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1.
Under fasting conditions, the cAMP-responsive CREB coactivator TORC2 promotes glucose homeostasis by stimulating the gluconeogenic program in liver. Following its nuclear translocation in response to elevations in circulating glucagon, TORC2 regulates hepatic gene expression via an association with CREB on relevant promoters. Here, we show that, in parallel with their effects on glucose output, CREB and TORC2 also enhance insulin signaling in liver by stimulating expression of the insulin receptor substrate 2 (IRS2) gene. The induction of hepatic IRS2 during fasting appears critical for glucose homeostasis; knockdown of hepatic IRS2 expression leads to glucose intolerance, whereas hepatic IRS2 overexpression attenuates the gluconeogenic program and reduces fasting glucose levels. By stimulating the expression of IRS2 in conjunction with gluconeogenic genes, the CREB:TORC2 pathway thus triggers a feedback response that limits glucose output from the liver during fasting.  相似文献   

2.
In fasted mammals, glucose homeostasis is maintained through induction of the cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) coactivator transducer of regulated CREB activity 2 (TORC2), which stimulates the gluconeogenic program in concert with the forkhead factor FOXO1. Here we show that starvation also triggers TORC activation in Drosophila, where it maintains energy balance through induction of CREB target genes in the brain. TORC mutant flies have reduced glycogen and lipid stores and are sensitive to starvation and oxidative stress. Neuronal TORC expression rescued stress sensitivity as well as CREB target gene expression in TORC mutants. During refeeding, increases in insulin signaling inhibited TORC activity through the salt-inducible kinase 2 (SIK2)-mediated phosphorylation and subsequent degradation of TORC. Depletion of neuronal SIK2 increased TORC activity and enhanced stress resistance. As disruption of insulin signaling also augmented TORC activity in adult flies, our results illustrate the importance of an insulin-regulated pathway that functions in the brain to maintain energy balance.  相似文献   

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Activation of the protein kinase mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) in both complexes 1 and 2 (mTORC1/2) in the liver is repressed during fasting and rapidly stimulated in response to a meal. The effect of feeding on hepatic mTORC1/2 is attributed to an increase in plasma levels of nutrients, such as amino acids, and insulin. By contrast, fasting is associated with elevated plasma levels of glucagon, which is conventionally viewed as having a counter-regulatory role to insulin. More recently an expanded role for glucagon action in post-prandial metabolism has been demonstrated. Herein we investigated the impact of insulin and glucagon on mTORC1/2 activation. In H4IIE and HepG2 cultures, insulin enhanced phosphorylation of the mTORC1 substrates S6K1 and 4E-BP1. Surprisingly, the effect of glucagon on mTORC1 was biphasic, wherein there was an acute increase in phosphorylation of S6K1 and 4E-BP1 over the first hour of exposure, followed by latent suppression. The transient stimulatory effect of glucagon on mTORC1 was not additive with insulin, suggesting convergent signaling. Glucagon enhanced cAMP levels and mTORC1 stimulation required activation of the glucagon receptor, PI3K/Akt, and exchange protein activated by cAMP (EPAC). EPAC acts as the guanine nucleotide exchange factor for the small GTPase Rap1. Rap1 expression enhanced S6K1 phosphorylation and glucagon addition to culture medium promoted Rap1-GTP loading. Signaling through mTORC1 acts to regulate protein synthesis and we found that glucagon promoted an EPAC-dependent increase in protein synthesis. Overall, the findings support that glucagon elicits acute activation of mTORC1/2 by an EPAC-dependent increase in Rap1-GTP.  相似文献   

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Abstract. Hormonal effects on gluconeogenesis from lactate were studied during the growth cycle of adult rat parenchymal liver cells using a primary monolayer culture system previously described [25]. Basal and glucagon-stimulated gluconeogenic ability were found to decline rapidly during log phase, insulin-stimulated growth. A progressive recovery of gluconeogenic activity was observed after cell division subsided. Rates of lactate-gluconeogenesis were found also to decline in the absence of prior insulin exposure. This decline was not as rapid as the loss observed in cells cultured with insulin. However, in insulin-deficient cultures gluconeogenesis was completely abolished after 12 days and did not reelevate with further incubation unless cells were washed and exposed to glucagon. Decreasing growth rates of insulin-supplemented cultures by decreasing serum concentrations resulted in comparatively higher gluconeogenic activity.
The results presented here are consistent with previous observations of hepatic parenchymal expression of 'differentiated function' during cellular growth phases in culture (i.e., differentiated functions are generally lost during rapid growth and regained as cells become quiescent). The present study, however, presents unexpected effects of insulin on the apparent growth-state dependent gluconeogenic recovery. Our data imply that although insulin has long been known to inhibit gluconeogenesis, its presence in culture may facilitate long-term basal maintenance of gluconeogenic enzyme activity. Insulin also functions as a growth factor whose initial mitogenic effect correlates with decreased gluconeogenic function. These changes show no simple or predictive correlation with cyclic nucleotide metabolism.  相似文献   

8.
Hormonal effects on gluconeogenesis from lactate were studied during the growth cycle of adult rat parenchyma liver cells using a primary monolayer culture system previously described [25]. Basal and glucagon-stimulated gluconeogenic ability were found to decline rapidly during log phase, insulin-stimulated growth. A progressive recovery of gluconeogenesis activity was observed after cell division subsided. Rates of lactate-gluconeogenesis were found also to decline in the absence of prior insulin exposure. This decline was not as rapid as the loss observed in cells cultured with insulin. However, in insulin-deficient cultures gluconeogenesis was completely abolished after 12 days and did not reelevate with further incubation unless cells were washed and exposed to glucagon. Decreasing growth rates of insulin-supplemented cultures by decreasing serum concentrations resulted in comparatively higher gluconeogenic activity. The results presented here are consistent with previous observations of hepatic parenchymal expression of 'differentiated function' during cellular growth phases in culture (i.e., differentiated functions are generally lost during rapid growth and regained as cells become quiescent). The present study, however, presents unexpected effects of insulin on the apparent growth-state dependent gluconeogenic recovery. Our data imply that although insulin has long been known to inhibit gluconeogenesis, its presence in culture may facilitate long-term basal maintenance of gluconeogenic enzyme activity. Insulin also functions as a growth factor whose initial mitogenic effect correlates with decreased gluconeogenic function. These changes show no simple or predictive correlation with cyclic nucleotide metabolism.  相似文献   

9.
The metabolic effects of glucagon and glucagon plus insulin on the isolated rat livers perfused with 10 mM sodium L-lactate as substrate were studied. Glucagon stimulated gluconeogenesis, ketogenesis and ureogenesis at the concentration used of 2.1 nM. The addition of insulin to give a glucagon-to-insulin ratio of 0.2 reversed all the glucagon effects. The glucagon enhancement of gluconeogenesis was accompanied by a rise in cytosolic and mitochondrial state of reduction of the NAD system and a fall in the [ATP]/[ADP] ratio. The analysis of the intermediary metabolite concentrations suggested, as possible sites of glucagon action, the steps between pyruvate and phosphoenolpyruvate as well as the reactions catalyzed by phosphofructokinase and/or fructose bisphosphatase. All the changes in metabolite contents were abolished when insulin was present. Glucagon increased the intramitochondrial concentration of all the metabolites, whose intracellular distribution was calculated. The finding of a significant rise in the calculated intramitochondrial concentration of oxaloacetate points to pyruvate carboxylation as an important site of glucagon interaction with the gluconeogenic pathway. A primary event in the glucagon action redistributing intracellular metabolites seems to be the mitochondrial entry of malate. The possibility is discussed that the changes in metabolite cellular distribution were brought about by the increased cellular state of reduction caused by the hormone.  相似文献   

10.
The key gluconeogenic enzyme fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) is induced when Saccharomyces cerevisiae are starved of glucose. However, when glucose is added to cells that have been starved for 3 days, FBPase is degraded in the vacuole. FBPase is first imported to Vid (vacuole import and degradation) vesicles, and these vesicles then merge with the endocytic pathway. In this report we show that two additional gluconeogenic enzymes, isocitrate lyase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, were also degraded in the vacuole via the Vid pathway. These new cargo proteins and FBPase interacted with the TORC1 complex during glucose starvation. However, Tor1p was dissociated from FBPase after the addition of glucose. FBPase degradation was inhibited in cells overexpressing TOR1, suggesting that excessive Tor1p is inhibitory. Both Tco89p and Tor1p were found in endosomes coming from the plasma membrane as well as in retrograde vesicles forming from the vacuole membrane. When TORC1 was inactivated by rapamycin, FBPase degradation was inhibited. We suggest that TORC1 interacts with multiple cargo proteins destined for the Vid pathway and plays an important role in the degradation of FBPase in the vacuole.  相似文献   

11.
Daytime restricted feeding (DRF) promotes circadian adaptations in the metabolic processing of nutrients. We explored the hepatic gluconeogenic response in DRF rats by the temporal profiles of the following: (1) the activity of glucose 6-phosphatase (G6Pase) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), as well as the periportal and pericentral distribution of PEPCK; (2) conversion of alanine to glucose; (3) glycemia and liver glycogen content; (4) presence of glycogen synthase (GYS) and its phosphorylated form (at Ser641, pGYS); (5) circulating levels of corticosterone, glucagon and insulin; (6) glucose-tolerance test; and (7) sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-coactivator 1α (PGC-1α). The results showed that DRF promoted: (1) a phase shift in G6Pase activity and an increase in PEPCK activity as well as a change of PEPCK from periportal to pericentral hepatocytes, (2) a net conversion of alanine to circulating glucose, (3) a decrease in glycemic values and a phase shift in the liver glycogen content, (4) a phase shift in GYS and an increase of pGYS, (5) an increase in the daily levels of corticosterone and glucagon, but a reduction in the levels of insulin, (6) normal glucose homeostasis in all groups and (7) an enhanced presence of SIRT1 and PGC-1α. It is proposed that the increased gluconeogenic in DRF group promotes synthesis of hepatic glycogen and the production of glucose. These results could be a modulation of the gluconeogenic process due to rheostatic adaptations in the endocrine, metabolic and timing regulation of liver and could be associated with the physiology of the food entrained oscillator.  相似文献   

12.
Fuel metabolism in fasted newborn rabbits   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Newborn rabbits delivered by Caesarean section at term were fasted for 72 h at 36 degrees C. Despite the abrupt interruption of maternal supply of energy substrates, glycaemia remains stable for 4 h after birth. This can be related to glucose production via rapid liver glycogenolysis; however, indirect evidence suggests that gluconeogenesis could also contribute to glucose production during this period. There is a selective decrease in the concentrations of gluconeogenic substrates and a suitable hormonal environment for gluconeogenesis as decreased insulin and increased glucagon concentration just after birth. The relative hypoglycaemia which develops after 6 h of life (2.6 mM at 72 h), despite high blood concentrations of non-esterified fatty acids and ketone bodies is not due to a deficient gluconeogenesis per se, as injection of gluconeogenic substrates to 72 h fasted newborns produces a three-fold increase in plasma glucose concentration. It is suggested that this relative hypoglycaemia is secondary to limited gluconeogenic substrate availability in the form of low circulting concentrations of gluconeogenic amino acids.  相似文献   

13.
The aim of these studies was to investigate the effect of hyperglycemia with or without hyperinsulinemia on hepatic gluconeogenic flux, with the hypothesis that inhibition would be greatest with combined hyperglycemia/hyperinsulinemia. A glycogen phosphorylase inhibitor (BAY R3401) was used to inhibit glycogen breakdown in the conscious overnight-fasted dog, and the effects of a twofold rise in plasma glucose level (HI group) accompanied by 1) euinsulinemia (HG group) or 2) a fourfold rise in plasma insulin were assessed over a 5-h experimental period. Hormone levels were controlled using somatostatin with portal insulin and glucagon infusion. In the HG group, net hepatic glucose uptake and net hepatic lactate output substantially increased. There was little or no effect on the net hepatic uptake of gluconeogenic precursors other than lactate (amino acids and glycerol) or on the net hepatic uptake of free fatty acids compared with the control group. Consequently, whereas hyperglycemia had little effect on gluconeogenic flux to glucose 6-phosphate (G-6-P), net hepatic gluconeogenic flux was reduced because of increased hepatic glycolytic flux during hyperglycemia. Net hepatic glycogen synthesis was increased by hyperglycemia. The effect of hyperglycemia on gluconeogenic flux to G-6-P and net hepatic gluconeogenic flux was similar. We conclude that, in the absence of appreciable glycogen breakdown, the increase in glycolytic flux that accompanies hyperglycemia results in decreased net carbon flux to G-6-P but no effect on gluconeogenic flux to G-6-P.  相似文献   

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15.
Although it is known that protein kinases are activated by cyclic AMP, the role of the activated kinase in the gluconeogenic response to cyclic AMP is not known. Therefore, we examined whether the inhibition of the gluconeogenic response in the liver is due to an interference with the activation of protein kinase in the following situations: (1) adrenalectomy, (2) Na+-free perfusate, (3) administration of local anesthetic. We measured protein kinase activity indirectly by measuring incorporation of 32P into proteins of the perfused liver, and directly by measuring the enzyme activity. We found no significant inhibition of activation of protein kinase in the above experimental conditions. It seems that in the intact liver, activation of protein kinase by itself is not sufficient to evoke metabolic responses. In order to clarify whether the requirement for ion redistribution is specific for the gluconeogenic response or not, the lipolytic and antilipogenic effects of glucagon and cyclic AMP were examined. Na+-free perfusate, local anesthetic or high K+ did interfere with the lipolytic and antilipogenic responses to these agents just as it interfered with the gluconeogenic response. It is likely that ion redistribution evoked by glucagon and cyclic AMP is essential to the expression of most, if not all, metabolic effects.  相似文献   

16.
A major problem in the insulin therapy of patients with diabetes type 2 (T2DM) is the increased occurrence of hypoglycemic events which, if left untreated, may cause confusion or fainting and in severe cases seizures, coma, and even death. To elucidate the potential contribution of the liver to hypoglycemia in T2DM we applied a detailed kinetic model of human hepatic glucose metabolism to simulate changes in glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, and glycogen metabolism induced by deviations of the hormones insulin, glucagon, and epinephrine from their normal plasma profiles. Our simulations reveal in line with experimental and clinical data from a multitude of studies in T2DM, (i) significant changes in the relative contribution of glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, and glycogen metabolism to hepatic glucose production and hepatic glucose utilization; (ii) decreased postprandial glycogen storage as well as increased glycogen depletion in overnight fasting and short term fasting; and (iii) a shift of the set point defining the switch between hepatic glucose production and hepatic glucose utilization to elevated plasma glucose levels, respectively, in T2DM relative to normal, healthy subjects. Intriguingly, our model simulations predict a restricted gluconeogenic response of the liver under impaired hormonal signals observed in T2DM, resulting in an increased risk of hypoglycemia. The inability of hepatic glucose metabolism to effectively counterbalance a decline of the blood glucose level becomes even more pronounced in case of tightly controlled insulin treatment. Given this Janus face mode of action of insulin, our model simulations underline the great potential that normalization of the plasma glucagon profile may have for the treatment of T2DM.  相似文献   

17.
Colony-bred sand rats were fed with rat pellet chow in restricted quantities or ad libitum for 8--10 or 28--31 weeks after weaning. The changes of glucose metabolism were characterized by an intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test. The daily food intake and the average weight gain differed only in the first 5--7 weeks of pellet nutrition. In the impaired glucose tolerance tests of all sand rats the high basal plasma IRI levels were not significantly increased by the grossly enhanced blood glucose concentrations. The insulin secretion of either acutely incubated or for 8 days cultivated isolated pancreatic islets, however, was stimulated already by low (1.7 and 5 mM) glucose concentrations in all diet groups. Otherwise the glucagon secretion of isolated islets was not suppressed by high glucose concentrations. No changes of insulin or glucagon contents of islets were found in the different diet groups. The adipocytes of all animals revealed a complete ineffectiveness of insulin on the glucose utilization to CO2 and triglycerides. The basal glucose conversion to CO2 and glycogen in skeletal muscle and the stimulatory potency of insulin was low and not distinctly different in all groups. In liver glycogen and triglyceride contents as well as gluconeogenic enzyme activities were not influenced by feeding of different quantities of pellet diet at the investigated time points. The time course of the metabolic and clinical alterations demonstrates that the peripheral organs become insensitive to insulin in the first weeks after weaning.  相似文献   

18.
Control properties of the gluconeogenic pathway in hepatocytes isolated from starved rats were studied in the presence of glucose. The following observations were made. (1) Glucose stimulated the rate of glucose production from 20 mM-glycerol, from a mixture of 20 mM-lactate and 2 mM-pyruvate, or from pyruvate alone; no stimulation was observed with 20 mM-alanine or 20 mM-dihydroxyacetone. Maximal stimulation was obtained between 2 and 5 mM-glucose, depending on the conditions. At concentrations above 6 mM, gluconeogenesis declined again, so that at 10 mM-glucose the glucose production rate became equal to that in its absence. (2) With glycerol, stimulation of gluconeogenesis by glucose was accompanied by oxidation of cytosolic NADH and reduction of mitochondrial NAD+ and was insensitive to the transaminase inhibitor amino-oxyacetate; this indicated that glucose accelerated the rate of transport of cytosolic reducing equivalents to the mitochondria via the glycerol 1-phosphate shuttle. (3) With lactate plus pyruvate (10:1) as substrates, stimulation of gluconeogenesis by glucose was almost additive to that obtained with glucagon. From an analysis of the effect of glucose on the curves relating gluconeogenic flux and the steady-state intracellular concentrations of gluconeogenic intermediates under various conditions, in the absence and presence of glucagon, it was concluded that addition of glucose stimulated both phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and pyruvate carboxylase activity.  相似文献   

19.
It was previously shown that glucagon and epinephrine have additive effects on both gluconeogenic and glycogenolytic flux. However, the changes in gluconeogenic substrates may have been limiting and thus may have prevented a synergistic effect on gluconeogenesis and a reciprocal inhibitory effect on glycogenolysis. Thus the aim of the present study was to determine if glucagon has a greater gluconeogenic and a smaller glycogenolytic effect in the presence of both epinephrine and clamped gluconeogenic precursors. Two groups (Epi and G + Epi + P) of 18-h-fasted conscious dogs were studied. In Epi, epinephrine was increased, and in G + Epi + P, glucagon and epinephrine were increased. Gluconeogenic precursors (lactate and alanine) were infused in G + Epi + P to match the rise that occurred in Epi. Insulin and glucose levels were also controlled and were similar in the two groups. Epinephrine and precursor administration increased glucagon's effect on gluconeogenesis (4.5-fold; P < 0.05) and decreased glucagon's effect on glycogenolysis (85%; P = 0.08). Thus, in the presence of both hormones, and when the gluconeogenic precursor supply is maintained, gluconeogenic flux is potentiated and glycogenolytic flux is inhibited.  相似文献   

20.

Background

An iron-overloaded state has been reported to be associated with insulin resistance. On the other hand, conditions such as classical hemochromatosis (where iron overload occurs primarily in the liver) have been reported to be associated with increased insulin sensitivity. The reasons for these contradictory findings are unclear. In this context, the effects of increased intracellular iron per se on insulin signaling in hepatocytes are not known.

Methods

Mouse primary hepatocytes were loaded with iron in vitro by incubation with ferric ammonium citrate (FAC). Intracellular events related to insulin signaling, as well as changes in gene expression and hepatocyte glucose production (HGP), were studied in the presence and absence of insulin and/or forskolin (a glucagon mimetic).

Results

In vitro iron-loading of hepatocytes resulted in phosphorylation-mediated activation of Akt and AMP-activated protein kinase. This was associated with decreased basal and forskolin-stimulated HGP. Iron attenuated forskolin-mediated induction of the key gluconeogenic enzyme, glucose-6-phosphatase. It also attenuated activation of the Akt pathway in response to insulin, which was associated with decreased protein levels of insulin receptor substrates 1 and 2, constituting insulin resistance.

Conclusions

Increased intracellular iron has dual effects on insulin sensitivity in hepatocytes. It increased basal activation of the Akt pathway, but decreased activation of this pathway in response to insulin.

General significance

These findings may help explain why both insulin resistance and increased sensitivity have been observed in iron-overloaded states. They are of relevance to a variety of disease conditions characterized by hepatic iron overload and increased risk of diabetes.  相似文献   

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