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1.
By using inhibitors and stimulators of different metabolic pathways the interdependence of the pentose phosphate cycle and lipogenesis in isolated fat-cells was studied. Rotenone, which is known to inhibit electron transport in the respiratory chain, blocked glucose breakdown at the site of pyruvate dehydrogenase. Consequently, because of the lack of acetyl-CoA, fatty acid synthesis was almost abolished. A concomitant decrease in pentose phosphate-cycle activity was observed. Phenazine methosulphate stimulated pentose phosphate-cycle activity about five- to ten-fold without a considerable effect on fatty acid synthesis. The influence of rotenone on both the pentose phosphate cycle and lipogenesis could be overcome by addition of phenazine methosulphate, indicating that rotenone has no direct effect on these pathways. The decreased rate of the pentose phosphate cycle in the presence of rotenone therefore has to be considered as a consequence of decreased fatty acid synthesis. The rate of glucose catabolism via the pentose phosphate cycle in adipocytes appears to be determined by the requirement of NADPH for lipogenesis. Treatment of cells with 6-aminonicotinamide caused an accumulation of 6-phosphogluconate, indicating an inhibition of 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. The rate of glucose metabolism via the pentose phosphate cycle as well as the rate of fatty acid synthesis, however, was not affected by 6-aminonicotinamide treatment and could still be stimulated by addition of insulin. Since even in cells from starved animals, in which the pentose phosphate-cycle activity is extremely low, no accumulation of 6-phosphogluconate was observed, it is concluded that the control of this pathway is achieved by the rate of regeneration of NADP at the site of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

2.
The provision of carbon substrates and reducing power for fatty acid synthesis in the heterotrophic plastids of developing embryos of sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) has been investigated. Profiles of oil and storage protein accumulation were determined and embryos at 17 and 24 days after anthesis (DAA) were selected to represent early and late periods of oil accumulation. Plastids isolated from either 17 or 24 DAA embryos did not incorporate label from [1-(14)C]glucose 6-phosphate (Glc6P) into fatty acids. Malate, when supplied alone, supported the highest rates of fatty acid synthesis by the isolated plastids at both stages. Pyruvate supported rates of fatty acid synthesis at 17 DAA that were comparable to those supported by malate, but only when incubations also included Glc6P. The stimulatory effect of Glc6P on pyruvate utilization at 17 DAA was related to the rapid utilization of Glc6P through the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (OPPP) at this stage. Addition of pyruvate to incubations containing [1-(14)C]Glc6P increased OPPP activity (measured as (14)CO(2) release), while the addition of malate suppressed it. Observations of the interactions between the rate of metabolite utilization for fatty acid synthesis and the rate of the OPPP are consistent with regulation of the OPPP by redox control of the plastidial glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity through the demand for NADPH. During pyruvate utilization for fatty acid synthesis, flux through the OPPP increases as NADPH is consumed, whereas during malate utilization, in which NADPH is produced by NADP-malic enzyme, flux through the OPPP is decreased.  相似文献   

3.
During the transition between the exponential and stationary phases of growth, there was a rapid accumulation of both cell-associated and extracellular enterotoxin B. Extracellular enterotoxin was synthesized until the cells entered the stationary phase during which cell-bound toxin was not detected. The differential rate of toxin synthesis relative to that of total protein synthesis was greater at pH 7.7 than at 6.0. Addition of glucose decreased the differential rate of toxin synthesis. This decrease was greater at pH 7.7 than at 6.0. Addition of pyruvate decreased the differential rate at pH 7.7 but not at 6.0. Analysis of the nongaseous end products of glucose and pyruvate metabolism showed that conditions which favor the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate also favor the repression of toxin synthesis. Elimination of thiamine from the medium prevented the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate by Staphylococcus aureus S-6 and partially or completely reversed the repression of toxin synthesis by glucose and pyruvate. In the absence of an added energy source, thiamine starvation caused a decrease in protein synthesis but an increased differential rate of toxin synthesis which was greater at pH 7.7 than at 6.0. In the absence of thiamine, pyruvate was not metabolized but caused a decrease in the rate of protein synthesis. This resulted in a twofold increase in the differential rate of toxin synthesis. Thus, conditions which altered the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate or decreased the rate of protein synthesis increased the rate of enterotoxin B synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract— Preparations of guinea pig brain nuclei, obtained by discontinuous gradient centrifugation in sucrose solutions of pH 6.7–6.8, containing 3 mM-MgCl2 and phosphate exhibited steady and reproducible oxygen uptake. Oxygen uptake was stimulated 60–70 per cent by glucose, pyruvate, oxalacetate or α-ketoglutarate and 267 per cent by succinate. This respiratory activity was unaffected by the relative sodium or potassium ion content of the medium and by variations in the concentration of inorganic phosphate. Agents known to inhibit citric acid cycle oxidation, oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis diminished oxygen uptake, but antibiotics inhibiting nucleic acid or protein synthesis did not. Treatment of the nuclear preparation with DNase decreased respiratory capacity, which was partially restored by the addition of polyacrylic acid.  相似文献   

5.
In mammalian cell culture technology glutamine is required for biomass synthesis and as a major energy source together with glucose. Different pathways for glutamine metabolism are possible, resulting in different energy output and ammonia release. The accumulation of ammonia in the medium can limit cell growth and product formation. Therefore, numerous ideas to reduce ammonia concentration in cultivation broths have been developed. Here we present new aspects on the energy metabolism of mammalian cells. The replacement of glutamine (2 mM) by pyruvate (10 mM) supported cell growth without adaptation for at least 19 passages without reduction in growth rate of different adherent commercial cell lines (MDCK, BHK21, CHO-K1) in serum-containing and serum-free media. The changes in metabolism of MDCK cells due to pyruvate uptake instead of glutamine were investigated in detail (on the amino acid level) for an influenza vaccine production process in large-scale microcarrier culture. In addition, metabolite profiles from variations of this new medium formulation (1-10 mM pyruvate) were compared for MDCK cell growth in roller bottles. Even at very low levels of pyruvate (1 mM) MDCK cells grew to confluency without glutamine and accumulation of ammonia. Also glucose uptake was reduced, which resulted in lower lactate production. However, pyruvate and glutamine were both metabolized when present together. Amino acid profiles from the cell growth phase for pyruvate medium showed a reduced uptake of serine, cysteine, and methionine, an increased uptake of leucine and isoleucine and a higher release of glycine compared to glutamine medium. After virus infection completely different profiles were found for essential and nonessential amino acids.  相似文献   

6.
1. The role of enhanced aerobic glycolysis in the transformation of rat thymocytes by concanavalin A has been investigated. Concanavalin A addition doubled [U-(14)C]glucose uptake by rat thymocytes over 3h and caused an equivalent increased incorporation into protein, lipids and RNA. A disproportionately large percentage of the extra glucose taken up was converted into lactate, but concanavalin A also caused a specific increase in pyruvate oxidation, leading to an increase in the percentage contribution of glucose to the respiratory fuel. 2. Acetoacetate metabolism, which was not affected by concanavalin A, strongly suppressed pyruvate oxidation in the presence of [U-(14)C]glucose, but did not prevent the concanavalin A-induced stimulation of this process. Glucose uptake was not affected by acetoacetate in the presence or absence of concanavalin A, but in each case acetoacetate increased the percentage of glucose uptake accounted for by lactate production. 3. [(3)H]Thymidine incorporation into DNA in concanavalin A-treated thymocyte cultures was sensitive to the glucose concentration in the medium in a biphasic manner. Very low concentrations of glucose (25mum) stimulated DNA synthesis half-maximally, but maximum [(3)H]thymidine incorporation was observed only when the glucose concentration was raised to 1mm. Lactate addition did not alter the sensitivity of [(3)H]-thymidine uptake to glucose, but inosine blocked the effect of added glucose and strongly inhibited DNA synthesis. 4. It is suggested that the major function of enhanced aerobic glycolysis in transforming lymphocytes is to maintain higher steady-state amounts of glycolytic intermediates to act as precursors for macromolecule synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
1. The infusion of sodium dichloroacetate into rats with severe diabetic ketoacidosis over 4h caused a 2mM decrease in blood glucose, and small falls in blood lactate and pyruvate concentrations. Similar findings had been reported in normal rats (Blackshear et al., 1974). In contrast there was a marked decrease in blood ketone-body concentration in the diabetic ketoacidotic rats after dichloroacetate treatment. 2. The infusion of insulin alone rapidly decreased blood glucose and ketone bodies, but caused an increase in blood lactate and pyruvate. 3. Dichloroacetate did not affect the response to insulin of blood glucose and ketone bodies, but abolished the increase of lactate and pyruvate seen after insulin infusion. 4. Neither insulin nor dichloroacetate stimulated glucose disappearance after functional hepatectomy, but both agents decreased the accumulation in blood of lactate, pyruvate and alanine. 5. Dichloroacetate inhibited 3-hydroxybutyrate uptake by the extra-splachnic tissues; insulin reversed this effect. Ketone-body production must have decreased, as hepatic ketone-body content was unchanged by dicholoracetate yet blood concentrations decreased. 6. It was concluded that: (a) dichloroacetate had qualitatively similar effects on glucose metabolism in severely ketotic rats to those observed in non-diabetic starved animals; (b) insulin and dichloroacetate both separately and together, decreased the net release of lactate, pyruvate and alanine from the extra-splachnic tissues, possibly through a similar mechanism; (c) insulin reversed the inhibition of 3-hydroxybutyrate uptake caused by dichloroacetate; (d) dichloroacetate inhibited ketone-body production in severe ketoacidosis.  相似文献   

8.
t-PA producing CHO cells have been shown to undergo a metabolic shift when the culture medium is supplemented with a mixture of glucose and galactose. This metabolic change is characterized by the reincorporation of lactate and its use as an additional carbon source. The aim of this work is to understand lactate metabolism. To do so, Chinese hamster ovary cells were grown in batch cultures in four different conditions consisting in different combinations of glucose and galactose. In experiments supplemented with glucose, only lactate production was observed. Cultures with glucose and galactose consumed glucose first and produced lactate at the same time, after glucose depletion galactose consumption began and lactate uptake was observed. Comparison of the metabolic state of cells with and without the shift by metabolic flux analysis show that the metabolic fluxes distribution changes mostly in the reactions involving pyruvate metabolism. When not enough pyruvate is being produced for cells to support their energy requirements, lactate dehydrogenase complex changes the direction of the reaction yielding pyruvate to feed the TCA cycle. The slow change from high fluxes during glucose consumption to low fluxes in galactose consumption generates intracellular conditions that allow the influx of lactate. Lactate consumption is possible in cell cultures supplemented with glucose and galactose due to the low rates at which galactose is consumed. Evidence suggests that an excessive production and accumulation of pyruvate during glucose consumption leads to lactate production and accumulation inside the cell. Other internal conditions such as a decrease in internal pH, forces the flow of lactate outside the cell. After metabolic shift the intracellular pool of pyruvate, lactate and H+ drops permitting the reversal of the monocarboxylate transporter direction, therefore leading to lactate uptake. Metabolic analysis comparing glucose and galactose consumption indicates that after metabolic shift not enough pyruvate is produced to supply energy metabolism and lactate is used for pyruvate synthesis. In addition, MFA indicates that most carbon consumed during low carbon flux is directed towards maintaining energy metabolism.  相似文献   

9.
Chloroquine (50 μm) is rapidly taken up by isolated hepatocytes in a temperature-dependent manner. It inhibits glucose synthesis from lactate, but not from pyruvate or dihydroxyacetone. The inhibition is reversed by lysine or ammonia but not by oleate or carnitine. Ammonia inhibits chloroquine uptake by the hepatocytes but lysine does not. Chloroquine also inhibits urea synthesis, the release of ninhydrin-reacting substances, the accumulation of amino acids, and the lactate-dependent accumulation of glutamate. Ethanol oxidation in the presence of lactate is also inhibited, and this too is reversed by lysine. Chloroquine increases the redox state of the cytosolic compartment, as evidenced by lactate-to-pyruvate ratios, of hepatocytes prepared from both 48-h fasted and meal-fed rats. The above findings are consistent with chloroquine entering the lysosomes of the hepatocytes and inhibiting proteolysis by raising the lysosomal pH. Isolated hepatocytes are deficient in amino acids and, chloroquine inhibition of proteolysis prevents replenishment of the amino acid pools. Thus, chloroquine prevents reconstitution of the malate-aspartate shuttle required for the movement of reducing equivalents into the mitochondrion during lactate gluconeogenesis, ethanol oxidation, and glycolysis. The metabolic competency of freshly isolated hepatocytes, therefore, depends on the replenishment of amino acid pools by lysosomal breakdown of endogenous protein. Furthermore, chloroquine uptake may be an index of lysosomal function with isolated hepatocytes.  相似文献   

10.
Less than 50% of theoretical oxygen uptake was observed when glucose was dissimilated by resting cells of Pseudomonas natriegens. Low oxygen uptakes were also observed when a variety of other substrates were dissimilated. When uniformly labeled glucose-(14)C was used as substrate, 56% of the label was shown to accumulate in these resting cells. This material consisted, in part, of a polysaccharide which, although it did not give typical glycogen reactions, yielded glucose after its hydrolysis. Resting cells previously cultivated on media containing glucose completely catabolized glucose and formed a large amount of pyruvate within 30 min. Resting cells cultivated in the absence of glucose catabolized glucose more slowly and produced little pyruvate. Pyruvate disappeared after further incubation. In this latter case, experimental results suggested (i) that pyruvate was converted to other acidic products (e.g., acetate and lactate) and (ii) that pyruvate was further catabolized via the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Growth on glucose repressed the level of key enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and of lactic dehydrogenase. Growth on glycerol stimulated the level of these enzymes. A low level of isocitratase, but not malate synthetase, was noted in extracts of glucose-grown cells. Isocitric dehydrogenase was shown to require nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP) as cofactor. Previous experiments have shown that reduced NADP (NADPH(2)) cannot be readily oxidized and that pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase could not be detected in extracts. It was concluded that acetate, lactate, and pyruvate accumulate under growing conditions when P. natriegens is cultivated on glucose (i) because of a rapid initial catabolism of glucose via an aerobic glycolytic pathway and (ii) because of a sluggishly functioning tricarboxylic acid cycle due to the accumulation of NADPH(2) and to repressed levels of key enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
Effectors of fatty acid synthesis in hepatoma tissue culture cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An investigation was undertaken to better understand the process of fatty acid synthesis in hepatoma tissue culture (HTC) cells. By comparing the findings to the normal liver some of the differences between normal and cancer tissue were defined. Incubation of the HTC cells in a buffered salt-defatted albumin medium showed that fatty acid synthesis was dependent upon the addition of substrate. The order of stimulation was glucose + pyruvate ~- glucose + alanine ~- glucose + lactate ~- pyruvate > glucose > alanine ? no additions. Fatty acid synthesis in HTC cells was decreased by oleate. In these respects HTC cells are similar to the liver; however, in contrast to the normal liver, N6, O2-dibutyryl cyclic adenosine 3′,5′-monophosphate (dibutyryl-cAMP) did not inhibit glycolysis or fatty acid synthesis. The cytoplasmic redox potential, as reflected by the lactate to pyruvate ratio, was found to be elevated compared to normal liver but unchanged by the addition of dibutyryl cAMP. Since higher rates of fatty acid synthesis are associated with lower lactate-to-pyruvate ratios in normal liver, it was expected that by decreasing the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio in HTC cells the rate of fatty acid synthesis would increase. One way to lower the lactate to pyruvate ratio is to increase the activity of the malate-aspartate shuttle. Stimulators of the hepatic malate-aspartate shuttle in normal liver (ammonium ion, glutamine, and lysine) had mixed effects on the redox state and fatty acid synthesis in HTC cells. Both ammonium ion and glutamine decreased the redox potential and increased the rate of fatty acid synthesis. Lysine was without effect on either process. Since NH4Cl and glutamine stimulate the movement of reducing equivalents into the mitochondria and decrease the redox potential, then the stimulation of fatty acid synthesis by NH4Cl and glutamine may be due to an increase in the movement of reducing equivalents into the mitochondria. However, if the shuttle were rate determining for fatty acid synthesis the rate from added lactate would be the same as from glucose alone but would be lower than from pyruvate which does not require the movement of reducing equivalents. This was not the case. Lactate and pyruvate gave comparable rates which were higher than glucose alone. Other possible sites of stimulation were investigated. The possibility that NH4+ and glutamine stimulated fatty acid synthesis by activating pyruvate dehydrogenase was excluded by finding that dichloroacetate, an activator of pyruvate dehydrogenase, did not stimulate fatty acid synthesis when glucose was added. Stimulation by NH4+ and glutamine at steps beyond pyruvate dehydrogenase was ruled out by the observation that NH4+ caused no stimulation from added pyruvate. NH4+ and glutamine did not alter the pentose phosphate pathway as determined by 14CO2 production from [1-14C]- or [6-14C]glucose. Ammonium ion and glutamine increased glucose consumption and increased lactate and pyruvate accumulation. The increased glycolysis in HTC cells appears to be the explanation for the stimulation of fatty acid synthesis by NH4+ and glutamine, even though glycolysis is much more rapid than fatty acid synthesis in these cells. The following observations support this conclusion. First, the percentage increase in glycolysis caused by NH4+ or glutamine is closely matched by the percentage increase in fatty acid synthesis. Second, the malate-aspartate shuttle, the pentose phosphate pathway, and the steps past pyruvate are not limiting in the absence of NH4+ or glutamine.  相似文献   

12.
Primary metabolism of a murine hybridoma was probed with (13)C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Cells cultured in a hollow fiber bioreactor were serially infused with [1-(13)C] glucose, [2-(13)C] glucose, and [3-(13)C] glutamine. In vivo spectroscopy of the culture was used in conjunction with off-line spectroscopy of the medium to determine the intracellular concentration of several metabolic intermediates and to determine fluxes for primary metabolic pathways. Intracellular concentrations of pyruvate and alanine were very high relative to levels observed in normal quiescent mammalian cells. Estimates made from labeling patterns in lactate indicate that 76% of pyruvate is derived directly from glycolysis; some is also derived from the malate shunt, the pyruvate/melate shuttle associated with lipid synthesis and the pentose phosphate pathway. The rate of formation of pyruvate from the pentose phosphate pathway was estimated to be 4% of that from glycolysis; This value is a lower limit and the actual value may be higher. Incorporation of pyruvate into the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle appears to occur through only pyruvate dehydrogenase; no pyruvate carboxylase activity was detected. The malate shunt rate was approximately equal to the rate of glutamine uptake. The rate of incorporation of glucosederived acetyl-CoA into lipids was 4% of the glucose uptake rate. The TCA cycle rate between isocitrate and alpha-ketoglutarate was 110% of the glutamine uptake rate. (c) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
The synthesis and release of alanine and glutamine were investigated with an intact rat epitrochlaris muscle preparation. This preparation will maintain on incubation for up to 6 hours, tissue levels of phosphocreatine, ATP, ADP, lactate, and pyruvate closely approximating those values observed in gastrocnemius muscles freeze-clamped in vivo. The epitrochlaris preparation releases amino acids in the same relative proportions and amounts as a perfused rat hindquarter preparation and human skeletal muscle. Since amino acids were released during incubation without observable changes in tissue amino acids levels, rates of alanine and glutamine release closely approximate net amino acid synthesis. Large increases in either glucose uptake or glycolysis in muscle were not accompanied by changes in either alanine or glutamine synthesis. Insulin increased muscle glucose uptake 4-fold, but was without effect on alanine and glutamine release. Inhibition of glycolysis by iodacetate did not decrease the rate of alanine synthesis. The rates of alanine and glutamine synthesis and release from muscle decreased significantly during prolonged incubation despite a constant rate of glucose uptake and pyruvate production. Alanine synthesis and release were decreased by aminooxyacetic acid, an inhibitor of alanine aminotransferase. This inhibition was accompanied by a compensatory increase in the release of other amino acids, such as aspartate, an amino acid which was not otherwise released in appreciable quantities by muscle. The release of alanine, pyruvate, glutamate, and glutamine were observed to be interrelated events, reflecting a probable near-equilibrium state of alanine aminotransferase in skeletal muscle. It is concluded that glucose metabolism and amino acid release are functionally independent processes in skeletal muscle. Alanine release reflects the de novo synthesis of the amino acid and does not arise from the selective proteolysis of an alanine-rich storage protein. It appears that the rate of alanine and glutamine synthesis in skeletal muscle is dependent upon the transformation and metabolism of amino acid precursors.  相似文献   

14.
In parenchymal liver cells isolated from fed rats, insulin increased the formation of 14CO2 from [1-14C]pyruvate (and presumably the flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase) by 14%. Dichloroacetate, an activator of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, stimulated this process by 133%. As judged from the conversion of [2-14C]pyruvate to 14CO2, the tricarboxylic acid cycle activity was not affected by insulin, but it was depressed by dichloroacetate. In hepatocytes from fed rats, incubated with glucose as the only carbon source, dichloroacetate caused a stimulation (31%) of fatty acid synthesis, measured as 3H incorporation from 3H2O into fatty acid, and an increased (134%) accumulation of ketone bodies (acetoacetate + D-3-hydroxybutyrate). Dichloroacetate did not affect ketone body formation from [14C]palmitate, suggesting that the increased accumulation of ketone bodies resulted from acetyl-CoA derived from pyruvate. Insulin stimulated fatty acid synthesis in hepatocytes from fed rats. In the combined presence of insulin plus dichloroacetate, fatty acid synthesis was more rapid than in the presence of either insulin or dichloroacetate, whereas the accumulation of ketone bodies was smaller than in the presence of dichloroacetate alone. Although pyruvate dehydrogenase activity, which is rate-limiting for fatty acid synthesis in hepatocytes from fed rats, is stimulated both by insulin and by dichloroacetate, the reciprocal changes in fatty acid synthesis and ketone body accumulation brought about by insulin in the presence of dichloroacetate suggest that insulin is also involved in the regulation of fatty acid synthesis at a mitochondrial site after pyruvate dehydrogenase, possibly at the partitioning of acetyl-CoA between citrate and ketone body formation.  相似文献   

15.
In order to study the quantitative relationship between fatty acid synthesis and pentose phosphate-cycle activity under different hormonal and dietary conditions affecting the extent of glucose uptake, cells isolated from rat epididymal adipose tissue were incubated in bicarbonate buffer containing [U-(14)C]-, [1-(14)C]- or [6-(14)C]-glucose. From the amount of glucose taken up, the production of lactate and pyruvate, and the incorporation of (14)C from differently labelled [(14)C]glucose into CO(2), fatty acids and glyceride glycerol, the rates of glucose metabolism via different pathways and the extent of lipogenesis under various experimental conditions were determined. The contribution of the pentose phosphate-cycle to glucose metabolism under normal conditions was calculated to be 8%. Starvation and re-feeding, and the presence of insulin, caused an enhancement of glucose uptake, pentose phosphate-cycle activity and fatty acid synthesis. Plots of both pentose phosphate-cycle activity and fatty acid synthesis versus glucose uptake revealed that the extent of glucose uptake, over a wide range, determines the rates of fatty acid synthesis and glucose metabolism via the pentose phosphate cycle. A balance of formation and production of nicotinamide nucleotides in the cytoplasm was established. The total amount of cytoplasmic NADH and NADPH formed was only in slight excess over the hydrogen equivalents required for the synthesis of fatty acids, glyceride glycerol and lactate. Except in cells from starved animals, the pentose phosphate cycle was found to provide only about 60% of the NADPH required for fatty acid synthesis. The results are discussed with respect to an overall control of the different metabolic and biosynthetic reactions in the fat-cells by the amount of glucose transported into the cell.  相似文献   

16.
The possibility that the availability of ATP may affect the rate of synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate (measured as citrulline) by carbamoyl phosphate synthase (ammonia) was studied using respiring isolated rat liver mitochondria incubated with added ADP, with hexokinase, glucose, and ATP, or with atractylate, in order to enhance or prevent the efflux of mitochondrial ATP. The effects of these agents were compared with those on oxaloacetate synthesis from pyruvate. Addition of hexokinase, glucose, and ATP to isolated mitochondria resulted in an inhibition of citrulline synthesis which was proportional to the amounts of glucose 6-phosphate formed; under these conditions, matrix ATP and ATP/ADP tended to decrease. The addition of increasing amounts of ADP also resulted in proportional inhibition of citrulline synthesis, but in this case the matrix content of ATP and ADP increased, and ATP/ADP decreased very slightly. In the presence of atractylate, citrulline synthesis was maximal despite a 30% decrease in matrix ATP and ATP/ADP. These effects were observed whether pyruvate, succinate, glutamate, or β-OH-butyrate was used as the respiratory substrate. ADP, the hexokinase system, and atractylate had qualitatively similar but much less pronounced effects on oxaloacetate synthesis from pyruvate. Within the limits of variation observed in these experiments, the rate of synthesis of citrulline appears not to be affected by the matrix content of total ATP, total ADP, or by ATP/ADP. It is affected, however, by the velocity of translocation of ATP into the extramitochondrial medium. These findings suggest that carbamoyl phosphate synthase (ammonia) may be loosely associated with the mitochondrial inner membrane, and may compete for ATP with the ATP-ADP translocator to an extent determined by the extramitochondrial demands for ATP.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The mechanism by which calcium regulates leptin secretion was studied in adipocytes isolated from rat white adipose tissue. Incubation of adipocytes in a medium containing glucose, but no calcium, markedly inhibited insulin-stimulated leptin secretion (ISLS) and synthesis, without affecting basal leptin secretion or lipolysis. However, when pyruvate was used as a substrate, ISLS was insensitive to the absence of calcium. Likewise, the stimulatory effects of insulin were completely prevented by phloretin, cytochalasin B, and W-13 (3 agents that interfere with early steps of glucose metabolism) in the presence of glucose, but not in the presence of pyruvate. Thus calcium appears to be specifically required for glucose utilization. On the other hand, (45)Ca uptake and leptin secretion were not affected by insulin or by inhibitors of L-type calcium channels. However, agents increasing plasma membrane permeability to calcium (high calcium concentrations, A-23187, and ATP) increased (45)Ca uptake and concomitantly inhibited ISLS. Similarly, release of endogenous calcium stores by thapsigargin inhibited ISLS in a dose-dependent manner. ATP, A-23187, calcium, and thapsigargin inhibited ISLS, even in the presence of pyruvate. These results show that 1) extracellular calcium is necessary for ISLS, mainly by affecting glucose uptake, 2) insulin does not affect extracellular calcium uptake, and 3) increasing cytosolic calcium by stimulating its uptake or its release from endogenous stores inhibits ISLS at a level independent of glucose metabolism. Thus calcium regulates leptin secretion from adipocytes in a manner that is markedly different from its role in the exocytosis of many other polypeptidic hormones.  相似文献   

19.
Isolated rat renal tubules from glucose from pyruvate, malate, glycerol and α-ketoglutarate. The rate of glucose formation from all but glycerol is enhanced by an increase in Ca2+ concentration. Because changes in inorganic phosphate concentrations influence the uptake and retention of calcium by isolated cells, the effect of changes in phosphate concentration upon renal gluconeogenesis was examined. It was found that changing phosphate concentration altered the metabolism of isolated rat renal tubules in three ways which dependend upon the Ca2+ concentration. In the absence of Ca2+, increasing phosphate concentration from 0.07 to 1.2 mM led to a stimulation of the decarboxylation of [U-14C]malate, [1-14C]pyruvate, [2-14C]-pyruvate, α-keto[5-14C]glutarate and [1,3-14C2]glycerol, and to an increase in ATP concentration but had no effect upon the rate of glucose formation from malate, pyruvate, α-ketoglutarate but a slight stimulation of glucose production from glycerol. A further increase in phosphate above 1.2 mM had no effect on any of these parameters. In the presence of either low (0.2 mM) or high (2.0 mM) Ca2+, changing phosphate concentration had no effect upon the decarboxylation of any of these substrates except glycerol whose decarboxylation was stimulated by increasing medium phosphate concentration. In the presence of calcium, increasing phosphate concentration led to an inhibition of glucose formation from malate, pyruvate and α-ketoglutarate but not from glycerol. Also in the presence of calcium both parathyroid hormone and cyclic AMP stimulated glucose formation, and under these conditions increasing phosphate concentration led to an inhibition of glucose formation. In tubules treated with parathyroid hormone an increase in phosphate concentration from 0.07 to 6.0 mM led to a significant increase in cyclic AMP concentration even though the rate of glucose formation decreased.Analysis of metabolite concentrations and rates of substrates decarboxylations, under a variety of conditions, revealed that Pi altered renal gluconeogenesis at a site different from those controlled by changes in Ca2+ concentration. The Pi-control site was tentatively identified as the glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase-glycerate kinase reaction sequence. However, the effect of changing Pi concentration upon parathyroid hormone-induced alterations in cyclic AMP concentration could not be explained by this action of Pi, and was probably due to an effect of Pi upon cellular calcium distribution. Thus, changes in Pi concentration appear to have two cellular effects, only one of which is related to a change in cellular calcium metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
The role of pyruvate metabolism in the triggering of aerobic, alcoholic fermentation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been studied. Since Candida utilis does not exhibit a Crabtree effect. this yeast was used as a reference organism. The localization, activity and kinetic properties of pyruvate carboxylase (EC 6.4.1.1), the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and pyruvate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.1) in cells of glucose-limited chemostat cultures of the two yeasts were compared. In contrast to the general situation in fungi, plants and animals, pyruvate carboxylase was found to be a cytosolic enzyme in both yeasts. This implies that for anabolic processes, transport of C4-dicarboxylic acids into the mitochondria is required. Isolated mitochondria from both yeasts exhibited the same kinetics with respect to oxidation of malate. Also, the affinity of isolated mitochondria for pyruvate oxidation and the in situ activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was similar in both types of mitochondria. The activity of the cytosolic enzyme pyruvate decarboxylase in S. cerevisiae from glucose-limited chemostat cultures was 8-fold that in C. utilis. The enzyme was purified from both organisms, and its kinetic properties were determined. Pyruvate decarboxylase of both yeasts was competitively inhibited by inorganic phosphate. The enzyme of S. cerevisiae was more sensitive to this inhibitor than the enzyme of C. utilis. The in vivo role of phosphate inhibition of pyruvate decarboxylase upon transition of cells from glucose limitation to glucose excess and the associated triggering of alcoholic fermentation was investigated with 31P-NMR. In both yeasts this transition resulted in a rapid drop of the cytosolic inorganic phosphate concentration. It is concluded that the relief from phosphate inhibition does stimulate alcoholic fermentation, but it is not a prerequisite for pyruvate decarboxylase to become active in vivo. Rather, a high glycolytic flux and a high level of this enzyme are decisive for the occurrence of alcoholic fermentation after transfer of cells from glucose limitation to glucose excess.  相似文献   

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