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Fatty acid and glucose oxidation by cultured rat heart cells
Authors:Miriam D. Rosenthal  Joseph B. Warshaw
Abstract:Monolayer cultures of fetal rat myocardial cells can be utilized to examine substrate preferences and interactions. The specific activity of glucose oxidation by myocardial cell cultures was high in sparse cultures but decreased with increased cell density. In contrast, palmitate oxidation was independent of initial cell density. Palmitate inhibited glucose oxidation by 50% in rat heart cultures. Glucose had only a slight sparing effect on palmitate oxidation. This suggests that fetal and newborn rat myocardial cells in culture preferentially oxidize palmitate similar to adult heart. The sparing effect of palmitate on glucose oxidation is accounted for by inhibition of the glycolytic-aerobic pathway and not by inhibition of the pentose phosphate pathway. Data on oxidation of 14C-pyruvate specifically labelled suggest that palmitate or a product of its oxidation such as acetyl-CoA may be acting directly to inhibit the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Palmitate oxidation per mg of cell protein was constant from 15 days gestational age to 2 days postnatal age. The observed differences between cultured cells and the intact heart may relate to decreased aerobic metabolism in monolayer cell culture and suggest that the increase in fatty acid oxidation observed in vivo is controlled by the oxygen environment of the cell. These studies show that heart cells in monolayer culture can be utilized to obtain metabolic information similar to an adult organ perfusion model.
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