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1.
Studies concerning the importance of glucagon secretion in hypoglycemic counterregulation have assumed that peripheral levels of glucagon are representative of rates of pancreatic glucagon secretion. The measurement of peripheral levels of this hormone, however, may be a poor reflection of secretion rates because of glucagon's metabolism by the liver. Therefore, in order to understand the relationship between pancreatic glucagon secretion and levels of glucagon in the peripheral blood during hypoglycemia, we evaluated hepatic glucagon metabolism during insulin induced hypoglycemia. Four dogs received an insulin infusion to produce glucose levels less than 50 mg/dl for 45 minutes. In response to this, the delivery of glucagon to the liver increased from 36.7 +/- 5.9 ng/min in the baseline to 322.6 +/- 6.3 ng/min during hypoglycemia. Hepatic glucagon uptake increased proportionally from 13.6 +/- 7.2 ng/min to 103.1 +/- 28.3 ng/min and the percentage of delivered hormone that was extracted did not change (30.8 +/- 13.8% vs 32.9 +/- 11.6%). The absolute amount of glucagon metabolized by the liver was dependent on the rate of delivery and was not directly affected by plasma glucose level per se. To directly study the effect of hypoglycemia on hepatic glucagon metabolism, five dogs were given an exogenous infusion of somatostatin followed by an infusion of glucagon and then administered insulin to produce hypoglycemia. The percent of glucagon extracted by the liver (19.5 +/- 4.9% and 21.3 +/- 6.4%) was not affected by a fall in the plasma glucose level.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The pancreatic hormone glucagon hyperpolarizes the liver cell membrane under various conditions. Here we investigated the physiological relevance of this effect by testing the influence of infusions of glucagon antiserum on the liver cell membrane potential in vivo. Intracellular microelectrode recordings of liver cells (up to 60/rat over 2 h) were done in anesthetized male rats. Livers were fixed in place, and recordings were done 10-30 min after intraperitoneal injections of glucagon or hepatic portal vein infusions of glucagon or specific polyclonal glucagon antibodies raised in rabbits. The isotonic lactose vehicle was used as a control for glucagon, and equal amounts of nonimmunized rabbit IgG were used as a control for glucagon antibodies. Intraperitoneal glucagon (400 microg/kg) hyperpolarized the liver cell membrane up to 12 mV, and intraportal glucagon (10 or 60 microg/kg) dose dependently hyperpolarized the liver cell membrane by 3-7 mV. Intraportal infusion of glucagon antiserum (in vitro binding capacity of 4 ng glucagon/rat) significantly depolarized the liver cell membrane by approximately 2.5 mV. The effects of both glucagon and glucagon antiserum reversed after 60-90 min. We conclude that glucagon is a physiologically important modulator of the liver cell membrane potential.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of glucagon on blood flow and high-energy phosphates in control and in rat livers damaged by ischemia were studied using in vivo nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Normal livers and livers which had been made ischemic for 20, 40, and 60 min followed by 60 min of reperfusion were studied. Ischemia led to a loss in adenosine triphosphate (ATP) within 30 min. Reperfusion after 20 min of ischemia led to complete recovery of ATP. 60 min of reperfusion after 40 or 60 min of ischemia led to only a 76% and 48% recovery of ATP, respectively. Glucagon, at doses up to 2.5 mg/kg body weight, caused no changes in the inorganic phosphate (Pi) to ATP ratio in normal livers as measured by 31P-NMR spectroscopy. In livers which had been made ischemic for 20, 40, or 60 min, glucagon caused an increase in the Pi/ATP ratio of 18%, 40%, and 40%, respectively. 19F-NMR detection of the washout of trifluoromethane from liver was used to measure blood flow. Glucagon-stimulated flow in the normal liver in a dose-dependent manner, with 2.5 mg glucagon/kg body weight leading to a 95% increase in flow. Ischemia for 20, 40, and 60 min followed by 60 min of reperfusion led to hepatic blood flows which were 63%, 68%, and 58% lower than control liver. In reperfused livers, blood flow after glucagon-stimulation was reduced to 56%, 43%, and 48% of control glucagon-stimulated flow after 20, 40, and 60 min of ischemia. These results indicate that ischemia followed by reperfusion leads to deceases in hepatic blood flow prior to alterations in ATP and the response of the liver to glucagon is altered in the reperfused liver.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of glucagon on hepatic protein systhesis and proteolysis has been investigated. The intraperitoneal administration of 200 mug of glucagon produced an increase of the polypeptide chains completion time which was maximal 5 min after its administration and approached control values at 20 min. The increase of the polypeptides chains completion time observed at 5 min after the hormone administration represents a 38% inhibition of the hepatic protein synthetic rate. When glucagon was continuously supplied by intravascular infusion, maximal inhibition was attained throughout the experiment. This inhibition of protein synthesis brought about by glucagon was accompanied by an increase in the polyribosomal state of aggregation, indicating that the hormone acts mainly if not exclusively, on the elongation or termination step, or both. The administration of glucagon produced also a progressive increase in the hepatic valine concentration. This increase could not be accounted for the the decrease in plasma valine levels, suggesting that the rise in haptic valine concentration is an expression of hepatic proteolysis rather than the result of an accelerated transport of amino acids across the hepatocyte plasma membrane. The different time sequence in the glucagon-induced effects of protein synthesis and proteolysis suggests that both effects are independent and probably mediated by different mechanisms.  相似文献   

5.
《Life sciences》1993,53(10):PL165-PL170
The concentration gradients of ethanol and acetate across liver and Gl were determined in overnight starved rats infused with ethanol at a rate (15 μmol/min/rat) below and a rate (30 μmol/min/rat) exceeding the rate of ethanol disposal in the animals. Plasma concentrations of ethanol in the systemic circulation reached steady-state levels of ∼0.6 mM between 30 and 60 min during low rate of infusion; increased steadily from 3.5 mM at 30 min to 6.4 mM at 2 h during high rate of infusion. Gl metabolism was determined by concentration differences in aorta and portal vein; hepatic metabolism by differences in hepatic influx and hepatic veins. Hepatic influx was the sum of the concentrations in aorta and portal vein, each multiplied by their fractional contributions to heoatic blood supply. At low rate of infusion, hepatic extraction of ethanol was nearly complete and could be accounted for entirely by the acetate released from liver. The concentrations of ethanol in aorta were greater but not significantly than that in portal vein. At high rate of infusion, hepatic and Gl gradients of ethanol remained constant despite changes in circulating concentrations of ethanol. The concentration gradients of ethanol and acetate across liver, though different in signs, were identical in magnitude. Gl gradient indicating uptake of ethanol was statistically significant and was about 30 % of hepatic gradient. Enzyme activity of alcohol dehydrogenase in stomach was found to be about 10 % of that in liver. Our results thus show that acetate generated during ethanol oxidation is completely released from liver in rats, in either conscious or anesthetized state under submaximal or maximal condition of ethanol disposal, and that Gl metabolism of circulating ethanol can be as high as one third of the metabolism in liver.  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of the present study was to test the hypothesis that a prior period of exercise is associated with an increase in hepatic glucagon sensitivity. Hepatic glucose production (HGP) was measured in four groups of anesthetized rats infused with glucagon (2 microg. kg(-1). min(-1) iv) over a period of 60 min. Among these groups, two were normally fed and, therefore, had a normal level of liver glycogen (NG). One of these two groups was killed at rest (NG-Re) and the other after a period of exercise (NG-Ex; 60 min of running, 15-26 m/min, 0% grade). The two other groups of rats had a high hepatic glycogen level (HG), which had been increased by a fast-refed diet, and were also killed either at rest (HG-Re) or after exercise (HG-Ex). Plasma glucagon and insulin levels were increased similarly in all four conditions. Glucagon-induced hyperglycemia was higher (P < 0.01) in the HG-Re group than in all other groups. HGP in the HG-Re group was not, however, on the whole more elevated than in the NG-Re group. Exercised rats (NG-Ex and HG-Ex) had higher hyperglycemia, HGP, and glucose utilization than rested rats in the first 10 min of the glucagon infusion. HG-Ex group had the highest HGP throughout the 60-min experiment. It is concluded that hyperglucagonemia-induced HGP is stimulated by a prior period of exercise, suggesting an increased sensitivity of the liver to glucagon during exercise.  相似文献   

7.
The fraction of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase in the dephosphorylated (active) form in rat liver in vivo was measured after various experimental treatments of animals. Intraperitoneal injection of glucose (to raise serum insulin concentrations) into rats 4 h into the light phase (L-4) resulted in a transient (30 min) increase in the expressed (E)/total (T) activity ratio of HMG-CoA reductase without any change in total activity (obtained after complete dephosphorylation of the enzyme). Conversely, intravenous injection of guinea-pig anti-insulin serum into rats 4 h into the dark phase (D-4) significantly depressed the E/T ratio within 20 min. Intravenous injection of glucagon into normal rats at this time point did not affect the degree of phosphorylation of the enzyme, in spite of a 10-fold increase in hepatic cyclic AMP concentration induced by the hormone treatment. A 3-fold increase in the concentration of the cyclic nucleotide induced by adrenaline infusion was similarly ineffective in inducing any change in expressed or total activities of hepatic HMG-CoA reductase. However, when insulin secretion was inhibited, either by the induction of streptozotocin-diabetes or by simultaneous infusion of somatostatin, glucagon treatment was able to depress the expressed activity of HMG-CoA reductase (i.e. it increased the phosphorylation of the enzyme). Therefore insulin appears to have a dominant role in the regulation of the phosphorylation state of hepatic HMG-CoA reductase. In apparent corroboration of this suggestion, short-term 4 h food deprivation of animals before D-4 resulted in a marked decrease in the E/T activity ratio of reductase, which was not affected further by an additional 8 h starvation. By contrast, the total activity of the enzyme was not significantly affected by 4 h starvation, but was markedly diminished after 12 or 24 h starvation. Longer-term starvation also produced a chronic increase in the degree of phosphorylation of the enzyme. These results are discussed in relation to the role of reversible phosphorylation in the control of hepatic HMG-CoA reductase activity in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
The influence of VIP, a potent vasodilator, on central hemodynamics, splanchnic blood flow and glucose metabolism was studied in six healthy subjects. Teflon catheters were inserted into an artery, a femoral vein and a right-sided hepatic vein. A Swan-Ganz catheter was introduced percutaneously and its tip placed in the pulmonary artery. Determinations of cardiac output, systemic, pulmonary arterial and hepatic venous pressures as well as splanchnic blood flow were made in the basal state and at the end of two consecutive 45 min periods of VIP infusion at 5 and 10 ng/kg/min, respectively. Arterial blood samples for analysis of glucose, FFA, insulin and glucagon were drawn at timed intervals. VIP infusion at 5 ng/kg/min resulted in an increase in cardiac output (55%) and heart rate (25%) as well as a reduction in mean systemic arterial pressure (15%) and vascular resistance (45%). With the higher rate of VIP infusion heart rate tended to rise further while cardiac output and arterial pressure remained unchanged. At 15 min after the end of VIP infusion the above variables had returned to basal levels. Splanchnic blood flow and free hepatic venous pressure did not change significantly. Arterial concentrations of glucose, FFA, insulin and glucagon increased during VIP infusion. At 15 min after the end of infusion the glucose levels were still significantly higher than basal (20%). Net splanchnic glucose output did not change in response to VIP infusion. It is concluded that VIP exerts a potent vasodilatory effect resulting in augmented cardiac output and lowered systemic blood pressure and vascular resistance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Using a non-recirculating perfusion system, we studied the time course of ketone body output from the isolated rat liver in response to various hormones and changes in pH and redox state. The release of 3-hydroxybutyrate (3-OHB) started to be suppressed within 1 min after the addition of insulin (50 mU/ml) and kept half of the basal level even 10 min after its cessation. The addition of glucagon (0.2 microM) caused an increase in both 3-OHB and acetoacetate (AcAc) outputs from fed livers within 5 min, which reached about 150% of the basal level 10 min after the infusion and maintained a constant level through out the experiment. Growth hormone (2 mu/ml) elicited a slight but significant increase in AcAc output soon after the infusion. Epinephrine (10 microM) also caused a slight increase in both AcAc and 3-OHB outputs 9 min after the infusion and maintained a significant increase even 10 min after stopping infusion. The decrease in pH of the perfusate or the addition of ascorbic acid abruptly suppressed the AcAc production. In summary, the present study clearly demonstrated the direct effects of various hormones on ketogenesis in the liver and the usefulness of a non-recirculating liver perfusion system as a tool for the study of ketogenesis.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of hepatic blood flow and portal insulin concentration on insulin extraction during one passage through the isolated perfused rat liver was studied. The percentage of insulin extracted was constant over the physiological range of blood flows (4 to 28 ml/min). The total amount of insulin extracted increased as the input concentration was raised from 48 to 4860 microU/ml with the highest level of extraction being approximately 700 microU of insulin per gram of liver per minute. When square wave input pulses of 243 to 4860 microU/ml were presented, about 5% of this insulin was retained and then released by the liver for periods up to 15 minutes after the cessation of the input. The possible roles of glucose and glucagon as regulators of insulin extraction were studied. Glucose (300 mg/dl), as compared with no glucose, led to a significant reduction of insulin extraction (22% vs. 38%, p less than 0.001). Glucagon had no effect on insulin extraction in the presence of constant levels of glucose. It is concluded, therefore, that glucose may increase circulating insulin levels not only by its well known stimulation of insulin secretion by the pancreas, but also by inhibiting insulin extraction by the liver.  相似文献   

11.
The half-life (t1/2) and metabolic clearance rate (MCR) of exogenous natural porcine oxyntomodulin (porcine OXM) and the synthetic analog of rat oxyntomodulin, [Nle27]-OXM (rat OXM), were compared with that of glucagon in control, sham-operated and acutely nephrectomized rats using the primed-continuous infusion technique. The half-disappearance times for porcine OXM (8.2 +/- 0.5 min) and rat OXM (6.4 +/- 0.5 min) were 3-fold slower than that of glucagon (1.9 +/- 0.1 min). Acute bilateral nephrectomy significantly prolonged the half-disappearance time of rat OXM (8.2 +/- 0.7 min) and glucagon (3.6 +/- 0.4 min) compared with that of sham-operated animals (6.5 +/- 0.8 min and 2.5 +/- 0.2 min, respectively). The mean MCRs were similar for porcine and rat OXM (11.3 +/- 0.7 and 11.9 +/- 0.5 ml.kg-1.min-1) but were 3 times lower than that measured with glucagon (36 +/- 5 ml.kg-1.min-1). Bilateral nephrectomy reduced the MCR of OXM and glucagon by 38% and 34%, respectively. No significant increase in C-terminal glucagon immunoreactivity was noticed during infusion of either porcine or rat OXM, measured directly in plasma, with a specific C-terminal glucagon antiserum or after HPLC. In the course of the glucagon infusion, blood glucose was increased 2-fold, while the same dose of porcine OXM or of rat OXM induced only a small increase over the values in phosphate buffer-infused rats. 10 times higher doses of rat OXM were necessary to obtain a similar hyperglycemic effect. These results indicate that: (1) the metabolism of OXM is 3-fold slower than that of glucagon, (2) renal clearance contributed close to 35% of the overall metabolic plasma extraction for OXM and glucagon and (3) OXM, although effective at a higher dose, when compared with glucagon, displays a hyperglycemic effect probably through the glucagon receptors.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of this study was to determine the role of glucagon in hepatic glutamine (Gln) metabolism during exercise. Sampling (artery, portal vein, and hepatic vein) and infusion (vena cava) catheters and flow probes (portal vein, hepatic artery) were implanted in anesthetized dogs. At least 16 days after surgery, an experiment, consisting of a 120-min equilibration period, a 30-min basal sampling period, and a 150-min exercise period, was performed in these animals. [5-(15)N]Gln was infused throughout experiments to measure gut and liver Gln kinetics and the incorporation of Gln amide nitrogen into urea. Somatostatin was infused throughout the study. Glucagon was infused at a basal rate until the beginning of exercise, when the rate was either 1) gradually increased to simulate the glucagon response to exercise (n = 5) or 2) unchanged to maintain basal glucagon (n = 5). Insulin was infused during the equilibration and basal periods at rates designed to achieve stable euglycemia. The insulin infusion was reduced in both protocols to simulate the exercise-induced insulin decrement. These studies show that the exercise-induced increase in glucagon is 1) essential for the increase in hepatic Gln uptake and fractional extraction, 2) required for the full increment in ureagenesis, 3) required for the specific transfer of the Gln amide nitrogen to urea, and 4) unrelated to the increase in gut fractional Gln extraction. These data show, by use of the physiological perturbation of exercise, that glucagon is a physiological regulator of hepatic Gln metabolism in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Glucagon metabolism under basal (endogenous) conditions and during intravenous glucagon infusion was studied in anesthetized pigs by use of midregion (M), COOH-terminal (C), and NH2-terminal (N)-RIAs. Arteriovenous concentration differences revealed a negative extraction of endogenous glucagon immunoreactivity across the portal bed (-35.4 +/- 11.0, -40.3 +/- 9.6, -35.6 +/- 16.9%, M-, C-, N-RIA, respectively), reflecting net secretion of pancreatic glucagon and intestinal glicentin and oxyntomodulin, but under exogenous conditions, a net extraction occurred (11.6 +/- 3.6 and 18.6 +/- 5.7%, C- and N-RIA, respectively). Hindlimb extraction of endogenous (17.4 +/- 3.7%, C-RIA) and exogenous (29.1 +/- 4.8 and 19.8 +/- 5.1%, C- and M-RIA) glucagon was detected, indicating M and C cleavage of the molecule. Renal extraction of glucagon was detected by all assays under endogenous (19.4 +/- 6.7, 33.9 +/- 7.1, 29.5 +/- 6.7%, M-, C-, N-RIA) and exogenous conditions (46.9 +/- 4.8, 46.4 +/- 6.0, 47.0 +/- 7.7%; M-, C-, N-RIA), indicating substantial elimination of the peptide. Hepatic glucagon extraction was undetectable under basal conditions and detected only by M-RIA (10.0 +/- 3.8%) during glucagon infusion, indicating limited midregional cleavage of the molecule. The plasma half-life determined by C- and N-RIAs (2.7 +/- 0.2 and 2.3 +/- 0.2 min) were similar, but both were shorter than when determined by M-RIA (3.2 +/- 0.2 min, P < 0.02). Metabolic clearance rates were similar regardless of assay (14.4 +/- 1.1, 13.6 +/- 1.7, 17.0 +/- 1.7 ml x kg-1 x min-1, M-, C-, N-RIA). Porcine plasma degraded glucagon, but this was not significantly affected by the dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) inhibitor valine-pyrrolidide, and in anesthetized pigs, glucagon's metabolic stability was unchanged by DPP IV inhibition. We conclude that tissue-specific metabolism of glucagon occurs, with the kidney being the main site of removal and the liver playing little, if any, role. Furthermore, valine-pyrrolidide has no effect on glucagon stability, suggesting that DPP IV is unimportant in glucagon metabolism in vivo, in contrast to its significant role in the metabolism of the other proglucagon-derived peptides and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide.  相似文献   

14.
The intravenous administration of glucagon to anesthetized rats resulted within 5 min in a 20% drop in the hepatic phosphorylase phosphatase activity, as measured in a post-mitochondrial supernatant at low dilution, but it did not affect the activity of glycogensynthase phosphatase. On the other hand, the injection of insulin plus glucose caused increases by about 35% in both phosphatase activities. Upon subcellular fractionation these effects were recovered in the cytosol, but not in the glycogen/microsomal fraction. However, activity changes in the latter fraction were observed after recombination with the liver cytosol from a hormone-treated animal. Preincubation of the liver cytosol with modulator protein (a specific inhibitor of type-1 protein phosphatases) cancelled the activity changes induced by insulin plus glucose. No hormonal effects on hepatic protein phosphatase activities were observed when the fractions were either diluted an additional 10-fold or pretreated with trypsin. An acute hormonal regulation of protein phosphatases could also be demonstrated in the perfused liver. When added to the perfusion medium, glucose as well as insulin increased the cytosolic protein phosphatase activities by about 25%. Their effect was additive, irrespective of the order of addition. On the other hand, the addition of glucagon and/or vasopressin resulted in a 20% drop in the phosphorylase phosphatase activity. The presence of glucagon did not interfere with the effectiveness of insulin, and vice versa. The changes in the phosphorylase phosphatase activities induced by glucagon, insulin, and glucose represented changes in the Vmax only. We propose that the acute control of the hepatic glycogen synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase activities is mediated by transferable, cytosolic effector(s).  相似文献   

15.
The present study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that a high-fat diet-induced liver lipid infiltration is associated with a reduction of hepatic glucagon receptor density (B(max)) and affinity (K(d)), and with a decrease in stimulatory G protein (G(s)alpha) content while enhancing inhibitory G protein (G(i)alpha(2)) expression. We also hypothesized that, under this dietary condition, a single bout of endurance exercise would restore hepatic glucagon receptor parameters and G protein expression to standard levels. Female Sprague-Dawley rats were fed either a standard (SD) or a high-fat diet (HF; 40% kcal) for 2 wk (n = 20 rats/group). Each dietary group was thereafter subdivided into a nonexercised (Rest) and an acute-exercised group (Ac-Ex). The acute exercise consisted of a single bout of endurance exercise on a treadmill (30 min, 26 m/min, and 0% slope) immediately before being killed. The HF compared with the SD diet was associated with significantly (P < 0.05) higher values in hepatic triglyceride concentrations (123%), fat pad weight, and plasma free fatty acid (FFA) concentrations. The HF diet also resulted in significantly (P < 0.05) lower hepatic glucagon receptor density (45%) and G(s)alpha protein content (75%), as well as higher (P < 0.05) G(i)alpha(2) protein content (27%), with no significant effects on glucagon receptor affinity. Comparisons of all individual liver triglyceride and B(max) values revealed that liver triglycerides were highly (P < 0.003) predictive of the decreased glucagon receptor density (R = -0.512). Although the 30-min exercise bout resulted in some typical exercise effects (P < 0.05), such as an increase in FFA (SD diet), a decrease in insulin levels, and an increase in plasma glucagon concentrations (SD diet), it did not change any of the responses related to liver glucagon receptors and G proteins, with the exception of a significant (P < 0.05) decrease in G(i)alpha(2) protein content under the HF diet. The present results indicate that the feeding of an HF diet is associated with a reduction in plasma membrane hepatic glucagon receptor density and G(s)alpha protein content, which is not attenuated by a 30-min exercise bout. It is suggested that liver lipid infiltration plays a role in reducing glucagon action in the liver through a reduction in glucagon receptor density and glucagon-mediated signal transduction.  相似文献   

16.
1. The isolated perfused rat liver efficiently takes up cysteinyl leukotrienes (LTs) C4, D4, E4 and N-acetyl-LTE4 from circulation. More than 70% of these cysteinyl LTs are excreted from liver into bile within 1 h of onset of a 5 min infusion, while about 5% remain in the liver. About 20% of infused N-acetyl-LTE4 escapes hepatic first-pass extraction under our conditions. 2. Metabolites of LTC4 appearing in bile within 20 min of the onset of infusion include mainly LTD4 and N-acetyl-LTE4, but also omega-hydroxy-N-acetyl-LTE4 and omega-carboxy-N-acetyl-LTE4. Metabolites generated from omega-carboxy-N-acetyl-LTE4 by beta-oxidation from the omega-end represent the major biliary LTs secreted at later times. 3. Stimulation of the isolated perfused liver by the combined infusion of the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 results in a transient increase of endogenous cysteinyl LT production, which is independent of extrahepatic cells. 4. The immunosuppressive drug cyclosporine causes a dose-dependent inhibition of hepatobiliary cysteinyl LT excretion, probably by interference with the sinusoidal uptake system for cysteinyl LTs.  相似文献   

17.
A commercially available mouse monoclonal antibody to human platelet glycoprotein IIIa was used to demonstrate sequestration of platelets in hepatic biopsies obtained from baboons following intravenous infusion of echistatin, a novel fibrinogen receptor antagonist derived from the venom of the snake Echis carinatus. Biopsies of liver and spleen were taken prior to administration of echistatin. The hepatic biopsies were either snap-frozen in Freon-22/liquid nitrogen or fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin. Biopsies of spleen were snap-frozen. During infusion of echistatin (2.3 micrograms/kg/min), circulating platelet counts decreased from 331,000/mm3 to 167,000/mm3. Selective sequestration within the liver was confirmed using whole body gamma camera imaging to demonstrate 111Indium-oxine labeled platelet accumulation within the liver during the thrombocytopenic episode. Hepatic biopsies were again taken and either snap-frozen in Freon-22/liquid nitrogen or fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin. Biopsies of spleen and inguinal lymph node were also snap-frozen. Platelet rich plasma smears, included as positive controls, dewaxed paraffin sections, and cryosections of liver, spleen, and lymph node were stained with monoclonal mouse anti-human platelet glycoprotein IIIa using an avidin biotinylated peroxidase complex (ABC) technique. Prior to infusion of echistatin, platelet staining within the liver was minimal. After echistatin infusion, hepatic cryosections showed prominent platelet staining within hepatic sinusoids. No localization was shown in lymph node, however, the spleen showed prominent platelet staining both before and after echistatin infusion. Platelet rich plasma smears were intensely positive. No prominent platelet staining was observed in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded material. Thus, this immunocytochemical technique may help localize platelets in cryosections of tissues from baboons and other primate species.  相似文献   

18.
To determine the effect of nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) on glucagon action, glucagon was infused intraportally (1.65 ng.min(-1).kg(-1)) for 3 h into 18-h-fasted, pancreatic-clamped conscious dogs in the presence [NEFA + glucagon (GGN)] or absence (GGN) of peripheral Intralipid plus heparin infusion. Additionally, hyperglycemic (HG), hyperglycemic-hyperlipidemic (NEFA + HG), and glycerol plus glucagon (GLYC + GGN) controls were studied. Arterial plasma glucagon concentrations rose equally in GGN, NEFA + GGN, and GLYC + GGN but remained basal in hyperglycemic controls. Peripheral infusions of Intralipid and heparin increased arterial plasma NEFA concentrations equally in NEFA + GGN and NEFA + HG and did not change in other protocols. After 15 min, glucagon infusion resulted in a rapid, brief increase in net hepatic glycogenolysis (NHGLY, mg.min(-1).kg(-1)) of approximately 6.0 in GGN and GLYC + GGN but only increased by 3.8 +/- 1.3 in NEFA + GGN. Thus increases in NHGLY, and consequently net hepatic glucose output (NHGO), were blunted by 40%, with no difference between the groups in the last 2.5 h of the study. NHGO and NHGLY did not significantly change in HG and NEFA + HG. Net hepatic gluconeogenic flux did not change in GGN, GLYC + GGN, or HG. However, Intralipid and heparin infusion resulted in similar increases in net hepatic gluconeogenic flux in NEFA + GGN and NEFA + HG. Thus elevated NEFA limit the initial increase in glucagon-stimulated HGO by blunting glycogenolysis, without having any effect on the gluconeogenic or glycogenolytic contributions or NHGO thereafter.  相似文献   

19.
The present study was designed to determine the effects of intravenously infused bombesin (10 ng/kg/min) upon basal and postprandial plasma somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI), glucagon, insulin and triglyceride levels in normal (n = 12) and chemically sympathectomized (n = 11) dogs. Basal plasma SLI, glucagon and insulin levels rose significantly during the infusion of bombesin in the normal dogs, and this was not altered by chemical sympathectomy. Bombesin infusion enhanced the postprandial SLI response, while attenuating the postprandial glucagon response by 50% and the insulin response in the early postprandial phase of the meal. Sympathectomy did not significantly alter the basal levels of these polypeptides, but augmented the postprandial plasma SLI response during the first 90 min, and reduced the postprandial glucagon response during the infusion of bombesin. The postprandial insulin response was not affected by sympathectomy. In both normal and chemically sympathectomized dogs the rise in postprandial triglyceride levels was attenuated by bombesin infusion.  相似文献   

20.
High-field 13C surface coil nuclear magnetic resonance has been employed to investigate glucose and glycogen metabolism in rat liver in vivo. Natural abundance and isotopically enriched proton-decoupled 13C NMR experiments were conducted at 90.56 MHz on a standard commercial spectrometer utilizing a laboratory-built high-sensitivity double-resonance coaxial coil probe. At variance with a previous preliminary report, natural abundance spectra of the liver in vivo from a rat fed ad libitum reveal resonances of substantial intensity from hepatic glycogen with approximately 10 min of signal averaging. The response of hepatic glycogen levels to an intravenous injection of the hormone glucagon was continuously monitored through the glycogen C-1 carbon resonance intensity; this revealed an average 60% depletion of hepatic glycogen stores in vivo within approximately 1 h. In a complementary study utilizing fasted rats, 100 mg of D-[1-13C]glucose (90% enriched) was administered via a peripheral vein injection and continuously monitored by 13C NMR with 3-min time resolution as it was incorporated into hepatic glycogen. The C-1 carbon resonances of hepatic glucose and glycogen are well-resolved in vivo enabling the time course for the relative change in concentration for both metabolites to be established simultaneously. The 13C label incorporated into the glycogen pool reaches a steady-state level in approximately 40 min.  相似文献   

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