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1.
The effect of Ca2+ on the rate of pyruvate carboxylation was studied in liver mitochondria from control and glucagon-treated rats, prepared under conditions that maintain low Ca2+ levels (1-3 nmol/mg of protein). When the matrix-free [Ca2+] was low (less than 100 nM), the rate of pyruvate carboxylation was not significantly different in mitochondria from control and glucagon-treated rats. Accumulation of 5-8 nmol of Ca2+/mg, which increased the matrix [Ca2+] to 2-5 microM in both preparations, significantly enhanced pyruvate carboxylase flux by 20-30% in the mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats, but had little effect in control preparations. Higher levels of Ca2+ (up to 75 nmol/mg) inhibited pyruvate carboxylation in both preparations, but the difference between the mitochondria from control and glucagon-treated animals was maintained. The enhancement of pyruvate dehydrogenase flux by mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake was also significantly greater in mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats. These differential effects of Ca2+ uptake on enzyme fluxes did not correlate with changes in the mitochondrial ATP/ADP ratio, the pyrophosphate level, or the matrix volume. Arsenite completely prevented 14CO2 incorporation when pyruvate was the only substrate, but caused only partial inhibition when succinate and acetyl carnitine were present as alternative sources of energy and acetyl-CoA. Under these conditions, mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats were less sensitive to arsenite than the control preparations, even at low Ca2+ levels. We conclude that the Ca(2+)-dependent enhancement of pyruvate carboxylation in mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats is a secondary consequence of pyruvate dehydrogenase activation; glucagon treatment is suggested to affect the conditions in the mitochondria that change the sensitivity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex to dephosphorylation by the Ca(2+)-sensitive pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase.  相似文献   

2.
The possibility that hormones control hepatic gluconeogenesis via the regulation of the rate of mitochondrial pyruvate carboxylation was investigated with the use of suspensions of liver cells isolated from fasted rats. The mitochondria prepared from liver cells were judged in good condition as they exhibited satisfactory phosphorus-oxygen and respiratory control ratios and transported Ca2+ and K+ ions in an energy-dependent manner. Addition of glucagon, epinephrine, or cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate to liver cells caused a 50 to 80% increase in the rate of glucose synthesis from lactate. When mitochondria were isolated from the cells after treatment with these agonists, they displayed 2- to 3-fold increases in the rate of pyruvate carboxylation, pyruvate decarboxylation, and pyruvate uptake. These mitochondrial changes are similar to those obtained in hepatic mitochondria prepared from intact, hormone-treated rats. The mitochondrial responses were specific for agents that stimulated gluconeogenesis; no response occurred with 5'-AMP or cyclic adenosine 2':3'-monophosphate. In the cell suspensions, the dose response curves for the activation of mitochondrial pyruvate metabolism and for increased glucose synthesis from L-lactate were coincident with four different agonists. The mitochondrial changes resulting from stimulation with glucagon developed in 1 to 2 min after the rise in cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate and occurred at least as early as the increase in the rate of gluconeogenesis. When the intracellular level of cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate returned to basal values, the rates of mitochondrial pyruvate carboxylation and glucose synthesis also declined to control levels. It is concluded that the rate of mitochondrial pyruvate metabolisms can be increased by hormones and cyclic nucleotides and that control of mitochondrial pyruvate carboxylation is an important regulatory site of hepatic gluconeogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
The 7- to 10-fold increase in the rat liver serine:pyruvate aminotransferase activity after glucagon administration was shown to occur mainly in the mitochondrial matrix of parenchymal cells. The enzyme was purified from glucagon-treated rat liver mitochondria to apparent homogeneity as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A specific rabbit antibody was prepared against the purified enzyme. Upon Ouchterlony double diffusion analysis, the mitochondrial extracts of glucagon-treated rat liver produced a single and fused precipitin line between the purified enzyme against the antibody. The supernatant fraction of glucagon-treated rat liver and the mitochondrial extracts of normal liver were also shown to make a single and fused precipitin line with the purified enzyme, when applied in large quantities. The quantitative immunotitration demonstrated that the glucagon-induced increase in the activity of liver serine:pyruvate aminotransferase were accompanied by the parallel increase in the amount of the enzyme antigen. Isotopic leucine incorporation studies showed that the relative rate of synthesis of the enzyme was increased approximately 10-fold by glucagon administration under the conditions employed. The rate of the degradation of the aminotransferase in the normal rat liver was a relatively slow process with a half-life of approximately 30 h. Thus the accumulation of serine:pyruvate aminotransferase in rat liver mitochondria by glucagon treatment can be ascribed mainly to the rise in the rate of enzyme synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Amino acid transport was studied in primary cultures of parenchymal cells isolated from adult rat liver by a collagenase perfusion technique and maintained as a monolayer in a serum-free culture medium. These cells carried out gluconeogenesis from three carbon precursors (alanine, pyruvate, and lactate) in response to glucagon addition. Amino acid transport was assayed by measuring the uptake of the nonmetabolizable amino acid, alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB). Addition of insulin or glucagon to culture rat liver parenchymal cells resulted in an increased influx of AIB transport. The glucocorticoid, dexamethasone, when added alone to cultures did not affect AIB transport. However, prior or simultaneous addition of dexamethasone to glucagon-treated cells caused a strong potentiation of the glucagon induction of AIB transport. Kinetic analysis of the effects of insulin and glucagon demonstrated that insulin increased the Vmax for transport without changing the Km while glucagon primarily decreased the Km for AIB transport. The effect of dexamethasone was to increase the Vmax of the low Km system.  相似文献   

5.
1. The fixation of CO(2) by pyruvate carboxylase in isolated rat brain mitochondria was investigated. 2. In the presence of pyruvate, ATP, inorganic phosphate and magnesium, rat brain mitochondria fixed H(14)CO(3) (-) into tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates at a rate of about 250nmol/30min per mg of protein. 3. Citrate and malate were the main radioactive products with citrate containing most of the radioactivity fixed. The observed rates of H(14)CO(3) (-) fixation and citrate formation correlated with the measured activities of pyruvate carboxylase and citrate synthase in the mitochondria. 4. The carboxylation of pyruvate by the mitochondria had an apparent K(m) for pyruvate of about 0.5mm. 5. Pyruvate carboxylation was inhibited by ADP and dinitrophenol. 6. Malate, succinate, fumarate and oxaloacetate inhibited the carboxylation of pyruvate whereas glutamate stimulated it. 7. The results suggest that the metabolism of pyruvate via pyruvate carboxylase in brain mitochondria is regulated, in part, by the intramitochondrial concentrations of pyruvate, oxaloacetate and the ATP:ADP ratio.  相似文献   

6.
The time course (0-60 min) of label incorporation from NaH14 CO3 into citric-acid-cycle intermediates and amino acids was investigated in incubations of isolated rat diaphragms. On the basis of these results, 14CO2 exchange by isocitrate dehydrogenase and 14CO2 fixation by propionyl-CoA carboxylation and pyruvate carboxylation could be estimated. Apparent rates amounted to about 30-40, 2, and 35 nmol/min per g of muscle, respectively. About 90 percent of C4-carbon compounds originating from 14CO2 fixation were subsequently removed by decarboxylation. 2-Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate, an inhibitor of mitochondrial pyruvate transport, effectively reduced 14CO2 production from [1-14C]pyruvate but did not affect incorporation of radioactive label from NaH14CO3. In cell-free muscle extracts, 14CO2 fixation was demonstrable under assay conditions suitable for NADP -dependent 'malic' enzyme(s). Addition of hydroxymalonate, an inhibitor of the latter enzyme(s), significantly reduced 14CO2 incorporation. The results provide evidence for a continuous cytosolic replenishment and mitochondrial depletion of citric-acid-cycle carbon skeletons in resting skeletal muscle tissue. The functional role of malic (iso)enzyme activities in these processes is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The inhibitor of mitochondrial pyruvate transport alpha-cyano-beta-(1-phenylindol-3-yl)-acrylate was used to inhibit progressively pyruvate carboxylation by liver mitochondria from control and glucagon-treated rats. The data showed that, contrary to our previous conclusions [Halestrap (1978) Biochem. J. 172, 389-398], pyruvate transport could not regulate metabolism under these conditions. This was confirmed by measuring the intramitochondrial pyruvate concentration, which almost equilibrated with the extramitochondrial pyruvate concentration in control mitochondria, but was significantly decreased in mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats, where rates of pyruvate metabolism were elevated. Computer-simulation studies explain how this is compatible with linear Dixon plots of the inhibition of pyruvate metabolism by alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate. Parallel measurements of the mitochondrial membrane potential by using [3H]triphenylmethylphosphonium ions showed that it was elevated by about 3 mV after pretreatment of rats with both glucagon and phenylephrine. There was no significant change in the transmembrane pH gradient. It is shown that the increase in pyruvate metabolism can be explained by a stimulation of the respiratory chain, producing an elevation in the protonmotive force and a consequent rise in the intramitochondrial ATP/ADP ratio, which in turn increases pyruvate carboxylase activity. Mild inhibition of the respiratory chain with Amytal reversed the effects of hormone treatment on mitochondrial pyruvate metabolism and ATP concentrations, but not on citrulline synthesis. The significance of these observations for the hormonal regulation of gluconeogenesis from L-lactate in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Pyruvate transport and carboxylation have been determined in mitochondria from liver and kidney cortex isolated from Wistar rats with acidosis produced by three different treatments: fasting, exercise and ingestion of ammonium chloride. Fasting for 48 h or swimming for 2 h resulted in an increased rate of CO2 fixation by mitochondria from both organs incubated with pyruvate. This increase was accompanied by a rise in the rate of pyruvate transport in all cases except in mitochondria derived from the kidney of the fasted animals. Acute acidosis produced by the ingestion of ammonium chloride resulted in increases in pyruvate transport and carboxylation in kidney mitochondria, but a drop in pyruvate carboxylation was observed in mitochondria from the liver. The results are discussed in terms of the differential regulation of the mitochondria steps for gluconeogenesis from three carbon precursors in liver and kidney, taking into consideration the hormonal status of the animals and the prevailing available substrates in each condition.  相似文献   

9.
Glucocorticoids administered to rats have been found to stimulate the rates of utilization of substrates by subsequently isolated hepatic mitochondria. This stimulation was observed in the carboxylation and decarboxylation of pyruvate and in the oxidation of β-hydroxybutyrate and succinate during state 3 and uncoupled conditions. These effects were produced by cortisol, triamcinolone, and dexamethasone, but not by deoxycorticosterone. Responses to the steroids were similar to those observed after glucagon or triiodothyronine administration. The stimulation of the rate of pyruvate decarboxylation was shown to occur independently of the rate of pyruvate carboxylation. Steroids varied with respect to the time required after in vivo administration for stimulation of metabolism to occur, as well as for achievement of maximally stimulated levels. Significant stimulation was obtained within 60 min after treatment with cortisol-succinate and 90 min after dexamethasone or cortisol. Maximal stimulation was observed after 2 to 4 h of treatment. The dose dependency of the mitochondrial responses was observable in the increase in the rates of pyruvate carboxylation after dexamethasone or cortisol treatment. Of the two steroids tested, dexamethasone was approximately 2000-fold more potent than cortisol in increasing mitochondrial activity. The effects of 30 min of treatment with glucagon or 20 h with triiodothyronine were additive with the stimulation produced by glucocorticoids. Complete additivity was found in the increased rates of pyruvate carboxylation, while oxidation of substrates was approximately 75% additive.  相似文献   

10.
A method is described for measuring rates of mitochondrial pyruvate carboxylation in hepatocytes treated with the polyene antibiotic, filipin, to render the plasma membrane permeable to substrates. With this approach it was possible to demonstrate that treatment of cells with glucagon or catecholamines results in a stimulation of mitochondrial CO2 fixation measured in situ comparable with that observed in the isolated mitochondria, in terms of time of onset of the response, hormone selectivity and sensitivity. In addition, angiotensin II and vasopressin were shown to enhance the activity of pyruvate carboxylase in both the intact mitochondria and filipin-treated cells, thus strengthening the postulate that this site is a major locus of hormone action in the control of gluconeogenesis. Addition of 3-mercaptopicolinic acid, to inhibit gluconeogenesis at the level of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, had no significant effect on the stimulation of pyruvate carboxylation by adrenaline, suggesting that the effect of the hormone at this site is independent of changes in activity of other enzymes further on in the pathway. The data presented preclude the possibility that acute effects of hormones on mitochondrial metabolism are solely artifacts of the preparation procedure.  相似文献   

11.
1. Mitochondria isolated from rat liver by centrifugation of the homogenate in buffered iso-osmotic sucrose at between 4000 and 8000g-min, 1h after the administration in vivo of 30μg of glucagon/100g body wt., retain Ca2+ for over 45min after its addition at 100nmol/mg of mitochondrial protein in the presence of 2mm-Pi. In similar experiments, but after the administration of saline (0.9% NaCl) in place of glucagon, Ca2+ is retained for 6–8min. The ability of glucagon to enhance Ca2+ retention is completely prevented by co-administration of 4.2mg of puromycin/100g body wt. 2. The resting rate of respiration after Ca2+ accumulation by mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats remains low by contrast with that from saline-treated rats. Respiration in the latter mitochondria increased markedly after the Ca2+ accumulation, reflecting the uncoupling action of the ion. 3. Concomitant with the enhanced retention of Ca2+ and low rates of resting respiration by mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats was an increased ability to retain endogenous adenine nucleotides. 4. An investigation of properties of mitochondria known to influence Ca2+ transport revealed a significantly higher concentration of adenine nucleotides but not of Pi in those from glucagon-treated rats. The membrane potential remained unchanged, but the transmembrane pH gradient increased by approx. 10mV, indicating increased alkalinity of the matrix space. 5. Depletion of endogenous adenine nucleotides by Pi treatment in mitochondria from both glucagon-treated and saline-treated rats led to a marked diminution in ability to retain Ca2+. The activity of the adenine nucleotide translocase was unaffected by glucagon treatment of rats in vivo. 6. Although the data are consistent with the argument that the Ca2+-translocation cycle in rat liver mitochondria is a target for glucagon action in vivo, they do not permit conclusions to be drawn about the molecular mechanisms involved in the glucagon-induced alteration to this cycle.  相似文献   

12.
Several groups of investigators have shown that treatment of rats with glucagon produces an increase in the adenine nucleotide content of hepatic mitochondria. It has been suggested that this enlarged pool of exchangeable nucleotides may be responsible for several of glucagon's stimulatory effects on mitochondrial functions by accelerating the transport of adenine nucleotides across the inner mitochondrial membrane. This hypothesis was tested by loading rat liver mitochondria in vitro with adenine nucleotides to supranormal levels. This procedure did result in stimulation of several metabolic and bioenergetic functions including pyruvate carboxylation, uncoupler-dependent ATPase, and succinic dehydrogenase activity but not formation of citrulline. However, a sham loading that did not increase the nucleotide content of the mitochondria was essentially as effective as the loading procedure in stimulating those functions assayed. Mitochondria, loaded in vitro with supranormal levels of adenine nucleotides, were shown to have an enlarged pool of exchangeable nucleotides. This exchange was atractyloside sensitive, but the rate of exchange was only slightly increased as a consequence of enlargement of the pool. Similarly, mitochondria isolated from glucagon-treated rats showed no increase in the rate of exchange, although the exchangeable pool was increased. There was no correlation between the rate of nucleotide exchange and the rate of the uncoupler-dependent ATPase.  相似文献   

13.
The sensitivity of glucose production from L-lactate by isolated liver cells from starved rats to inhibition by alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate was studied. A small percentage of the maximal rate of gluconeogenesis was insensitive to inhibition by alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate, and evidence is presented to show that this is due to pyruvate entry into the mitochondria as alanine. After subtraction of this rate, Dixon plots of the reciprocal of the rate of gluconeogenesis against inhibitor concentration were linear both in the absence and presence of glucagon, phenylephrine or valinomycin, each of which stimulated gluconeogenesis by 30-50%. Pyruvate kinase activity was decreased by glucagon, but not by phenylephrine or valinomycin. Inhibition of gluconeogenesis by quinolinate (inhibitor of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase) or monochloroacetate (probably inhibiting pyruvate carboxylation) caused a significant deviation from linearity of the Dixon plot obtained with alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate. Amytal, however, inhibited gluconeogenesis without affecting the linearity of this plot. These data, coupled with a computer simulation study, suggest that pyruvate transport may control gluconeogenesis from L-lactate and that hormones may stimulate this process through an effect on the respiratory chain. An additional role for pyruvate kinase and pyruvate carboxylase is quite compatible with the data presented.  相似文献   

14.
These studies were undertaken to determine the mechanism by which intravenously administered lead salts inhibit hepatic gluconeogenesis. Within 1 h after the intravenous administration of lead acetate (10 mg), there is 97% inhibition of CO2 fixation in isolated rat liver mitochondria. This effect is concentration-dependent. The induction of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase activity observed with starvation was also inhibited by intravenously administered lead acetate, but the activities of pyruvate kinase, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and pyruvate carboxylase were unaffected, as was the oxidation of palmitate and palmitoyl-CoA by mitochondria from Pb2+-treated animals. The addition of reduced glutathione to mitochondria from Pb2+-treated animals had no effect on the inhibited CO2 fixation. ATP concentrations in mitochondria from Pb2+-treated animals are decreased and the dose-response relationships for the effect of Pb2+ on CO2 fixation and ATP concentrations correspond. We conclude that the decrease in mitochondrial ATP in Pb2+-treated animals is probably responsible for the marked inhibition ov CO2 fixation, and hence the impairment of gluconeogenesis from alanine, lactate and pyruvate observed by others.  相似文献   

15.
Treatment of rats for 3 h with dexamethasone was shown to stimulate both pyruvate carboxylation and decarboxylation in the subsequently isolated mitochondria. The effect of hormone treatment on pyruvate carboxylation was also apparent in liver homogenates assayed within minutes of killing the animal and was independent of the temperature at which the assay was performed, suggesting that it was not an artifact of the mitochondrial preparation procedure. The stimulation of both aspects of pyruvate metabolism in the intact organelle was independent of the induction of either pyruvate carboxylase or pyruvate dehydrogenase. Similarly, there was no change in the percentage of pyruvate dehydrogenase in the active form, indicating that the effect of steroid treatment on pyruvate oxidation was not via changes in the degree of phosphorylation of the enzyme. Adrenalectomizing the animals for a period of 14 days before the experiment had no effect on either parameter. Glucocorticoid treatment of the animals increased the rate of pyruvate uptake into the mitochondria, as measured by the titration of pyruvate metabolism with alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate, a specific inhibitor of the pyruvate translocator. It also increased the intramitochondrial concentrations of acetyl-CoA and ATP and led to an elevated [ATP]/[ADP] ratio within the mitochondria. It is suggested that both enzymes of pyruvate metabolism exist in the mitochondria under considerable restraint and that glucocorticoids act to relieve this restraint by alterations in substrate supply and the intramitochondrial concentrations of effector molecules.  相似文献   

16.
Oxamate, a structural analog of pyruvate, known as a potent inhibitor of lactic dehydrogenase, lactic dehydrogenase, produces an inhibition of gluconeogenic flux in isolated perfused rat liver or hepatocyte suspensions from low concentrations of pyruvate (less than 0.5 mM) or substrates yielding pyruvate. The following observations indicate that oxamate inhibits flux through pyruvate carboxylase: accumulation of substrates and decreased concentration of all metabolic intermediates beyond pyruvate; decreased levels of aspartate, glutamate, and alanine; and enhanced ketone body production, which is a sensitive indicator of decreased mitochondrial free oxaloacetate levels. The decreased pyruvate carboxylase flux does not seem to be the result of a direct inhibitory action of oxamate on this enzyme but is secondary to a decreased rate of pyruvate entry into the mitochondria. This assumption is based on the following observations: Above 0.4 mM pyruvate, no significant inhibitory effect of oxamate on gluconeogenesis was observed. The competitive nature of oxamate inhibition is in conflict with its effect on isolated pyruvate carboxylase which is noncompetitive for pyruvate. Fatty acid oxidation was effective in stimulating gluconeogenesis in the presence of oxamate only at concentrations of pyruvate above 0.4 mM. Since only at low pyruvate concentrations its entry into the mitochondria occurs via the monocarboxylate translocator, from these observations it follows that pyruvate transport across the mitochondrial membrane, and not its carboxylation, is the first nonequilibrium step in the gluconeogenic pathway. In the presence of oxamate, fatty acid oxidation inhibited gluconeogenesis from lactate, alanine, and low pyruvate concentrations (less than 0.5 mM), and the rate of transfer of reducing equivalents to the cytosol was significantly decreased. Whether fatty acids stimulate or inhibit gluconeogenesis appears to correlate with the rate of flux through pyruvate carboxylase which ultimately seems to rely on pyruvate availability. Unless adequate rates of oxaloacetate formation are maintained, the shift of the mitochondrial NAD couple to a more reduced state during fatty acid oxidation seems to decrease mitochondrial oxaloacetate resulting in a decreased rate of transfer of carbon and reducing power to the cytosol.  相似文献   

17.
Pyruvate carboxylation by isolated mitochondria from rat liver is inhibited by t-butylhydroperoxide in a fully reversible manner. The rate of malate formation at 10 mM pyruvate was decreased by some 80% by 30 microM t-butylhydroperoxide. The effective peroxide concentration was dependent on the mitochondrial hydrogen supply, being increased to about 120 microM in the presence of 50 microM palmitoylcarnitine. Regarding the mechanism(s) of the t-butylhydroperoxide action, pyruvate transport and intramitochondrial energy or activator supply are unlikely involved, because the effect also took place with alanine as the substrate and was not accompanied by a change in the intramitochondrial levels of adenine nucleotides and acetyl-CoA respectively. However, t-butylhydroperoxide caused a rapid fall in the 3-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio and a marked increase in the oxidized glutathione content. Therefore, experiments were designed to disclose the participation of the respective redox couples in the expression of pyruvate carboxylase activity. From measurements of NADPH, NADH, oxidized and reduced glutathione contents of mitochondria incubated under a variety of conditions, evidence has been obtained indicating that the mitochondrial NADH supply represents an important factor in the regulation of pyruvate carboxylase activity. The results presented seemingly provide a new basis for the understanding of the functional relationship between beta-oxidation and pyruvate carboxylation.  相似文献   

18.
Glucagon treatment of rats allowed the isolation of liver mitochondria with enhanced rates of pyruvate metabolism measured in either sucrose or KCl media. No change in the activity of the pyruvate carrier itself was apparent, but under metabolizing conditions, use of the inhibitor of pyruvate transport, alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate, demonstrated that pyruvate transport limited the rate of pyruvate metabolism. The maximum rate of transport under metabolizing conditions was enhanced by glucagon treatment. Problems involved in measuring the transmembrane pH gradient under metabolizing conditions are discussed and a variety of techniques are used to estimate the matrix pH. From the distribution of methylamine, ammonia and D-lactate and the Ki for inhibition by alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate it is concluded that the matrix is more acid than the medium and that the pH of the matrix rises after glucagon treatment. The increase in matrix pH stimulates pyruvate transport. The membrane potential, ATP concentration and O2 uptake were also increased under metabolizing conditions in glucagon-treated mitochondria. These changes were correlated with a stimulation of the respiratory chain which can be observed in uncoupled mitochondria [Yamazaki (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 7924--7930]. The mitochondrial Mg2+ content (mean +/- S.E.M.) was increased from 38.8 +/- 1.2 (n = 26) to 47.5 +/- 2.0 (n = 26) ng-atoms/mg by glucagon and the K+ content from 126.7 +/- 10.3 (n = 19) ng-atoms/mg. This may represent a change in membrane potential induced by glucagon in vivo. The physiological significance of these results in the control of gluconeogenesis is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Glucagon stimulates 14CO2 production from [1-14C] glycine by isolated rat hepatocytes. Maximal stimulation (70%) of decarboxylation of glycine by hepatocytes was achieved when the concentration of glucagon in the medium reached 10 nM; half-maximal stimulation occurred at a concentration of about 2 nM. A lag period of 10 min was observed before the stimulation could be measured. Inclusion of beta-hydroxybutyrate (10 mM) or acetoacetate (10 mM) did not affect the magnitude of stimulation suggesting that the effects of glucagon were independent of mitochondrial redox state. Glucagon did not affect either the concentration or specific activity of intracellular glycine, thus excluding the possibilities that altered concentration or specific activity of intracellular glycine contributes to the observed stimulation. The stimulation of decarboxylation of glycine by glucagon was further studied by monitoring 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glycine by mitochondria isolated from rats previously injected with glucagon. Glycine decarboxylation was significantly stimulated in the mitochondria isolated from the glucagon-injected rats. We suggest that glucagon is a major regulator of hepatic glycine metabolism through the glycine cleavage enzyme system and may be responsible for the increased hepatic glycine removal observed in animals fed high-protein diets.  相似文献   

20.
Quinolinic acid (Q.A.) which inhibits gluconeogenesis at the site of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) synthesis, reduced the content of PEP while elevating that of aspartate and malate in rat livers perfused with a medium containing 10 mM L-lactate. Glucagon at 10(-9) M did not affect Q.A. inhibition of lactate gluconeogenesis nor the depression of PEP level, but further elevated malate and aspartate accumulation. Exogenous butyrate had the same effect as glucagon on these parameters. Butylmalonate (BM), an inhibitor of mitochondrial malate transport, inhibited lactate and propionate gluconeogenesis to similar extents. The addition of 10(-9) M glucagon had no effect on BM inhibition of lactate gluconeogenesis, but almost completely reversed BM inhibition of propionate gluconeogenesis. These results suggest that glucagon may act on at least two sites, resulting in elevated hepatic gluconeogenesis. First, it may stimulate dicarboxylic acid synthesis (malate and oxaloacetate, specifically) through activation of pyruvate carboxylation. Secondly, it may stimulate synthesis of other dicarboxylic acids (fumarate, for example) by activating certain steps of the tricarboxylic acid cycle. The stimulatory effect of glucagon on gluconeogenesis in the perfused rat liver is well documented (1, 2). Exton et al., who earlier located the site of stimulation between pyruvate and PEP synthesis (3), proposed that glucagon stimulated PEP synthesis in the perfused rat liver (4), while reports from Williamson et al. (5) suggested the pyruvate-carboxylase reaction as the site of glucagon action. Stimulation at sites above PEP formation and of portions of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (4) by glucagon have also been suggested (6). In the present experiments, we have used substrates entering at different parts of the gluconeogenic pathway, and specific inhibitors to further resolve the action of glucagon.  相似文献   

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