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1.
1. The hepatic utilization of gluconeogenic substrates was investigated shortly after portal infusion of either insulin or glucose in fasted rats. 2. After 20 min of insulin infusion blood glucose concentration decreased. However, neither glucose generation from precursors such as alanine or pyruvate nor their incorporation into fatty acids was modified. Under these conditions, insulin rapidly increased the incorporation of gluconeogenic substrates into the hepatic glyceride glycerol fraction. Insulin treatment led to a decrease in substrate incorporation into liver glycogen. 3. After 20 min of portal glucose infusion both plasma insulin and glucose concentrations increased and the incorporation of pyruvate into hepatic glyceride glycerol and into glycogen was also stimulated. 4. A close relationship was observed between blood glucose concentrations and the level of incorporation of gluconeogenic substrates into liver glycogen. 5. In conclusion, during fasting insulin stimulates the incorporation of gluconeogenic substrates into the glycerol moiety of hepatic glycerides, which may be the preferential mechanism through which fatty acid esterification is accomplished during refeeding. This effect of insulin is rapid and detected even before other classical modifications induced by the hormone such as gluconeogenesis inhibition or lipogenesis activation. Furthermore, the effect is not related to insulin-induced hypoglycemia since glucose infusion mimics insulin action on glyceride glycerol synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Incorporation of Glc and Fru into glycogen was measured in perfused livers from 24-h fasted rats using [6-3H]Glc and [U-14C]Fru. For the initial 20 min, livers were perfused with low Glc (2 mM) to deplete hepatic glycogen and were perfused for the following 30 min with various combinations of Glc and Fru. With constant Fru (2 mM), increasing perfusate Glc increased the relative contribution of Glc carbons to glycogen (7.2 +/- 0.4, 34.9 +/- 2.8, and 59.1 +/- 2.7% at 2, 10, and 20 mM Glc, respectively; n = 5 for each). During perfusion with substrate levels seen during refeeding (10 mM Glc, 1.8 mumol/g/min gluconeogenic flux from 2 mM Fru), Fru provided 54.7 +/- 2.7% of the carbons for glycogen, while Glc provided only 34.9 +/- 2.8%, consistent with in vivo estimations. However, the estimated rate of Glc phosphorylation was at least 1.10 +/- 0.11 mumol/g/min, which exceeded by at least 4-fold the glycogen accumulation rate (0.28 +/- 0.04 mumol of glucose/g/min). The total rate of glucose 6-phosphate supply via Glc phosphorylation and gluconeogenesis (2.9 mumol/g/min) exceeded reported in vivo rates of glycogen accumulation during refeeding. Thus, in perfused livers of 24-h fasted rats there is an apparent redundancy in glucose 6-phosphate supply. These results suggest that the rate-limiting step for hepatic glycogen accumulation during refeeding is located between glucose 6-phosphate and glycogen, rather than at the step of Glc phosphorylation or in the gluconeogenic pathway.  相似文献   

3.
Ethanol stimulates glycogenolysis in livers from fed rats.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
To determine the reason for the lack of a hypoglycemic effect of ethanol in the fed state, the effect of ethanol on glucose turnover, liver glycogenolysis, and glucose metabolites was determined. Chronically catheterized awake and freely moving fed rats received either ethanol (blood ethanol, 37 +/- 10 mmol/liter, n = 11) or saline (n = 13) intravenously for 4 hr. Glucose turnover was determined using a primed continuous infusion of [3-3H]glucose. The liver was freeze clamped at 4 hr for glycogen and metabolite measurements. Plasma glucose (5.8 +/- 0.3 mmol/liter vs 6.3 +/- 0.2 mmol/liter at 4 hr, ethanol versus saline) and the rate of glucose turnover (61 +/- 9 vs 58 +/- 8 moles/kg.min) were similar during the ethanol and saline infusions. Plasma lactate was significantly higher in the ethanol (1.32 +/- 0.05 mmol/liter) than in the saline (0.86 +/- 0.06 mmol/liter, P less than 0.001) study. Concentrations of gluconeogenic intermediates in the liver (glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, glucose 1-phosphate, and pyruvate) were all significantly and -30% lower in ethanol-infused than in saline-infused rats. The liver citrate content was similar in ethanol-infused than in saline-infused rats. The liver citrate content was similar in ethanol (0.38 +/- 0.03 mmol/liter) and saline (0.37 +/- 0.04 mmol/liter) studies. Liver glycogen was 75% lower in the ethanol-infused (61 +/- 9 mmol/kg dry wt) than the saline (242 +/- 27 mmol/kg dry wt, P less than 0.001)-infused rats. These data demonstrate that in fed rats given ethanol, glucose turnover is maintained constant by accelerated glycogenolysis. Thus, inhibition of gluconeogenesis by ethanol does not lower hepatic glucose production unless compensatory glycogenolysis can be prevented.  相似文献   

4.
1. The work investigated hepatic glycogen synthesis and glucose output after the intragastric administration of glucose or glycerol or the provision of chow ad libitum to 48 h-starved euthyroid or hyperthyroid rats. 2. After glucose administration, glycogen synthesis via the indirect pathway [Newgard, Hirsch, Foster & McGarry (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 8046-8052] occurred concomitantly with reversal of glucose flux across the liver and re-activation of pyruvate kinase in the euthyroid controls. Glycogen synthesis was decreased and net glucose output continued in the hyperthyroid rats, but normal re-activation of pyruvate kinase was observed. 3. Use of 3-mercaptopicolinate indicated that the glucose released from liver of hyperthyroid rats was synthesized from substrates metabolized via the gluconeogenic pathway. 4. Hepatic glycogen synthesis was also impaired in hyperthyroid rats after administration of glycerol or chow. Measurement of portal-minus-hepatovenous concentration differences and arterial glucose concentrations after the administration of glycerol in combination with 3-mercaptopicolinate indicated that flux from triose phosphate to glucose 6-phosphate was not decreased. 5. Inhibited glycogen synthesis after chow re-feeding was associated with accelerated re-activation of hepatic pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in the hyperthyroid rats. 6. The results indicate three distinct and independent actions of hyperthyroidism after re-feeding: (i) it inhibits the reversal of glucose flux across the liver normally observed in response to carbohydrate; (ii) it affects glycogen deposition at a site distal to glucose 6-phosphate; (iii) it allows more rapid re-activation of liver pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in response to a mixed diet.  相似文献   

5.
The aim of these studies was to investigate the effect of hyperglycemia with or without hyperinsulinemia on hepatic gluconeogenic flux, with the hypothesis that inhibition would be greatest with combined hyperglycemia/hyperinsulinemia. A glycogen phosphorylase inhibitor (BAY R3401) was used to inhibit glycogen breakdown in the conscious overnight-fasted dog, and the effects of a twofold rise in plasma glucose level (HI group) accompanied by 1) euinsulinemia (HG group) or 2) a fourfold rise in plasma insulin were assessed over a 5-h experimental period. Hormone levels were controlled using somatostatin with portal insulin and glucagon infusion. In the HG group, net hepatic glucose uptake and net hepatic lactate output substantially increased. There was little or no effect on the net hepatic uptake of gluconeogenic precursors other than lactate (amino acids and glycerol) or on the net hepatic uptake of free fatty acids compared with the control group. Consequently, whereas hyperglycemia had little effect on gluconeogenic flux to glucose 6-phosphate (G-6-P), net hepatic gluconeogenic flux was reduced because of increased hepatic glycolytic flux during hyperglycemia. Net hepatic glycogen synthesis was increased by hyperglycemia. The effect of hyperglycemia on gluconeogenic flux to G-6-P and net hepatic gluconeogenic flux was similar. We conclude that, in the absence of appreciable glycogen breakdown, the increase in glycolytic flux that accompanies hyperglycemia results in decreased net carbon flux to G-6-P but no effect on gluconeogenic flux to G-6-P.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of inhibition of glycogen phosphorylase by 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-d-arabinitol on rates of gluconeogenesis, gluconeogenic deposition into glycogen, and glycogen recycling was investigated in primary cultured hepatocytes, in perfused rat liver, and in fed or fasted rats in vivo clamped at high physiological levels of plasma lactate. 1,4-Dideoxy-1,4-imino-d-arabinitol did not alter the synthesis of glycerol-derived glucose in hepatocytes or lactate-derived glucose in perfused liver or fed or fasted rats in vivo. Thus, 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-d-arabinitol inhibited hepatic glucose output in the perfused rat liver (0.77 +/- 0.19 versus 0.33 +/- 0.09, p < 0.05), whereas the rate of lactate-derived gluconeogenesis was unaltered (0.22 +/- 0.09 versus 0.18 +/- 0.08, p = not significant) (1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-d-arabinitol versus vehicle, micromol/min * g). Overall, the data suggest that 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-d-arabinitol inhibited glycogen breakdown with no direct or indirect effects on the rates of gluconeogenesis. Total end point glycogen content (micromol of glycosyl units/g of wet liver) were similar in fed (235 +/- 19 versus 217 +/- 22, p = not significant) or fasted rats (10 +/- 2 versus 7 +/- 2, p = not significant) with or without 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-d-arabinitol, respectively. The data demonstrate no glycogen cycling under the investigated conditions and no effect of 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-d-arabinitol on gluconeogenic deposition into glycogen. Taken together, these data also suggest that inhibition of glycogen phosphorylase may prove beneficial in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

7.
We analyzed the biochemical mechanisms involved in the liver glycogen repletion upon refeeding for 360 min in 48 and 96 h-fasted rats. In 48 h-fasted rats, the glycogen synthesis involved a rapid and further sustained induction of glucokinase (GK) (increased twice from 90 min) and a rapid but transient activation of glycogen synthase a (GSa) (maximal increase by 150% at 90 min). It did not involve the inhibition of glycogen phosphorylase a (GPa). In 96 h-fasted rats, the glycogen repletion did not involve the induction of GK for the first 180 min of refeeding. It involved a slow activation of GSa (maximal 150% increase at 180 min) and a rapid inhibition of GPa (significant from 90 min, maximal 50% inhibition by 180 min). In both groups of rats, there was a progressive inhibition of the glucose-6 phosphatase (Glc6Pase) activity (maximal suppression by 30% in both groups at 360 min). These results highlighted a key role for the inhibition of Glc6Pase activity in the liver glycogen repletion upon refeeding.  相似文献   

8.
Glycogen synthesis in hepatocyte cultures is dependent on: (1) the nutritional state of the donor rat, (2) the acinar origin of the hepatocytes, (3) the concentrations of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors, and (4) insulin. High concentrations of glucose (15-25 mM) and gluconeogenic precursors (10 mM-lactate and 1 mM-pyruvate) had a synergistic effect on glycogen deposition in both periportal and perivenous hepatocytes. When hepatocytes were challenged with glucose, lactate and pyruvate in the absence of insulin, glycogen was deposited at a linear rate for 2 h and then reached a plateau. However, in the presence of insulin, the initial rate of glycogen deposition was increased (20-40%) and glycogen deposition continued for more than 4 h. Consequently, insulin had a more marked effect on the glycogen accumulated in the cell after 4 h (100-200% increase) than on the initial rate of glycogen deposition. Glycogen accumulation in hepatocyte cultures prepared from rats that were fasted for 24 h and then re-fed for 3 h before liver perfusion was 2-fold higher than in hepatocytes from rats fed ad libitum and 4-fold higher than in hepatocytes from fasted rats. The incorporation of [14C]lactate into glycogen was 2-4-fold higher in periportal than in perivenous hepatocytes in both the absence and the presence of insulin, whereas the incorporation of [14C]glucose into glycogen was similar in periportal and perivenous hepatocytes in the absence of insulin, but higher in perivenous hepatocytes in the presence of insulin. Rates of glycogen deposition in the combined presence of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors were similar in periportal and perivenous hepatocytes, whereas in the presence of glucose alone, rates of glycogen deposition paralleled the incorporation of [14C]glucose into glycogen and were higher in perivenous hepatocytes in the presence of insulin. It is concluded that periportal and perivenous hepatocytes utilize different substrates for glycogen synthesis, but differences between the two cell populations in the relative utilization of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors are dependent on the presence of insulin and on the nutritional state of the rat.  相似文献   

9.
In the fasted to fed transition liver glycogen derives mainly from gluconeogenic precursors. Why glucose is not used efficiently as a direct precursor of glycogen has become a controversial issue, in part because of disagreement over the question of how well liver can phosphorylate glucose under conditions prevailing postprandially. To try to resolve the matter the relative merits of two recently described assays, one spectrophotometric (A), the other isotopic (B), for monitoring rates of glucose phosphorylation in the high speed supernatant fraction of liver have been rigorously evaluated. A third method, also isotopic (C), was developed for use with unfractionated as well as fractionated liver homogenates. Using fasted rats and mice from different nutritional backgrounds the glucose-phosphorylating capacity of liver extracts was measured and compared with rates of hepatic glycogen synthesis observed during refeeding. Two of the assays (A and C) provided reliable data at all concentrations of glucose tested (5-100 mM), while method B exhibited shortcomings at lower substrate concentrations. The results clearly establish that in both rats and mice the ability of the liver to phosphorylate glucose at physiological concentrations is sufficient to support only 25-30% of postprandial glycogen synthesis. A limited capacity for glucose phosphorylation probably accounts for the fact that two-thirds of glycogen synthesized with refeeding after a fast is formed by the indirect (gluconeogenic) pathway.  相似文献   

10.
The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether the PDC and GS activities at the transition from fasted into fed state are consistent with indirect pathway for glycogen synthesis, as suggested previously. Refeeding of glucose given to rats after 72 hr of starvation did not reactivate PDC in the liver; however, the PDC activity in the muscle was increased. In comparison to PDC, glucose refeeding leads to an opposite effect on GS in both liver and muscle as evidenced by the immediate increase in the active form of GS. The low activity of liver PDC restricts 3-carbon flux through the Krebs cycle and enables their transfer to the gluconeogenic pathway for glycogen synthesis. In contrast, an immediate activation of muscle PDC following refeeding indicates that 3-carbon flux will be oxidized in the citric acid cycle, which thereby eliminates the indirect pathway for glycogen synthesis in this tissue. Glucose infusion increased plasma lactate, insulin, and glycogen content in the liver and muscle to the same extent as observed in the fed rats. The results are in agreement with the suggestion that at the transition from fasted to fed state, liver glycogen synthesis occurs mainly from 3-carbon precursors.  相似文献   

11.
Synergism of glucose and fructose in net glycogen synthesis was studied in perfused livers from 24-h fasted rats. With either glucose or fructose alone, net glycogen deposition did not occur (p greater than 0.10 for each), whereas the addition of both together resulted in significant glycogen accumulation (net glycogen accumulation was 0.21 +/- 0.03 mumol of glucose/g of liver/min at 2 mM fructose and 30 mM glucose, p less than 0.001). To better understand this synergism, intermediary substrate levels were compared at steady state with various glucose levels in the absence and in the presence of 2 mM fructose. Independent of fructose, hepatic glucose and glucose 6-phosphate increased proportionally when glucose level in the medium was raised (r = 0.86, p less than 0.001). Unlike glucose 6-phosphate, UDP-glucose did not consistently increase with glucose (p greater than 0.10); in fact, there was a small decrease at a very high glucose level (30 mM), a result consistent with the well-established activation of glycogen synthase by glucose. With elevated glucose, the level of glucose 6-phosphate was strongly correlated with glycogen content (r = 0.71, p less than 0.01, slope = 32). Adding fructose increased the "efficiency" of glucose 6-phosphate to glycogen conversion: the effect of a given increment in glucose 6-phosphate upon glycogen accumulation was increased 2.6-fold (r = 0.73, p less than 0.01, slope = 86). A kinetic modeling approach was used to investigate the mechanisms by which fructose synergized glycogen accumulation when glucose was elevated. Based on steady-state hepatic substrate levels, net hepatic glucose output, and net glycogen synthesis rate, the model estimated the rate constants of major enzymes and individual fluxes in the glycogen metabolic pathway. Modeling analysis is consistent with the following scenario: glycogen synthase is activated by glucose, whereas glucose-6-phosphatase was inhibited. In addition, the model supports the hypothesis that fructose synergizes net glycogen accumulation due to suppression of phosphorylase. Overall, our analysis suggests that glucose enhances the metabolic flux to glycogen by inducing a build up of glucose 6-phosphate via combined effects of mass action and glucose-6-phosphatase inhibition and activating glycogen synthase and that fructose enhances glycogen accumulation by retaining glycogen via phosphorylase inhibition.  相似文献   

12.
Effects of acute inhibition of glucose-6-phosphatase activity by the chlorogenic acid derivative S4048 on hepatic carbohydrate fluxes were examined in isolated rat hepatocytes and in vivo in rats. Fluxes were calculated using tracer dilution techniques and mass isotopomer distribution analysis in plasma glucose and urinary paracetamol-glucuronide after infusion of [U-(13)C]glucose, [2-(13)C]glycerol, [1-(2)H]galactose, and paracetamol. In hepatocytes, glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) content, net glycogen synthesis, and lactate production from glucose and dihydroxyacetone increased strongly in the presence of S4048 (10 microm). In livers of S4048-treated rats (0.5 mg kg(-1)min(-)); 8 h) Glc-6-P content increased strongly (+440%), and massive glycogen accumulation (+1260%) was observed in periportal areas. Total glucose production was diminished by 50%. The gluconeogenic flux to Glc-6-P was unaffected (i.e. 33.3 +/- 2.0 versus 33.2 +/- 2.9 micromol kg(-1)min(-1)in control and S4048-treated rats, respectively). Newly synthesized Glc-6-P was redistributed from glucose production (62 +/- 1 versus 38 +/- 1%; p < 0.001) to glycogen synthesis (35 +/- 5% versus 65 +/- 5%; p < 0.005) by S4048. This was associated with a strong inhibition (-82%) of the flux through glucokinase and an increase (+83%) of the flux through glycogen synthase, while the flux through glycogen phosphorylase remained unaffected. In livers from S4048-treated rats, mRNA levels of genes encoding Glc-6-P hydrolase (approximately 9-fold), Glc-6-P translocase (approximately 4-fold), glycogen synthase (approximately 7-fold) and L-type pyruvate kinase (approximately 4-fold) were increased, whereas glucokinase expression was almost abolished. In accordance with unaltered gluconeogenic flux, expression of the gene encoding phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was unaffected in the S4048-treated rats. Thus, acute inhibition of glucose-6-phosphatase activity by S4048 elicited 1) a repartitioning of newly synthesized Glc-6-P from glucose production into glycogen synthesis without affecting the gluconeogenic flux to Glc-6-P and 2) a cellular response aimed at maintaining cellular Glc-6-P homeostasis.  相似文献   

13.
A minimal model of glycogen metabolism can allow the estimation of the flux rates in the glycogen pathway from the time course of the intermediates in the pathway, measured during substrate administration and hormonal stimulation. The comprehensive model of El-Refai & Bergman (Am. J. Physiol. 231, 1608, 1976) consisting of six compartments and 26 non-estimable parameters has successfully accounted for the responses of hepatic glycogenic intermediates in response to a glucose load in hepatocytes (Katz et al., J. biol. Chem. 253, 4530, 1978), in perfused liver (Nordlie et al., J. biol. Chem. 255, 1834, 1980) and during refeeding in vivo (Van DeWerve & Jeanrenaud, Am. J. Physiol. 247, E271, 1984). The comprehensive model is here reduced to a minimal model, consisting of five compartments representing extracellular and intracellular glucose, glucose-phosphate, uridine diphosphate glucose (UDPG), glycogen, and five parameters estimated from the hepatic response to a given stimulus. Estimation of these parameters requires the measurement of the net hepatic glucose balance, the net gluconeogenic flux, and the time course of glycogenic intermediates responding to a hormone or substrate stimulus. The hepatic glycogenolytic response predicted by the comprehensive model in response to an increase in glucagon is closely fitted by the minimal model. When Gaussian distributed random error was added, 0-5% SD in the glucose and glycogen compartments and 0-10% SD in the glucose-phosphate and UDPG compartments, the hepatic response predicted by the minimal model was virtually free of the added error, and the model parameters were found to be within 30% of their true values. When the minimal model was used to interpret the experimental response to an increase in glucose concentration it predicted that: (1) glucokinase can phosphorylate glucose at rates similar to maximal rates of net glycogen synthesis; (2) futile cycling at the glycogen/glucose-1-phosphate level can limit glycogen synthesis; and (3) glucose-6-phosphatase inhibition by glucose has a significant role in net glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
3-Mercaptopicolinate (3-MPA) is a specific inhibitor of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEP CK). In vivo the hypoglycaemic action of 3-MPA in 24 h-starved rats was abolished on intragastric glucose refeeding. Nonetheless, 3-MPA decreased hepatic glycogen content and rate of synthesis in starved animals re-fed glucose. The inference is that on re-feeding after starvation hepatic glycogen is synthesised mainly de novo via glyconeogenesis involving PEP CK. 3-MPA increased hepatic lipogenesis in water- and glucose-fed normal and diabetic rats. This increase is presumed to result from inhibition of PEP CK and consequent diversion of pyruvate from gluconeogenesis to lipogenesis. In contrast, 3-MPA inhibited brown-fat lipogenesis in water- and glucose-fed rats.  相似文献   

15.
Glycogen synthesis in isolated hepatocytes can occur from glucose both by a direct mechanism and by an indirect process in which glucose is first metabolized to C3 intermediates before use for glycogenesis via gluconeogenesis. We studied the incorporation into glycogen of glucose and the gluconeogenic substrate, fructose, in primary cultures of hepatocytes from fasted rats. In the presence of insulin, both glucose and fructose promoted net deposition of glycogen; however, fructose carbon was incorporated into glycogen to a greater extent than that from glucose. When glucose and fructose were administered simultaneously, the glycogenic utilization of glucose was stimulated 2-3-fold, and that of fructose was increased by about 50%. At constant hexose concentrations, the total incorporation of carbon, and the total accumulation of glycogen mass, from glucose and fructose when present together exceeded that from either substrate alone. Fructose did not change the relative proportion of glucose carbon incorporated into glycogen via the indirect (gluconeogenic) mechanism. The synergism of glucose and fructose in glycogen synthesis in isolated rat hepatocytes in primary culture appears to result from a decrease in the rate of degradation of newly deposited glycogen, owing to (i) decreased amount of phosphorylase a mediated by glucose and (ii) noncovalent inhibition of residual phosphorylase activity by some intermediate arising from the metabolism of fructose, presumably fructose 1-phosphate.  相似文献   

16.
Glycogen synthesis in the perfused liver of the starved rat   总被引:1,自引:18,他引:1  
1. In the isolated perfused liver from 48h-starved rats, glycogen synthesis was followed by sequential sampling of the two major lobes. 2. The fastest observed rates of glycogen deposition (0.68–0.82μmol of glucose/min per g fresh liver) were obtained in the left lateral lobe, when glucose in the medium was 25–30mm and when gluconeogenic substrates were present (pyruvate, glycerol and serine: each initially 5mm). In this situation there was no net disappearance of glucose from the perfusion medium, although 14C from [U-14C]glucose was incorporated into glycogen. There was no requirement for added hormones. 3. In the absence of gluconeogenic precursors, glycogen synthesis from glucose (30mm) was 0–0.4μmol/min per g. 4. When livers were perfused with gluconeogenic precursors alone, no glycogen was deposited. The total amount of glucose formed was similar to the amount converted into glycogen when 30mm-glucose was also present. 5. The time-course, maximal rates and glucose dependence of hepatic glycogen deposition in the perfused liver resembled those found in vivo in 48h-starved rats, during infusion of glucose. 6. In the perfused liver, added insulin or sodium oleate did not significantly affect glycogen synthesis in optimum conditions. In suboptimum conditions (i.e. glucose less than 25mm, or with gluconeogenic precursors absent) insulin caused a moderate acceleration of glycogen deposition. 7. These results suggest that on re-feeding after starvation in the rat, hepatic glycogen deposition could be initially the result of continued gluconeogenesis, even after the ingestion of glucose. This conclusion is discussed, particularly in connexion with the role of hepatic glucokinase, and the involvement of the liver in the glucose intolerance of starvation.  相似文献   

17.
Ethanol inhibited glucose synthesis from alpha-ketoisovalerate by isolated rat hepatocytes without significant inhibition of flux through the branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase complex. Accumulation of 3-hydroxyisobutyrate, an intermediate in the catabolism of alpha-ketoisovalerate, was increased by ethanol, indicating inhibition of flux at the level of 3-hydroxyisobutyrate dehydrogenase. 3-Hydroxybutyrate caused the same effects as ethanol, suggesting inhibition was a consequence of an increase in the mitochondrial NADH/NAD+ ratio. Flux through the 3-hydroxyisobutyrate dehydrogenase was more sensitive to regulation by the mitochondrial NADH/NAD+ ratio than flux through the branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase. Oleate also inhibited glucose synthesis from alpha-ketoisovalerate, but marked inhibition of flux through the branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase complex was caused by this substrate.  相似文献   

18.
1. Starvation of rats for 40 hr decreased the body weight, liver weight and blood glucose concentration. The hepatic and skeletal muscle glycogen concentrations were decreased by 95% (from 410 mumol/g tissue to 16 mumol/g tissue) and 55% (from 40 mumol/g tissue to 18.5 mumol/g tissue), respectively. 2. Fine structural analysis of glycogen purified from the liver and skeletal muscle of starved rats suggested that the glycogenolysis included a lysosomal component, in addition to the conventional phosphorolytic pathway. In support of this the hepatic acid alpha-glucosidase activity increased 1.8-fold following starvation. 3. Refeeding resulted in liver glycogen synthesis at a linear rate of 40 mumol/g tissue per hr over the first 13 hr of refeeding. The hepatic glycogen store were replenished by 8 hr of refeeding, but synthesis continued and the hepatic glycogen content peaked at 24 hr (approximately 670 mumol/g tissue). 4. Refeeding resulted in skeletal muscle glycogen synthesis at an initial rate of 40 mumol/g tissue per hr. The muscle glycogen store was replenished by 30 min of refeeding, but synthesis continued and the glycogen content peaked at 13 hr (approximately 50 mumol/g tissue). 5. Both liver and skeletal muscle glycogen synthesis were inhomogeneous with respect to molecular size; high molecular weight glycogen was initially synthesised at a faster rate than low molecular weight glycogen. These observations support suggestions that there is more than a single site of glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
When glucose was given to starved rats there was an increase in both 6-phosphofructo 2-kinase and pyruvate kinase activity and a decrease in fructose 2,6-bisphosphatase activity 30 min and 60 min later. These changes were accompanied by an increase in glycogen deposition and by modest, but significant increases in fructose 2,6-bisphosphate levels at the same time. Metabolite measurements indicated that flux through 6-phosphofructo 1-kinase and pyruvate kinase were increased. These results suggest that although glycogen deposition may occur via the gluconeogenic pathway, glycolysis is activated at the same time by changes in the phosphorylation state of key regulatory enzymes as well as by the small rise in fructose 2,6-bisphosphate.  相似文献   

20.
To determine if enteral delivery of glucose influences splanchnic glucose metabolism, 10 subjects were studied when glucose was either infused into the duodenum at a rate of 22 micromol x kg(-1) x min(-1) and supplemental glucose given intravenously or when all glucose was infused intravenously while saline was infused intraduodenally. Hormone secretion was inhibited with somatostatin, and glucose (approximately 8.5 mmol/l) and insulin (approximately 450 pmol/l) were maintained at constant but elevated levels. Intravenously infused [6,6-(2)H(2)]glucose was used to trace the systemic appearance of intraduodenally infused [3-(3)H]glucose, whereas UDP-glucose flux (an index of hepatic glycogen synthesis) was measured using the acetaminophen glucuronide method. Despite differences in the route of glucose delivery, glucose production (3.5 +/- 1.0 vs. 3.3 +/- 1.0 micromol x kg(-1) x min(-1)) and glucose disappearance (78.9 +/- 5.7 vs. 85.0 +/- 7.2 micromol x kg(-1) x min(-1)) were comparable on intraduodenal and intravenous study days. Initial splanchnic glucose extraction (17.5 +/- 4.4 vs. 14.5 +/- 2.9%) and hepatic UDP-glucose flux (9.0 +/- 2.0 vs. 10.3 +/- 1.5 micromol x kg(-1) x min(-1)) also did not differ on the intraduodenal and intravenous study days. These data argue against the existence of an "enteric" factor that directly (i.e., independently of circulating hormone concentrations) enhances splanchnic glucose uptake or hepatic glycogen synthesis in nondiabetic humans.  相似文献   

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