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1.
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   

2.
Phenylephrine increases hepatic gluconeogenesis for as long as it is present in the extracellular medium. This effect is accompanied by a parallel increase in oxygen consumption. No apparent stoichiometric relationship exists between the phenylephrine-stimulated respiration and the energy required to meet the demands of gluconeogenesis. In the absence of extracellular calcium, no sustained stimulation of respiration was observed and phenylephrine failed to enhance gluconeogenesis; however, acute and transient effects of the alpha-adrenergic agonist were still observable. The following observations indicate that fatty acids are not involved in the alpha-adrenergic response: (1) the effects of phenylephrine and octanoate on respiration and gluconeogenesis were found to be additive; (2) unlike phenylephrine, octanoate is capable of stimulating gluconeogenesis in calcium-depleted liver; (3) in the absence of calcium, phenylephrine was incapable of further stimulating respiration or gluconeogenesis in the presence of octanoate. It is concluded that the conditions of increased lipid mobilization and/or oxidation are not sufficient to explain the metabolic response to alpha-adrenergic agonists. Fatty acids and alpha-adrenergic stimulation share a common role of stimulating gluconeogenesis in a manner dependent on their ability to stimulate respiration; however, the additive nature of their effects and distinct calcium requirements indicate that they act to trigger different mechanisms.  相似文献   

3.
A variety of experimental conditions were applied with the aim to estimate the correlation between the contribution of ATP synthase to the respiratory flux control and the calcium-induced activation of succinate oxidation in heart mitochondria isolated from rat, rabbit and guinea pig. The sensitivity of respiration in heart mitochondria to the decrease in temperature from 37 degrees C to 28 degrees C decreases in the order rabbit > guinea pig > rat. Ca2+ effect on succinate oxidation rate in state 3 respiration was species- and temperature-dependent and ranged from 0 (rat, 37 degrees C) to +44% (rabbit, 28 degrees C). For mitochondria from all experimental animals, the increase of Ca2+ in physiological range of concentration did not change state 2 respiration rate, and the stimulatory effect of Ca2+ on state 3 respiration was more pronounced at 28 degrees C than at 37 degrees C. The respiratory subsystem was sensitive to Ca2+ ions only in rabbit heart mitochondria. A high positive correlation between Ca2+ ability to stimulate succinate oxidation in state 3 and the control exerted by ATP synthase over the respiratory flux provides argument confirming stimulation of ATP synthase by Ca2+ ions.  相似文献   

4.
1. The alpha-adrenergic agonists noradrenaline (in the presence of beta-blocker) and phenylephrine cause a transient stimulation of the respiration in isolated rat hepatocytes. After a lag period of 12s, this activation first attains its maximal value (+24%) for about 1 min and then falls to a sustained value (+15%). The effect is blocked by the alpha-antagonists phenoxybenzamine and phentolamine. It is dose-dependent, with an half-maximal stimulation by 16 nM-noradrenaline, which is similar to that found for other cell responses to the hormone. 2. Vasopressin and ATP, which in common with alpha-agonists are believed to increase intracellular [Ca2+], induce similar activation in the respiration rate. 3. The alpha-adrenergic-mediated respiration depends on extracellular Ca2+. The activation is decreased or abolished when extracellular [Ca2+] is decreased by adding EGTA, or when the Ca2+ antagonists Mn2+ and La3+ are present in the incubation medium. 4. It is suggested that the activation of the mitochondrial respiration rate results from the increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration, presumably via Ca2+ influx or Ca2+ release from the plasma membrane or endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

5.
Palmitylcarnitine oxidation by isolated liver mitochondria has been used to investigate the interaction of fatty acid oxidation with malate, glutamate, succinate, and the malate-aspartate shuttle. Mitochondria preincubated with fluorocitrate were added to a medium containing 2mM ATP and ATPase. This system, characterized by a high energy change, allowed titration of respiration to any desired rate between States 4 and 3 (Chance, B., and Williams, G. R. (1956) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 17, 65-134). When respiration (reference, with palmitylcarnitine and malate as substrates) was set at 75% of State 3, the oxidation of palmitylcarnitine was limited by acetoacetate formation. The addition of malate or glutamate approximately doubled the rate of beta oxidation. Malate circumvented this limitation by citrate formation, but the effect of glutamate apparently was due to enhancement of the capacity for ketogenesis. The rate of beta oxidation was curtailed when malate and glutamate were both present. This curtailment was more pronounced when the malate-aspartate shuttle was fully reconstituted. Among the oxidizable substrates examined, succinate was most effective in inhibiting palmitylcarnitine oxidation. Mitochondrial NADH/NAD+ ratios were correlated positively with suppression of beta oxidation. The degree of suppression of beta oxidation by the malate-aspartate shuttle (NADH oxidation) or by succinate oxidation was dependent on the respiratory state. Both substrates extensively reduced mitochondrial NAD+ and markedly suppressed beta oxidation as respiration approached State 4. Calculations of the rates of flux of hydrogen equivalents through beta oxidation show that the suppression of beta oxidation by glutamate or by the malate-aspartate shuttle is accounted for by increased flux of reducing equivalents through mitochondrial malic dehydrogenase. This increased Flux is accompanied by an increase in the steady state NADH/NAD+ ratio and a marked decrease in the synthesis of citrate. The alpha-glycerophosphate shuttle was reconstituted with mitochondria isolated from rats treated with L-thyroxine. This shuttle was about equal to the reconstructed malate-aspartate shuttle in supression of palmitylcarnitine oxidation. This interaction could not be demonstrated in euthyroid animals owing to the low activity of the mitochondrial alpha-glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase. It is concluded that beta oxidation can be regulated by the NADH/NAD+ ratio. The observed stimulation of flux through malate dehydrogenase both by glutamate and by the malate-aspartate shuttle results in an increased steady state NADH/NAD+ ratio, and is linked to a stoichiometric outward transport of aspartate. We suggest, therefore, that some of the reducing pressure exerted by the malate-aspartate shuttle and by glutamate plus malate is provided through the energy-linked, electrogenic transport of aspartate out of the mitochondria. These results are discussed with respect to the mechanism of the genesis of ethanol-induced fatty liver.  相似文献   

6.
Accumulation of Ca2+ (+ phosphate) by respiring mitochondria from Ehrlich ascites or AS30-D hepatoma tumor cells inhibits subsequent phosphorylating respiration in response to ADP. The respiratory chain is still functional since a proton-conducting uncoupler produces a normal stimulation of electron transport. The inhibition of phosphorylating respiration is caused by intramitochondrial Ca2+ (+ phosphate). ATP + Mg2+ together, but not singly, prevents the inhibitory action of Ca2+. Neither AMP, GTP, GDP, nor any other nucleoside 5'-triphosphate or 5'-diphosphate could replace ATP in this effect. Phosphorylating respiration on NAD(NADP)-linked substrates was much more susceptible to the inhibitory effect of intramitochondrial Ca2+ than succinate-linked respiration. Significant inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation is given by the endogenous Ca2+ present in freshly isolated tumor mitochondria. The phosphorylating respiration of permeabilized Ehrlich ascites tumor cells is also inhibited by Ca2+ accumulated by the mitochondria in situ. Possible causes of the Ca2+-induced inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation are considered.  相似文献   

7.
Norepinephrine and epinephrine, in the presence of the beta-adrenergic antagonist propranolol (10(-5) M), stimulated adipocyte pyruvate dehydrogenase at low concentrations but inhibited the enzyme at higher concentrations. The alpha-adrenergic agonist, phenylephrine, rapidly stimulated pyruvate dehydrogenase activity in a dose-dependent manner with maximal stimulation observed at 10(-6) M. The stimulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase by phenylephrine was mediated via alpha 1-receptors. Inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase by catecholamines was mediated via beta-adrenergic receptors, since the beta-agonist, isoproterenol, and dibutyryl cAMP produced similar effects. Like insulin, alpha-adrenergic agonists increased the active form of pyruvate dehydrogenase without changing the total enzyme activity and cellular ATP concentration. The effects induced by maximally effective concentrations of insulin and alpha-adrenergic agonists were nonadditive. The ability of phenylephrine and methoxamine to stimulate pyruvate dehydrogenase and phosphorylase and to inhibit glycogen synthase was not affected by the removal of extracellular Ca2+. Similarly, the stimulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase and glycogen synthase by insulin was also observed under the same conditions. However, when intracellular adipocyte Ca2+ was depleted by incubating cells in a Ca2+-free buffer containing 1 mM ethylene glycol bis(beta-amino-ethyl ether)-N,N,N' -tetraacetic acid, the actions of alpha-adrenergic agonists, but not insulin, on pyruvate dehydrogenase were completely abolished. Vasopressin and angiotensin II also stimulated pyruvate dehydrogenase in a dose-dependent manner with enhancement of glucose oxidation and lipogenesis. Our results demonstrate that the Ca2+ -dependent hormones stimulate pyruvate dehydrogenase and lipogenesis in isolated rat adipocytes, and the action is dependent upon intracellular, but not extracellular, Ca2+.  相似文献   

8.
Rapid, unidirectional Ca2+ influx was examined in isolated brown adipocytes by short incubations (30 s) with 45Ca2+. Ca2+ uptake was found to be large in the resting brown adipocyte, but was markedly inhibited when the cells were presented with norepinephrine. Specific alpha 1-adrenergic stimulation was without effect on Ca2+ uptake. The effect of norepinephrine (which had an EC50 of 140 nM) could be inhibited by beta-adrenergic blockade and could be mimicked by forskolin (an adenylate cyclase activator) and theophylline (a phosphodiesterase inhibitor). Exogenous free fatty acids such as octanoate and palmitate (classical stimulators of respiration in brown adipocytes) were also able to dramatically inhibit Ca2+ uptake by the cells. The artificial mitochondrial uncoupler carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP) induced a large reduction in cellular Ca2+ uptake (even in the presence of the ATPase inhibitor oligomycin), and in the presence of FCCP the inhibitory effect of norepinephrine on Ca2+ uptake was significantly reduced. The effect of beta-adrenergic stimulation on Ca2+ uptake was not directly caused by the large increase in respiration that occurs in response to norepinephrine because the respiratory inhibitor rotenone did not affect the Ca2+ response of the cells to the hormone. The evidence suggests that beta-adrenergic stimulation of brown adipocyte metabolism leads to a partial inhibition of Ca2+ uptake into the mitochondrial Ca2+ pool and we discuss the possibility that this represents the effect of a reduced membrane potential (and thus reduced Ca2+ uniport activity) in the partially uncoupled mitochondria of the thermogenically active brown adipocyte.  相似文献   

9.
Addition of calcium chloride to an egg homogenate of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus stimulates O2 consumption which is not inhibited by millimolar cyanide. Results strongly suggest that Ca2+-stimulated O2 consumption is at least partially the result of polyunsaturated fatty acid oxidation. First, addition of arachidonic acid (AA), or other polyunsaturated fatty acids, to the homogenate enhance Ca2+-stimulated O2 consumption; this enhancement, by AA, being coupled to its oxidation to a hydroxy fatty acid. Second, calcium stimulates a lipase activity in the homogenate that is capable of releasing free fatty acids. Third, Ca2+-stimulated O2 consumption and AA oxidation have virtually identical calcium requirements and pH optima. The sequence of events then is that upon calcium addition to the homogenate, lipase activity is increased which liberates free fatty acids. At the same time calcium also activates a polyunsaturated fatty acid oxygenase, possibly lipoxygenase, that converts the free fatty acids to hydroxy fatty acids. The possible physiological importance of this reaction is underscored by the high affinity for Ca2+ [approximately 10(-7)M], an ion known to increase above the required levels at fertilization. The pH activity profile also suggests possible physiological modulation because a pH change of 6.8 increasing to 7.2, as suggested to occur after fertilization, yields almost a twofold increase in O2 consumption. Egg homogenates from many other invertebrate species have the ability to oxidize AA in a Ca2+-dependent fashion. For the investigated species, the presence of Ca2+-stimulated O2 consumption and AA oxidation correlates with the presence of cyanide insensitive respiration in the intact egg.  相似文献   

10.
alpha-Ketoisocaproate (ketoleucine) is shown to be metabolized to ketone bodies rapidly by isolated rat liver cells. Acetoacetate is the major end product and maximum rates were observed with 2 mM substrate. Studies with 2-tetradecylglycidic acid (an inhibitor of long chain fatty acid oxidation) showed that ketogenesis from alpha-ketoisocaproate and from endogenous fatty acids were additive. With alpha-ketoisocaproate present as soole substrate at 2 mM, leucine production was less than 10% of alpha-ketoisocaproate uptake and only 30% of the acetyl coenzyme A generated was oxidized in the citric acid cycle. Metabolism of alpha-ketoisocaproate was inhibited by fatty acids, alpha-ketoisovalerate, alpha-keto-beta-methylvalerate, and pyruvate. Oxidation of acetyl-CoA generated from alpha-ketoisocaproate was suppressed by oleate and by pyruvate, but was enhanced by lactate. Metabolism between the different branched chain alpha-ketoacids was mutually competitive. When alpha-ketoisocaproate (2 mM) was added in the presence of high pyruvate concentrations (4.4 mM), flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase was decreased, and the proportion of total pyruvate dehydrogenase in the active form (PDHa) also fell. With lactate as substrate, PDHa was only 25% of total activity and was little affected by addition of alpha-ketoisocaproate. These data suggest that enhanced oxidation of acetyl-CoA from alpha-ketoisocaproate by lactate addition is caused by a low activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase combined with increased flux through the citric acid cycle in response to the energy requirements for gluconeogenesis. However, acetyl-CoA generation from pyruvate is apparently insufficiently inhibited by alpha-ketoisocaproate to cause a diversion of acetyl-CoA formed during alpha-ketoisocaproate metabolism from ketone body formation to oxidation in the citric acid cycle. Measurements of the cell contents of CoASH, acetyl-CoA, acid-soluble acyl-CoA, and acid-insoluble fatty acyl-CoA indicated that when the branched chain alpha-ketoacids were added as sole substrate, their oxidation was limited at a step distal to the branched chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase. Acid-soluble acyl-CoA derivatives were depleted after oleate addition in the presence of alpha-ketoisocaproate, suggesting an inhibition of the branched chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase by the elevation of the mitochondrial NADH/NAD+ ratio observed during fatty acid oxidation. This effect was not observed in the presence of oleate and 2-tetradecylglycidic acid.  相似文献   

11.
We investigated spatiotemporal changes in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in norepinephrine (NE)-stimulated and fura-2-loaded individual H-35 rat hepatoma cells, using digital imaging microscopy and high time-resolution microspectrofluorometry. Application of NE (5 x 10(-6) M) resulted in an initial transient increase in [Ca2+]i, followed by a small sustained [Ca2+]i plateau above the pre-stimulation level. The initial peak and the small sustained plateau originated from intracellular stores and the extracellular space, respectively. The initial transient evoked by NE was totally blocked by phentolamine, an alpha-adrenergic antagonist, but was not blocked by either pre-incubation with nominally Ca(2+)-free medium or by pre-treatment of cells with La3+. On the other hand, the sustained plateau was eliminated by Ca(2+)-free medium or La3+. Therefore, H-35 cells have a Ca(2+)-signaling pathway which is activated via alpha-adrenergic receptors. Mn2+ entered the cytosol after NE stimulation, as shown by quenching of fura-2. This indicates that H-35 hepatoma cells possess Mn(2+)-permeable Ca2+ channels at the plasma membrane. In addition, the Ca2+ efflux pattern from H-35 cells to the extracellular space during NE stimulation was visualized by digital imaging microscopy when free fura-2 was equilibrated between the cells and the extracellular space. The efflux of Ca2+ from H-35 begins between the initial [Ca2+]i transient and the sustained [Ca2+]i plateau.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of arachidonic acid and other fatty acids on mitochondrial Ca2+ transport were studied. Cis-unsaturated fatty acids generally strongly inhibited mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake, induced a net Ca2+ efflux, and thereby increased the extramitochondrial Ca2+ concentration, whereas trans-unsaturated fatty acids were ineffective. Saturated fatty acids exhibited slight activity at chain lengths from C(10) to C(14) only. The structure-activity relationship and the inability of some of the effective fatty acids such as palmitoleic and myristoleic acid to be metabolized to eicosanoids suggest that Ca2+ release was induced by the fatty acids themselves and resulted from changes in the mitochondrial membrane bilayer structure. There was a correlation between Ca2+-releasing potency and reduction of mitochondrial membrane potential, which is the main driving force for mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake. There were, however, considerable differences compared with the effects of lysophospholipids on the membrane potential. The mechanism of action of fatty acids may be that of a fluidizing effect on the hydrophobic core of the membrane, thereby modulating the activity of integral membrane proteins of the respiratory chain.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of alpha-adrenergic agonists on Ca2+ fluxes was examined in the perfused rat liver by using a combination of Ca2+-electrode and 45Ca2+-uptake techniques. We showed that net Ca2+ fluxes can be described by the activities of separate Ca2+-uptake and Ca2+-efflux components, and that alpha-adrenergic agonists modulate the activity of both components in a time-dependent manner. Under resting conditions, Ca2+-uptake and -efflux activities are balanced, resulting in Ca2+ cycling across the plasma membrane. The alpha-adrenergic agonists vasopressin and angiotensin, but not glucagon, stimulate the rate of both Ca2+ efflux and Ca2+ uptake. During the first 2-3 min of alpha-agonist administration the effect on the efflux component is the greater, the net effect being efflux of Ca2+ from the cell. After 3-4 min of phenylephrine treatment, net Ca2+ movements are essentially complete, however, the rate of Ca2+ cycling is significantly increased. After removal of the alpha-agonist a large stimulation of the rate of Ca2+ uptake leads to the net accumulation of Ca2+ by the cell. The potential role of these Ca2+ flux changes in the expression of alpha-adrenergic-agonist-mediated effects is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Cytosolic free Ca2+ rises in pancreatic beta-cells in response to glucose stimulation and is part of the coupling to insulin secretion. This study evaluates a possible role for cytosolic long chain acyl-CoA esters in modulating Ca2+ handling by clonal beta-cells (HIT). Intact cells incubated with 20 microM free palmitic acid exhibited a 40% decrease in basal cytosolic free Ca2+. In contrast, acyl-CoA esters, up to a chain length of 16, but not the corresponding fatty acids, significantly lowered the Ca2+ set point maintained by cells permeabilized with saponin. The maximum response to the various acyl-CoA esters increased with increasing chain length, with no differences in the half-maximally effective concentration of 0.5 microM. Long chain acyl-CoA esters caused a 40-50% increase in 45Ca2+ influx into a non-mitochondrial pool in the permeabilized HIT cells, consistent with a stimulatory effect on the endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase activity, but did not affect inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-induced Ca(2+)-efflux. Thapsigargin, an inhibitor of endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase activity, blocked the decrease in the Ca2+ set point caused by acyl-CoA esters. The ability of acyl-CoA esters to lower the Ca2+ set point depended on the ATP/ADP ratio (or free ADP); the Ca2+ set point was lowered by 36 +/- 3.6% at an ATP/ADP ratio of 90 and by 14 +/- 1.9% at an ATP/ADP ratio of 7. Depletion of cellular protein kinase C did not prevent the acyl-CoA-induced lowering of the Ca2+ set point. These findings suggest that the increases in long chain acyl-CoA esters may play a role in restoring cytosolic free Ca2+ through activation of Ca(2+)-ATPases.  相似文献   

15.
1. Addition of oxaloacetate or acetoacetate to isolated rat liver mitochondria results in an efflux of Ca2+. Concomitant with this efflux is an immediate oxidation of endogenous nicotinamide nucleotides, a fall in the mitochondrial membrane potential and an increase in the rate of respiration. The primary effect in this sequence may be either (a) physiologically important stimulation of a Ca2+-efflux carrier, followed by Ca2+ re-uptake, a fall in membrane potential and increased respiration, or (b) physiologically unimportant damage to mitochondrial integrity, followed by a fall in membrane potential, increased respiration and Ca2+ efflux. 2. Ruthenium Red and EGTA will restore the increased respiratory rate to one approximating to the control rate of respiration. However, addition of lanthanide, at a concentration which inhibits the uptake but not the normal efflux of Ca2+, inhibits the rate of Ca2+ efflux induced by oxaloacetate or acetoacetate. Therefore the observed efflux is occurring by a reversal of the uptake pathway (uniporter) and thus follows the fall in membrane potential. 3. From these results we conclude that the decrease in membrane potential and increase in the rate of respiration seen during oxaloacetate- or acetoacetate-induced Ca2+ efflux cannot be accounted for by rapid Ca2+ cycling, but are due to damage to mitochondrial integrity.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of ionophore A23187 on cellular Ca2+ fluxes, glycogenolysis and respiration was examined in perfused liver. At low extracellular Ca2+ concentrations (less than 4 microM), A23187 induced the mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ and stimulated the rate of glycogenolysis and respiration. As the extracellular Ca2+ concentration was elevated, biphasic cellular Ca2+ fluxes were observed, with Ca2+ uptake preceding Ca2+ efflux. Under these conditions, both the glycogenolytic response and the respiratory response also became biphasic, allowing the differentiation between the effects of extracellular and intracellular Ca2+. Under all conditions examined the rate of Ca2+ efflux induced by A23187 was much slower than the rate of phenylephrine-induced Ca2+ efflux, although the net amounts of Ca2+ effluxed were similar for both agents. The effect of A23187 on phenylephrine-induced Ca2+ fluxes, glycogenolysis and respiration is dependent on the extracellular Ca2+ concentration. At concentrations of less than 50 microM-Ca2+, A23187 only partially inhibited alpha-agonist action, whereas at 1.3 mM-Ca2+ almost total inhibition was observed. The action of A23187 at the cellular level is complex, dependent on the experimental conditions used, and shows both differences from and similarities to the hepatic action of alpha-adrenergic agonists.  相似文献   

17.
Mitochondrial pyruvate-supported respiration was studied in vitro under conditions known to exist following ischemia, i.e., elevated extramitochondrial Ca2+, Na+, and peroxide. Ca2+ alone (7-10 nmol/mg) decreased state 3 and increased state 4 respiration to 81 and 141% of control values, respectively. Sodium (15 mM) and/or tert-butyl hydroperoxide (tBOOH; up to 2,000 nmol/mg protein) alone had no effect on respiration; however, Na+ or tBOOH in combination with Ca2+ dramatically altered respiration. Respiratory inhibition induced by Ca2+ and tBOOH does not involve pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) inhibition since PDH flux increased linearly with tBOOH concentration (R = 0.96). Calcium potentiated tBOOH-induced mitochondrial NAD(P)H oxidation and shifted the redox state of cytochrome b from 67 to 47% reduced. Calcium (5.5 nmol/mg) plus Na+ (15 mM) decreased state 3 and increased state 4 respiratory rates to 55 and 202% of control values, respectively. Sodium- as well as tBOOH-induced state 3 inhibition required mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake because ruthenium red addition before Ca2+ addition negated the effect. The increase in state 4 respiration involved Ca2+ cycling since ruthenium red immediately returned state 4 rates back to control values. The mechanisms for the observed Ca2(+)-, Na(+)-, and tBOOH-induced alterations in pyruvate-supported respiration in vitro are discussed and a multifactorial etiology for mitochondrial respiratory dysfunction following cerebral ischemia in vivo is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
The flux control distribution of the net rate of state 3 respiration was determined in heart and kidney mitochondria incubated with low concentrations of pyruvate (0.5 mM) or 2-oxoglutarate (1 mM), and in conditions that led to activation of NAD-linked dehydrogenases, i.e., high substrate or Ca2+ concentrations. Control of flux was exerted by the ATP/ADP carrier (flux control coefficient, ci = 0.37) and Site 1 of the respiratory chain (ci = 0.28) when dehydrogenase activity was low. Control of the process shifted to the ATP synthase (ci = 0.32) and the Pi carrier (Ci = 0.27) when dehydrogenases were activated by high pyruvate and high Ca2+. The changes in the control exerted by the ATP/ADP carrier and the ATP synthase were not due to changes in the transmembrane potential, nor to a modification of intramitochondrial ATP/ADP ratios. Applying the summation theorem of the control analysis, it was found that at low Ca2+ and pyruvate concentrations the dehydrogenases shared the control of state 3 respiration with other steps. The NAD-linked dehydrogenases did not exert any significant control at high Ca2+ or high pyruvate concentrations.  相似文献   

19.
The manner in which insulin resistance impinges on hepatic mitochondrial function is complex. Although liver insulin resistance is associated with respiratory dysfunction, the effect on fat oxidation remains controversial, and biosynthetic pathways that traverse mitochondria are actually increased. The tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle is the site of terminal fat oxidation, chief source of electrons for respiration, and a metabolic progenitor of gluconeogenesis. Therefore, we tested whether insulin resistance promotes hepatic TCA cycle flux in mice progressing to insulin resistance and fatty liver on a high-fat diet (HFD) for 32 weeks using standard biomolecular and in vivo (2)H/(13)C tracer methods. Relative mitochondrial content increased, but respiratory efficiency declined by 32 weeks of HFD. Fasting ketogenesis became unresponsive to feeding or insulin clamp, indicating blunted but constitutively active mitochondrial β-oxidation. Impaired insulin signaling was marked by elevated in vivo gluconeogenesis and anaplerotic and oxidative TCA cycle flux. The induction of TCA cycle function corresponded to the development of mitochondrial respiratory dysfunction, hepatic oxidative stress, and inflammation. Thus, the hepatic TCA cycle appears to enable mitochondrial dysfunction during insulin resistance by increasing electron deposition into an inefficient respiratory chain prone to reactive oxygen species production and by providing mitochondria-derived substrate for elevated gluconeogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Insulin inhibition of alpha-adrenergic actions in liver.   总被引:8,自引:7,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The effects of insulin on alpha-agonist (phenylephrine)- and [Arg8]vasopressin-induced Ca2+ and glucose release and mitochondrial Ca2+ fluxes in isolated perfused rat livers were examined. Insulin (6 nM) inhibited the ability of phenylephrine (1 and 0.5 microM) to elicit Ca2+ and glucose release, whereas it was without effect on vasopressin (10 and 2.5 nM) actions. Correspondingly, insulin inhibited the action of phenylephrine to induce a stable increase in mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake, but it did not affect the alteration caused by vasopressin. Phenylephrine and vasopressin caused transient increases in hepatocyte respiration. Insulin inhibited the effect of phenylephrine on this parameter, but not that of vasopressin. Insulin added alone did not alter any of the above parameters. It is concluded from these data that insulin does not alter cellular Ca2+ fluxes and respiration themselves, but selectively inhibits alpha-adrenergic stimulation of these processes. It is proposed that insulin acts either to inhibit binding of alpha-agonists to their specific plasma-membrane receptors or to alter generation and/or degradation of the putative alpha-adrenergic 'second messenger'. If this latter possibility is the case, then the alpha-adrenergic 'second messenger' must be different from the 'second messenger' of vasopressin.  相似文献   

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