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1.
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   

2.
Isolated liver cells from 24 h starved rats were incubated in Krebs-Ringer buffer containing 4% albumin. In the presence of 10, 20 and 30 mM glucose, addition of insulin stimulated net glycogen production by 52, 39 and 20%, respectively. 2 . 10(-9) M insulin was required for half-maximal stimulation. Increases of glycogen production and of glycogen synthase a activity were observed after 15-30 min of incubation with insulin. The stimulatory effect of insulin was additive to that of lithium. In agreement with the literature, insulin antagonized the inhibitory action of suboptimal doses of glucagon on glycogen deposition whereby a decrease of glucagon-elevated cyclic AMP levels was observed. In addition, we found that insulin also decreased the basal cyclic AMP levels in the absence of added glucagon by 22%. It is concluded that physiological concentrations of insulin stimulate net glycogen deposition in hepatocytes from fasted rats; the decrease of basal cyclic AMP levels upon insulin addition may play a role in the mechanism of the hormone action.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Swelling of rat hepatocytes stimulates glycogen synthesis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In hepatocytes from fasted rats, several amino acids are known to stimulate glycogen synthesis via activation of glycogen synthase. The hypothesis that an increase in cell volume resulting from amino acid uptake may be involved in the stimulation of glycogen synthesis is supported by the following observations. 1) The extent of stimulation of glycogen synthesis by both metabolizable and nonmetabolizable amino acids was directly proportional to their ability to increase cell volume, except for proline, which stimulated glycogen synthesis more than could be accounted for by the increase in cell volume. 2) Both cell swelling and stimulation of glycogen synthesis by amino acids were prevented when hepatocytes were incubated in hyperosmotic media containing sucrose or raffinose. 3) Increasing the cell volume by incubating hepatocytes in Na(+)-depleted media in the absence of amino acids also stimulated glycogen synthesis. 4) Stimulation of glycogen synthesis by Na+ depletion was prevented by restoring the normal osmolarity with sucrose, but not with choline chloride which, by itself, stimulated glycogen synthesis and increased the cell volume. It is concluded that stimulation of glycogen synthesis by amino acids is due, at least in part, to an increase in hepatocyte volume resulting from amino acid uptake, and that hepatocyte swelling per se stimulates glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
Glutamine stimulated glycogen synthesis and lactate production in hepatocytes from overnight-fasted normal and diabetic rats. The effect, which was half-maximal with about 3 mM-glutamine, depended on glucose concentration and was maximal below 10 mM-glucose. beta-2-Aminobicyclo[2.2.1.]heptane-2-carboxylic acid, an analogue of leucine, stimulated glutaminase flux, but inhibited the stimulation of glycogen synthesis by glutamine. Various purine analogues and inhibitors of purine synthesis were found to inhibit glycogen synthesis from glucose, but they did not abolish the stimulatory effect of glutamine on glycogen synthesis. The correlation between the rate of glycogen synthesis and synthase activity suggested that the stimulation of glycogen synthesis by glutamine depended solely on the activation of glycogen synthase. This activation of synthase was not due to a change in total synthase, nor was it caused by a faster inactivation of glycogen phosphorylase, as was the case after glucose. It could, however, result from a stimulation of synthase phosphatase, since, after the addition of 1 nM-glucagon or 10 nM-vasopressin, glutamine did not interfere with the inactivation of synthase, but did promote its subsequent re-activation. Glutamine was also found to inhibit ketone-body production and to stimulate lipogenesis.  相似文献   

6.
In hepatocytes from fasted rats, Zn2+ in the range from 0 to 500 microM has relatively minor effects on gluconeogenesis from most substrates, or on ureagenesis from NH3. In hepatocytes from fed rats, Zn2+ does not affect glycogenolysis. In hepatocytes from fasted rats, in which glycogen is being actively synthesized using the substrate combination (Katz et al. (1976) Proc. Natl.Acad.Sci.USA 73,3433-3437) of glucose, lactate and glutamine (all 10mM), Zn2+ markedly inhibits glycogen synthesis, with total inhibition at 500 microM, and a half maximal effect in the range from 50 to 100 microM. Dipicolinate (pyridine 2,6-dicarboxylate), a zinc chelator, is about as effective as L-glutamine in activating glycogen synthesis with the substrate combination of dihydroxyacetone, lactate and glucose (all 10mM). This suggests the possible hypothesis that endogenous Zn2+ might control the rate of glycogen synthesis in vivo. However, alternate explanations such as metabolite accumulation are also possible, since dipicolinate causes inhibition of gluconeogenesis from L-lactate.  相似文献   

7.
Incubation of hepatocytes isolated from fasted rats with [14C]glucose for short periods of time showed that the initial stages of glycogen synthesis occur near the plasma membrane. Incubation with [14C]glucose followed by cold glucose demonstrated that glycogen synthesis is always active at the hepatocyte periphery and that previously synthesised glycogen moves towards the centre of the cell, while its place is filled by newly synthesised molecules. However, the reverse experiment, incubation with cold glucose before addition of [14C]glucose, showed that, as glycogen synthesis progresses, it also becomes gradually active in more internal sites of the hepatocyte. These results indicate a spatial order in the synthesis of hepatic glycogen.  相似文献   

8.
Glycogen synthesis from various combinations of substrates by hepatocytes isolated from rats fasted 24 h was studied. As reported by Katz et al. (Katz, J., Golden, S., and Wals, P. A. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 3433-3437), appreciable rates of glycogen synthesis occurred only in the presence of gluconeogenic precursors and one of several amino acids, which includes L-glutamine. L-Leucine had negligible effects on glycogen synthesis from 20 mM dihydroxyacetone and/or 15 mM glucose when L-glutamine was not added to the medium. In the presence of 10 mM L-glutamine, L-leucine greatly increased glycogen synthesis from these substrates. alpha-Ketoisocaproate was ineffective, as was oleate. NH4Cl depressed glycogen synthesis from 10 mM glucose plus 20 mM dihydroxyacetone in the absence of added L-glutamine and enhanced that in its presence, but these effects were weak compared to those of L-leucine. The amino acid analogues L-norvaline and L-norleucine exerted effects that were similar to those exerted by L-leucine. Under all conditions studied, cycloheximide and puromycin inhibited net glycogen synthesis. Cycloheximide did not stimulate gluconeogenesis from dihydroxyacetone, or phosphorylase in hepatocytes from starved rats, or glycogenolysis in hepatocytes from fed rats. Puromycin, however, stimulated glycogenolysis in hepatocytes from fed rats. Glycogen synthesis from 20 mM dihydroxyacetone proceeds with a pronounced initial lag phase that can be shortened by incubation of cells with glutamine plus leucine before addition of dihydroxyacetone. Concurrent measurements of glycogen synthesis, glycogen synthase, and gluconeogenesis under different conditions reveal that in addition to protein synthesis, activation of glycogen synthase, which must occur to allow glycogen synthesis in hepatocytes, requires a second component which can be satisfied by addition of dihydroxyacetone or fructose to the cells.  相似文献   

9.
Cultured rat hepatocytes were used to characterize the relationship between cellular glycogen content and the basal rate, as well as response to insulin of glycogen synthesis. Depending on the concentration of medium glucose, glycogen-depleted monolayers accumulated glycogen between 24 and 48 h of culture up to the fed in vivo level. Insulin at 100 nM stimulated glycogen deposition 20-fold at 1 mM and 1.5-fold at 50 mM glucose. The rate of further glycogen storage decreased with time and increasing glycogen content. In hepatocytes preincubated with 1-50 mM glucose during 24-48 h, short-term basal and insulin-dependent incorporation of 10 mM [14C]glucose into glycogen was inversely related to the actual cellular glycogen content. This was not due to different intracellular dilution of the label, since the specific radioactivity of UDP-glucose was similar in all groups. 125I-Insulin binding indicated that insulin receptors were also not involved in this phenomenon. An inverse relationship was also found between glycogen content and the stimulation of glycogen synthase I activity by insulin, whereas the basal activity of the enzyme was dissociated from the rate of incorporation of [14C]glucose. Basal net glycogen deposition at 10 mM glucose was also inversely related to cellular glycogen; however, no such relation was evident in the presence of insulin due to the overlapping inhibition of glycogenolysis. These studies suggest that the glycogen-mediated inhibition of the activation of glycogen synthase I is operative in the cultured hepatocyte and leads to an apparent inverse relationship between the actual glycogen content and basal as well as insulin-dependent glycogenesis.  相似文献   

10.
When added to the hepatocyte incubation medium, vanadate increased the rate of fatty acid synthesis de novo as well as the activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, whereas it had no effect on the activity of fatty acid synthase. On the other hand, and despite elevating the intracellular levels of malonyl-CoA, vanadate diverted exogenous fatty acids into the oxidation pathway at the expense of the esterification route. This was concomitant to an increase in carnitine palmitoyltransferase I activity. All these effects were not significantly different between periportal and perivenous hepatocytes and were also evident in cells incubated in Ca2(+)-free medium. Nevertheless, Ca2+ ions enhanced carnitine palmitoyltransferase I activity in isolated liver mitochondria. In addition, the effects of vanadate on acetyl-CoA carboxylase and carnitine palmitoyltransferase I were only evident in a permeabilized-cell assay, disappearing upon cell disruption and isolation of the corresponding cell subfraction for enzyme assay. Results show that vanadate exerts specific insulin-like and non-insulin-like effects on hepatic fatty acid metabolism, and suggest that the intracellular concentration of malonyl-CoA is not the only factor responsible for the regulation of the fatty-acid-oxidative process in the liver.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of adenosine on glycogen metabolism have been studied in isolated fat-pads from epididymal adipose tissue. Adenosine caused a sustained short-term increase in the incorporation of [U-14C]glucose into glycogen, as well as a stimulation of both basal and insulin-induced [1-14C]glucose oxidation. Adenosine produced changes also in the activity of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase, these effects being apparent only when glucose was present in the incubation medium. The addition of adenosine prevented the depressed synthesis of glycogen observed in the presence of dibutyryl cyclic AMP. In the presence of adenosine deaminase, the stimulation by insulin of glycogen synthesis was markedly decreased. The results suggest that adenosine may have a regulatory role on glycogen synthesis by facilitating the glucose transport.  相似文献   

12.
To explore the mechanism of the stimulation of glycogen synthesis by amino acids (1) we have studied the effects of transaminase inhibitors and of mercaptopicolinic acid, (MPA) an inhibitor of phosphoenol pyruvate carboxykinase. Mercaptopicolinic acid enhanced glycogen synthesis from fructose, dihydroxyacetone and xylitol. Stimulation of glycogen synthesis with hepatocytes from fasted rats by 0.5 mM mercaptopicolinic acid was 50–70% as effective as 10 mM glutamine. With hepatocytes from fed rats, the stimulation of glycogen synthesis by mercaptopicolinic acid was more pronounced, and stimulation by mercaptopicolinic acid and amino acids was additive. Glycogen synthesis as high as 1% in wet weight per hour was attained in hepatocytes with a high initial glycogen content. Over 80% of glycogen synthase was in the active (a) form. Amino oxyacetic acid greatly depressed or abolished the stimulatory effect of glutamine and asparagine and of mercatopicolinic acid, and induced extensive glycogen breakdown in hepatocytes of fed rats.  相似文献   

13.
Glycogen synthesis was examined in primary cultures of adult rat hepatocytes that had been isolated from rats following a 24-h fast. Glycogen synthesis was dependent on the concentration of glucose in the culture medium and also required the presence of insulin. The addition of dexamethasone to the culture medium also increased the amount of glycogen synthesis. When the culture medium was supplemented with [U-14C,3-3H]glucose, it was found that approximately 60% of the glucose incorporated into glycogen was not derived from the pool of labeled glucose. In addition, the relative ratio of 3H/14C in the newly synthesized glycogen was approximately 50% of the ratio of the two isotopes in glucose in the culture medium, indicating that the glucose had undergone metabolism prior to its incorporation into glycogen. However, when hepatocytes were isolated from rats that had been fed ad libitum and the synthesis of glycogen from [U-14C,3-3H]glucose was followed, the relative ratio of the two isotopes in glycogen was similar to that measured for glucose in the culture medium, indicating that the glucose was directly incorporated into glycogen without any apparent metabolism. These results indicate that the synthesis of glycogen from glucose may, at least in part, follow an indirect pathway whereby glucose is metabolized prior to incorporation of the carbon into glycogen, but that the pathway followed for the synthesis of glycogen is dependent on the prior metabolic state of the animal.  相似文献   

14.
Breakdown of plasma-membrane sphingomyelin caused by TNF-alpha is known to inhibit glucose metabolism and insulin signalling in muscle and fat cells. In hepatocytes, conversion of glucose to glycogen is strongly activated by amino acid-induced cell swelling. In order to find out whether breakdown of plasma-membrane sphingomyelin also inhibits this insulin-independent process, the effect of addition of sphingomyelinase was studied in rat hepatocytes. Sphingomyelinase (but not ceramide) inhibited glycogen synthesis, caused cell shrinkage, decreased the activity of glycogen synthase a, but had no effect on phosphorylase a. Cell integrity was not affected by sphingomyelinase addition as gluconeogenesis and the intracellular concentration of ATP were unchanged. As a control, glycogen synthesis was studied in HepG2 cells. In these cells, the basal rate of glycogen production was high, could not be stimulated by amino acids, nor be inhibited by sphingomyelinase. Regarding the mechanism responsible for the inhibition of glycogen synthase a, sphingomyelinase did not affect amino acid-induced, PtdIns 3-kinase-dependent, phosphorylation of p70S6 kinase, but caused an increase in intracellular chloride, which is known to inhibit glycogen synthase phosphatase. It is concluded that the decrease in cell volume, following the breakdown of sphingomyelin in the plasma membrane of the hepatocyte, may contribute to the abnormal metabolism of glucose when TNF-alpha levels are high.  相似文献   

15.
Glycogen synthesis in hepatocyte cultures is dependent on: (1) the nutritional state of the donor rat, (2) the acinar origin of the hepatocytes, (3) the concentrations of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors, and (4) insulin. High concentrations of glucose (15-25 mM) and gluconeogenic precursors (10 mM-lactate and 1 mM-pyruvate) had a synergistic effect on glycogen deposition in both periportal and perivenous hepatocytes. When hepatocytes were challenged with glucose, lactate and pyruvate in the absence of insulin, glycogen was deposited at a linear rate for 2 h and then reached a plateau. However, in the presence of insulin, the initial rate of glycogen deposition was increased (20-40%) and glycogen deposition continued for more than 4 h. Consequently, insulin had a more marked effect on the glycogen accumulated in the cell after 4 h (100-200% increase) than on the initial rate of glycogen deposition. Glycogen accumulation in hepatocyte cultures prepared from rats that were fasted for 24 h and then re-fed for 3 h before liver perfusion was 2-fold higher than in hepatocytes from rats fed ad libitum and 4-fold higher than in hepatocytes from fasted rats. The incorporation of [14C]lactate into glycogen was 2-4-fold higher in periportal than in perivenous hepatocytes in both the absence and the presence of insulin, whereas the incorporation of [14C]glucose into glycogen was similar in periportal and perivenous hepatocytes in the absence of insulin, but higher in perivenous hepatocytes in the presence of insulin. Rates of glycogen deposition in the combined presence of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors were similar in periportal and perivenous hepatocytes, whereas in the presence of glucose alone, rates of glycogen deposition paralleled the incorporation of [14C]glucose into glycogen and were higher in perivenous hepatocytes in the presence of insulin. It is concluded that periportal and perivenous hepatocytes utilize different substrates for glycogen synthesis, but differences between the two cell populations in the relative utilization of glucose and gluconeogenic precursors are dependent on the presence of insulin and on the nutritional state of the rat.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of medium composition on basal and insulin-stimulated glycogenesis was studied in cultured 17-day-old rat fetal hepatocytes, which contain no glycogen at the time of transplantation. Continuous-labeling 14C-glucose experiments were used to determine both glycogen content and glycogen labeling. The specific activity of glucose units in the newly formed glycogen (a) was compared to that of the medium glucose (b): the ratio a/b expresses the contribution of medium glucose to glycogen formation. In standard medium (5.5 mM glucose), this ratio averaged 0.60. Variations of glucose concentration in the medium from 1 to 40 mM were accompanied by a progressive increase in both glycogen content and the ratio a/b (up to 0.80). Supplementation of standard medium with fructose, galactose, glycerol, or lactate-pyruvate decreased the hepatocyte glucose uptake from the medium. Galactose (1 to 5 mM) or lactate-pyruvate (5 mM) enhanced the glycogen content whereas glycerol or fructose (1 to 5 mM) had no effect. The ratio a/b, not modified by glycerol or lactate-pyruvate, was decreased to 0.45 by fructose (5 mM). Galactose at concentrations as low as 1 to 2 mM brought the ratio down to 0.30, indicating that it is a superior precursor of glycogen as compared to glucose. When the hepatocytes were grown in the presence of 10 nM insulin, the glycogen content was constantly higher than in the absence of the hormone (2-fold stimulation). Also the amplitude of the glycogenic effect of insulin was similar whatever the modifications of the medium, whereas ratio a/b and glucose uptake were hardly increased by insulin. Thus several substrates can contribute to glycogen formation (especially galactose) in cultured fetal hepatocytes and the essential effect of insulin is a stimulation of the final step of the glycogenosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of short- and long-term stimulation of glycogen synthesis elicited by dexamethasone were studied by light (LM) and electron (EM) microscopic radioautography (RAG) and biochemical analysis. Adrenalectomized rats were fasted overnight and pretreated for short- (3 hr) or long-term (14 hr) periods with dexamethasone prior to intravenous injection of tracer doses of 3H-galactose. Analysis of LM-RAGs from short-term rats revealed that about equal percentages (44%) of hepatocytes became heavily or lightly labeled 1 hr after labeling. The percentage of heavily labeled cells increased slightly 6 hr after labeling, and unlabeled glycogen became apparent in some hepatocytes. The percentage of heavily labeled cells had decreased somewhat 12 hr after labeling, and more unlabeled glycogen was evident. In the long-term rats 1 hr after labeling, a higher percentage of heavily labeled cells (76%) was observed compared to short-term rats, and most glycogen was labeled. In spite of the high amount of labeling seen initially, the percentage of heavily labeled hepatocytes had decreased considerably to 55% by 12 hr after injection; and sparsely labeled and unlabeled glycogen was prevalent. The EM-RAGs of both short- and long-term rats were similar. Silver grains were associated with glycogen patches 1 hr after labeling; 12 hr after labeling, the glycogen patches had enlarged; and label, where present, was dispersed over the enlarged glycogen clumps. Analysis of DPM/mg tissue corroborated the observed decrease in label 12 hr after administration in the long-term animals. The loss of label observed 12 hr after injection in the long-term pretreated rats suggests that turnover of glycogen occurred during this interval despite the net accumulation of glycogen that was visible morphologically and evident from biochemical measurement.  相似文献   

18.
In Type 2 diabetes, increased glycogenolysis contributes to the hyperglycaemic state, therefore the inhibition of GP (glycogen phosphorylase), a key glycogenolytic enzyme, is one of the possibilities to lower plasma glucose levels. Following this strategy, a number of GPis (GP inhibitors) have been described. However, certain critical issues are associated with their mode of action, e.g. an impairment of muscle function. The interaction between GP and the liver glycogen targeting subunit (termed G(L)) of PP1 (protein phosphatase 1) has emerged as a new potential anti-diabetic target, as the disruption of this interaction should increase glycogen synthesis, potentially providing an alternative approach to counteract the enhanced glycogenolysis without inhibiting GP activity. We identified an inhibitor of the G(L)-GP interaction (termed G(L)-GPi) and characterized its mechanism of action in comparison with direct GPis. In primary rat hepatocytes, at elevated glucose levels, the G(L)-GPi increased glycogen synthesis similarly to direct GPis. Direct GPis significantly reduced the cellular GP activity, caused a dephosphorylation of the enzyme and decreased the amounts of GP in the glycogen-enriched fraction; the G(L)-GPi did not influence any of these parameters. Both mechanisms increased glycogen accumulation at elevated glucose levels. However, at low glucose levels, only direct GPis led to increased glycogen amounts, whereas the G(L)-GPi allowed the mobilization of glycogen because it did not block the activity of GP. Due to this characteristic, G(L)-GPi in comparison with GPis could offer an advantageous risk/benefit profile circumventing the potential downsides of a complete prevention of glycogen breakdown while retaining glucose-lowering efficacy, suggesting that inhibition of the G(L)-GP interaction may provide an attractive novel approach for rebalancing the disturbed glycogen metabolism in diabetic patients.  相似文献   

19.
The dependence of the regulation of insulin receptors by insulin on the time hepatocytes were maintained in culture and the relationship between the return of down-regulated receptors and glycogen synthesis from labelled glucose were investigated in primary cultures of adult rat hepatocytes. Insulin receptor numbers, but not ligand affinity, decreased significantly within the first 24 h of culture, even in the absence of insulin, and then returned to the immediate 'post-attachment' level during 24-48 h. Therefore, down-regulation of insulin receptors by 10 nmol/l insulin was only minor during the 1st day in culture, but amounted to 50% of control levels after the 2nd day, whereas the rate of insulin degradation remained unaltered throughout the entire period of culture. When down-regulated monolayers were switched to insulin-free medium, receptors returned to control levels within 5-10 h. The reduced basal rate of glycogenesis as well as insulin-sensitivity and insulin responsiveness of this metabolic pathway also gradually increased to control levels. However, the time-dependent receptor return was dissociated from the increase in insulin-sensitivity, emphasising the importance of postbinding events. Since the changes both in basal rates and in insulin responsiveness of glycogenesis during the period of receptor return were inversely related to differences in the actual glycogen content between control and down-regulated cells, cellular glycogen content might participate in the regulation of glycogenesis as a 'feedback inhibitor'.  相似文献   

20.
The phenacylimidazolium compound LY177507 was shown by Harris et al. (Harris, R. A., Yamanuchi, K., Roach, P. J., Yen, T. T., Dominiani, S. J., and Stephens, T. W. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 14674-14680) to stimulate glycogen synthesis greatly in isolated rat hepatocytes. We extended studies with this compound, designated proglycosyn (Yamaguchi, K., Stephens, T. W., Chikadar, K., Depaoli-Roach, A., And Harris, R. A. (1991) Diabetes 40, (Suppl. 1) 102 (abstr.] employing hepatocytes from normal and streptozotocin diabetic rats. Proglycosyn is more effective than amino acids in stimulating glycogen synthesis. In cells incubated with glucose, lactate, or dihydroxyacetone the effect of glutamine and proglycosyn was synergistic. In cells incubated with glucose plus lactate, or glucose plus dihydroxyacetone, the stimulation by the two agonists was additive. Proglycosyn diverted the gluconeogenic flux from glucose to glycogen. The maximal rates of glycogen deposition attained in the presence of glutamine and proglycosyn from cells incubated with glucose plus lactate, or glucose plus dihydroxyacetone, where about 80 and 110 mumols/h/g of liver, respectively. Proglycosyn depressed glycogenolysis in hepatocytes of fed rats and stimulated glycogen synthesis from lactate and dihydroxyacetone. The incorporation of [U-14C]glucose and [U-14C]lactate in these cells occurred in the presence of glycogen breakdown or exceeded net production, indicating the occurrence of recycling of glycogen in hepatocytes of fed rats. Hepatocytes from fasted streptozotocin diabetic rats contained high levels of glycogen. Glycogenolysis was markedly depressed by proglycosyn. Glycogen synthesis from lactate and dihydroxyacetone in these cells was stimulated by glutamine and proglycosyn in a fashion similar to that in cells from fasted control rats, and the rates of glycogen synthesis were similar in cells of control and diabetic rats. With glucose as sole substrate, glutamine did not stimulate glycogen synthesis. When both agonists were present, there was a marked synergism and substantial glycogen formation. Streptozotocin diabetic rats prior to the onset of cachexia have a normal capacity for glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

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