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1.
Activation of glycogen synthase in the perfused rat liver is defective in severely diabetic rats. In the present study, activation of glycogen synthase by glucose and increased incorporation of [14C]glucose into glycogen by insulin are defective in hepatocytes isolated from alloxan diabetic rats. Acute activation of glycogen synthase in hepatocytes isolated from diabetic rats was restored by treatment of the rats with insulin in vivo. Restoration of synthase activation was not achieved by incubation of hepatocytes in the presence of insulin in vitro for up to 12 h. When isolated hepatocytes from diabetic rats were placed in primary culture in a serum-free defined medium over a 3-day period, glycogen synthesis was partially restored by cortisol and triiodothyronine and dramatically increased by insulin. Concomitant with restoration of [14C]glycogen synthesis was an insulin-mediated increase in glycogen synthase I and synthase phosphatase activity. Restoration of regulation of glycogen synthesis in primary cultures of hepatocytes from diabetic rats by insulin required the presence of cortisol and triiodothyronine. Primary cultures of hepatocytes from normal rats did not require triiodothyronine for insulin to effect glycogenesis over a 3-day period. These data demonstrate that insulin acts in a chronic manner in concert with other hormones to control synthase phosphatase activity, an effect which may be influencing acute control of hepatic glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
The loss of glucose regulation of glycogen synthase in perfused livers from diabetic rats was associated with a substantial reduction in synthase phosphatase activity. Treatment of diabetic rats with insulin alone resulted in total restoration of the glucose effect and synthase phosphatase activity, while simultaneous treatment with cycloheximide severely reduced the hormonal effect. Although treatment of normal rats with cycloheximide had no effect on glucose activation of synthase, it did result in severe depletion of liver glycogen, increased liver glycogen phosphorylase activity, and elevation of liver adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP), but without elevation of liver protein kinase activity. Simultaneous treatment of alloxan-diabetic rats with insulin and cycloheximide resulted in reduction of total liver glycogen, increased phosphorylase activity, a reduction in the ability of insulin to lower hepatic cyclic AMP, and a further reduction of protein kinase activity. In summary, the effect of insulin treatment of diabetic rats to restore glucose regulation of hepatic glycogen synthase probably involves synthesis of new protein, and the data remain consistent with the hypothesis that the defect may be due to a diabetes-related deficiency in a specific synthase phosphatase and/or alteration of the synthase molecule itself.  相似文献   

3.
The loss of glucose regulation of glycogen synthase in perfused livers from diabetic rats was associated with a substantial reduction in synthase phosphatase activity. Treatment of diabetic rats with insulin alone resulted in total restoration of the glucose effect and synthase phosphatase activity, while simultaneous treatment with cycloheximide severely reduced the hormonal effect. Although treatment of normal rats with cycloheximide had no effect on glucose activation of synthase, it did result in severe depletion of liver glycogen increased liver glycogen phosphorylase activity, and elevation of liver adenosine 3′,5′-monosphosphate (cyclic AMP), but without elevation of liver protein kinase activity. Simultaneous treatment of alloxan-diabetic rats with insulin and cycloheximide resulted in reduction of total liver glycogen, increased phosphorylase activity, a reduction in the ability of insulin to lower hepatic cyclic AMP, and a further reduction of protein kinase activity.In summary, the effect of insulin treatment of diabetic rats to restore glucose regulation of hepatic glycogen synthase probably involves synthesis of new protein, and the data remain consistent with the hypothesis that the defect may be due to a diabetes-related deficiency in a specific synthase phosphatase and/or alteration of the synthase molecule itself.  相似文献   

4.
T B Miller 《Life sciences》1978,23(10):1083-1091
The large decreases in hepatic glycogen associated with alloxan diabetes in fed rats were accompanied by apparent decreases in total activities of glycogen synthase, phosphorylase, protein kinase and synthase phosphatase determined on 8000 × g supernatants of liver homogenates. Inclusion of 4% glycogen in the extraction buffer normalized total soluble activities of synthase in the diabetic. Whereas inclusion of 4% glycogen in the extraction buffer doubled total soluble phosphorylase, total activity remained lower in the diabetic than in the normal. Extraction and assay of soluble protein kinase were unaffected by added glycogen. When activities were determined on whole homogenates, total glycogen synthase activities were the same in normal and diabetic liver. Although the decreases in total activities of phosphorylase, kinase and phosphatase were less when determined on whole homogenates of livers from diabetic rats, the diabetes-related decreases in total activities remained significant. Therefore, it appears that while alloxan diabetes results in absolute decreases in total hepatic activities of phosphorylase, kinase and phosphatase, it may also result in redistribution of hepatic synthase and phosphorylase between soluble and particulate fractions, a phenomenon possibly related to tissue glycogen concentrations. Such a redistribution might be involved in the lack of control of hepatic glycogenesis observed in alloxan diabetic rats.  相似文献   

5.
Defects in the deposition of glycogen and the regulation of glycogen synthesis in the livers of severely insulin-deficient rats can be reversed, in vivo, within hours of insulin administration. Using primary cultures of hepatocytes isolated from normal and diabetic rats in a serum-free chemically defined medium, the present study addresses the chronic action of insulin to facilitate the direct effects of insulin and glucose on the short term regulation of the enzymes controlling glycogen metabolism. Primary cultures were maintained in the presence of insulin, triiodothyronine, and cortisol for 1-3 days. On day 1 in alloxan diabetic cultures, 10(-7) M insulin did not acutely activate glycogen synthase over a period of 15 min or 1 h, whereas insulin acutely activated synthase in cultures of normal hepatocytes. By day 3 in hepatocytes isolated from alloxan diabetic rats, insulin effected an approximate 30% increase in per cent synthase I within 15 min as was also the case for normal cells. The acute effect of insulin on synthase activation was independent of changes in phosphorylase alpha. Whereas glycogen synthase phosphatase activity could not be shown to be acutely affected by insulin, the total activity in diabetic cells was restored to normal control values over the 3-day culture period. The acute effect of 30 mM glucose to activate glycogen synthase in cultured hepatocytes from normal rats after 1 day of culture was missing in hepatocytes isolated from either alloxan or spontaneously diabetic (BB/W) rats. After 3 days in culture, glucose produced a 50% increase in glycogen synthase activity during a 10-min period under the same conditions. These studies clearly demonstrate that insulin acts in a chronic manner in concert with thyroid hormones and steroids to facilitate acute regulation of hepatic glycogen synthesis by both insulin and glucose.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of experimentally induced diabetes on the conversion of glucose to lipid in the isolated perfused rat lung were examined. Alloxan diabetes and streptozotocin diabetes reduced the incorporation of glucose into the neutral lipid and phospholipid fractions of the lung to a rate less than 40% of that observed in normal animals. This phenomenon appears to be related to insulin deficiency as lungs from diabetic rats treated for one week with insulin were capable of incorporating glucose at a rate comparable to that observed in normal animals. While insulin invivo altered lipid metabolism in perfused lung, invitro insulin had no demonstrable effect on lipid metabolism in the perfused lung, an indication that the effects of the hormone may be long term rather than short term. These data indicate that pulmonary lipid metabolism may be regulated by the action of insulin.  相似文献   

7.
Cycloheximide given to insulin-treated alloxan diabetic rats results in the inhibition of insulin-induced liver glycogen synthase bintoa conversion without affecting the level of synthase b. The effect of cycloheximide, believed to elevate cAMP in liver of normal rats, is independent of cAMP levels of the insulin-treated diabetic rat. The inhibition of insulin-mediated synthase b to a conversion by cycloheximide does not appear to be the result of a cycloheximide-induced cAMP-dependent phosphorylation of synthase a to b and suggests that insulin control of synthase b and a interconversions is dependent upon cycloheximide-sensitive protein synthesis.  相似文献   

8.
Vasopressin-induced glucose release from the perfused livers of fed rats is diminished in the presence of insulin or following adrenal ablation. The reduced rate of glucose release following vasopressin treatment in the perfused livers of adrenalectomized rats was restored towards the control value by cortisol treatment in vivo.Vaspressin did not influence the total rate of fatty acid synthesis in the livers of fed rats perfused with medium containing glucose and two concentrations of lactate. The contribution of these precursors to hepatic fatty acid synthesis and CO2 production was similarly uninfluenced by vasopressin.Vasopressin caused a transient increase in the release of K+ by the perfused liver which was observed within 2 min of hormone administration.These results are discussed in relation to the possible mode of action of vasopressin in the liver.  相似文献   

9.
The ability of insulin to inhibit efflux of potassium (K) and amino acid nitrogen (AAN) from perfused livers of normal and insulin deficient rats was studied. Two groups of rats with different degrees of insulin deficiency were produced by injecting varying amounts of streptozotocin. One group, classified as being moderately diabetic (MD), had fasting plasma glucose levels between 235--425 mg%, while the other group, whose plasma glucose levels greater than 425 mg%, were considered to have severe diabetes (SD). Two other groups of rats were food restricted in order to attain body weights comparable to the two groups of diabetic rats, and livers from these animals were used for control perfusions. The results indicated that the ability of insulin to suppress efflux of K and AAN from perfused livers of rats with MD was comparable to that seen in control perfusions. On the other hand, insulin could not suppress the efflux of either K or AAN from perfused livers of rats with SD. These results indicate that normal hepatic responsiveness to insulin can be lost secondary to the production of insulin deficiency.  相似文献   

10.
To elucidate the effect of nutrition during induction on peripheral muscle responsiveness to insulin, the incorporation of radiolabeled glucose to glycogen and the uptake of radiolabeled deoxyglucose were studied in isolated diaphragms from the fetuses of normal and diabetic pregnant rats in vitro. Basal- and insulin-stimulated incorporation of [1-14C]glucose into diaphragm glycogen were greater in the fetuses of diabetic mothers (IDM) than in normal fetuses, but there was no difference in the degree of stimulation by insulin of labeled glucose into glycogen between normal fetuses and IDM. Diaphragms from normal fetuses and IDM had the same basal uptake of 2-deoxy-[1-3H]glucose as well as insulin-stimulated uptake. Consequently the sensitivity of glucose uptake to insulin was similar both in normal fetuses and IDM. These data indicate that glucose utilization (incorporation of labeled glucose into glycogen) was increased in IDM, but that the response of glucose uptake and glycogenesis to insulin was not altered.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of potassium cyanide on p-nitroanisole O-demethylation in perfused rat livers has been examined. Cyanide (2 mm), an inhibitor of cytochrome oxidase, diminished p-nitroanisole O-demethylation by 50–75% in perfused livers from normal and phenobarbital-treated rats, but had much less effect on hepatic microsomal p-nitroanisole O-demethylation. The inhibition was also observed in livers where the activity of the pentose phosphate shunt was abolished by pretreatment with 6-aminonicotinamide. Cyanide infusion decreased hepatic ATPADP ratios and cellular concentrations of glutamate, α-ketoglutarate, and isocitrate, but caused an increase in the NADPV+NADPH ratio. Rates of NADPH generation via the pentose phosphate shunt were unchanged by cyanide, and hepatic concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate were markedly increased by cyanide. Thus, inhibition of p-nitroanisole metabolism could not be explained solely by a direct interaction of cyanide with mixed-function oxidases or diminished NADPH generation via the pentose cycle. These data indicate that cyanide inhibits mixed-function oxidation in intact cells by diminishing the generation of NADPH from sources other than the pentose cycle. Further, these data are consistent with the hypothesis that some NADPH for mixed-function oxidation arises from cyanidesensitive mitochondrial sources.  相似文献   

12.
Vasopressin-induced glucose release from the perfused livers of fed rats is diminished in the presence of insulin or following adrenal ablation. The reduced rate of glucose release following vasopressin treatment in the perfused livers of adrenalectomized rats was restored towards the control value by cortisol treatment in vivo. Vasopressin did not influence the total rate of fatty acid synthesis in the livers of fed rats perfused with medium containing glucose and two concentrations of lactate. The contribution of these precursors to hepatic fatty acid synthesis and CO2 production was similarly uninfluenced by vasopressin. Vasopressin casued a transient increase in the release of K+ by the perfused liver which was observed within 2 min of hormone administration. These results are discussed in relation to the possible mode of action of vasopressin in the liver.  相似文献   

13.
Effects of streptozotocin-induced maternal diabetes on fetal hepatic carbohydrate-metabolizing enzyme development and hormonal status has been explored in the rat. Hepatic glycogen synthase a activity of the normal fetus rose to a maximum at 20 days of gestation, then fell prior to parturition. In fetuses of diabetic mothers, this prepartum decline was curtailed, resulting in enhanced synthase a activity and increased glycogen content in fetal livers at term. Elevation in hepatic synthase a in fetuses of diabetic mothers was due, not to altered interconversion between existing synthase a and b, but to equivalent increases in both forms of the enzyme. Both hepatic and free plasma corticosterone levels were elevated in fetuses of diabetic mothers and may be responsible for the enhanced development of total glycogen synthase observed in these fetuses. In normal fetuses hepatic phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase activities also rose to maxima at 20 days, then declined prior to term. In fetuses of diabetic mothers pyruvate kinase activity attained higher than normal maximal levels and phosphofructokinase activity fell more gradually, thus resulting in elevations in both enzyme activities at term. Augmentations in these glycolytic enzymes are compatible with hyperinsulinemia observed in fetuses of diabetic mothers. The following conclusions may be drawn from these findings. During late fetal life developmental patterns of rate-limiting hepatic glycogen-synthesizing and glycolytic enzymes are adapted to glucose utilization. In the normal fetus these patterns reverse at term, thereby promoting glucose mobilization, which prepares the fetus for abrupt deprivation of maternal glucose at birth. Maternal diabetes results in retardation of these reversal processes, presumably due to elevations in fetal glucocorticoid and insulin levels. Glycogenolytic and glucogenic capacities are thereby impaired in these fetuses.  相似文献   

14.
Rats trained to the “8 + 16” controlled feeding cycle where food is only available for the first 8 h of the 12 h dark period exhibit a pronounced diurnal rhythm of hepatic glycogen metabolism. Glycogen is stored within the liver parenchymal cells during the dark period and subsequently mobilized for energy production during the light period. Hepatocytes, isolated by collagenase perfusion, from livers of such animals have differing capacities for glycogen synthesis when incubated with glucose. Cells prepared at the end of the 16 h period without food have very little capacity for synthesis compared with much higher rates obtained in cells obtained during the feeding period. Cells obtained from livers containing a large glycogen concentration produce a net breakdown of glycogen during incubations with glucose, however experiments using radioactively labelled glucose indicate that synthesis does occur in these cells. The changes in the capacity of the cells for glycogen synthesis appear to be due, in part, to changes in the percentage of the cell population involved in synthesis and in the activity of glycogen synthetase a. Attempts to influence the rate of glycogen synthesis at any time of day with insulin or dexamethasone were unsuccessful.  相似文献   

15.
Defective acute regulation of hepatic glycogen synthase by glucose and insulin, caused by severe insulin deficiency, can be corrected in adult rat hepatocytes in primary culture by inclusion of insulin, triiodothyronine, and cortisol in a chemically defined serum-free culture medium over a 3-day period (Miller, T. B., Jr., Garnache, A. K., Cruz, J., McPherson, R. K., and Wolleben, C. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 785-790). Using primary cultures of hepatocytes isolated from normal and diabetic rats in the same serum-free chemically defined medium, the present study addresses the effects of cycloheximide and actinomycin D on the chronic actions of insulin, triiodothyronine, and cortisol to facilitate the direct effects of glucose on the short-term activation of glycogen synthase. The short-term presence (1 h) of the protein synthesis blockers had no effect on acute activation of glycogen synthase by glucose in primary hepatocyte cultures from normal rats. Normal cells maintained in the presence of cycloheximide or actinomycin D for 2 and 3 days exhibited unimpaired responsiveness to glucose activation of synthase. The protein synthesis inhibitors were effective at blocking the restoration of glucose activation of synthase in diabetic cells in media which restored the activation in their absence. Restoration of glycogen synthase phosphatase activity by insulin, triiodothyronine, and cortisol in primary cultures of diabetic hepatocytes was also blocked by cycloheximide or actinomycin D. These data clearly demonstrate that restoration of acute glycogen synthase activation by glucose and restoration of glycogen synthase phosphatase activity in primary cultures of hepatocytes from adult diabetic rats are dependent upon the synthesis of new protein.  相似文献   

16.
Anise oil, anethole, and several related compounds inhibit the deposition of glycogen in the livers of fasted, adrenalectomized rats by adrenal cortical extract. This effect is reversed by increased levels of adrenal extract.Anethole blocks the effect of adrenal cortical hormones in reducing insulin sensitivity of adrenalectomized rats.Adrenal hypertropy of unilaterally adrenalectomized rats is increased by anethole.It is postulated that these compounds compete for an active carbohydrate intermediate formed during glycogenesis.The possible role of β-glucuronidase is also pointed out.  相似文献   

17.
The direct effects of insulin and glucose on glycogen accumulation were compared using monolayers of chicken embryo hepatocytes which, when cultured in chemically defined medium without hormones, retain viability for several days but become depleted of glycogen. The data strongly suggest that insulin is the major direct signal for hepatic glycogen synthesis, while glucose supports glycogen accumulation primarily in its role as a substrate. Insulin alone, when added to the cells in physiological concentrations, either shortly after isolation or throughout culture, restored glycogen to the maximal levels found in the liver of the fed chicken. Addition of increasing amounts of glucose in the absence of insulin, in contrast, yielded proportional but limited increases in glycogen deposition attaining not more than 30% of the maximal storage capacity of the cells. This hormone-independent glycogenesis was characterized by a 30-min burst of glycogen deposition immediately following a stepped increase of glucose, with no detectable change in glycogen synthase activity. Insulin-dependent glycogenesis evidenced a much slower rate of glycogen deposition and was accompanied by a near tripling of glycogen synthase activity. Insulin-induced glycogen stores were broken down following removal of the hormone, even when glucose was present in great excess, indicating that the cells require insulin to maintain as well as build up maximal levels of glycogen. In the presence of glucagon, insulin-induced glycogen stores were rapidly degraded, but glucose-induced glycogenesis was not inhibited. The actions of insulin and glucose in this system are both qualitatively and quantitatively similar to those that have been observed in the diabetic animal.  相似文献   

18.
M Hara  G Patton  J Gerich 《Life sciences》1979,24(7):625-628
Insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin release in vitro from perfused pancreases of normal and alloxan-diabetic rats were compared. Insulin and glucagon responses to arginine were decreased in the diabetic group whereas both basal and arginine-stimulated somatostatin release was increased. These results suggest that alterations in pancreatic D cell function as well as in D cell mass may contribute to the abnormal insulin and glucagon secretion found in alloxan diabetes.  相似文献   

19.
Hepatocytes prepared from streptozotocin- and alloxan-diabetic rats starved for 24 h contain 0.5--2% wet wt. of glycogen. Glycogen synthesis in the hepatocytes from such rats, after prior depletion of the glycogen by glucagon injection, was studied. As distinct from cells from normal animals, there was no glycogen synthesis from glucose as sole substrate, even at concentrations of 60 mM. When supplied with glucose, a gluconeogenic precursor (lactate, dihydroxyacetone or fructose), and with glutamine there was concurrent synthesis of glucose and of glycogen. Without glutamine there was little or no glycogen synthesis. The rate of glycogen formation was in the same range as for cells from control rats. Glutamine addition markedly activated glycogen synthase in cells of starved diabetic rats, but there was no effect on phosphorylase. We obtained very little synthesis of glycogen with hepatocytes from fed diabetic rats, whereas with normal animals, synthesis by such cells equals or exceeds that obtained from starved rats. The conversion of synthase b (inactive) into the active form was studied in rat liver homogenates. The activation of the synthase in cells from starved diabetic rats is somewhat less than that from normal animals, but that from fed diabetic rats is markedly decreased compared with that in livers of fed control animals or that of starved diabetic animals.  相似文献   

20.
Regulation of insulin-binding and basal (insulin-independent) as well as insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis from [14C]glucose, net glycogen deposition and glycogen synthase activation by insulin and dexamethasone were studied in primary cultures of adult rat hepatocytes maintained under chemically defined conditions. (1) Insulin receptor number was increased in a dose-dependent fashion by dexamethasone added to the medium between 24 and 48 h of culture and reduced by insulin, whereas ligand affinity remained unaltered. Insulin-induced down-regulation of insulin receptors was not affected by the glucocorticoid. (2) Although the changes in the sensitivity to insulin of glycogen synthesis from glucose and net glycogen deposition paralleled the modulation of the number of insulin receptors, postbinding events appear to be implicated also in the regulation of insulin-sensitivity. (3) Alterations of the responsiveness of glycogen synthesis to insulin caused by the glucocorticoid and/or insulin and by variation between individual rats were inversely related to cellular glycogen contents, suggesting that hepatocellular glycogen content participates in the regulation of insulin-responsiveness of this metabolic pathway. (4) Regulation of insulin-independent glycogenesis in response to an increase from 5 to 10 mM glucose, and of insulin-dependent glycogen synthesis were different. Since the effects of this ‘physiological’ increase in exogenous glucose were small compared to the acute action of insulin, insulin rather than portal venous glucose is considered to represent the prime stimulator of hepatic glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

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