首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
1. Carbohydrate metabolism was studied in HT29 human colon cancer cells cultured in a glucose free medium supplemented with 2.8 mM inosine (HT29ino cells) in comparison with standard HT29 cells grown in the permanent presence of glucose (HT29Glc + cells) and with HT29Glc- cells which are adapted to grow permanently without glucose. 2. Inosine allows the standard cells to grow when glucose is lacking but surprisingly stops the growth of HT29Glc- cells. 3-mercaptopicolinate, an inhibitor of PEP-carboxykinase, does not hinder HT29ino cells to grow, which shows that gluconeogenesis from aspartate or pyruvate is not essential. It suggests that enough carbohydrate is supplied by the ribose moiety of inosine. 3. While standard HT29Glc + cells are highly glycolytic, it is not the case of HT29ino or HT29Glc- cells when glucose is given for few hours. When glucose is present for 24 hr or more, glycolytic rate increases in HT29ino cells and glycogen accumulates. 4. It is found that the pattern of enzymes activities related to carbohydrate metabolism in HT29ino cells is closer to that of HT29Glc + cells rather than to that of HT29Glc- cells. However, phosphofructokinase-1 activity, measured with saturating concentration of Fru-2,6-diP, is significantly lower in HT29ino cells. 5. Binding rate of hexokinase to mitochondria is similar in the three cell-lines. However, in HT29Glc- cells, bound hexokinase easily utilizes ATP generated by the mitochondria. By contrast, in HT29Glc+ and HT29ino cells, bound hexokinase is much more active with exogenous ATP, suggesting a functional defect in the mitochondria from these two latter cells.  相似文献   

2.
Effect of insulin on glycogen metabolism in isolated catfish hepatocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Insulin effect on carbohydrate metabolism in catfish hepatocytes consisted of a significant decrease of cell glycogen concentration both in the absence and in the presence of glucose in the medium. The hormone did not influence either the output of glucose from the cell or the intracellular glucose level. Experiments with radioactive glucose showed a very low uptake of the sugar by the hepatocytes; correspondingly the incorporation of radioactivity into glycogen was very low and not influenced by insulin. The glycogen content in catfish liver cells was influenced by the hormone in the opposite way to rat liver cells.  相似文献   

3.
Activity of several enzymes of the glycogen and carbohydrate metabolism is studied in HT 29 colon adenocarcinoma cell line and in HT 29 tumors developed in nude mice, by reference to the normal human colon mucosa. Activity of glycogen synthase, glycogen phosphorylase, pyruvate kinase, fructose-1,6-diphosphatase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and lactate dehydrogenase is found to be increased in both the cultured cells and the tumors. It indicates that the biochemical strategy of malignant cells, due to the neoplastic transformation process, involves specific changes in the carbohydrate metabolism of tumor as well as in vitro growing correspondent cell line.  相似文献   

4.
The study examined the effect of insulin on glucose metabolism in freshly isolated calcium-tolerant heart myocytes from adult rats. The uptake of 2-deoxyglucose demonstrated an initial lag in response to insulin and the maximal insulin effect was not attained until after 3 min preincubation with the hormone. A dose-response study of 14CO2 production from [14C]glucose revealed that the maximum insulin stimulation of glucose utilization occurred with 5 mU/ml. Both the uptake and the oxidation of glucose proceeded at a linear rate in the absence and presence of insulin. However, insulin exerted a greater effect on the uptake (42-54%) than on the oxidation (17-22%) of exogenous glucose. Incorporation of glucose into glycogen was markedly increased by insulin and resulted in the myocyte glycogen concentration returning to in vivo levels. In the absence of insulin, glucose incorporation plateaued within 10 min of incubation and the glycogen concentration was not altered. Our findings also indicate that at equilibrium, insulin-treated cells exhibited a higher glycogen turnover rate. It thus appears that insulin exerts a differential effect on the different pathways in glucose metabolism in the isolated cardiac cells. This may be related in part to their quiescent state and lower energy demand.  相似文献   

5.
Addition of insulin to liver cells from fed rats incubated in the absence of other hormones resulted in a 2-fold increase in glycogen synthase activity. This direct effect of insulin has been characterized and compared with the antagonism by insulin of alpha 1-adrenergic effects on glycogen metabolism. The activation of glycogen synthase by insulin developed slowly (20-25 min) and was most effective when the enzyme was partially preactivated by glucose. With glucose concentrations above 15 mM the effects of insulin and glucose were additive. In contrast to glucose, which caused inverse changes in phosphorylase and glycogen synthase activity, insulin activated glycogen synthase without affecting phosphorylase a. Treatment of hepatocytes with phenylephrine led to an activation of phosphorylase and inactivation of glycogen synthase, which could be partially blocked by insulin. This antagonistic effect of insulin was rapid (complete within 5 min of insulin addition) and showed an identical time course for both enzymes. The activation of glycogen synthase by insulin and inactivation by phenylephrine both resulted principally from alterations in the Vmax. Insulin added alone did not alter the basal cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration, which was 160 nM as measured with Quin 2 as an intracellular Ca2+ indicator. Both the magnitude and the initial rate of cytosolic free Ca2+ increase induced by phenylephrine were reduced by about 50% in cells pretreated with insulin. It is concluded that the direct activation of glycogen synthase by insulin is mediated by a glycogen synthase-specific kinase or phosphatase, whereas insulin antagonizes the effects of alpha 1-agonists by interfering with their ability to elevate cytosolic free Ca2+.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of insulin on carbohydrate metabolism in atrophied rat soleus muscle are increased after unweighting by tail-cast suspension. This work has been extended by testing the effect of unweighting on the response of carbohydrate metabolism to isoproterenol, a beta-adrenergic agonist. Isoproterenol promoted glycogen degradation more in the unweighted than in the weight-bearing soleus but showed no differences in the extensor digitorum longus, which is unresponsive to hindlimb unweighting. In soleus muscles depleted of glycogen, to avoid varied inhibitory effects of glycogen on glycogen synthesis, isoproterenol inhibited this process more in the unweighted muscle. Isoproterenol did not have a greater inhibitory effect on net uptake of 2-deoxy-D[1,2-3H]glucose by the unweighted muscle. Measurements of intracellular 2-deoxy-[3H]glucose 6-phosphate and 3-O-methyl-D-[1-3H]glucose, which cannot be phosphorylated, showed that isoproterenol inhibited glucose phosphorylation but not transport. This effect could be explained by an increase of glucose 6-phosphate, an inhibitor of hexokinase. At 100 microU insulin/ml but not at a lower amount (10 microU/ml), isoproterenol inhibited hexose phosphorylation more in the control than in the unweighted muscle. This result may be explained by greater insulin antagonism in the unweighted muscle owing to increased insulin sensitivity. However, insulin antagonism of isoproterenol stimulation of glycogenolysis or inhibition of glycogenesis was not altered by unweighting. Therefore, for some aspects of carbohydrate metabolism, the unweighted muscle has an increased response to beta-adrenergic activation, just as this muscle shows increased responses to insulin.  相似文献   

7.
The regulation of carbohydrate metabolism involves changes in the phosphorylation state of enzymes. We used okadaic acid, a potent inhibitor of protein phosphatases type 2A (IC50 0.05-2 nM) and type 1 (IC50 10-20 nM) to determine the role of these phosphatases in the control of carbohydrate metabolism by insulin in rat hepatocytes. In the absence of insulin, okadaic acid caused total inhibition of glycogen synthesis at 100 nM and half-maximal inhibition at 8-9 nM. In the presence of insulin, lower concentrations of okadaic acid (to which type 2A phosphatases are sensitive) were effective at inhibiting glycogen synthesis. 2.5 nM okadaic acid caused total inhibition of the 2-fold stimulation of glycogen synthesis by insulin but had no effect on the basal unstimulated rate of glycogen synthesis. This suggests the involvement of type 2A protein phosphatases in the stimulation of glycogen synthesis by insulin. Okadaic acid (5 nM), partially suppressed but did not abolish the increase in glucokinase mRNA levels caused by insulin, indicating that dephosphorylation mechanisms may be involved in the control of glucokinase mRNA levels by insulin. It is concluded that activation of protein phosphatases type 1 and/or type 2A by insulin may have a widespread role in the control of glucose metabolism at various sites.  相似文献   

8.
The direct effects of insulin and glucose on glycogen accumulation were compared using monolayers of chicken embryo hepatocytes which, when cultured in chemically defined medium without hormones, retain viability for several days but become depleted of glycogen. The data strongly suggest that insulin is the major direct signal for hepatic glycogen synthesis, while glucose supports glycogen accumulation primarily in its role as a substrate. Insulin alone, when added to the cells in physiological concentrations, either shortly after isolation or throughout culture, restored glycogen to the maximal levels found in the liver of the fed chicken. Addition of increasing amounts of glucose in the absence of insulin, in contrast, yielded proportional but limited increases in glycogen deposition attaining not more than 30% of the maximal storage capacity of the cells. This hormone-independent glycogenesis was characterized by a 30-min burst of glycogen deposition immediately following a stepped increase of glucose, with no detectable change in glycogen synthase activity. Insulin-dependent glycogenesis evidenced a much slower rate of glycogen deposition and was accompanied by a near tripling of glycogen synthase activity. Insulin-induced glycogen stores were broken down following removal of the hormone, even when glucose was present in great excess, indicating that the cells require insulin to maintain as well as build up maximal levels of glycogen. In the presence of glucagon, insulin-induced glycogen stores were rapidly degraded, but glucose-induced glycogenesis was not inhibited. The actions of insulin and glucose in this system are both qualitatively and quantitatively similar to those that have been observed in the diabetic animal.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of insulin, epinephrine, glucose and anti-insulin receptor antibodies on enzymes involved in the regulation of glycogen synthesis were investigared in the isolated mouse soleus muscle. Insulin maximally increased the percentage of glycogen synthase active form after 15 min in the absence of glucose in the extracellular medium; half-maximal and maximal effects were obtained with 1.5 and 33 nM insulin, respectively. The basal percentage of glycogen phosphorylase active form was not altered by insulin. Antibodies to the insulin receptor had similar effects to those of insulin on both enzymes. The percentage of glycogen synthase active form was maximally decreased and that of phosphorylase maximally increased after a 2 min exposure to epinephrine in the absence of extracellular glucose. Glucose alone had no effect on muscle glycogen synthase. When muscles were incubated with insulin (33 nM) plus glucose (20 mM) for 5–10 min, the increase in the percentage of glycogen synthase active form was greater than with insulin alone. This enhancing effect of glucose on insulin activation of glycogen synthase disappeared after 20 min. The results suggest the existence of two mechanisms whereby insulin activates muscle glycogen synthase. The main effect is operative in the absence of extracellular glucose and occurs at insulin concentrations close to the physiological range. The other effect requires glucose and may result from the stimulation by insulin of glucose transport and/or metabolism.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of insulin, epinephrine, glucose and anti-insulin receptor antibodies on enzymes involved in the regulation of glycogen synthesis were investigated in the isolated mouse soleus muscle. Insulin maximally increased the percentage of glycogen synthase active form after 15 min in the absence of glucose in the extracellular medium; half-maximal and maximal effects were obtained with 1.5 and 33 mM insulin, respectively. The basal percentage of glycogen phosphorylase active form was not altered by insulin. Antibodies to the insulin receptor had similar effects to those of insulin on both enzymes. The percentage of glycogen synthase active form was maximally decreased and that of phosphorylase maximally increased after a 2 min exposure to epinephrine in the absence of extracellular glucose. Glucose alone had no effect on muscle glycogen synthase. When muscles were incubated with insulin (33 nM) plus glucose (20 mM) for 5-10 min, the increase in the percentage of glycogen synthase active form was greater than with insulin alone. This enhancing effect of glucose on insulin activation of glycogen synthase disappeared after 20 min. The results suggest the existence of two mechanisms whereby insulin activates muscle glycogen synthase. The main effect is operative in the absence of extracellular glucose and occurs at insulin concentrations close to the physiological range. The other effect requires glucose and may result from the stimulation by insulin of glucose transport and/or metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of insulin and glucagon on glycogen metabolism were studied in cultured fetal hepatocytes transplanted from 15-day-old fetuses. The effects of these hormones were examined just after transplantation, when the cells contained only minute amounts of glycogen, and during the 3 to 4 day culture period, when the hepatocytes were exposed to 10 muM cortisol and actively accumulated glycogen. At all stages of the culture, glucagon addition (10 nM) was followed by a rapid depletion of labeled glycogen, previously synthesized during a pulse labeling with [14C]glucose: this effect was mimicked by N6, O2'-dibutyryl adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (dibutyryl cyclic AMP) (0.3 to 1 nM). Such a glycogenolytic effect of glucagon was observed even 6 hours after transplantation, i.e. at a time when cortisol was not present. In addition, glucagon clearly induced cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monosphosphate (cyclic AMP) accumulation in cells grown for 18 hours in the absence of cortisol. With cells grown for 3 days in the presence of cortisol, glucagon-dependent glycogenolysis was also obtained when cortisol was removed from the medium 20 hours before hormone addition. Thus the presence of cortisol is not necessary either to maintain a response to glucagon or for the onset of the glycogenolytic effect of glucagon. Insulin addition (10 nM) stimulated [14C]glucose incorporation into glycogen at all stages of the culture when grown in the presence of cortisol; no glycogenic response to insulin was observed 6 hours after transplantation where cortisol was not previously introduced. In addition, if the hepatocytes were grown in the presence of insulin alone (i.e. in the absence of cortisol) no significant storage of glycogen occurred. Maximal storage (or labeling) of glycogen was observed when hepatocytes were grown in the presence of both cortisol and insulin. The presence of cortisol was therefore necessary for the expression of the glycogenic effect of insulin. These data show that marked difference exist between the onset of developmental responses towards glucagon and insulin. The glucagon-dependent regulatory pathway should be present very early in fetal development and should not depend on cortisol. On the contrary, the onset of the insulin-dependent regulatory pathway seems to be induced during culture, and it is likely that this is caused by cortisol.  相似文献   

12.
Rat parenchymal hepatocytes in monolayer culture were used to study the metabolic effects of epidermal growth factor (EGF) and insulin on ketogenesis, gluconeogenesis and glycogen metabolism. EGF, unlike insulin, did not inhibit ketogenesis from palmitate or gluconeogenesis from pyruvate in hepatocyte cultures. It also had no effect on these pathways in the presence of insulin. In contrast, EGF potently counteracted the stimulation of [14C]pyruvate incorporation into glycogen by insulin, and also glycogen deposition from both gluconeogenic precursors and glucose. The EGF concentration causing half-maximal effect was about 0.1 nM. The anti-glycogenic effect of EGF was observed after both long-term (24 h) and short-term (1 h) exposure to EGF, and was more marked in the presence of insulin than in its absence. EGF did not displace bound insulin, suggesting that it neither competes for the insulin receptor nor affects the affinity of the receptor for insulin. EGF did not alter cellular cyclic AMP; and inhibition of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity did not prevent the anti-glycogenic effect of EGF. In liver-derived dividing epithelial cells, Hep-G2 cells and fibroblasts, which have no capacity for gluconeogenesis, EGF did not counteract the stimulatory effect of insulin on [14C]glucose incorporation into glycogen, and in the epithelial cells EGF increased [14C]glucose incorporation into glycogen. The counter-effect of EGF on the glycogenic action of insulin in parenchymal hepatocytes may be due to a direct effect on glycogen metabolism or to an interaction with the post-receptor events in insulin action.  相似文献   

13.
Defects in the deposition of glycogen and the regulation of glycogen synthesis in the livers of severely insulin-deficient rats can be reversed, in vivo, within hours of insulin administration. Using primary cultures of hepatocytes isolated from normal and diabetic rats in a serum-free chemically defined medium, the present study addresses the chronic action of insulin to facilitate the direct effects of insulin and glucose on the short term regulation of the enzymes controlling glycogen metabolism. Primary cultures were maintained in the presence of insulin, triiodothyronine, and cortisol for 1-3 days. On day 1 in alloxan diabetic cultures, 10(-7) M insulin did not acutely activate glycogen synthase over a period of 15 min or 1 h, whereas insulin acutely activated synthase in cultures of normal hepatocytes. By day 3 in hepatocytes isolated from alloxan diabetic rats, insulin effected an approximate 30% increase in per cent synthase I within 15 min as was also the case for normal cells. The acute effect of insulin on synthase activation was independent of changes in phosphorylase alpha. Whereas glycogen synthase phosphatase activity could not be shown to be acutely affected by insulin, the total activity in diabetic cells was restored to normal control values over the 3-day culture period. The acute effect of 30 mM glucose to activate glycogen synthase in cultured hepatocytes from normal rats after 1 day of culture was missing in hepatocytes isolated from either alloxan or spontaneously diabetic (BB/W) rats. After 3 days in culture, glucose produced a 50% increase in glycogen synthase activity during a 10-min period under the same conditions. These studies clearly demonstrate that insulin acts in a chronic manner in concert with thyroid hormones and steroids to facilitate acute regulation of hepatic glycogen synthesis by both insulin and glucose.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of insulin on glucose transport and metabolism were examined in cultured HT29 human colonic adenocarcinoma cells. The presence of glucose transporters was verified by D-glucose displaceable [3H]cytochalasin B binding. The Kd and Bmax values from cytochalasin B binding studies were 190 +/- 30 nM and 8.4 +/- 1.4 pmol/mg protein, respectively. Glucose transport determined with 3-O-methylglucose showed saturable kinetics with a Km of 5.8 +/- 0.4 mM and a Vmax of 0.047 +/- 0.003 mumol/mg protein per min at 25 degrees C. Moreover, in HT29 cells, two classes of insulin binding sites were detected in radioligand binding experiments. Although insulin failed to stimulate glucose transport, it was found to activate glycolysis in HT29 cells. Glucose consumption increased from 0.33 +/- 0.03 mumol/mg protein per h to 0.49 +/- 0.05 mumol/mg protein per h and lactate production was augmented from 0.67 +/- 0.04 mumol/mg protein per h to 0.87 +/- 0.06 mumol/mg protein per h in response to 10(-7) to 10(-5) M insulin. Insulin also enhanced mannose metabolism. Apart from these two hexoses, HT29 cells exhibited a surprisingly narrow substrate specificity. With the possible exception of glyceraldehyde, little lactate was produced from alternative substrates, including adenosine, inosine, ribose, deoxyribose, dihydroxyacetone, galactose and fructose either with or without insulin. Despite its limited utilization by the glycolytic pathway, adenosine was readily salvaged for de novo synthesis of adenine nucleotides. These findings suggest that insulin directly influences substrate utilization through the glycolytic pathway in HT29 cells without activating the glucose transport pathway.  相似文献   

15.
Zucker diabetic fatty rats develop type 2 diabetes concomitantly with peripheral insulin resistance. Hepatocytes from these rats and their control lean counterparts have been cultured, and a number of key parameters of glucose metabolism have been determined. Glucokinase activity was 4.5-fold lower in hepatocytes from diabetic rats than in hepatocytes from healthy ones. In contrast, hexokinase activity was about 2-fold higher in hepatocytes from diabetic animals than in healthy ones. Glucose-6-phosphatase activity was not significantly different. Despite the altered ratios of glucokinase to hexokinase activity, intracellular glucose 6-phosphate concentrations were similar in the two types of cells when they where incubated with 1-25 mM glucose. However, glycogen levels and glycogen synthase activity ratio were lower in hepatocytes from diabetic animals. Total pyruvate kinase activity and its activity ratio as well as fructose 2,6-bisphosphate concentration and lactate production were also lower in cells from diabetic animals. All of these data indicate that glucose metabolism is clearly impaired in hepatocytes from Zucker diabetic fatty rats. Glucokinase overexpression using adenovirus restored glucose metabolism in diabetic hepatocytes. In glucokinase-overexpressing cells, glucose 6-phosphate levels increased. Moreover, glycogen deposition was greatly enhanced due to the activation of glycogen synthase. Pyruvate kinase was also activated, and fructose-2,6-bisphosphate concentration and lactate production were increased in glucokinase-overexpressing diabetic hepatocytes. Overexpression of hexokinase I did not increase glycogen deposition. In conclusion, hepatocytes from Zucker diabetic fatty rats showed depressed glycogen and glycolytic metabolism, but glucokinase overexpression improved their glucose utilization and storage.  相似文献   

16.
Incubation of fat cells with insulin increased glycogen synthase I activity without changing total synthase activity. This effect of insulin was dependent upon the particular lot of albumin present in the medium and was abolished by incubating cells with trypsin. Half-maximal activation of glycogen synthase was obtained with 8 microunits/ml of insulin, a concentration very similar to that which half-maximally stimulated 3-O-methylglucose uptake. The basal percentage of phosphorylase a activity was not detectably altered by insulin, although it was decreased by incubating cells with 5 mM glucose. Insulin (50 microunits/ml) markedly opposed actions of epinephrine (0.05 to 10 muM) to increase phosphorylase a activity and decrease glycogen synthase I activity, effects which were observed without glucose. Partial activation of glycogen synthase by insulin was seen after 1 min and complete activation after 4 min. Glucose alone produced a transient increase in synthase I activity. When cells were incubated with insulin plus glucose for 4 min, the increase in the percent synthase I activity was much greater than the additive effects of insulin and glucose alone. This potentiation of the effect of insulin on glucogen synthase I activity depended on the time of incubation with glucose and on the concentration of the hexose. If cells were incubated with cytochalasin B before insulin plus glucose, the effect of glucose was abolished. These results suggest that there are at least two mechanisms by which insulin can increase fat cell glycogen synthase I activity. One requires glucose and activation occurs secondary to an increase in glucose transport; where another mechanism(s) is operative even in the absence of glucose.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Rat transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha) inhibits glycogen synthesis in rat and guinea pig hepatocyte cultures and counteracts the stimulation of glycogen deposition and activation of glycogen synthase caused by insulin. The EC50 for inhibition of glycogen deposition was 0.2nM. The inhibition of glycogen synthesis was also observed in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ and was not blocked by indomethacin, suggesting that it is not mediated by production of prostaglandins. Since TGF alpha is produced by hepatocytes during liver regeneration and by macrophages during endotoxin stimulation, it may have an autocrine/paracrine effect on hepatic carbohydrate metabolism in these states, and may account for the low hepatic glycogen levels during liver regeneration and the impaired glucose tolerance associated with sepsis.  相似文献   

19.
There is growing evidence that glycogen targeting subunits of protein phosphatase-1 play a critical role in regulation of glycogen metabolism. In the current study, we have investigated the effects of adenovirus-mediated overexpression of a specific glycogen targeting subunit known as protein targeting to glycogen (PTG) in cultured human muscle cells. PTG was overexpressed both in muscle cells cultured at high glucose (glycogen replete) or in cells incubated for 18 h in the absence of glucose and then incubated in high glucose (glycogen re-synthesizing). In both glycogen replete and glycogen resynthesizing cells, PTG overexpression caused glycogen to be synthesized at a linear rate 1-5 days after viral treatment, while in cells treated with a virus lacking a cDNA insert (control virus), glycogen content reached a plateau at day 1 with no further increase. In the glycogen replete PTG overexpressing cells, glycogen content was 20 times that in controls at day 5. Furthermore, in cells undergoing glycogen resynthesis, PTG overexpression caused a doubling of the initial rate of glycogen synthesis over the first 24 h relative to cells treated with control virus. In both sets of experiments, the effects of PTG on glycogen synthesis were correlated with a 2-3-fold increase in glycogen synthase activity state, with no changes in glycogen phosphorylase activity. The alterations in glycogen synthase activity were not accompanied by changes in the intracellular concentration of glucose 6-phosphate. We conclude that PTG overexpression activates glycogen synthesis in a glucose 6-phosphate-independent manner in human muscle cells while overriding glycogen-mediated inhibition. Our findings suggest that modulation of PTG expression in muscle may be a mechanism for enhancing muscle glucose disposal and improving glucose tolerance in diabetes.  相似文献   

20.
Parenchymal cells from adult rat liver, isolated by a collagenase perfusion technique, have been maintained in primary culture and a detailed study on carbohydrate metabolism carried out over the initial 48-hour culture period. The glucose concentration of the medium exerts a major influence on glycogen accumulation by the cells. Insulin, particularly at high glucose concentrations, stimulates glycogen biosynthesis, whereas glucagon prevents glycogen accumulation. Dexamethasone was without effect on glycogen metabolism. Glucose appears to stimulate glycogen accumulation by activation of glycogen synthetase enzyme. However, there is a gradual loss of synthetase activity throughout the culture period. Similar decreases in activity were noted for pyruvate kinase, aldolase and hexokinase. Glucose, insulin and dexamethasone were unable to prevent these decreases in enzyme activity. Foetal bovine serum contains fructose and this hexose appears to be the factor in serum which is responsible for the activation of glycogen accumulation in the presence of physiological glucose concentrations. The lactic acid content of the serum may also stimulate glycogen accumulation. In general, there is a gradual loss of the pattern of carbohydrate metabolism typical of differentiated hepatocytes during the culture period.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号