotinamide nucleotides in the two compartments has been calculated using the compartmented values. The mitochondrial redox state of the NADP couple appears to be far more reduced than has hitherto been thought. Control of the glycolytic pathway is vested in phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase/3-phosphoglycerate kinase. The most important modifier of hepatic phosphofructokinase seems to be fructose-6-phosphate, which may act by changing the Ki; for citrate, thus permitting a sufficient concentration of citrate to be present in the cytosol for fatty acid synthesis without inhibition of phosphofructokinase. This overcomes the difficulty of the requirement for a rapid glycolytic flux simultaneously with lipid synthesis from citrate. Ultimate control of glycolysis may rest with glucokinase. The extent of deviation of triose phosphate isomerase from equilibrium is suggested as an index of glycolytic pathway flux and direction. Compartmentation of metabolites in the span pyruvate to phosphoenolpyruvate provided additional evidence for an increased flux through the control enzymes pyruvate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in gluconeogenesis. The possibility that cAMP may be a positive effector of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase is considered. The source of reducing equivalents for gluconeogenesis is examined. It is concluded that transfer of carbon occurs both as malate and aspartate, and that the requirement for reducing equivalents is met in part by the transfer of malate to the cytosol and in part by NADH generated by the fumarate cycle geared to urea production.  相似文献   

13.
The non-invasive technique of 13C nuclear magnetic resonance was applied to study glucose metabolism in vivo in the insect parasite Crithidia fasciculata. It was found that under anaerobic conditions [1-13C]glucose underwent a glycolytic pathway whose main metabolic products were identified as [2-13C]ethanol, [2-13C]succinate and [1,3-13C2]glycerol. These metabolites were excreted by C. fasciculata into the incubation medium, while in the cells [3-13C]phosphoenolpyruvate was also detected in addition to the aforementioned compounds. The C3 acid is apparently the acceptor of the primary CO2 fixation reaction, which leads in Trypanosomatids to the synthesis of succinate. By addition of sodium bicarbonate to the incubation mixture L-[3-13C]malate was detected among the excretion products, while the ethanol:succinate ratio of 2.0 in the absence of bicarbonate changed to a ratio of 0.6 in the presence of the latter. This was due to a shift of the balance between carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate, leading to succinate, and pyruvate decarboxylation leading to ethanol. The addition of 25% 2H2O to the incubation mixture led to the formation of [2-13C, 2-2H]ethanol derived from the prior incorporation of 2H+ into pyruvate in the reactions mediated by either pyruvate kinase or malic enzyme. However, no 2H+ incorporation into L-malate was detected, excluding the possibility that the latter was formed by carboxylation of pyruvate, and lending support to the idea that L-malate results from the carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate to oxaloacetate by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. The formation of [2-13C, 2-2H]-succinate under the same conditions reflected the uptake of 2H+ during the reduction of fumarate. When the incubations were carried out in the presence of 100% 2H2O, several [1-13C, 1-2H]ethanol species were detected, as well as [2-13C, 2-2H]malate and [1,3-13C2, 1,3-2H2]glycerol. The former deuterated compounds reflect the existence of NAD2H species when the incubations were carried out in 100% 2H2O, while the incorporation of 2H+ into [1,3-13C2]glycerol must be attributed to the phosphoglucose-isomerase-mediated reaction during glycolysis.  相似文献   

14.
In isolated hepatocytes, dichloroacetate decreased glucose synthesis from lactate, pyruvate and alanine, but not from substrates which bypass pyruvate carboxylase (propionate, glycerol). It was also found to inhibit pyruvate carboxylation in isolated mitochondria, but only after a preincubation period, and had no effect on partially purified pyruvate carboxylase. Hepatocytes and liver mitochondria metabolized [14C] dichloroacetate to oxalate which inhibits pyruvate carboxylase and mimics, without preincubation, the effects of dichloroacetate in mitochondrial pyruvate carboxylation. Thus, oxalate appears to be responsible for the inhibition of gluconeogenesis by dichloroacetate at the level of pyruvate carboxylation.  相似文献   

15.
Rat lung mitochondrial preparations were incubated in the presence of pyruvate and malate. The principal metabolic products measured were citrate and CO2. Citrate formation from pyruvate was found to be dependent on the presence of malate. Significant citrate was formed in the presence of isocitrate and the rate of citrate formation was increased by the addition of pyruvate. Small amounts of citrate were formed by lung mitochondrial preparations in the presence of 2-oxoglutarate and succinate only after the addition of pyruvate. The level of acetyl-CoA was significantly greater in the presence of pyruvate than in the presence of pyruvate plus malate. The addition of malate to lung mitochondrial preparations increased 14CO2 production from [U-14C]- and [1-14C] pyruvate but decreased its production from [2-14C]- and [3-14C]-pyruvate. However, malate increased the incorporation of [2-14C] pyruvate into malate and citrate. A low level of pyruvate-dependent H14CO8-incorporation into acid-stable products was observed, principally citrate and malate, but this rate did not exceed 5% of the rate of net citrate formation in the presence of malate and pyruvate. The capacity of rat lung mitochondria to form oxaloacetate from pyruvate alone in vitro is very limited, and would appear to cast doubt on a major role of pyruvate carboxylase in citrate formation. It is concluded that the rate of citrate formation from pyruvate is limited by the availability of intramitochondrial oxaloacetate and the rate of citrate efflux across the mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

16.
1. The enzymes in ultrasonically prepared extracts of Chloropseudomonas ethylicum were studied to elucidate how this organism assimilates acetate and carbon dioxide and why it cannot grow with either of these two compounds alone. 2. Such extracts can (i) convert acetate and oxaloacetate into alpha-oxoglutarate, (ii) convert oxaloacetate into succinyl-CoA, (iii) convert phosphopyruvate into 3-phosphoglyceraldehyde and (iv) interconvert phosphopyruvate and pyruvate via oxaloacetate. 3. Pyruvate kinase, alpha-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase, ribulose diphosphate carboxylase, isocitrate lyase and malate synthase were not detected. 4. It is difficult to detect aconitate hydratase, fumarate hydratase and citrate synthase in extracts of the organism ultrasonically treated in tris buffer; to demonstrate these enzymes extracts should be prepared in phosphate buffer containing 2-mercaptoethanol. 5. Provided that this organism can synthesize pyruvate from acetate and carbon dioxide, the enzymes detected are sufficient to account for the nutritional requirements of this organism.  相似文献   

17.
In the presence of 0.5 mM extracellular Ca2+ concentration both 1-34 human parathyroid hormone fragment (0.5 micrograms/ml) as well as 0.1 mM dibutyryl cAMP stimulated gluconeogenesis from lactate in renal tubules isolated from fed rabbits. However, these two compounds did not affect glucose synthesis from pyruvate as substrate. When 2.5 mM Ca2+ was present the stimulatory effect of the hormone fragment on gluconeogenesis from lactate was not detected but dibutyryl cAMP increased markedly the rate of glucose formation from lactate, dihydroxyacetone and glutamate, and inhibited this process from pyruvate and malate. Moreover, dibutyryl cAMP was ineffective in the presence of either 2-oxoglutarate or fructose as substrate. Similar changes in glucose formation were caused by 0.1 mM cAMP. As concluded from the 'crossover' plot the stimulatory effect of dibutyryl cAMP on glucose formation from lactate may result from an acceleration of pyruvate carboxylation due to an increase of intramitochondrial acetyl-CoA, while an inhibition by this compound of gluconeogenesis from pyruvate is likely due to an elevation of mitochondrial NADH/NAD+ ratio, resulting in a decrease of generation of oxaloacetate, the substrate of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Dibutyryl cAMP decreased the conversion of fracture 1,6-bisphosphate to fructose 6-phosphate in the presence of both substrates which may be secondary to an inhibition of fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase.  相似文献   

18.
1. The subcellular distribution of adenine nucleotides, acetyl-CoA, CoA, glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, malate, oxaloacetate, pyruvate, phosphoenolpyruvate, 3-phosphoglycerate, glucose 6-phosphate, aspartate and citrate was studied in isolated hepatocytes in the absence and presence of glucagon by using a modified digitonin procedure for cell fractionation. 2. In the absence of glucagon, the cytosol contains about two-thirds of cellular ATP, some 40-50% of ADP, acetyl-CoA, citrate and phosphoenolpyruvate, more than 75% of total 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, malate, oxaloacetate, pyruvate, 3-phosphoglycerate and aspartate, and all of glucose 6-phosphate. 3. In the presence of glucagon the cytosolic space shows an increase in the content of malate, phosphoenolpyruvate and 3-phosphoglycerate by more than 60%, and those of aspartate and glucose 6-phosphate rise by about 25%. Other metabolites remain unchanged. After glucagon treatment, cytosolic pyruvate is decreased by 37%, whereas glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate decrease by 70%. The [NAD(+)]/[NADH] ratios calculated from the cytosolic concentrations of the reactants of lactate dehydrogenase and malate dehydrogenase were the same. Glucagon shifts this ratio and also that of the [NADP(+)]/[NADPH] couple towards a more reduced state. 4. In the mitochondrial space glucagon causes an increase in the acetyl-CoA and ATP contents by 25%, and an increase in [phosphoenolpyruvate] by 50%. Other metabolites are not changed by glucagon. Oxaloacetate in the matrix is only slightly decreased after glucagon, yet glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate fall to about 25% of the respective control values. The [NAD(+)]/[NADH] ratios as calculated from the [3-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate] ratio and from the matrix [malate]/[oxaloacetate] couple are lowered by glucagon, yet in the latter case the values are about tenfold higher than in the former. 5. Glucagon and oleate stimulate gluconeogenesis from lactate to nearly the same extent. Oleate, however, does not produce the changes in cellular 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate as observed with glucagon. 6. The changes of the subcellular metabolite distribution after glucagon are compatible with the proposal that the stimulation of gluconeogenesis results from as yet unknown action(s) of the hormone at the mitochondrial level in concert with its established effects on proteolysis and lipolysis.  相似文献   

19.
Hepatocytes prepared from rats treated with dexamethasone for 2 or 3h and maintained in the presence of 10 microM-dexamethasone in the preparation and incubation buffers showed significantly elevated rates of gluconeogenesis compared with those prepared from control animals. Dexamethasone treatment also increased the sensitivity of the cells to glucagon and the catecholamines. Analysis of the concentrations of metabolites in the gluconeogenic pathway indicated that dexamethasone decreased the intracellular concentration of pyruvate and increased those of phosphoenolpyruvate, acetyl-CoA and citrate, suggesting a stimulation of the reaction(s) converting pyruvate into phosphoenolpyruvate. This was substantiated by analysis of the pattern of metabolites found in the mitochondrial compartment after digitonin fractionation of the cells. Inclusion of 3-mercaptopicolinate in the incubation enhanced the effect of the hormone on the distribution of metabolites. Thus, in the absence of an effect of the steroid at the level of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase or pyruvate kinase, dexamethasone treatment still increased the formation of malate, aspartate and citrate from pyruvate, indicating a stimulation in the intact cell of pyruvate carboxylase. It is suggested that the stimulation of pyruvate carboxylase is a result of a general activation of mitochondrial function, with an increase in the intramitochondrial concentrations of acetyl-CoA and ATP, a decrease in glutamate and an enhanced intramitochondrial [ATP]/[ADP] ratio.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of oleate, palmitate, and octanoate on glucose formation was studied with lactate or pyruvate as substrate. Octanoate was much more quickly oxidized and utilized for ketone body production than were oleate and palmitate. Among fatty acids studied, only octanoate resulted in a marked increase of the 3-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate (3-OHBAcAc) ratio. Each of the fatty acids studied stimulated glucose synthesis from pyruvate. The enhancement of gluconeogenesis by long-chain fatty acids was abolished after the addition of ammonia. As concluded from the “crossover” plot, the stimulatory effect of fatty acids was due to: (i) a stimulation of pyruvate carboxylation, (ii) a provision of reducing equivalents for glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase, and (iii) an acceleration of flux through hexose diphosphatase. Moreover, palmitate and oleate resulted in an increased generation of mitochondrial phosphpenolpyruvate, while in the presence of octanoate, the activity of mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was diminished. When lactate was used as the glucose precursor, palmitate and oleate increased glucose production by about 50% but did not affect the contribution of mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase to gluconeogenesis. In contrast, in spite of the stimulation of both pyruvate carboxylase and hexose diphosphatase, as judged from the crossover plot, the addition of octanoate resulted in a marked inhibition of both glucose formation and mitochondrial generation of phosphoenolpyruvate. The inhibitory effect of octanoate was reversed by ammonia. Results indicate that fatty acids and ammonia are potent regulatory factors of both the rate of glucose formation and the contribution of mitochondrial phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase to gluconeogenesis in hepatocytes of the fasted rabbit.  相似文献   

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