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1.
Splanchnic and renal net balance measurements indicate that lactate and glycerol may be important precursors for epinephrine-stimulated gluconeogenesis (GNG) in liver and kidney, but the effects of epinephrine on their renal and hepatic conversion to glucose in humans have not yet been reported. We therefore used a combination of renal balance and isotopic techniques in nine postabsorptive volunteers to measure systemic and renal GNG from these precursors before and during a 3-h infusion of epinephrine (270 pmol. kg-1. min-1) and calculated hepatic GNG as the difference between systemic and renal rates. During infusion of epinephrine, renal and hepatic GNG from lactate increased 4- to 6-fold and accounted for approximately 85 and 70% of renal and hepatic glucose release, respectively, at the end of study; renal and hepatic GNG from glycerol increased approximately 1.5- to 2-fold and accounted for approximately 7-9% of renal and hepatic glucose release at the end of study. The increased renal GNG from lactate and glycerol was due not only to their increased renal uptake (approximately 3.3- and 1.4-fold, respectively) but also increased renal gluconeogenic efficiency (approximately 1.8- and 1.5-fold). The increased renal uptake of lactate and glycerol was wholly due to their increased arterial concentrations, since their renal fractional extraction remained unchanged and renal blood flow decreased. We conclude that 1) lactate is the predominant precursor for epinephrine-stimulated GNG in both liver and kidney, 2) hepatic and renal GNG from lactate and glycerol are similarly sensitive to stimulation by epinephrine, and 3) epinephrine increases renal GNG from lactate and glycerol by increasing substrate availability and the gluconeogenic efficiency of the kidney.  相似文献   

2.
Ruminant animals, as a result of the fermentative nature of their digestion, ordinarily absorb little or no hexose sugar from the gut. Their glucose needs must be met by gluconeogenesis, even postprandially. The role of insulin in regulating hepatic gluconeogenesis in ruminants has not been assessed. In this study the effect of insulin on net hepatic removal of the major glucose precursors was determined. Insulin was infused with glucose matched to maintain euglycemia. The insulin concentrations attained in plasma were within the physiological range. Insulin at low concentrations reduced the hepatic removal of lactate, glutamine, and glycerol. At higher concentrations of insulin the hepatic extractions of pyruvate and alanine were also reduced. Thus, in sheep insulin at physiological concentrations may reduce hepatic glucose output by altering the uptake of glucose precursors.  相似文献   

3.
Gluconeogenesis increases during exercise, which is associated with elevated concentrations of lactate and glycerol in blood. This study was undertaken to determine if the exercise-induced increase in gluconeogenesis is due to increased hepatic extraction efficiency of glucose precursors. The net hepatic uptake and extraction ratios were determined for selected glucose precursors before and during exercise. The hepatic uptake of lactate and glycerol increased during exercise in fed and fasted animals, but extraction ratios of lactate and glycerol increased only in fed animals. Thus, the exercise-induced increase in gluconeogenesis is due to increased substrate supply and to hepatic extraction efficiency under certain circumstances, which is comparable to the situation in man.  相似文献   

4.
Perinatal onset of hepatic gluconeogenesis in the lamb   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Hepatic gluconeogenesis does not occur in the unstressed fetal sheep. After birth, in addition to glycogenolysis, the newborn lamb must eventually initiate gluconeogenesis to maintain glucose homeostasis. The regulation and time course of this transition have not been defined. We studied six animals in an acute preparation before and after delivery to determine hepatic lactate and glucose uptake, hepatic gluconeogenesis from lactate, and plasma catecholamine and cortisol concentrations. After a priming dose, continuous infusion of [14C]lactate provided tracer substrate for calculations of gluconeogenesis in the fetus and then for ten hours after delivery in the newborn lamb. The radionuclide-labelled microsphere method was used to measure hepatic blood flow. Appreciable gluconeogenesis was not present during the fetal period. Following delivery, the newborn lambs began to produce significant quantities of glucose from lactate at 6 h of age (1.37 +/- 0.84 mg.min-1.100 g-1 min-1 x 100 g-1 liver), when gluconeogenesis from lactate accounted for 22% of hepatic glucose output. Despite the onset of gluconeogenesis, postnatal lambs had blood glucose concentrations that remained less than fetal levels of 23.4 +/- 12.1 mg/dl for the duration of the 10-h study. Plasma norepinephrine concentration was 1380 +/- 1145 pg/ml in the fetus and fell by 2 h after birth. Plasma epinephrine concentrations were highest at 15 min after birth (205 +/- 262 pg/ml), but remained quite low for the remainder of the study. Plasma cortisol concentrations did not vary over the course of study, ranging from 40 to 50 ng/ml.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Hepatocytes were prepared from a strain of rats deficient in hepatic phosphorylase b kinase and were used to assess the role of this enzyme in the adrenergic regulation of pyruvate kinase and gluconeogenesis. Epinephrine (10 μM) stimulated glucose output and gluconeogenesis from 1.8 mM lactate but did not significantly affect the concentration of hepatocyte glycogen. In addition epinephrine treatment led to an inhibition of pyruvate kinase. The stimulation of gluconeogenesis and the inhibition of pyruvate kinase by epinephrine were blocked by both α- and β-antagonists: similar effects with epinephrine were observed in cells from control animals. It is concluded that mechanisms for the adrenergic regulation of pyruvate kinase and gluconeogenesis are similar in hepatocytes from both phosphorylase kinase-deficient and normal rats.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Effect of cortisol on hepatic gluconeogenesis in the fetal sheep   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To determine whether the prenatal surge in cortisol induces the onset of gluconeogenesis in the fetal sheep, we performed studies in eight fetal sheep of 124 +/- 3 days gestational age. Catheters were inserted chronically in the descending aorta, inferior vena cava, and hepatic and umbilical veins, allowing the measurement of substrate flux across the liver and placenta. Cortisol was infused over a 48-h period, raising plasma cortisol concentrations from 3.5 +/- 2.5 ng/ml to 78 +/- 22 ng/ml at 24 h and 111 41 ng/ml at 48 h. At 24 and 48 h, [14C]lactate was infused into the inferior vena cava, and blood samples were obtained to measure plasma concentrations and specific activities of glucose and lactate. Comparison of the cortisol-treated group with an untreated control group of animals revealed no differences in blood gases, haemoglobin concentrations, or glucose and lactate levels. Similarly, there were no differences between groups in liver oxygen consumption, glucose and lactate flux, or gluconeogenesis from lactate. In two animals we demonstrated hepatic glucose production from lactate. One of these was in active labor at the time of study, and one aborted within hours of the study. We conclude that the prenatal cortisol surge alone is not responsible for the onset of hepatic gluconeogenesis in the perinatal period. However, cortisol may have a permissive action, promoting hepatic gluconeogenesis in response to other hormonal stimuli.  相似文献   

8.
Owing to the fermentative nature of their digestion, ruminant animals are highly dependent upon gluconeogenesis to meet their glucose needs. The role of hormones in regulating this process is not clear. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of insulin on the utilization of lactate in glucose synthesis in sheep. The euglycemic model was used in sheep. [U-14C]Lactate and [6-3H]glucose were infused to monitor lactate and glucose fluxes. Hepatic metabolism was measured using radioisotopic and venoarterial concentration difference techniques. Insulin concentrations increased from basal concentrations of 16 +/- 2 to 95 +/- 9 microU/mL. Insulin reduced the net hepatic utilization of lactate (303 +/- 43 vs. 120 +/- 27 mumol/min), hepatic extraction efficiency of lactate (29 +/- 4 vs. 9 +/- 2%), hepatic output of glucose (338 +/- 33 vs. 103 +/- 21 mumol/min), and incorporation of lactate into glucose (90 +/- 5 vs. 46 +/- 8 mumol/min). Insulin at physiological levels can inhibit hepatic gluconeogenesis in ruminants.  相似文献   

9.
The obese (fa/fa) Zucker rat shows an impaired sympathetic tone which is accompanied by an altered thermogenesis and changes in both lipid and carbohydrate metabolism. In this work, we have investigated the regulatory effects of epinephrine on the rate of gluconeogenesis from a mixture of [(14)C]lactate/pyruvate, in hepatocytes isolated from obese (fa/fa) rats and their lean (Fa/-) littermates. Epinephrine caused a dose-dependent stimulation of the rate of [(14)C]glucose formation in both obese and lean rat hepatocytes, the maximal rates being five- and twofold higher than the corresponding basal values (0.50 +/- 0.06 and 1.96 +/- 0.15 micromol of lactate converted to glucose/g of cell x 20 min, respectively). No significant differences were found between the calculated half-maximal effective concentrations (EC(50)) for epinephrine in obese and lean rat liver cells. The stimulation of gluconeogenesis by epinephrine was accompanied by a decrease in the cellular concentration of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, and an inactivation of both pyruvate kinase and 6-phosphofructo 2-kinase, to similar extents in both types of hepatocytes. Epinephrine also significantly raised the hepatocyte content of cyclic AMP, with about a twofold increase at a saturating concentration of the catecholamine (1 microM), in both lean and obese rat liver cells. However, at suboptimal concentrations of epinephrine, the rise in cyclic AMP levels was significantly less marked in obese than in lean rat hepatocytes. Nevertheless, no significant differences were found in either the affinity or the number of beta-adrenergic receptors, in radioligand binding studies carried out in liver plasma membranes obtained from obese and lean Zucker rats. In conclusion, compared to the corresponding basal values, the response of gluconeogenesis from lactate to the stimulatory effect of epinephrine is higher in obese (fa/fa) than in lean (Fa/-) Zucker rat hepatocytes, with no significant differences in the calculated EC(50) values for this hormone. This occurs in spite of an apparent decreased sensitivity of the adenylate cyclase system to the stimulatory effect of epinephrine in obese rat liver cells.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Gluconeogenesis by isolated hepatocytes resulted in glucose release but insignificant rates of glycogen synthesis. The effectiveness of precursors was similar for hepatocytes from fed and starved chickens except for impaired gluconeogenesis from pyruvate when compared to lactate in lactate in starved chicken hepatocytes. The impairment was caused by limitations in cytosolic NADH production as a result of the mitochondrial location of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in chicken liver. The order of effectiveness of precursors on hepatic gluconeogenesis was generally similar to the effects of precursors on increasing the plasma glucose concentration in vivo. The exceptions were caused by interactions with other precursors in vivo.The alteration of the NADH/NAD+ ratio by ethanol and ATP/ADP ratio by adenosine could play significant roles in the control of precursor conversion to glucose. Physiological glucagon concentrations stimulated gluconeogenesis from precursors entering the pathway both above and below the level of triose phosphates, and its effect were mimicked by dibutyryl cyclic AMP.Previous results on the effects of precursor and glucagon injection on the plasma glucose concentration of chickens in vivo can largely be explained by effects at the hepatic level.Isolated chicken and rat hepatocytes share many common features. Qualitatively the ordering of gluconeogenic effectiveness was similar but quantitive differences existed as a result of differing activities and cellular locations of enzymes. Neither preparation readily synthesised glycogen and the sensitivity to glucagon was similar.  相似文献   

11.
Tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) is a cytokine involved in many metabolic responses in both normal and pathological states. Considering that the effects of TNFα on hepatic gluconeogenesis are inconclusive, we investigated the influence of this cytokine in gluconeogenesis from various glucose precursors. TNFα (10 μg/kg) was intravenously injected in rats; 6 h later, gluconeogenesis from alanine, lactate, glutamine, glycerol, and several related metabolic parameters were evaluated in situ perfused liver. TNFα reduced the hepatic glucose production (p < 0.001), increased the pyruvate production (p < 0.01), and had no effect on the lactate and urea production from alanine. TNFα also reduced the glucose production (p < 0.01), but had no effect on the pyruvate production from lactate. In addition, TNFα did not alter the hepatic glucose production from glutamine nor from glycerol. It can be concluded that the TNFα inhibited hepatic gluconeogenesis from alanine and lactate, which enter in gluconeogenic pathway before the pyruvate carboxylase step, but not from glutamine and glycerol, which enter in this pathway after the pyruvate carboxylase step, suggesting an important role of this metabolic step in the changes mediated by TNFα.  相似文献   

12.
Extrahepatic glucose release was evaluated during the anhepatic phase of liver transplantation in 14 recipients for localized hepatocarcinoma with mild or absent cirrhosis, who received a bolus of [6,6-2H2]glucose and l-[3-13C]alanine or l-[1,2-13C2]glutamine to measure glucose kinetics and to prove whether gluconeogenesis occurred from alanine and glutamine. Twelve were studied again 7 mo thereafter along with seven healthy subjects. At the beginning of the anhepatic phase, plasma glucose was increased and then declined by 15%/h. The right kidney released glucose, with an arteriovenous gradient of -3.7 mg/dl. Arterial and portal glucose concentrations were similar. The glucose clearance was 25% reduced, but glucose uptake was similar to that of the control groups. Glucose production was 9.5 +/- 0.9 micromol.kg-1. min-1, 30% less than in controls. Glucose became enriched with 13C from alanine and especially glutamine, proving the extrahepatic gluconeogenesis. The gluconeogenic precursors alanine, glutamine, lactate, pyruvate, and glycerol, insulin, and the counterregulatory hormones epinephrine, cortisol, growth hormone, and glucagon were increased severalfold. Extrahepatic organs synthesize glucose at a rate similar to that of postabsorptive healthy subjects when hepatic production is absent, and gluconeogenic precursors and counterregulatory hormones are markedly increased. The kidney is the main, but possibly not the unique, source of extrahepatic glucose production.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Isolated hepatocyte preparations from fed immature American eels,Anguilla rostrata Le Sueur, were used to study gluconeogenic, lipogenic, glycogenic and oxidative rates of radioactively labelled lactate, glycerol, alanine and aspartate. Eel hepatocytes maintain membrane integrity and energy charge during a 2 h incubation period and are considered a viable preparation for studying fish liver metabolism.Incubating eel hepatocytes with 10 mM substrates, the following results were obtained: glycerol, alanine and lactate, in that order, were effective gluconeogenic substrates; these three substrates reduced glucose release from glycogen stores, while aspartate had no such effect; lactate, alanine and aspartate led to high rates of glycerol production, with subsequent incorporation into lipid; incorporation into glycogen was low from all substrates; and, alanine oxidation was seven times higher than that observed with other substrates.When eel hepatocytes were incubated with low or physiological substrate concentrations gluconeogenic rates from lactate were twice those from alanine; rates from aspartate were very low. Glucagon stimulated lactate gluconeogenesis, but not amino acid gluconeogenesis, and had no significant effect on glycogenolysis. Cortisol increased gluconeogenic rates from 1 mM lactate.Thus, in the presence of adequate substrate, eel liver gluconeogenesis is preferentially stimulated relative to glycogenolysis to produce plasma glucose. These data support three important roles for gluconeogenesis: the recycling of muscle lactate, the synthesis of glucose from dietary amino acids to supplement glucose levels, and the production of glycerol for lipogenesis.This work was supported from operating grants to TWM from the National Research Council of Canada (A6944)  相似文献   

14.
In order to study the effect of epinephrine on the rate of esterification of fatty acids in adipose tissue, pieces of epididymal fat pad were incubated in KRB in the presence of purified albumin, glucose and either 1-14C-glycerol, 1-14C-glucose or 6-14C-glucose. Epinephrine enhances the production of glycerol but reduces the uptake of 1-14C-glycerol by the tissue and its conversion to 14CO2, 14C-fatty acids and 14C-glyceride glycerol. When the change in specific activity of the tracer is taken into account the effect of epinephrine on the utilization of glycerol by the tissue is only observed in the reduction of glyceride glycerol synthesis. When 14C-labelled glucose was used as tracer, epinephrine enhances both the production of 14CO2 from 6-14C-glucose and the synthesis of 14C-glyceride glycerol from 1-14C and 6-14C-glucose. The contrasting effects of epinephrine on the glyceride glycerol formation from glycerol and from glucose can explain the difficulties found in observing any change in the net rate of esterification of fatty acids by adipose tissue.  相似文献   

15.
Lactate is produced by the sheep placenta and is an important metabolic substrate for fetal sheep. However, lactate uptake and release by the fetal liver have not been assessed directly. We measured lactate flux across the liver in 16 fetal sheep at 129 (120-138) days gestation that had catheters chronically maintained in the fetal descending aorta, inferior vena cava, right or left hepatic vein, and umbilical vein. Lactate and hemoglobin concentrations and oxygen saturation were measured in blood drawn from all vessels. Umbilical venous, portal venous, and hepatic blood flow were measured by injecting radionuclide-labeled microspheres into the umbilical vein while obtaining a reference sample from the descending aorta. We found net hepatic uptake of lactate (5.0 +/- 4.4 mg/min per 100 g liver). A large quantity of lactate was delivered to the liver (94.2 +/- 78.1 mg/min per 100 g), so that the hepatic extraction of lactate was only 7.7 +/- 6.5%. Hepatic oxygen consumption was 3.18 +/- 3.3 ml/min per 100 g, and the hepatic lactate/oxygen quotient was 2.07 +/- 1.54. There was no significant correlation between hepatic lactate uptake and hepatic lactate or glucose delivery, hepatic oxygen consumption, hepatic blood flow, hepatic glucose flux, total body oxygen consumption, arterial pH, oxygen content, or oxygen saturation. There was, however, a significant correlation between hepatic lactate uptake and umbilical lactate uptake (r = 0.74, P less than 0.005) such that net hepatic lactate uptake was nearly equivalent to that produced across the umbilical-placental circulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
D-mannose is an essential monosaccharide constituent of glycoproteins and glycolipids. However, it is unknown how plasma mannose is supplied. The aim of this study was to explore the source of plasma mannose. Oral administration of glucose resulted in a significant decrease of plasma mannose concentration after 20 min in fasted normal rats. However, in fasted type 2 diabetes model rats, plasma mannose concentrations that were higher compared with normal rats did not change after the administration of glucose. When insulin was administered intravenously to fed rats, it took longer for plasma mannose concentrations to decrease significantly in diabetic rats than in normal rats (20 and 5 min, respectively). Intravenous administration of epinephrine to fed normal rats increased the plasma mannose concentration, but this effect was negated by fasting or by administration of a glycogen phosphorylase inhibitor. Epinephrine increased mannose output from the perfused liver of fed rats, but this effect was negated in the presence of a glucose-6-phosphatase inhibitor. Epinephrine also increased the hepatic levels of hexose 6-phosphates, including mannose 6-phosphate. When either lactate alone or lactate plus alanine were administered as gluconeogenic substrates to fasted rats, the concentration of plasma mannose did not increase. When lactate was used to perfuse the liver of fasted rats, a decrease, rather than an increase, in mannose output was observed. These findings indicate that hepatic glycogen is a source of plasma mannose.  相似文献   

17.
Glucose output from perfused livers of 48 h-starved rats was stimulated by phenylephrine (2 microM) when lactate, pyruvate, alanine, glycerol, sorbitol, dihydroxyacetone or fructose were used as gluconeogenic precursors. Phenylephrine-induced increases in glucose output were immediately preceded by a transient efflux of Ca2+ and a sustained increase in oxygen uptake. Phenylephrine decreased the perfusate [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio when sorbitol or glycerol was present, but increased the ratio when alanine, dihydroxyacetone or fructose was present. Phenylephrine induced a rapid increase in the perfusate [beta-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate] ratio and increased total ketone-body output by 40-50% with all substrates. The oxidation of [1-14C]octanoate or 2-oxo[1-14C]glutarate to 14CO2 was increased by up to 200% by phenylephrine. All responses to phenylephrine infusion were diminished after depletion of the hepatic alpha-agonist-sensitive pool of Ca2+ and returned toward maximal responses after Ca2+ re-addition. Phenylephrine-induced increases in glucose output from lactate, sorbitol and glycerol were inhibited by the transaminase inhibitor amino-oxyacetate by 95%, 75% and 66% respectively. Data presented suggest that the mobilization of an intracellular pool of Ca2+ is involved in the activation of gluconeogenesis by alpha-adrenergic agonists in perfused rat liver. alpha-Adrenergic activation of gluconeogenesis is apparently accompanied by increases in fatty acid oxidation and tricarboxylic acid-cycle flux. An enhanced transfer of reducing equivalents from the cytoplasmic to the mitochondrial compartment may also be involved in the stimulation of glucose output from the relatively reduced substrates glycerol and sorbitol and may arise principally from an increased flux through the malate-aspartate shuttle.  相似文献   

18.
Epinephrine is one of the major hormones involved in glucose counter-regulation and gluconeogenesis. However, little is known about its importance in energy homeostasis during fasting. Our objective is to study the specific role of epinephrine in glucose and lipid metabolism during starvation. In our experiment, we subject regular mice and epinephrine-deficient mice to a 48-h fast then we evaluate the different metabolic responses to fasting. Our results show that epinephrine is not required for glucose counter-regulation: epinephrine-deficient mice maintain their blood glucose at normal fasting levels via glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis, with normal fasting-induced changes in the peroxisomal activators: peroxisome proliferator activated receptor γ coactivator α (PGC-1α), fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF-21), peroxisome proliferator activated receptor α (PPAR-α), and sterol regulatory element binding protein (SREBP-1c). However, fasted epinephrine-deficient mice develop severe ketosis and hepatic steatosis, with evidence for inhibition of hepatic autophagy, a process that normally provides essential energy via degradation of hepatic triglycerides during starvation. We conclude that, during fasting, epinephrine is not required for glucose homeostasis, lipolysis or ketogenesis. Epinephrine may have an essential role in lipid handling, possibly via an autophagy-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
It was previously shown that glucagon and epinephrine have additive effects on both gluconeogenic and glycogenolytic flux. However, the changes in gluconeogenic substrates may have been limiting and thus may have prevented a synergistic effect on gluconeogenesis and a reciprocal inhibitory effect on glycogenolysis. Thus the aim of the present study was to determine if glucagon has a greater gluconeogenic and a smaller glycogenolytic effect in the presence of both epinephrine and clamped gluconeogenic precursors. Two groups (Epi and G + Epi + P) of 18-h-fasted conscious dogs were studied. In Epi, epinephrine was increased, and in G + Epi + P, glucagon and epinephrine were increased. Gluconeogenic precursors (lactate and alanine) were infused in G + Epi + P to match the rise that occurred in Epi. Insulin and glucose levels were also controlled and were similar in the two groups. Epinephrine and precursor administration increased glucagon's effect on gluconeogenesis (4.5-fold; P < 0.05) and decreased glucagon's effect on glycogenolysis (85%; P = 0.08). Thus, in the presence of both hormones, and when the gluconeogenic precursor supply is maintained, gluconeogenic flux is potentiated and glycogenolytic flux is inhibited.  相似文献   

20.
Cortisol induces perinatal hepatic gluconeogenesis in the lamb.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To examine the influence of a prenatal increase in plasma cortisol concentration on perinatal initiation of hepatic gluconeogenesis, we infused cortisol into seven fetal sheep at 137-140 days gestation. 14C-Lactate provided tracer substrate for estimation of gluconeogenesis. We measured hepatic blood flow using radionuclide-labeled microspheres. After delivery, fetal arterial blood glucose concentration (1.33 +/- 0.4 mmol/l) increased transiently, but returned to fetal levels within 1 h after delivery. Substantial hepatic gluconeogenesis was induced in the fetus after cortisol infusion, averaging 23.4 +/- 12.2 mumol/min/100 g liver (7.8 +/- 4.4 mumol/min/kg fetal weight). Fetal hepatic glucose output was 44.4 +/- 17.7 mumol/min/100 g liver. Hepatic glucose output did not change after delivery; estimated gluconeogenesis decreased immediately, then increased by 6 h after delivery. Lactate supply to the liver fell substantially, from 1.1 +/- 0.4 mmol/min/100 g in the fetus to 0.24 +/- 0.09 at 1 h after delivery. Lactate flux across the liver decreased from 75.3 +/- 23 mumol/min/100 g in the fetus to 20.2 +/- 15.7 at 1 h after delivery. Hepatic lactate flux was significantly related to gluconeogenesis (r = 0.734, P = 0.0001). We conclude that cortisol induces substantial hepatic gluconeogenesis in fetal sheep near term. After delivery, there appears to be a transient decline in gluconeogenesis from lactate, which may be secondary to limited hepatic oxygen and substrate supply. Onset of gluconeogenesis in the fetus fails to sustain increases in either fetal or postnatal blood glucose concentrations.  相似文献   

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