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1.
Kinetic constants for liver glycogen synthase (UDPglucose: glycogen 4-alpha-D-glucosyltransferase, EC 2.4.1.11) with respect to UDPglucose have been measured in foetal liver homogenates from samples taken during late gestation (days 17-22) and the first hours after birth. The V of the inactive form of glycogen synthase increased markedly in this period and there was a significant increase in V of the active enzyme to a maximum at day 20 of gestation. The Km for UDPglucose measured in the presence of glucose-6-P (total activity) did not vary greatly, mean values of 0.51 +/- 0.04 mM. Values derived for the inactive enzyme were almost identical. In contrast, Km values for active glycogen synthase in foetal livers during gestation were significantly higher than those for adult liver. Highest values were seen at day 19 of gestation (1.84 +/- 0.08 mM) followed by a steady fall to 0.55 +/- 0.05 mM in the newborn compared with a mean value of 0.48 +/- 0.04 mM for adult liver. Existence of a reduced affinity of active glycogen synthase for UDPglucose must be recognized when assaying the enzyme in foetal liver, particularly when extrapolating values to rates of glycogen synthesis in vivo. Data were obtained only after removal of an amylase-like contaminant from foetal liver samples which invalidated the radioassay of glycogen synthase. This work illustrates the care needed in the analysis of foetal tissue and the interpretation of resulting data when utilizing methods developed for adult tissue.  相似文献   

2.
Hepatocytes from adrenalectomized 48 h-starved rats responded to increasing glucose concentrations with a progressively more complete inactivation of phosphorylase. Yet no activation of glycogen synthase occurred, even in a K+-rich medium. Protein phosphatase activities in crude liver preparations were assayed with purified substrates. Adrenalectomy plus starvation decreased synthase phosphatase activity by about 90%, but hardly affected phosphorylase phosphatase activity. Synthase b present in liver extracts from adrenalectomized starved rats was rapidly and completely converted into the a form on addition of liver extract from a normal fed rat. Glycogen synthesis can be slowly re-induced by administration of either glucose or cortisol to the deficient rats. In these conditions there was a close correspondence between the initial recovery of synthase phosphatase activity and the amount of synthase a present in the liver. The latter parameter was strictly correlated with the measured rate of glycogen synthesis in vivo. The decreased activity of synthase phosphatase emerges thus as the single factor that limits hepatic glycogen deposition in the adrenalectomized starved rat.  相似文献   

3.
Hexose phosphates as regulators of hepatic glycogen synthase phosphatases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The activity of glycogen synthase phosphatase from smooth endoplasmic reticulum of liver was stimulated markedly by galactose-6- and fructose-6-phosphates and to a lesser extent by glucose-1- and 2-deoxyglucose-6-phosphates. The synthase phosphatase of liver cytosol showed strong activation by glucose-1-, glucose-6- and fructose-6-phosphates and smaller activation by galactose-6- and 2-deoxyglucose-6-phosphates. Kinetic analysis showed that the activators did not affect the Km for glycogen synthase D, for either enzyme. The mechanism of activation of the two phosphatases by hexose phosphates appears to be by combination of the activator at a specific activator site on the enzyme rather than by substrate modulation. It is concluded that certain hexose phosphates, particularly fructose-6-phosphate and glucose-1-phosphate, can function as regulators of hepatic synthase phosphatase activity, and that this may explain the ability of elevated blood glucose to increase both glycogen synthase I activity and glycogen synthesis in the liver.  相似文献   

4.
Mechanism of activation of liver glycogen synthase by swelling.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The mechanism linking the stimulation of liver glycogen synthesis to swelling induced either by amino acids or hypotonicity was studied in hepatocytes, in gel-filtered liver extracts, and in purified preparations of particulate glycogen to which glycogen-metabolizing enzymes are bound. High concentrations of KCl, but not of potassium glutamate, were found to inhibit glycogen synthesis in permeabilized hepatocytes. Similarly, physiological concentrations (30-50 mM) of Cl- ions were also found to inhibit synthase phosphatase in vitro, whereas 10-20 mM Cl- ions, a concentration found in swollen hepatocytes, did not inhibit synthase phosphatase. Synthase phosphatase activity was more sensitive to inhibition by Cl- ions at low (0.1%) than at high (1%) concentrations of glycogen. By contrast, 10 mM glutamate and aspartate, a concentration observed in hepatocytes incubated with glutamine or proline, stimulated synthase phosphatase in vitro. Therefore, it is proposed that the fall in intracellular Cl- concentration as well as the increase in intracellular glutamate and aspartate concentrations, that are observed in swollen hepatocytes in the presence of amino acids, are responsible, at least in part, for the stimulation of synthase phosphatase and, hence, of glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
1. Control of glycogen metabolism by various substrates and hormones was studied in ruminant liver using isolated hepatocytes from fed sheep. 2. In these cells glucose appeared uneffective to stimulate glycogen synthesis whereas fructose and propionate activated glycogen synthase owing to (i) a decrease in phosphorylase a activity and (ii) changes in the intracellular concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate and adenine nucleotides. 3. The activation of hepatic glycogenolysis by glucagon and alpha 1-adrenergic agents was associated with increased phosphorylase a and decreased glycogen synthase activities. 4. The simultaneous changes in these two enzyme activities suggest that in sheep liver, activation of phosphorylase a is not a prerequisite step for synthase inactivation. 5. In sheep hepatocytes, in the presence of propionate and after a lag period, insulin activated glycogen synthase without affecting phosphorylase a. 6. This latter result suggests that the direct activation of glycogen synthase by insulin is mediated by a glycogen synthase-specific kinase or phosphatase. Insulin also antagonized glucagon effect on glycogen synthesis by counteracting the rise of cAMP.  相似文献   

6.
Activation of glycogen synthase in the perfused rat liver is defective in severely diabetic rats. In the present study, activation of glycogen synthase by glucose and increased incorporation of [14C]glucose into glycogen by insulin are defective in hepatocytes isolated from alloxan diabetic rats. Acute activation of glycogen synthase in hepatocytes isolated from diabetic rats was restored by treatment of the rats with insulin in vivo. Restoration of synthase activation was not achieved by incubation of hepatocytes in the presence of insulin in vitro for up to 12 h. When isolated hepatocytes from diabetic rats were placed in primary culture in a serum-free defined medium over a 3-day period, glycogen synthesis was partially restored by cortisol and triiodothyronine and dramatically increased by insulin. Concomitant with restoration of [14C]glycogen synthesis was an insulin-mediated increase in glycogen synthase I and synthase phosphatase activity. Restoration of regulation of glycogen synthesis in primary cultures of hepatocytes from diabetic rats by insulin required the presence of cortisol and triiodothyronine. Primary cultures of hepatocytes from normal rats did not require triiodothyronine for insulin to effect glycogenesis over a 3-day period. These data demonstrate that insulin acts in a chronic manner in concert with other hormones to control synthase phosphatase activity, an effect which may be influencing acute control of hepatic glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Hormonal regulation of hepatic glycogen synthase phosphatase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Perfusion of livers from fed rats with medium containing glucagon (2 x 10(-10) or 1 x 10(-8) M) resulted in both time- and concentration-dependent inactivation of glycogen synthase phosphatase. Expected changes occurred in cAMP, cAMP-dependent protein kinase, glycogen synthase, and glycogen phosphorylase. The effect of glucagon on synthase phosphatase was partially reversed by simultaneous addition of insulin (4 x 10(-8) M), an effect paralleled by a decrease in cAMP. Addition of arginine vasopressin (10 milliunits/ml) resulted in a similar inactivation of synthase phosphatase and activation of phosphorylase, but independent of any changes in cAMP or its kinase. Phosphorylase phosphatase activity was unaffected by any of these hormones. Synthase phosphatase activity, measured as the ability of a crude homogenate to catalyze the conversion of purified rat liver synthase D to the I form, was no longer inhibited by glucagon or vasopressin when phosphorylase antiserum was added to the phosphatase assay mixture in sufficient quantity to inhibit 90-95% of the phosphorylase a activity. These data support the following conclusions: 1) hepatic glycogen synthase phosphatase activity is acutely modulated by hormones, 2) hepatic glycogen synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase are regulated differently, 3) the hormone-mediated changes in synthase phosphatase cannot be explained by an alteration of the synthase D molecule affecting its behavior as a substrate, and 4) glycogen synthase phosphatase activity is at least partially controlled by the level of phosphorylase a.  相似文献   

8.
The loss of glucose regulation of glycogen synthase in perfused livers from diabetic rats was associated with a substantial reduction in synthase phosphatase activity. Treatment of diabetic rats with insulin alone resulted in total restoration of the glucose effect and synthase phosphatase activity, while simultaneous treatment with cycloheximide severely reduced the hormonal effect. Although treatment of normal rats with cycloheximide had no effect on glucose activation of synthase, it did result in severe depletion of liver glycogen increased liver glycogen phosphorylase activity, and elevation of liver adenosine 3′,5′-monosphosphate (cyclic AMP), but without elevation of liver protein kinase activity. Simultaneous treatment of alloxan-diabetic rats with insulin and cycloheximide resulted in reduction of total liver glycogen, increased phosphorylase activity, a reduction in the ability of insulin to lower hepatic cyclic AMP, and a further reduction of protein kinase activity.In summary, the effect of insulin treatment of diabetic rats to restore glucose regulation of hepatic glycogen synthase probably involves synthesis of new protein, and the data remain consistent with the hypothesis that the defect may be due to a diabetes-related deficiency in a specific synthase phosphatase and/or alteration of the synthase molecule itself.  相似文献   

9.
The type-1 protein phosphatase associated with hepatic microsomes has been distinguished from the glycogen-bound enzyme in five ways. (1) The phosphorylase phosphatase/synthase phosphatase activity ratio of the microsomal enzyme (measured using muscle phosphorylase a and glycogen synthase (labelled in sites-3) as substrates) was 50-fold higher than that of the glycogen-bound enzyme. (2) The microsomal enzyme had a greater sensitivity to inhibitors-1 and 2. (3) Release of the catalytic subunit from the microsomal type-1 phosphatase by tryptic digestion was accompanied by a 2-fold increase in synthase phosphatase activity, whereas release of the catalytic subunit from the glycogen-bound enzyme decreased synthase phosphatase activity by 60%. (4) 95% of the synthase phosphatase activity was released from the microsomes with 0.3 M NaCl, whereas little activity could be released from the glycogen fraction with salt. (5) The type-1 phosphatase separated from glycogen by anion-exchange chromatography could be rebound to glycogen, whereas the microsomal enzyme (separated from the microsomes by the same procedure, or by extraction with NaCl) could not. These findings indicate that the synthase phosphatase activity of the microsomal enzyme is not explained by contamination with glycogen-bound enzyme. The microsomal and glycogen-associated enzymes may contain a common catalytic subunit complexed to microsomal and glycogen-binding subunits, respectively. Thiophosphorylase a was a potent inhibitor of the dephosphorylation of ribosomal protein S6, HMG-CoA reductase and glycogen synthase, by the glycogen-associated type-1 protein phosphatase. By contrast, thiophosphorylase a did not inhibit the dephosphorylation of S6 or HMG-CoA reductase by the microsomal enzyme, although the dephosphorylation of glycogen synthase was inhibited. The I50 for inhibition of synthase phosphatase activity by thiophosphorylase a catalysed by either the glycogen-associated or microsomal type-1 phosphatases, or for inhibition of S6 phosphatase activity catalysed by the glycogen-associated enzyme, was decreased 20-fold to 5-10 nM in the presence of glycogen. The results suggest that the physiologically relevant inhibitor of the glycogen-associated type-1 phosphatase is the phosphorylase a-glycogen complex, and that inhibition of the microsomal type-1 phosphatase by phosphorylase a is unlikely to play a role in the hormonal control of cholesterol or protein synthesis. Protein phosphatase-1 appears to be the principal S6 phosphatase in mammalian liver acting on the serine residues phosphorylated by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.  相似文献   

10.
The loss of glucose regulation of glycogen synthase in perfused livers from diabetic rats was associated with a substantial reduction in synthase phosphatase activity. Treatment of diabetic rats with insulin alone resulted in total restoration of the glucose effect and synthase phosphatase activity, while simultaneous treatment with cycloheximide severely reduced the hormonal effect. Although treatment of normal rats with cycloheximide had no effect on glucose activation of synthase, it did result in severe depletion of liver glycogen, increased liver glycogen phosphorylase activity, and elevation of liver adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP), but without elevation of liver protein kinase activity. Simultaneous treatment of alloxan-diabetic rats with insulin and cycloheximide resulted in reduction of total liver glycogen, increased phosphorylase activity, a reduction in the ability of insulin to lower hepatic cyclic AMP, and a further reduction of protein kinase activity. In summary, the effect of insulin treatment of diabetic rats to restore glucose regulation of hepatic glycogen synthase probably involves synthesis of new protein, and the data remain consistent with the hypothesis that the defect may be due to a diabetes-related deficiency in a specific synthase phosphatase and/or alteration of the synthase molecule itself.  相似文献   

11.
The activity of glycogen synthase phosphatase in rat liver stems from the co-operation of two proteins, a cytosolic S-component and a glycogen-bound G-component. It is shown that both components possess synthase phosphatase activity. The G-component was partially purified from the enzyme-glycogen complex. Dissociative treatments, which increase the activity of phosphorylase phosphatase manyfold, substantially decrease the synthase phosphatase activity of the purified G-component. The specific inhibition of glycogen synthase phosphatase by phosphorylase a, originally observed in crude liver extracts, was investigated with purified liver synthase b and purified phosphorylase a. Synthase phosphatase is strongly inhibited, whether present in a dilute liver extract, in an isolated enzyme-glycogen complex, or as G-component purified therefrom. In contrast, the cytosolic S-component is insensitive to phosphorylase a. The activation of glycogen synthase in crude extracts of skeletal muscle is not affected by phosphorylase a from muscle or liver. Consequently we have studied the dephosphorylation of purified muscle glycogen synthase, previously phosphorylated with any of three protein kinases. Phosphorylase a strongly inhibits the dephosphorylation by the hepatic G-component, but not by the hepatic S-component or by a muscle extract. These observations show that the inhibitory effect of phosphorylase a on the activation of glycogen synthase depends on the type of synthase phosphatase.  相似文献   

12.
Glycogen synthase (UDP glucose: glycogen α-4-glucosyltransferase, EC 2.4. 1.11) from rat kidney was stimulated 4- to 5-fold by glucose 6-phosphate. The for glucose 6-phosphate stimulation was about 0.45 mM. Glycogen synthase was not evenly distributed throughout the kidney. Total synthase activity was greatest in the outer cortex and cortico-medullary junction and least in the inner medulla. Glucose 6-phosphate stimulation was greatest in the outer cortex and least in the inner medulla. Glycogen synthase in crude homogenates was not complexed with glycogen and eluted from Sepharose 6-B with an apparent molecular weight of about 390 000.Renal glycogen synthase appeared to exist in two interconvertible forms, synthase I (activity in the absence of glucose 6-phosphate) and synthase D (requires glucose 6-phosphate for activity). The conversion of synthase D to I (synthase D phosphatase) was inhibited by F, glycogen, ATP, Mn2+, and Co2+. The conversion was not altered by mercaptoethanol, AMP, Mg2+, or Ca2+. The conversion of synthase I to D (synthase I kinase) required ATP-Mg and was stimulated by cyclic AMP.It was suggested that the interconversion of renal glycogen synthase involved a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation. The significance of glycogen synthase interconversion to the regulation of renal glycogen synthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Glycogen synthase (labelled in sites-3) and glycogen phosphorylase from rabbit skeletal muscle were used as substrates to investigate the nature of the protein phosphatases that act on these proteins in the glycogen and microsomal fractions of rat liver. Under the assay conditions employed, glycogen synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities in both subcellular fractions could be inhibited 80-90% by inhibitor-1 or inhibitor-2, and the concentrations required for half-maximal inhibition were similar. Glycogen synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities coeluted from Sephadex G-100 as broad peaks, stretching from the void volume to an apparent molecular mass of about 50 kDa. Incubation with trypsin decreased the apparent molecular mass of both activities to about 35 kDa, and decreased their I50 for inhibitors-1 and -2 in an identical manner. After tryptic digestion, the I50 values for inhibitors-1 and -2 were very similar to those of the catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase-1 from rabbit skeletal muscle. The glycogen and microsomal fractions of rat liver dephosphorylated the beta-subunit of phosphorylase kinase much faster than the alpha-subunit and dephosphorylation of the beta-subunit was prevented by the same concentrations of inhibitor-1 and inhibitor-2 that were required to inhibit the dephosphorylation of phosphorylase. The same experiments performed with the glycogen plus microsomal fraction from rabbit skeletal muscle revealed that the properties of glycogen synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase were very similar to the corresponding activities in the hepatic glycogen fraction, except that the two activities coeluted as sharp peaks near the void volume of Sephadex G-100 (before tryptic digestion). Tryptic digestion of the hepatic glycogen and microsomal fractions increased phosphorylase phosphatase about threefold, but decreased glycogen synthase phosphatase activity. Similar results were obtained with the glycogen plus microsomal fraction from rabbit skeletal muscle or the glycogen-bound form of protein phosphatase-1 purified to homogeneity from the same tissue. Therefore the divergent effects of trypsin on glycogen synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities are an intrinsic property of protein phosphatase-1. It is concluded that the major protein phosphatase in both the glycogen and microsomal fractions of rat liver is a form of protein phosphatase-1, and that this enzyme accounts for virtually all the glycogen synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activity associated with these subcellular fractions.  相似文献   

14.
The glycogen level in mouse liver was maximal during the night and decreased to the lowest level during the light period. The peak activity of phosphorylase alpha was observed during the light hours and thus paralleled the decline of hepatic glycogen concentrations. The period of rapid glycogen synthesis (1800-2200 hr) was immediately preceded by maximum glycogen synthase alpha activity. Significant diurnal rhythms for phosphorylase kinase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities were also observed and appear to play a role in regulating the diurnal rhythm of phosphorylase alpha activity.  相似文献   

15.
A liver glycogen pellet preparation previously found to contain synthase D phosphatase activity was shown to contain also phosphohistone phosphatase activity. Pellet phosphohistone phosphatase and synthase D phosphatase competed for the same substrates and appeared to be the same enzyme. ATP, a potent inhibitor, and G-6-P, a potent activator of the synthase phosphatase reaction, had little effect on the phosphohistone phosphatase reaction. These observations suggest that the ATP and G-6-P effects are relatively specific and are probably caused by binding to the synthase D substrate. The observed effects of NaCl and KCl were more complex. They stimulated phosphohistone phosphatase activity but strikingly inhibited synthase phosphatase activity. Sodium fluoride inhibited both reactions.  相似文献   

16.
Overexpression of the protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) subunit protein targeting to glycogen (PTG) markedly enhances cellular glycogen levels. In order to disrupt the endogenous PTG-PP1 complex, small interfering RNA (siRNA) constructs against PTG were identified. Infection of 3T3-L1 adipocytes with PTG siRNA adenovirus decreased PTG mRNA and protein levels by >90%. In parallel, PTG reduction resulted in a >85% decrease in glycogen levels 4 days after infection, supporting a critical role for PTG in glycogen metabolism. Total PP1, glycogen synthase, and GLUT4 levels, as well as insulin-stimulated signaling cascades, were unaffected. However, PTG knockdown reduced glycogen-targeted PP1 protein levels, corresponding to decreased cellular glycogen synthase- and phosphorylase-directed PP1 activity. Interestingly, GLUT1 levels and acute insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis rates were increased two- to threefold, and glycogen synthase activation in the presence of extracellular glucose was maintained. In contrast, glycogenolysis rates were markedly increased, suggesting that PTG primarily acts to suppress glycogen breakdown. Cumulatively, these data indicate that disruption of PTG expression resulted in the uncoupling of PP1 activity from glycogen metabolizing enzymes, the enhancement of glycogenolysis, and a dramatic decrease in cellular glycogen levels. Further, they suggest that reduction of glycogen stores induced cellular compensation by several mechanisms, but ultimately these changes could not overcome the loss of PTG expression.  相似文献   

17.
Muscle extracts were subjected to fractionation with ethanol, chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, precipitation with (NH4)2SO4 and gel filtration on Sephadex G-200. These fractions were assayed for protein phosphatase activities by using the following seven phosphoprotein substrates: phosphorylase a, glycogen synthase b1, glycogen synthase b2, phosphorylase kinase (phosphorylated in either the alpha-subunit or the beta-subunit), histone H1 and histone H2B. Three protein phosphatases with distinctive specificities were resolved by the final gel-filtration step and were termed I, II and III. Protein phosphatase-I, apparent mol.wt. 300000, was an active histone phosphatase, but it accounted for only 10-15% of the glycogen synthase phosphatase-1 and glycogen synthase phosphatase-2 activities and 2-3% of the phosphorylase kinase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activity recovered from the Sephadex G-200 column. Protein phosphatase-II, apparent mol.wt. 170000, possessed histone phosphatase activity similar to that of protein phosphatase-I. It possessed more than 95% of the activity towards the alpha-subunit of phosphorylase kinase that was recovered from Sephadex G-200. It accounted for 10-15% of the glycogen synthase phosphatase-1 and glycogen synthase phosphatase-2 activity, but less than 5% of the activity against the beta-subunit of phosphorylase kinase and 1-2% of the phosphorylase phosphatase activity recovered from Sephadex G-200. Protein phosphatase-III was the most active histone phosphatase. It possessed 95% of the phosphorylase phosphatase and beta-phosphorylase kinase phosphatase activities, and 75% of the glycogen synthase phosphatase-1 and glycogen synthase phosphatase-2 activities recovered from Sephadex G-200. It accounted for less than 5% of the alpha-phosphorylase kinase phosphatase activity. Protein phosphatase-III was sometimes eluted from Sephadex-G-200 as a species of apparent mol.wt. 75000(termed IIIA), sometimes as a species of mol.wt. 46000(termed IIIB) and sometimes as a mixture of both components. The substrate specificities of protein phosphatases-IIA and -IIB were identical. These findings, taken with the observation that phosphorylase phosphatase, beta-phosphorylase kinase phosphatase, glycogen synthase phosphatase-1 and glycogen synthase phosphatase-2 activities co-purified up to the Sephadex G-200 step, suggest that a single protein phosphatase (protein phosphatase-III) catalyses each of the dephosphorylation reactions that inhibit glycogenolysis or stimulate glycogen synthesis. This contention is further supported by results presented in the following paper [Cohen, P., Nimmo, G.A. & Antoniw, J.F. (1977) Biochem. J. 1628 435-444] which describes a heat-stable protein that is a specific inhibitor of protein phosphatase-III.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Regulation of the dephosphorylation of glycogen synthase in extracts from rat heart has been studied by adding exogenous phosphatase to the extract. These experiments were possible only because the endogenous protein phosphatase activity of the extract could be inhibited by KF under conditions where alkaline phosphatase activity was not. The concentration of substrate (glycogen synthase from the heart extract) and catalyst (purified E. coli alkaline phosphatase) could be varied independently, by adding known amounts of alkaline phosphatase to the KF-containing heart extracts. Alkaline phosphatase could completely dephosphorylate glycogen synthase while phosphorylase was unchanged. The rate of dephosphorylation was proportional to both the concentration of alkaline phosphatase added to the tissue extract and the amount of glycogen synthase in the extract. The Km for glycogen synthase was close to the concentration found in heart tissue. The Km and the maximum rate of dephosphorylation were both dependent on the phosphorylation state of the glycogen synthase. Less phosphorylated enzyme forms were dephosphorylated faster. These results indicate the necessity for precise control of many variables in studying the rate of glycogen synthase dephosphorylation.Alkaline phosphatase-catalyzed dephosphorylation could be inhibited by physiological concentrations of glycogen. Glycogen synthase dephosphorylation in extracts from fasted-refed rats was less sensitive to glycogen inhibition than in extracts from normal animals. The phosphorylation state of the glycogen synthase in these animals was assessed by kinetic studies to show that differences in phosphorylation state probably could not account for the observations. Fasting led to a decreased rate of dephosphorylation of glycogen synthase due to both an apparent change in kinetic properties of glycogen synthase as a substrate for alkaline phosphatase, and an increased inhibitory effect of glycogen. Stable modifications of glycogen synthase caused by altered nutritional states in the animals are thought to produce these effects.%GSI represents the percentage of glycogen synthase activity that is active without glucose 6-P.  相似文献   

19.
The correlation between blood glucose levels, the concentration of glycogen, the activities of glycogen sythase and phosphorylase and their respective kinases and phosphatases was examined in liver of rat fetuses between day 18 of gestation and one day after birth. Between day 18 and 21 there is a rapid increase in the concentration of glycogen and in the activity of synthase a and a much slower increase in the activity of phosphorylase a. The activity of the respective kinases increased rapidly during this period and reached maximun on day 21. The activity of synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase increased after day 18, to reach a maximum on day 19 and 20, respectively, but decreased again towards day 21. The possibility that the changes in glycogen concentration and enzyme activities were related to an effect of glucose of AMP on the respective phosphatases was considered. It was found that the Km of phosphatase for glucose in the prenatal period was 5–7 mM, as in the adult. Since the level of blood glucose during this period was constant (2.8 mM), an effect of glucose on phosphatase activity seems unlikely. AMP concentration increased between day 18 and 21 from 6–15 nmol/g. In view of the low level of phosphorylase a activity during this period, the increase in AMP concentration is not considered to be important in the regulation of glycogen breakdown at this time.Immediately after birth blood glucose levels dropped to 5 mg/dl. This was accompanied by a rapid decrease in glycogen concentration and in the activity of glycogen synthase and a rise in phosphorylase activity. Blood glucose levels returned to the initial level within 1 h after birth, whereas the changes in glycogen concentration and enzyme activities continued for at least 3 h after birth. On day 22 all parameters examined had reached the level found in adult rat liver.It is suggested that the rapid changes observed immediately after birth are due to an effect of hypoglycemia mediated by hormones and cannot be ascribed to direct effects of metabolites on the enzyme systems involved.  相似文献   

20.
The hyperthyroid state is associated with low hepatic glycogen levels, but paradoxically with a high activity of glycogen synthase and low activity of glycogen phosphorylase. We determined the effects of triiodo-L-thyronine (T3) on glycogen synthesis and glycogen synthase activity in rat hepatocytesin vitro. Culture of rat hepatocytes with T3 (100 nM–1 M) for 16 h–40 h increases glycogen synthesis from glucose and gluconeogenic precursors. The stimulation of glycogen synthesis by T3 was associated with an increase in the activity of glycogen synthase and was additive with the long-term effects of insulin but not with the short-term stimulation of glycogen synthesis by insulin. Culture of hepatocytes with T3 (at concentrations up to 1 M) did not affect the responsiveness of glycogen synthesis to short-term stimulation by insulin but culture with 10 M-T3 decreased the responsiveness to insulin without affecting the basal rate. It is suggested that the high activity of glycogen synthase in the hyperthyroid state is due to a direct effect of T3 on the hepatocyte, but the low hepatic glycogen content is probably due to either secondary metabolite and/or endocrine changes or to impaired responsiveness to insulin. T3 may have an anabolic role in the control of hepatic glycogen storage in the euthyroid postprandial state. (Mol Cell Biol120: 151–158, 1993)Abbreviations T3 triiodo-L-thyronine  相似文献   

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