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1.
The metabolism of glucose by rat abdominal skin flaps has been investigated at various times after flap elevation. Biopsies of flap skin taken during the first 3 days after flap elevation and incubated in vitro show a marked increase in glucose consumption and lactate production compared with normal skin. At the same time, flap tissue reserves of glucose and glycogen are lower than those of normal skin. Providing that some circulation persists, the magnitude of the changes in glucose metabolism is proportional to the degree of ischemia experienced by the flap tissue in vivo. In most cases, glucose consumption and lactate production return to normal by the end of the first week after flap elevation. These experiments thus further define a major ischemia-induced shift to anaerobic metabolism (glycolysis) that occurs in skin flaps.  相似文献   

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3.
The earthworm, Dendrobaena octaedra, is a common species in the uppermost soil and humus layers of coniferous forests and tundra in temperate and subarctic regions. The species is freeze-tolerant and may survive several months in a frozen state. Upon freezing, glycogen reserves are rapidly converted to glucose serving as a cryoprotectant and fuel for metabolism. In the present study we investigated the induction of freeze-tolerance under field conditions, and sought to find relationships between temperature, glycogen and fat reserves, membrane phospholipid composition and the degree of freeze-tolerance. Freeze-tolerance was induced when worms had experienced temperatures below 5°C for 2 weeks or more. Freeze-tolerance was linked to the magnitude of glycogen reserves, which also fluctuated with field temperatures being highest in autumn and winter. On the other hand fat reserves seemed not to be linked with freeze-tolerance at all. However, high glycogen alone did not confer freeze-tolerance; alterations in the membrane phospholipid fatty acid composition (PLFA) were also necessary in order to secure freeze-tolerance. The changes in PLFA composition were generally similar to changes occurring in other ectothermic animals during winter acclimation with an increased degree of unsaturation of the PLFAs.  相似文献   

4.
Adults of the Southern hemisphere lamprey Geotria australis were subjected to an exercise/recovery regime at the commencement and end of their 12–15 month non-trophic, upstream spawning migration. In early (immature) migrants and pre-spawning females, muscle glycogen was markedly depleted during exercise, but became rapidly replenished. As muscle lactate rose during exercise and peaked 1–1.5 h into the recovery period, and therefore after muscle glycogen had become replenished, it cannot be the direct source for that replenishment. However, both plasma lactate and glycerol (but not muscle glycerol and glucose) rose sharply during exercise and then declined markedly during the first 0.5 h of recovery and thus exhibited the opposite trend to that of muscle glycogen, implying that these limited pools of glycogenic precursors contribute to glycogen replenishment. Although plasma glucose rose following exercise, and consequently could also be a precursor for muscle glycogen replenishment, it remained elevated even after muscle glycogen had become replenished. While resting pre-spawning females and mature males retained high muscle glycogen concentrations, this energy store became permanently depleted in females during spawning. In mature males, muscle glycogen remained high and lactate low during the exercise/recovery regime, whereas muscle glycerol declined precipitously during exercise and then rose rapidly. In summary, vigorous activity by G. australis is fuelled extensively by anaerobic metabolism of glycogen early in the spawning run and by pre-spawning females, but by aerobic metabolism of its energy reserves in mature males.  相似文献   

5.
Increases in liver glycogen phosphorylase activity, along with inhibition of glycogen synthetase and phosphofructokinase-1, are associated with elevated cryoprotectant (glucose) levels during freezing in some freeze-tolerant anurans. In contrast, freeze-tolerant chorus frogs, Pseudacris triseriata, accumulate glucose during freezing but exhibit no increase in phosphorylase activity following 24-h freezing bouts. In the present study, chorus frogs were frozen for 5- and 30-min and 2- and 24-h durations. After freezing, glucose, glycogen, and glycogen phosphorylase and synthetase activities were measured in leg muscle and liver to determine if enzyme activities varied over shorter freezing durations, along with glucose accumulation. Liver and muscle glucose levels rose significantly (5-12-fold) during freezing. Glycogen showed no significant temporal variation in liver, but in muscle, glycogen was significantly elevated after 24 h of freezing relative to 5 and 30 min-frozen treatments. Hepatic phosphorylase a and total phosphorylase activities, as well as the percent of the enzyme in the active form, showed no significant temporal variation following freezing. Muscle phosphorylase a activity and percent active form increased significantly after 24 h of freezing, suggesting some enhancement of enzyme function following freezing in muscle. However, the significance of this enhanced activity is uncertain because of the concurrent increase in muscle glycogen with freezing. Neither glucose 6-phosphate independent (I) nor total glycogen synthetase activities were reduced in liver or muscle during freezing. Thus, chorus frogs displayed typical cryoprotectant accumulation compared with other freeze-tolerant anurans, but freezing did not significantly alter activities of hepatic enzymes associated with glycogen metabolism.  相似文献   

6.
Deterioration of function in brain dead baboons is associated with depletion of both myocardial energy stores and certain circulating hormones, notably thyroxine, cortisol, and insulin. We have therefore investigated the effect of the administration of these three hormones to the brain dead pig; their value has been assessed on both the freshly excised and stored donor heart. Brain death was induced by ligation of the two arteries to the upper part of the body which arise from the aortic arch. Storage of selected hearts was by continuous hypothermic perfusion for 20 to 24 hr. Hearts were biopsied for estimation of adenosine triphosphate, creatine phosphate, lactate, and glycogen, and were subsequently functionally tested. Six groups of pigs were studied. Hearts were tested from control pigs which had not undergone brain death (A1), from brain dead pigs which had received intravenous fluid and inotropic support for 4 hr (B1), and from brain dead pigs which had in addition received 2 hr of hormonal therapy (thyroxine 2 micrograms cortisol 100 mg, and insulin 5-10 IU hourly) (C1). A further 3 groups (A2-C2) underwent management identical to A1-C1, but in addition the hearts were stored for 24 hr. Brain death in pigs was followed by a consumption of myocardial energy stores, despite anaerobic glycolysis; this was associated with reduced myocardial function. The administration of hormones to the brain dead pig led to some replenishment of myocardial energy and glycogen reserves and reduction in lactate, with associated improvement in hemodynamic function. A period of hypothermic perfusion storage appeared to reverse the anaerobic metabolism occurring in the heart in the nonhormonally treated brain dead animal, though not in the hormonally treated animal, and led to replenishment of glycogen reserves in nontreated animals. The observation that both better function and an increase in myocardial energy stores occurred in hormonally treated, stored hearts, even though perfusate lactate dehydrogenase rose to significantly higher levels during hypothermic perfusion storage, and tissue lactate levels remained high, suggests that thyroxine promotes both aerobic and anaerobic metabolism in brain dead animals.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract— –The rates of incorporation of 14C from [U-l4C]glucose into intermediary metabolites have been measured in rat brain in vivo. The time course of labelling of glycogen was similar to that of glutamate and of glucose, which were all maximally labelled between 20 and 40min, but different from lactate, which lost radioactivity rapidly after 20min. The extent of labelling of glycogen (d.p.m./ μ mol of glucose) was of the same order as that of glutamate at 20 and 40 min after injection of [14C]glucose. However, calculations of turnover rates showed that glutamate turns over some 8-10 times faster than glycogen. Insulin, intracisternally applied, produced after 4-5 h a 60 per cent increase in glucose-6-P and a 50 per cent increase in glycogen. There was no change in the levels of glucose, glutamate or lactate, nor in the activity or properties of the particulate and soluble hexokinase of the brain. The injection of insulin affected neither the glycogen nor glucose contents of skeletal muscle from the same animals. The effects of insulin on the incorporation of l4C into the metabolites contrasted with its effects on their levels. The specific activities of glycogen and glucose were unchanged and there was a slight but non-significant increase in the specific activity of glutamate. The time course of incorporation into lactate was unaffected up to 20 min, but a significant delay in the loss of 14C after 20 min occurred as a result of the insulin injection. At 40 min, the specific activity of cerebral lactate was 60 per cent higher in insulin-treated animals than in control animals. The results are interpreted in terms of an effect of insulin on glucose uptake to the brain, with possibly an additional effect on a subsequent stage in metabolism, which involves lactate.  相似文献   

8.
—Major components of the energy reserves of the isolated superior cervical ganglion (ATP, phosphocreatine, glucose, glycogen and lactate) were measured under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Complete anaerobiosis was maintained by incubation in mineral oil through which N2 had been bubbled. From the initial rate of change in the energy reserves, a metabolic rate was calculated which would be equivalent to the consumption of 93 m-moles of O2 per kg per hour. Under aerobic conditions (oxygenated moist chamber) a similar metabolic rate was calculated. In contrast to the anaerobic state, initial energy expenditure was almost exclusively at the expense of glucose. Continuous supramaximal stimulation in O2 increased energy expenditure by a factor of three; both glucose and glycogen were utilized from the outset, and lactate accumulated in the initial periods. Ganglionic transmission failed in both resting and stimulated states in spite of the continued presence of very substantial levels of ATP and phosphocreatine. Failure seemed to be associated not with ATP depletion but rather with the complete disappearance of glucose and glycogen.  相似文献   

9.
It has been reported that glycogen levels in retina vary with retinal vascularization. However, the electrical activity of isolated retina depends on glucose supply, suggesting that it does not contain energetic reserves. We determined glycogen levels and pyruvate and lactate production under various conditions in isolated retina. Ex vivo retinas from light- and dark-adapted rats showed values of 44 +/- 0.3 and 19.5 +/- 0.4 nmol glucosyl residues/mg protein, respectively. The glycogen content of retinas from light-adapted animals was reduced by 50% when they were transferred to darkness. Glycogen levels were low in retinas incubated in glucose-free media and increased in the presence of glucose. The highest glycogen values were found in media containing 20 mm of glucose. A rapid increase in lactate production was observed in the presence of glucose. Surprisingly, glycogen levels were the lowest and lactate production was also very low in the presence of 30 mm glucose. Our results suggest that glycogen can be used as an immediate accessible energy reserve in retina. We speculate on the possibility that gluconeogenesis may play a protective role by removal of lactic acid.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Select hepatic changes in the freeze-tolerant hatchling turtle, Chrysemys picta marginata, were studied in response to freezing at -2.5 degrees C and thawing. Upon freezing, a small, selective increase in the liver weight with no increase in body weight was seen suggestive of an hepatic capacitance response. In all turtles studies, lobular differences in the hepatic content of glycogen were evident: the smaller lobe contained twice as much glycogen as the larger lobe. The response to freezing and thawing was comparable. Total hepatic glycogen levels of turtles were reduced approximately 60 per cent from control levels in the frozen state and recovered to >80 per cent of control levels in the thawed state. Compared to the control state, turtle blood glucose levels were: unchanged after 12 h in the cool state; reduced 28 per cent after 24 h and increased two-fold after 48 h in the frozen state; and increased 4.5-fold in the thawed state. Thus, changes in hepatic glycogen metabolism occur without large changes in blood glucose levels. In turtle liver plasma membranes, the hepatic alpha(1)-adrenergic receptor was barely detectable and did not change. The beta(2)-adrenergic receptor was expressed at high levels and, compared to control levels, was: unchanged after 12 h in the cool state; reduced 20 per cent after 24 h and 40 per cent after 48 h in the frozen state. On thawing, this receptor was 50 per cent of control levels. While catecholamines working through the beta(2)-adrenergic receptor may effect early hepatic glycogen breakdown in response to freezing, other factors must be involved to complete the process. The plasma membrane-bound enzyme gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase displayed a different pattern of changes indicative of selective modulation: it was increased 2.7-fold over control levels in the cool state; unchanged in the frozen state; and increased 1.8-fold in the thawed state. The activity of the kidney enzyme was decreased in the cool state and slightly increased in the frozen and thawed states emphasizing the tissue-specific nature of the changes in the activity of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase in response to freezing and thawing. The similarities and differences of the hepatic changes in response to freezing and thawing in the freeze-tolerant hatchling turtle to those we have previously reported for the freeze-tolerant frog are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Starving Aphelenchus avenae survived 3-4 weeks in microaerobic and anaerobic environments, but Caenorhabditis sp. survived less than 80 hr. Aerobically, both nematodes metabolize neutral lipid reserves: there was no microaerobic ( <5% O₂) or anaerobic neutral lipid catabolism. Early in anaerobiosis both nematodes utilized endogenous glycogen. Caenorhabditis sp. depleted the glycogen and died. A. avenae under oxygen stress longer than 120 hr entered cryptobiosis, during which there was neither measurable O₂ uptake nor glycogen or neutral lipid utilization, Only when re-aerated, did A. avenae recover and resume "''normal" metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
Hatchling painted turtles (Chrysemys picta) were placed individually into artificial nests constructed in jars of damp soil and then were cooled slowly to temperatures between-7.7 and-12.7 °C. Distinct exotherms were recorded in all jars when water in the soil began to freeze at temperatures between-0.9 and-2.4 °C. A second (animal) exotherm was subsequently detected in some of the jars when water in hatchlings also began to freeze. An animal exotherm occurred in the temperature records for all 23 hatchlings that died in tests terminating at temperatures between-7.7 and-10.8 °C, but no such exotherm was apparent in the temperature records for the 23 turtles that survived these treatments. Moreover, the 4 hatchlings that produced exotherms in tests terminating between-11.5 and-12.7 °C failed to survive, but 5 of 7 hatchlings that produced no exotherm in these tests also died. Thus, turtles that die at subzero temperatures above-11 °C apparently succumb to freezing when ice propagates across their integument from the frozen soil, but animals that die at temperatures below-11 °C generally perish from some other cause. These findings indicate that hatchling painted turtles overwintering inside their shallow, subterranean nests survive exposure to subzero temperatures by avoiding freezing instead of by tolerating freezing.  相似文献   

14.
We conducted a 3-year field and laboratory study of winter biology in hatchlings of the northern map turtle (Graptemys geographica). At our study area in northern Indiana, hatchlings routinely overwintered in their natal nests, emerging after the weather warmed in spring. Winter survival was excellent despite the fact that hatchlings were exposed frequently to subfreezing temperatures (to –5.4 °C). In the laboratory, cold-acclimated hatchlings exhibited low rates of evaporative water loss (mean=2.0 mg g–1 day–1), which would enable them to conserve body water during winter. Laboratory-reared hatchlings were intolerant of freezing at –2.5 °C for 24 h, conditions that are readily survived by freeze-tolerant species of turtles. Winter survival of hatchling G. geographica probably depended on their extensive capacity for supercooling (to –14.8 °C) and their well-developed resistance to inoculative freezing, which may occur when hatchlings contact ice and ice-nucleating agents present in nesting soil. Supercooled hatchlings survived a brief exposure to –8 °C. Others, held at –6 °C for 5 days, maintained ATP concentrations at control levels, although they did accumulate lactate and glucose, probably in response to tissue hypoxia. Therefore, anoxia tolerance, as evidenced by the viability of hatchlings exposed to N2 gas for 8 days, may promote survival during exposure to subfreezing temperatures.Abbreviations EWL evaporative water loss - FPeq equilibrium freezing point - INA ice-nucleating agents - Tc temperature of crystallizationCommunicated by L.C.-H. Wang  相似文献   

15.
Overwintering habits of hatchling Blanding's turtles (Emydoidea blandingii) are unknown. To determine whether these turtles are able to survive winter in aquatic habitats, we submerged hatchlings in normoxic (155 mmHg Po2) and hypoxic (6 mmHg Po2) water at 4 degrees C, recording survival times and measuring changes in key physiological variables. For comparison, we simultaneously studied hatchling softshell (Apalone spinifera) and snapping (Chelydra serpentina) turtles, which are known to overwinter in aquatic habitats. In normoxic water, C. serpentina and A. spinifera survived to the termination of the experiment (76 and 77 d, respectively). Approximately one-third of the E. blandingii died during 75 d of normoxic submergence, but the cause of mortality was unclear. In hypoxic water, average survival times were 6 d for A. spinifera, 13 d for E. blandingii, and 19 d for C. serpentina. Mortality during hypoxic submergence was probably caused by metabolic acidosis, which resulted from accumulated lactate. Unlike the case with adult turtles, our hatchlings did not increase plasma calcium and magnesium, nor did they sequester lactate within the shell. Our results suggest that hatchling E. blandingii are not particularly well suited to hibernation in hypoxic aquatic habitats.  相似文献   

16.
The period of post-hypoxia recovery is essential for the rapid replenishment of energy reserves and for the removal of metabolic end products formed during hypoxia. Periods of post-hypoxia recovery were analyzed in two crayfish species, where Parastacus defossus is a fossorial species, and Parastacus brasiliensis lives in lotic environments with higher oxygen levels. After 4 h of hypoxia (2 mg O(2)/L), groups of animals were placed in tanks with oxygenated water and were then removed at intervals of 1, 3, 6, and 9 h. Hemolymph and tissues (hepatopancreas, muscle, and anterior and posterior gills) were extracted for the determination of glucose, lactate, free glucose, glycogen, total proteins, total lipids, arginine phosphate, and arginine. As expected, lactate levels were restored more rapidly in P. defossus than in P. brasiliensis. P. defossus restored its glycogen reserves of the hepatopancreas and muscle tissue. Free glucose was quickly restored in all tissues of both species. In relation to arginine phosphate reserves, P. defossus showed a greater ability to restore this metabolite in the hepatopancreas. Both species recovered their arginine phosphate reserves, but they also used this metabolite in longer periods of recovery. Mainly in P. brasiliensis the reserves of total lipids seem to be an important source of energy during the recovery period. The animals developed various metabolic strategies to post-hypoxia recovery, mainly P. defossus which restored its reserves more completely and more rapidly than did P. brasiliensis.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of rats of different ages to survive exposure to anoxia was correlated with rates of high energy phosphate consumption (metabolic rates) of the fore-brain. Fetal rats at term, delivered by hysterotomy following maternal decapitation, survived in nitrogen at 37°C twice as long as 1-day-old neo-nates, 5 times longer than 7-day-old rats, and 45 times longer than adults. During ischemia induced by decapitation, the cerebral concentrations of the labile energy reserves (ATP, ADP, P-creatine, glucose and glycogen) and of lactate were determined in fetuses, 1- and 7-day post-natal animals. From the changes, the cerebral energy use rates were calculated to be 1·57 mmol/kg/min in fetuses, 1·33 mmol/kg/min in 1-day-olds and 2·58 mmol/kg/min in 7-day-olds. Maximal rates of lactate accumulation during ischemia, as a measure of glycolytic capacity, were comparable in fetuses and neonates, but were about twice as great in 7-day-old rats. It is concluded that in post-natal animals survival in anoxia and cerebral energy consumption are inversely, and nearly quantitatively, related. However, the reduced cerebral energy requirement cannot entirely account for the greater anoxic resistance of fetuses.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The effects of extracellular freezing on intracellular metabolism were monitored over both a short (9 h) and long (12 weeks) time course using the freeze tolerant larvae of the gall fly,Eurosta solidaginis.The process of freezing, monitored over the short time course, had no effect upon cellular energy levels (adenylates, arginine phosphate) but initiated a rise in glucose-6-P and lactate levels. This suggests that freezing initiates a shift towards glycolysis as the predominant mode of energy production. The process of thawing at 3°C (after 24 h at –16°C) also had no effect, even transient, on cellular energy levels demonstrating that thawing and the rapid redistribution of water and solutes which must accompany it does not disrupt cellular metabolism. During thawing accumulated lactate was quickly cleared with a t 1/2 of 20–30 min.Long term freezing at –16°C had dramatic effects on energy metabolism. Freezing for up to 1 week had minimal effects with only a small drop in arginine phosphate reserves and an increase in lactate content noted. Between 1 and 2 weeks of freezing, however, larvae showed strong signs of energy stress. The arginine phosphate pool fell from 75% to 30% of control levels, ATP content dropped by 50% and energy charge dropped to 0.75. This state, with continued lactate accumulation, was maintained through 4 weeks of freezing. Between 6 and 12 weeks of freezing energy stress became even greater. Phosphagen and ATP contents dropped to 5 and 25% of control values and energy charge decreased to about 0.50. Despite this stress, however, 94% of larvae survived 12 weeks of freezing with an 86% hatch rate of adults. The data demonstrate that the larvae can survive prolonged periods of winter freezing drawing upon glycolysis and phosphagen reserves to supply the continued basal energy demands of the cell.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract— Assays of citric acid cycle substrates and metabolites of the second stage of the glycolytic pathway have completed a series of studies of glucose metabolism in brains of mice rapidly frozen at intervals during electrically-induced, tonic-clonic convulsions. Citric acid cycle metabolism reached a new equilibrium at a significantly higher rate. However, oxidative metabolism did not keep up with the demand for energy supplies, as indicated by an increasing lactate level and an increasing lactate: pyruvate ratio. Administration of a sub-anaesthetic but anticonvulsant dose of phenobarbitone prior to convulsive electrical stirnulation was associated with as great an increase in anaerobic glycolysis as in mice given no drug prior to stimulation; but oxidative metabolism was not enhanced, as reflected by even greater lactate: pyruvate ratios in mice given phenobarbitone than in mice given no drug prior to convulsive stimulation.  相似文献   

20.
Hatchlings of the North American painted turtle (Family Emydidae: Chrysemys picta) typically spend their first winter of life inside a shallow, subterranean hibernaculum (the natal nest) where life-threatening conditions of ice and cold commonly occur. Although a popular opinion holds that neonates exploit a tolerance for freezing to survive the rigors of winter, hatchlings are more likely to withstand exposure to ice and cold by avoiding freezing altogether-and to do so without the benefit of an antifreeze. In the interval between hatching by turtles in late summer and the onset of wintery weather in November or December, the integument of the animals becomes highly resistant to the penetration of ice into body compartments from surrounding soil, and the turtles also purge their bodies of catalysts for the formation of ice. These two adjustments, taken together, enable the animals to supercool to temperatures below those that they routinely experience in nature. However, cardiac function in hatchlings is diminished at subzero temperatures, thereby compromising the delivery of oxygen to peripheral tissues and eliciting an increase in reliance by those tissues on anaerobic metabolism for the provision of ATP. The resulting increase in production of lactic acid may disrupt acid/base balance and lead to death even in animals that remain unfrozen. Although an ability to undergo supercooling may be key to survival by overwintering turtles in northerly populations, a similar capacity to resist inoculation and undergo supercooling characterizes animals from a population near the southern limit of distribution, where winters are relatively benign. Thus, the suite of characters enabling hatchlings to withstand exposure to ice and cold may have been acquired prior to the northward dispersal of the species at the end of the Pleistocene, and the characters may not have originated as adaptations specifically to the challenges of winter.  相似文献   

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