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1.
Effect of insulin on glycogen metabolism in isolated catfish hepatocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Insulin effect on carbohydrate metabolism in catfish hepatocytes consisted of a significant decrease of cell glycogen concentration both in the absence and in the presence of glucose in the medium. The hormone did not influence either the output of glucose from the cell or the intracellular glucose level. Experiments with radioactive glucose showed a very low uptake of the sugar by the hepatocytes; correspondingly the incorporation of radioactivity into glycogen was very low and not influenced by insulin. The glycogen content in catfish liver cells was influenced by the hormone in the opposite way to rat liver cells.  相似文献   

2.
1. In catfish (Ictalurus melas) after glucagon treatment blood glucose increased until 150 min, then it gradually decreased towards control values at the 5th hr. 2. In glucagon treated fish, liver glycogen levels were significantly lower then in controls 30 min after hormone administration; thereafter, liver glycogen levels returned rapidly to initial values. Glucagon did not induce any significant effect on the glycogen content in white and red muscles. 3. In liver slices, the addition of glucagon to the incubation medium significantly enhanced the glycogen phosphorylase activity and decreased the level of glycogen. Both phosphorylase activity and glycogen content of white and red muscle slices were practically unaffected by glucagon.  相似文献   

3.
To explore the possible role of gap junctions in neural regulation of hepatic glucose metabolism, the effects of hepatic nerve stimulation on metabolic and hemodynamic changes were examined in normal and regenerating rat liver which was perfused in situ at constant pressure via the portal vein with a medium containing 5 mM glucose, 2 mM lactate and 0.2 mM pyruvate. 1. The content of connexin 32, a major component of gap junctions in rat liver, decreased transiently to about 25% of the control level in regenerating liver 48-72 h after partial hepatectomy and recovered to normal by the 11th day after the operation. 2. In normal liver, electrical stimulation of the hepatic nerves (10 Hz, 20 V, 2 ms) and infusion of noradrenaline (1 microM) both increased glucose and lactate output and reduced perfusion flow. 3. In early stage of regenerating liver 48 h and 72 h after partial hepatectomy, the increase in glucose output in response to nerve stimulation was almost completely inhibited, whereas the change in lactate balance was partially suppressed and the reduction of flow rate was retained. The response of glucose output to nerve stimulation recovered by the 11th day after partial hepatectomy. In contrast, exogenous application of noradrenaline increased glucose output even in the early stage of regenerating liver. 4. The increase in noradrenaline overflow during hepatic nerve stimulation in the early stage of regenerating liver was approximately the same as in normal liver. Liver glycogen was sufficiently preserved in the early stage of regenerating liver. However, noradrenaline infusion could no more increase glucose output both in normal and in regenerating livers after 24 h of fasting that depleted liver glycogen. These results suggest that the impaired effects of sympathetic nerve stimulation on glucose metabolism observed in regenerating liver are derived neither from reduced release of noradrenaline nor from depletion of liver glycogen, but rather from transient reduction of gap junctions which assist signal propagation of the nerve action through intercellular communication in rat liver.  相似文献   

4.
Insulin infusion through the portal vein immediately after a pulse of [3-14C]pyruvate in 24 hr starved rats enhanced the appearance of [14C]glucose at 2, 5 and 10 min and glucose specific activity at 1, 2 and 20 min in blood collected from the cava vein at the level of the suprahepatic veins. Insulin infusion for 5 min decreased liver pyruvate concentration and enhanced both liver and plasma lactate/pyruvate ratio, and it decreased the plasma concentration of all amino acids. When insulin was infused together with glucose, [14C]glucose levels and glucose specific activity decreased in blood but there was a marked increase in liver [14C]glycogen, glycogen specific activity and glycogen concentration, and an increase in liver lactate/pyruvate ratio. The effect of insulin plus glucose infusion on plasma amino acids concentration was smaller than that found with insulin alone. It is proposed that insulin effect enhancing liver gluconeogenesis is secondary to its effect either enhancing liver glycolysis which modifies the liver's cytoplasmic oxidoreduction state to its more reduced form, increasing liver amino acids consumption or both. In the presence of glucose, products of gluconeogenesis enhanced by insulin are diverted into glycogen synthesis rather than circulating glucose. This together with results of the preceding paper (Soley et al., 1985), indicates that glucose enhances liver glycogen synthesis from C3 units in the starved rat, the process being further enhanced in the presence of insulin.  相似文献   

5.
The role of gluconeogenesis on the increase in plasma glucose and liver glycogen of rats exposed to hyper-G (radial acceleration) stress was determined. Overnight-fasted, male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-300 g) were injected i.p. with uniformly labeled 1 4C lactate, alanine, or glycerol (5 microCi/rat) and immediately exposed to 3.1G for 0.25, 0.50, and 1.0 hr. 1 4C incorporation of the labeled substrates into plasma glucose and liver glycogen was measured and compared to uncentrifuged control rats injected in a similar manner. Significant increases in 1 4C incorporation of all three labeled substrates into plasma glucose were observed in centrifuged rats at all exposure periods; 1 4C incorporation into liver glycogen was significantly increased only at 0.50 and 1.0 hr. The i.p. administration (5 mg/100-g body wt) of 5-methoxyindole-2-carboxylic acid, a potent gluconeogenesis inhibitor, prior to centrifugation blocked the increase in plasma glucose and liver glycogen during the first hour of centrifugation. The increase in plasma glucose and liver glycogen was also abolished in adreno-demedullated rats exposed to centrifugation for 1.0 hr. Propranolol, a beta-adrenergic blocker, suppressed the increase in plasma glucose of rats exposed to centrifugation for 0.25 hr. From the results of this study, it is concluded that the initial, rapid rise in plasma glucose as well as the increase in liver glycogen of rats exposed to hyper-G stress can be attributed to an increased rate of gluconeogenesis, and that epinephrine plays a dominant role during the early stages of exposure to centrifugation.  相似文献   

6.
Lactate production in the perfused rat liver   总被引:10,自引:9,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. In aerobic conditions the isolated perfused liver from well-fed rats rapidly formed lactate from endogenous glycogen until the lactate concentration in the perfusion medium reached about 2mm (i.e. the concentration of lactate in blood in vivo) and then production ceased. Pyruvate was formed in proportion to the lactate, the [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio remaining between 8 and 15. 2. The addition of 5mm- or 10mm-glucose did not affect lactate production, but 20mm- and 40mm-glucose greatly increased lactate production. This effect of high glucose concentration can be accounted for by the activity of glucokinase. 3. The perfused liver released glucose into the medium until the concentration was about 6mm. When 5mm- or 10mm-glucose was added to the medium much less glucose was released. 4. At high glucose concentrations (40mm) more glucose was taken up than lactate and pyruvate were produced; the excess of glucose was probably converted into glycogen. 5. In anaerobic conditions, livers of well-fed rats produced lactate at relatively high rates (2.5mumol/min per g wet wt.). Glucose was also rapidly released, at an initial rate of 3.2mumol/min per g wet wt. Both lactate and glucose production ceased when the liver glycogen was depleted. 6. Addition of 20mm-glucose increased the rate of anaerobic production of lactate. 7. d-Fructose also increased anaerobic production of lactate. In the presence of 20mm-fructose some glucose was formed anaerobically from fructose. 8. In the perfused liver from starved rats the rate of lactate formation was very low and the increase after addition of glucose and fructose was slight. 9. The glycolytic capacity of the liver from well-fed rats is equivalent to its capacity for fatty acid synthesis and it is pointed out that hepatic glycolysis (producing acetyl-CoA in aerobic conditions) is not primarily an energy-providing process but part of the mechanism converting carbohydrate into fat.  相似文献   

7.
Gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis were studied in isolated hepatocytes obtained from normal and alloxan diabetic rats. Insulin treatment maintained near-normal blood glucose levels and caused an increase in glycogen deposition. The third day after insulin withdrawal the rats displayed a diabetic syndrome marked by progressive hyperglycemia and glycogen depletion. Net glucose production in liver cells isolated from alloxan diabetic rats progressively increased with time up to 72 hr after the last in vivo insulin injection. Maximal glucose production was observed at 72 hr with 10 mM alanine, lactate, pyruvate, or fructose. Glucose production decreased at 96 hr. The same pattern was observed with the incorporation of labeled bicarbonate into glucose. Ketogenesis in liver cells and hepatic lipid content also peaked at 72 hr.  相似文献   

8.
The hepatic glucose output (Ra) was measured in dogs with indwelling arterial and venous catheters, using 2-3H-glucose as tracer according to the primed constant rate infusion technique. From the rate of disappearance of glucose and plasma glucose level the clearance rate (CR) was calculated. 1.2–1.5 g/kg manno-heptulose was given i.a. to control and methylprednisolone (MP) treated dogs. Plasma insulin (iRi) decreased and the resulting hyperglycemia was clearly caused by the sharp rise of Ra. A decrease of CR seemed to be responsible for the slow return of plasma glucose. Plasma FFA and lactate did not show marked changes. As iRi decreased plasma cAMP rose. MP treatment greatly (3.5 fold) potentiated the effects of MH on heptanic glucose output. It was concluded that the diabetogenic effect of MH was due by the excess breakdown of liver glycogen caused by the inhibition of insulin release and presumably by the increase of glucagon release as shown by others.  相似文献   

9.
Glycogen synthesis in the perfused liver of adrenalectomized rats.   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. A total loss of capacity for net glycogen synthesis was observed in experiments with the perfused liver of starved adrenalectomized rats. 2. This lesion was corrected by insulin or cortisol in vivo (over 2-5h), but not by any agent tested in perfusion. 3. The activity of glycogen synthetase a, and its increase during perfusion, in the presence of glucose plus glucogenic substrates, were proportional to the rate of net glycogen accumulation. 4. This complete inherent loss of capacity for glycogen synthesis after adrenalectomy is greater than any defect in hepatic metabolism yet reported in this situation, and is not explicable by a decrease in the rate of gluconegenesis (which supports glycogen synthesis in the liver of starved rats). The short-term (2-5h) stimulatory effect of glucocorticoids in the intact animal, on hepatic glycogen deposition, may be mediated partly through insulin action, although neither insulin or cortisol appear to act directly on the liver to stimulate glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

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

11.
1. The metabolic pattern of [U-(14)C]glucose in the isolated rat heart has been studied, with both retrograde aortic (Langendorff) and atrially (working) perfused preparations in the presence and absence of insulin, in normal animals, animals rendered insulin-deficient (by injection of anti-insulin serum 1hr. before excision of the heart) and animals rendered diabetic by streptozotocin injection 7 days before use. 2. Radioautochromatograms of heart extracts show that the pattern of glucose metabolism in heart muscle is more complex than in diaphragm muscle. In addition to (14)CO(2), glycogen, oligosaccharides, phosphorylated sugars and lactate (the main metabolites formed from [(14)C]glucose in diaphragm muscle), (14)C label from [(14)C]glucose appears in heart muscle in glutamate, glutamine, aspartate and alanine, and in tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates. 3. By a quantitative scanning technique of two-dimensional chromatograms it was found that a mechanical work load stimulates glucose metabolism, increasing by a factor of 2-3 incorporation of (14)C into all the metabolites mentioned above except lactate and phosphorylated sugars, into which (14)C incorporation is in fact diminished; (14)CO(2) production is equally stimulated. 4. Addition of insulin to the perfusion fluid of the working heart causes increases in (14)C incorporation, by a factor of about 1.5 into (14)CO(2), by a factor of about 3-5 into glycogen, lactate and phosphorylated sugars, by a factor of about 2-3 into glutamate and tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates and by a factor of about 0.5 into aspartate, whereas incorporation into alanine and glutamine is not affected. The effect of a work load on the pattern of glucose metabolism is thus different from that of insulin. 5. Increasing the concentration of glucose in the perfusion fluid from 1 to 20mm leads to changes of the pattern of glucose metabolism different from that brought about by insulin. (14)CO(2) production steadily increases whereas [(14)C]lactate and glycogen production levels off at 10mm-glucose, at values well below those reached in the presence of insulin. 6. In Langendorff hearts of animals rendered insulin-deficient by anti-insulin serum or streptozotocin, glucose uptake, formation of (14)CO(2) and [(14)C]lactate, and (14)C incorporation into glycogen and oligosaccharides are decreased. In insulin-deficient working hearts, however, glucose uptake and (14)CO(2) production are normal, whereas incorporation of (14)C into glycogen and [(14)C]lactate production are greatly decreased. 7. Insulin added to the perfusion fluid restores (14)C incorporation from glucose into (14)CO(2), glycogen and lactate in the Langendorff heart from animals rendered insulin-deficient by anti-insulin serum; in hearts from streptozotocin-diabetic animals addition of insulin restores (14)C incorporation into glycogen and lactate, but (14)CO(2) production remains about 50% below normal. 8. The bearing of these results on the problem of the mode of action of insulin is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
1. The effect of insulin on the perfused rat heart during normoxia and total ischaemia was studied by 31P-NMR. 2. During normoxic perfusion, insulin increased the phosphocreatine to ATP ratio at the expense of Pi, when glucose was the substrate. No change was observed when acetate was used as the sole substrate. The intracellular pH (as measured from the position of the 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate resonance peak) was unaffected by insulin treatment. 3. Infusion of insulin prior to ischaemia caused an increase in the rate and extent of acidosis during the period of no flow while the rate of ATP depletion was decreased. 4. Freezeclamped studies showed an increase in glycogen levels upon insulin treatment of the glucose perfused rat heart. During ischaemia, a decrease in glycogen content concomitant with an increase in lactate was observed. The accessibility of glycogen to phosphorylase during ischaemia is increased as a result of insulin treatment. The control of glycolysis during ischaemia is discussed with respect to the content and structure of glycogen in heart tissue.  相似文献   

13.
1. The metabolism of [U-(14)C]glucose in perfused resting and contracting diaphragm muscle from normal rats and rats made diabetic with streptozotocin was studied in the presence and absence of insulin. 2. The incorporation of [U-(14)C]-glucose into glycogen and oligosaccharides was stimulated by insulin under all experimental conditions studied. 3. In the normal perfused resting diaphragm muscle the incorporation of radioactivity from [(14)C]glucose into lactate and CO(2) was not affected by insulin. 4. Periodic contractions, induced by electrical stimulation of the perfused diaphragm muscle in the absence of insulin, caused an increased incorporation of (14)C into glycogen and hexose phosphate esters, whereas incorporation of (14)C into lactate was greatly decreased. Production of (14)CO(2) in the contracting muscle was not significantly different from that in resting muscle. Addition of insulin to the perfusion liquid caused a further increase in formation of [(14)C]-glycogen in contracting muscle to values reached in the resting muscle in the presence of insulin. Formation of [(14)C]lactate was also stimulated by insulin, to values close to those found in the resting muscle in the presence of insulin. 5. In the diabetic resting muscle the rate of glucose metabolism was very low in the absence of insulin. Insulin increased formation of [(14)C]glycogen to the value found in normal muscle in the absence of insulin. Production of (14)CO(2) and formation of [(14)C]hexose phosphate remained unchanged. 6. In the diabetic contracting muscle production of (14)CO(2) was increased to values approaching those found in normal contracting muscle. Formation of [(14)C]lactate and [(14)C]glycogen was also increased by contraction, to normal values. Only traces of [(14)C]hexose phosphate were detectable. Addition of insulin to the perfusion medium stimulated formation of [(14)C]glycogen, to values found in normal contracting muscle. Production of [(14)C]hexose phosphate was stimulated by insulin, to approximately the values found in the normal contracting muscle. Production of (14)CO(2) and [(14)C]lactate, however, was not significantly affected by insulin. 7. These results indicate that the defects of glucose metabolism observed in perfused resting diabetic diaphragm muscle can be partially corrected by contraction, and in the presence of insulin the contracting diabetic muscle has a completely normal pattern of glycogen synthesis and lactate production, but CO(2) production remains impaired.  相似文献   

14.
1. Net glycogen accumulation was measured in sequentially removed samples during perfusion of the liver of starved streptozotocin-diabetic rats, and shown to be significantly impaired, compared with rates in normal (starved) rats. 2. In perfusions of normal livers with glucose plus C3 substrates, there was an increase in the proportion of glycogen synthetase 'a', compared with that in the absence of substrates. This response to substrates, followed in sequential synthesis and enzymic sensitivity in the perfused liver of diabetic rats were reversed by pretreatment in vivo with glucose plus fructose, or insulin. Glucose alone did not produce this effect. 4. Glucose, fructose, insulin or cortisol added to e perfusion medium (in the absence of pretreatment in vivo) did not stimulate glycogen synthesis in diabetic rats. 5. In intact diabetic rats, there was a decline in rates of net hepatic glycogen accumulation, and the response of glycogen synthetase to substrates. The most rapid rates of synthesis were obtained after fructose administration. 6. These results demonstrate that there is a marked inherent impairment in hepatic glycogen synthesis in starved diabetic rats, which can be rapidly reversed in vivo but no in perfusion. Thus hepatic glycogen synthesis does not appear to be sensitive to either the short-term direct action of insulin (added alone to perfusions) of to long-term insulin deprivation in vivo. The regulatory roles of substrates, insulin and glycogen synthetase in hepatic glycogen accumulation are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
1. By perfusion of rat livers with 3mm-AMP in the perfusion medium we obtain increased intracellular concentrations of AMP. 2. These high intracellular concentrations of AMP lead to an increased output of glucose and urea into the perfusion medium. 3. The increased output of glucose in livers from fed rats is brought about primarily by an AMP-stimulated breakdown of liver glycogen. In livers from starved rats the increase in glucose output is not as great, reflecting the low contents of glycogen in livers from starved rats. 4. AMP inhibits gluconeogenesis from lactate in perfused livers. In the presence of high concentrations of lactate, however, the counteracting effects of AMP to increase glycogenolysis and to inhibit gluconeogenesis result in little change in the net glucose output. 5. The increased urea output is brought about by increased breakdown of amino acids that are present in the perfusion medium. In livers from starved rats the overall urea production is much higher, indicating increased catabolism of amino acids and other nitrogenous substrates in the absence of carbohydrate substrates. 6. AMP causes an inhibition of incorporation of labelled precursors into protein and nucleic acid. This may result from increased catabolism of precursors of proteins and nucleic acids as reflected by the more rapid breakdown of nitrogenous compounds. In support of this hypothesis, cell-free systems for amino acid incorporation isolated from livers perfused with and without AMP are equally capable of supporting protein synthesis. 7. The labelling pattern of RNA in perfused livers corresponds very closely to those found by pulse-labelling in vivo. AMP in no way alters the qualitative nature of the labelling patterns. 8. We consider these results as supporting evidence for the role of the concentration ratio of AMP to ATP in controlling the metabolic pathways that lead to the formation of ATP.  相似文献   

16.
1. When pancreatic islets are preincubated for 20h in the presence of glucose (83.3mM) and thereafter transferred to a glucose-free medium, theophylline (1.4mM) provokes a dramatic stimulation of insulin release. This phenomenon does not occur when the islets are preincubated for either 20h at low glucose concentration (5.6mM) or only 30 min at the high glucose concentration (83.3mM). 2. The insulinotropic action of theophylline cannot be attributed to contamination of the islets with exogenous glucose and is not suppressed by mannoheptulose. 3. The secretory response to theophylline is an immediate phenomenon, but disappears after 60min of exposure to the drug. 4. The release of insulin evoked by theophylline is abolished in calcium-depleted media containing EGTA. Theophylline enhances the net uptake of 45Ca by the islets. 5. Glycogen accumulates in the islets during the preincubation period, as judged by both ultrastructural and biochemical criteria. Theophylline significantly increases the rate of glycogenolysis during the final incubation in the glucose-free medium. 6. The theophylline-induced increase in glycogenolysis coincides with a higher rate of both lactate output and oxidation of endogenous 14C-labelled substrates. 7. These data suggest that stimulation of glycolysis from endogenous stores of glycogen is sufficient to provoke insulin release even in glucose-deprived islets, as if the binding of extracellular glucose to hypothetical plasma-membrane glucoreceptors is not an essential feature of the stimulus-secretion coupling process.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Carp, Cyprinus carpio, were subjected to a short term of fasting (2 months) and 12 days of refeeding. The early changes produced in plasma metabolites and hormones (insulin and glucagon) and their respective energy contribution in liver and muscle during fasting and refeeding was studied. Two phases of fasting were differentiated. The first phase (until day 8 of fasting) was characterized by a reduction in the hepatosomatic index mainly due to glycogen mobilization. A transitory increase in plasma glucose and lactate suggested an initial increase in energy demand. No changes were produced in the percentage of glycogen and protein in muscle, but musculosomatic index and the total body muscle protein decreased. Although the most depleted tissue in this phase was the liver, the loss of energy content of total muscle was higher. Stabilization of liver glycogen content, plasma glucose and lactate levels, decreased muscle protein levels and a reduction in the rate of body weight loss characterized the second phase (from day 8 of fasting). Protein content in whole muscle decreased by 22%, similar to the first phase. The energy expenditure of both liver and muscle was lower in this phase. Plasma insulin levels decreased two-fold and plasma glucagon three-fold in the first phase and remained low in the second phase of fasting. Twelve days of refeeding produced a greater increase in daily growth rate than in the control group and a recovery of plasma insulin, glucagon and glucose levels. Liver completely recovered. In contrast, musculosomatic index, protein and lipid content indicated that muscle did not completely recover from the 2 months of fasting, although and overshoot of muscle glycogen was observed.Abbreviations ANOVA analysis of variance - bw body weight - D1, D2, D5, D8, D19, D50 1, 2, 5, 8, 19 and 50 days of fasting, respectively - GSI gonadosomatic index - HSI hepatosomatic index - MSI musculosomatic index - P-DNA deoxyribonucleic acid phosphorus  相似文献   

18.
After a pulse of [3-14C]pyruvate, 24 hr starved rats were infused through the portal vein with two different doses of glucose (7.8 or 20.8 mg/min) or the medium, and blood was collected from the inferior cava vein at the level of the suprahepatic veins. The highest dose of glucose enhanced the appearance of [14C]glucose in blood from the 2nd to the 20th min after tracer delivery. It also enhanced production of [14C]glycogen and concentration of glycogen in the liver after 5 and 20 min. At 20 min of glucose infusion the appearance of [14C]glyceride glycerol in liver as well as liver lactate concentration and lactate/pyruvate ratio were increased. The low dose of glucose used enhanced liver values of [14C]glycogen, [14C]glycogen specific activity and glycogen concentration. Our results support the hypothesis that in the starved rat glucose is converted into C3 units prior to being deposited as liver glycogen and based on the liver zonation model (Jungermann et al., 1983) it is proposed that glucose stimulated gluconeogenesis by shifting the liver to the cytosolic redox state as a secondary consequence of increased glycolytic activity.  相似文献   

19.
This study evaluated the effects of an acute change in water pH (from pH 7.5 to 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, 7.5, 8.0 or 9.0) on several biochemical parameters in juveniles of the silver catfish, Rhamdia quelen. Ammonia levels decreased in the liver and increased in the muscle with increasing water pH. In the kidney, lower ammonia levels were observed at neutral pH. An increase in water pH decreased the glucose, glycogen and lactate levels in the liver and kidney (except for glycogen levels in the kidney and lactate levels in the liver, which presented lower levels at neutral pH). In muscle, the glucose and glycogen levels decreased with increasing water pH, whereas lactate levels tended to be lower at neutral pH. Gill and kidney Na+/K+-ATPase activities tended to increase in alkaline water, and the highest value was observed in fish exposed to pH 9.0. The optimal levels of the analyzed biochemical parameters occurred at neutral pH. In conclusion, exposure to acidic and alkaline pH changes the metabolic parameters of silver catfish as well as gill Na+/K+-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

20.
In the perfused rat liver stimulation of the hepatic nerves around the portal vein and the hepatic artery was previously shown to increase glucose output, to shift lactate uptake to output, to decrease and re-distribute intrahepatic perfusion flow and to cause an overflow of noradrenaline into the hepatic vein. The metabolic effects could be caused directly via nerve hepatocyte contacts or indirectly by the hemodynamic changes and/or by noradrenaline overflow from the afferent vasculature into the sinusoids. Evidence against the indirect modes of nerve action is presented. Reduction of perfusion flow by lowering the perfusion pressure from 2 to 1 ml X min-1 X g-1--as after nerve stimulation--or to 0.35 ml X min-1 X g-1--far beyond the nerve stimulation-dependent effect--did not change glucose output and lowered lactate uptake only slightly. Only re-increase of flow to 2 ml X min-1 X g-1 enhanced glucose and lactate release transiently due to washout of glucose and lactate accumulated in parenchymal areas not perfused during low perfusion flow. In chemically sympathectomized livers nerve stimulation decreased perfusion flow almost normally but without changing the intrahepatic microcirculation; yet it enhanced glucose and lactate output only insignificantly and caused noradrenaline overflow of less than 10% of normal. Conversely, in the presence of nitroprussiate (III) nerve stimulation reduced overall flow only slightly without intrahepatic redistribution but still increased glucose and lactate output strongly and caused normal noradrenaline overflow.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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