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1.
Addition of glucagon (20 nM) to the isolated hepatocytes from 24-h starved male rats results in an inactivation of glycogen synthase. The A0.5 for glucose-6-P is increased 2-fold over the control but the S0.5 for UDP-glucose is not significantly affected. The glucagon-stimulated inactivation of glycogen synthase is also accompanied by a 60-120% increase in the phosphorylation of the synthase. Glycogen synthase labeled with 32P by incubation of the hepatocytes with [32P] PO4(3-) was recovered by immunoprecipitation and the resulting immunoprecipitate was subjected to tryptic digestion. Analysis of the 32P-labeled peptides reveals that the sites corresponding to those phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase and glycogen synthase (casein) kinase-1 (Itarte, E., and Huang, K.-P. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 4052-4057) are rapidly phosphorylated in response to glucagon. These results demonstrate that glucagon not only triggers the activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase through an increase in the intracellular level of cAMP but also, by an unknown mechanism, activates a Ca2+- and cAMP-independent protein kinase.  相似文献   

2.
Incubation of hepatocytes from fasted rats with LiCl provoked a concentration- and time-dependent activation of glycogen synthase. This effect was observed in the absence of glucose in the incubation medium. No changes in the intracellular concentrations of ATP or glucose-6-phosphate were detected. Lithium was also able to activate glycogen synthase in the absence of extracellular calcium. If hepatocytes were incubated with lithium and insulin, an additive effect of both agents on glycogen synthase activity was observed. LiCl was also effective in activating the enzyme in hepatocytes obtained from fed rats. When hepatocytes were incubated with [33P]phosphate and then treated with LiCl, a decrease in the amount of [32P]phosphate incorporated in the enzyme was observed. This dephosphorylation affected two CNBr fragments of the enzyme (CB-2 and CB-1), suggesting that several phosphorylation sites were involved. Lithium was also able to activate glycogen phosphorylase from both fasted and fed rats. Phosphorylase activation was concentration- and time-dependent, either in the presence or absence of calcium in the incubation medium. These findings demonstrate that although lithium appears to mimic the effects of insulin on glycogen synthase activity, its mechanism of action must be different from that of the hormone.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of glucose on phosphorylase and glycogen synthase were investigated in hepatocytes isolated from acutely (40 h) and chronically (90 h) alloxan-diabetic rats. The glucose-induced inactivation of phosphorylase proceeded normally in all conditions. The ensuing activation of glycogen synthase was slightly blunted in acute diabetes, but became virtually absent in 72 h diabetes of similar severity. In hepatocytes from rats with various degrees of chronic diabetes, the maximal activation of glycogen synthase (at 60 mM-glucose) was inversely correlated with the plasma glucose concentration.  相似文献   

4.
The following article provides evidence that cellular calcium controls the activity of glycogen synthase in all three major glycogen storage tissues; muscle, fat, and liver. Depletion of cellular calcium resulted in a moderate increase of glycogen synthase %I activities in intact mouse diaphragms, in isolated rat adipocytes, and in rat hepatocytes. The increase in %I activity of glycogen synthase was more pronounced when the uridine di-phosphoglucose concentration in the glycogen synthase assay was lowered from 4.4 mM to 0.2 mM. Calcium depletion resulted in an approximately two-fold decrease in the Ka values for glucose-6-phosphate in all three tissues. The activities of glycogen synthase also correlated well with the content of cell-associated calcium in rat hepatocytes. The glucose-6-phosphate independent activities of glycogen synthase in extracts of calcium-replete and calcium-depleted tissue approached the same value following the exposure to crude phosphoprotein phosphatase. The activities of glycogen phosphorylase decreased in calcium-depleted tissues and cells. Insulin stimulated the activity of glycogen synthase in muscle and fat in the absence of added sugar and in the absence of extracellular calcium. It is concluded that glycogen synthase is under the control of calcium in the three main glycogen storage tissues. The actions of calcium are probably mediated through the actions of calcium-sensitive protein kinase(s).  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism responsible for the diminished activation of glycogen synthase (GS) in diabetic myotubes remains unclear, but may involve increased activity and/or expression of glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3). In myotubes established from type 2 diabetic and healthy control subjects we determined GS activity ratio, protein expression, and activity of GSK-3alpha and beta under basal and insulin-stimulated conditions when precultured in increasing insulin concentrations. In myotubes precultured at low insulin concentrations acute insulin stimulation increased GS activity more in control than in diabetic subjects, whereas the corresponding GSK-3alpha but not GSK-3beta activity was significantly reduced by acute insulin treatment in both groups. However, in myotubes precultured at high insulin concentrations the effect of insulin on GS and GSK-3alpha activity was blunted in both groups. The protein expression of GSK-3alpha or beta was unaffected. In conclusion, myotubes with a primary defect in GS activity express insulin responsive GSK-3alpha, suggesting that failure of insulin to decrease GS phosphorylation involves abnormal activity of another kinase or phosphatase.  相似文献   

6.
Synopsis The effect of fixation with a bicarbonate-buffered solution of paraformaldehyde and polyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP) on the ultrastructural demonstration of glycogen and phosphorylase activity in rat hepatocytes has been studied. Phosphorylase was demonstrated by the precipitation of liberated phosphate ions with ferrous ions. 7.5% PVP was included in all steps in the procedure before post-fixation in osmium tetroxide.Glycogen particles were well preserved. Structures connecting membranes and glycogen particles were also evident. Phosphorylase activity was rapidly inhibited by the fixative; the fixation time was, therefore, kept very short. The final reaction product was localized on glycogen particles and on endoplasmic membranes in association with glycogen particles. The results support the view that endoplasmic membranes are involved in the metabolism of glycogen in hepatocytes.Paper presented at a symposium The changing directions of carbohydrate histochemistry at the Fifth International Congress of Cytochemistry and Histochemistry in Bucharest, Romania on 1 September 1976.  相似文献   

7.
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry - Glycogen synthase, the regulatory enzyme of glycogen synthesis undergoes multisite phosphorylation leading to its inactivation. The kinases responsible for...  相似文献   

8.
Specific antibodies were used to purify glycogen synthase from isolated rabbit hepatocytes that had been incubated in a medium containing [32P]phosphate. The enzyme gave rise to two main 32P-labeled CNBr fragments of electrophoretic mobilities similar to those obtained after phosphorylation of the enzyme by individual protein kinases in vitro.  相似文献   

9.
Fasting newborn and growing young rats, though capable of synthesizing liver glycogen when fed, are, unlike adult fasted animals, insensitive to glucocorticoid stimulation of the rate of glucose and lactate incorporation into glycogen. Hormone resistance parallels a decreased liver capability for the synthase b to a conversion reaction up to 2 days after birth, after which the b to a transformation becomes adult type in nature. A comparison of the level of glucose 6-phosphate in liver to the effect of the activator on the synthase activity from newborn rat shows that the enzyme has a greater affinity toward the activator than comparable enzyme from the adult, suggesting the presence of an intermediate metabolite-regulated form of synthase in neonatal liver.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Isolated rat hepatocytes were incubated in a medium containing 0.1 mM [32P]phosphate (0.1 mCi/ml) before exposure to epinephrine, glucagon or vasopressin. 32P-labeled glycogen synthase was purified from extracts of control or hormone-treated cells by the use of specific antibodies raised to rabbit skeletal muscle glycogen synthase. Analysis of the immunoprecipitates by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate indicated that a single 32P-labeled polypeptide, apparent Mr 88000, was removed specifically by the antibodies and corresponded to glycogen synthase. Similar electrophoretic analysis of CNBr fragments prepared from the immunoprecipitate revealed that 32P was distributed between two fragments, of apparent Mr 14000 (CB-1) and 28000 (CB-2). Epinephrine, vasopressin or glucagon increased the 32P content of the glycogen synthase subunit. CB-2 phosphorylation was increased by all three hormones while CB-1 was most affected by epinephrine and vasopressin. These effects correlated with a decrease in glycogen synthase activity. From studies using rat liver glycogen synthase, purified by conventional methods and phosphorylated in vitro by individual protein kinases, it was found that electrophoretically similar CNBr fragments could be obtained. However, neither cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase nor three different Ca2+-dependent enzymes (phosphorylase kinase, calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, and protein kinase C) were effective in phosphorylating CB-2. The protein kinases most effective towards CB-2 were the Ca2+ and cyclic-nucleotide-independent enzymes casein kinase II (PC0.7) and FA/GSK-3. The results demonstrate that rat liver glycogen synthase undergoes multiple phosphorylation in whole cells and that stimulation of cells by glycogenolytic hormones can modify the phosphorylation of at least two distinct sites in the enzyme. The specificity of the hormones, however, cannot be explained simply by the direct action of any known protein kinase dependent on cyclic nucleotide or Ca2+. Therefore, either control of other protein kinases, such as FA/GSK-3, is involved or phosphatase activity is regulated, or both.  相似文献   

12.
13.
We examined the signaling pathways regulating glycogen synthase (GS) in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes. The activation of GS by insulin and glucose was completely reversed by the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin. Wortmannin also inhibited insulin-induced phosphorylation and activation of protein kinase B/Akt (PKB/Akt) as well as insulin-induced inactivation of GS kinase-3 (GSK-3), consistent with a role for the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/PKB-Akt/GSK-3 axis in insulin-induced GS activation. Although wortmannin completely inhibited the significantly greater level of GS activation produced by the insulin-mimetic bisperoxovanadium 1,10-phenanthroline (bpV(phen)), there was only minimal accompanying inhibition of bpV(phen)-induced phosphorylation and activation of PKB/Akt, and inactivation of GSK-3. Thus, PKB/Akt activation and GSK-3 inactivation may be necessary but are not sufficient to induce GS activation in rat hepatocytes. Rapamycin partially inhibited the GS activation induced by bpV(phen) but not that effected by insulin. Both insulin- and bpV(phen)-induced activation of the atypical protein kinase C (zeta/lambda) (PKC (zeta/lambda)) was reversed by wortmannin. Inhibition of PKC (zeta/lambda) with a pseudosubstrate peptide had no effect on GS activation by insulin, but substantially reversed GS activation by bpV(phen). The combination of this inhibitor with rapamycin produced an additive inhibitory effect on bpV(phen)-mediated GS activation. Taken together, our results indicate that the signaling components mammalian target of rapamycin and PKC (zeta/lambda) as well as other yet to be defined effector(s) contribute to the modulation of GS in rat hepatocytes.  相似文献   

14.
To investigate the effect of elevation of liver glycogen synthase (GYS2) activity on glucose and glycogen metabolism, we performed adenoviral overexpression of the mutant GYS2 with six serine-to-alanine substitutions in rat primary hepatocytes. Cell-free assays demonstrated that the serine-to-alanine substitutions caused constitutive activity and electrophoretic mobility shift. In rat primary hepatocytes, overexpression of the mutant GYS2 significantly reduced glucose production by 40% and dramatically induced glycogen synthesis via the indirect pathway rather than the direct pathway. Thus, we conclude that elevation of glycogen synthase activity has an inhibitory effect on glucose production in hepatocytes by shunting gluconeogenic precursors into glycogen. In addition, although intracellular compartmentation of glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) remains unclear in hepatocytes, our results imply that there are at least two G6P pools via gluconeogenesis and due to glucose phosphorylation, and that G6P via gluconeogenesis is preferentially used for glycogen synthesis in hepatocytes.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether the PDC and GS activities at the transition from fasted into fed state are consistent with indirect pathway for glycogen synthesis, as suggested previously. Refeeding of glucose given to rats after 72 hr of starvation did not reactivate PDC in the liver; however, the PDC activity in the muscle was increased. In comparison to PDC, glucose refeeding leads to an opposite effect on GS in both liver and muscle as evidenced by the immediate increase in the active form of GS. The low activity of liver PDC restricts 3-carbon flux through the Krebs cycle and enables their transfer to the gluconeogenic pathway for glycogen synthesis. In contrast, an immediate activation of muscle PDC following refeeding indicates that 3-carbon flux will be oxidized in the citric acid cycle, which thereby eliminates the indirect pathway for glycogen synthesis in this tissue. Glucose infusion increased plasma lactate, insulin, and glycogen content in the liver and muscle to the same extent as observed in the fed rats. The results are in agreement with the suggestion that at the transition from fasted to fed state, liver glycogen synthesis occurs mainly from 3-carbon precursors.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Although chronic hyperinsulinemia has been shown to induce insulin resistance, the basic cellular mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon are unknown. The present study was performed 1) to determine the time-related effect of physiological hyperinsulinemia on glycogen synthase (GS) activity, hexokinase II (HKII) activity and mRNA content, and GLUT-4 protein in muscle from healthy subjects, and 2) to relate hyperinsulinemia-induced alterations in these parameters to changes in glucose metabolism in vivo. Twenty healthy subjects had a 240-min euglycemic insulin clamp study with muscle biopsies and then received a low-dose insulin infusion for 24 (n = 6) or 72 h (n = 14) (plasma insulin concentration = 121 +/- 9 or 143 +/- 25 pmol/l, respectively). During the baseline insulin clamp, GS fractional velocity (0.075 +/- 0.008 to 0.229 +/- 0.02, P < 0.01), HKII mRNA content (0.179 +/- 0.034 to 0.354 +/- 0.087, P < 0.05), and HKII activity (2.41 +/- 0.63 to 3.35 +/- 0.54 pmol x min(-1) x ng(-1), P < 0.05), as well as whole body glucose disposal and nonoxidative glucose disposal, increased. During the insulin clamp performed after 24 and 72 h of sustained physiological hyperinsulinemia, the ability of insulin to increase muscle GS fractional velocity, total body glucose disposal, and nonoxidative glucose disposal was impaired (all P < 0.01), whereas the effect of insulin on muscle HKII mRNA, HKII activity, GLUT-4 protein content, and whole body rates of glucose oxidation and glycolysis remained unchanged. Muscle glycogen concentration did not change [116 +/- 28 vs. 126 +/- 29 micromol/kg muscle, P = nonsignificant (NS)] and was not correlated with the change in nonoxidative glucose disposal (r = 0.074, P = NS). In summary, modest chronic hyperinsulinemia may contribute directly (independent of change in muscle glycogen concentration) to the development of insulin resistance by its impact on the GS pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Summary We have previously shown that synthase phosphatase activity was decreased in starved animals and was rapidly restored by insulin administration (1). In order to determine whether the decreased phosphatase activity was due to a decrease in phosphatase enzyme per se or to a change in the substrate, synthase D, phosphatase activity has been determined using purified synthase D substrate. Using purified heart or liver synthase D, phosphatase activity was lower in extracts from starved animals than in fed animals. Insulin administration rapidly increased phosphatase activity in extracts from the starved animals. The total amount of endogenous synthase D which was convertible to synthase I was lower in extracts from starve animals, but this was rapidly increased within 15 minutes following insulin administration. These data suggest that starvation and insulin have a direct effect on the phosphatase enzyme activity per se and probably on the substrate suitability of synthase D as well.  相似文献   

19.
20.
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   

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