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1.
Effects of glucose concentration and anoxia upon the metabolite concentrations and rates of glycolysis and respiration have been investigated in the perfused liver of the fetal guinea pig. In most cases the metabolite concentrations in the perfused liver were similar to those observed in vivo. Between 50 days and term there was a fall in the respiratory rate and in the concentration of ATP and fructose 1,6-diphosphate and an increase in the concentration of glutamate, glycogen and glucose. Reducing the medium glucose concentration from 10 mM to 1 mM or 0.1 mM depressed lactate production and the concentration of most of the phosphorylated intermediates (except 6-phosphogluconate) in the liver of the 50-day fetus. This indicates a fall in glycolytic rate which is not in accord with the known kinetic properties of hexokinase in the fetal liver. Anoxia increased lactate production by, and the concentrations of, the hexose phosphates ADP and AMP in the 50-day to term fetal liver, while the concentration of ribulose 5-phosphate, ATP and some triose phosphates fell. These results are consistent with an activation of glycolysis, particularly at phosphofructokinase and of a reduction in pentose phosphate pathway activity, particularly at 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. The calculated cytosolic NAD+/NADH ratio for the perfused liver was similar to that measured in vivo and evidence is presented to suggest that the dihydroxyacetone phosphate/glycerol 3-phosphate ratio gives a better indication of cytosolic redox than the lactate/pyruvate ratio. The present observations indicate that phosphofructokinase hexokinase and possibly pyruvate kinase control the glycolytic rate and that glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase is at equilibrium in the perfused liver of the fetal guinea pig.  相似文献   

2.
Effects of glucose concentration and anoxia upon the metabolite concentrations and rates of glycolysis and respiration have been investigated in the perfused liver of the fetal guinea pig. In most cases the metabolite concentrations in the perfused liver were similar to those observed in vivo. Between 50 days and term there was a fall in the respiratory rate and in the concentration of ATP and fructose 1,6-diphosphate and an increase in the concentration of glutamate, glycogen and glucose. Reducing the medium glucose concentration from 10 mM to 1 mM or 0.1 mM depressed lactate production and the concentration of most of the phosphorylated intermediates (except 6-phosphogluconate) in the liver of the 50-day fetus. This indicates a fall in glycolytic rate which is not in accord with the known kinetic properties of hexokinase in the fetal liver. Anoxia increased lactate production by, and the concentrations of, the hexose phosphates ADP and AMP in the 50-day to term fetal liver, while the concentration of ribulose 5-phosphate, ATP and some triose phosphates fell. These results are consistent with an activation of glycolysis, particularly at phosphofructokinase and of a reduction in pentose phosphate pathway activity, particularly at 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase.The calculated cytosolic NAD+/NADH ratio for the perfused liver was similar to that measured in vivo and evidence is presented to suggest that the dihydroxyacetone phosphate/glycerol 3-phosphate ratio gives a better indication of cytosolic redox than the lactate/pyruvate ratio. The present observations indicate that phosphofructokinase and hexokinase and possibly pyruvate kinase control the glycolytic rate and that glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase is at equilibrium in the perfused liver of the fetal guinea pig.  相似文献   

3.
Experimental and model studies were performed to characterize the flux of glucose metabolism and the sharing of glucose-6-phosphate (Glu6P) by the upper parts of glycolytic and pentosephosphate pathways in the brain extract. A mathematical model based upon the kinetic equations of the individual enzymes was evaluated to fit the experimental data. Glucose is converted to glucose-6-phosphate by hexokinase that controls almost exclusively the glucose metabolism. Experiments showed that this crossroad-metabolite was shared between glycolysis and pentosephosphate pathway in the brain extract in a ratio of 1.5:1. This ratio was favorable to the pentosephosphate pathway by the addition of high excess of exogenous glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, standardly used for the activity assay of hexokinase, but still a significant part (17+/-3%) of the common intermediate was converted into the direction of glycolysis. Stimulation of glucose-6-phosphate formation via moderate (30-50%) increase of hexokinase activity by adding exogenous hexokinase or tubulin resulted in the slight increase of the relative flux into direction of glycolysis. The model correctly described all of these observations. However, when the activity of hexokinase was doubled with exogenous enzyme, significantly less glucose-6-phosphate was converted into direction of glycolysis than predicted. This discrepancy shows that the system did not behave in this case as an ideal one, which could be due to the formation of distinct pools for the intermediate.  相似文献   

4.
Using ion-exchange chromatography of sucrose phosphates on Dowex-1, it was demonstrated that the highly purified rat liver transketolase (specific activity 1.7 mumol/min.mg protein) is capable of catalyzing the synthesis of erythrose-4-phosphate, a metabolite of the pentose phosphate pathway non-oxidizing step, from the initial participants of glycolysis, i. e., glucose-6-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate. As can be evidenced from the reaction course, the second product of this synthesis is octulose-8-phosphate. The reaction was assayed by accumulation of erythrose-4-phosphate. The soluble fraction from rat liver catalyzes under identical conditions the synthesis of heptulose-7-phosphate (but not erythrose-4-phosphate), which points to the utilization of the erythrose-4-phosphate formed in the course of the transketolase reaction by transaldolase which is also present in the soluble fraction. The role of the transketolase reaction reversal from the synthesis of pentose phosphate derivatives to glycolytic products is discussed. The transketolase reaction provides for the relationship between glycolysis and the anaerobic step of the pentose phosphate pathway which share common metabolites, i. e. glucose-6-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate.  相似文献   

5.
Glucose and glutamine metabolism in several cultured mammalian cell lines (BHK, CHO, and hybridoma cell lines) were investigated by correlating specific utilization and formation rates with specific maximum activities of regulatory enzymes involved in glycolysis and glutaminolysis. Results were compared with data from two insect cell lines and primary liver cells. Flux distribution was measured in a representative mammalian (BHK) and an insect (Spodoptera frugiperda) cell line using radioactive substrates. A high degree of similarity in many aspects of glucose and glutamine metabolism was observed among the cultured mammalian cell lines examined. Specific glucose utilization rates were always close to specific hexokinase activities, indicating that formation of glucose-6-phosphate from glucose (catalyzed by hexokinase) is the rate limiting step of glycolysis. No activity of the key enzymes connecting glycolysis with the tricarboxylic acid cycle, such as pyruvate dehydrogenase, pyruvate carboxylase, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, could be detected. Flux distribution in BHK cells showed glycolytic rates very similar to lactate formation rates. No glucose- or pyruvate-derived carbon entered the tricarboxylic acid cycle, indicating that glucose is mainly metabolized via glycolysis and lactate formation. About 8% of utilized glucose was metabolized via the pentose phosphate shunt, while 20 to 30% of utilized glucose followed pathways other than glycolysis, the tricarboxylic acid cycle, or the pentose phosphate shunt. About 18% of utilized glutamine was oxidized, consistent with the notion that glutamine is the major energy source for mammalian cell lines. Mammalian cells cultured in serum-free low-protein medium showed higher utilization rates, flux rates, and enzyme activities than the same cells cultured in serum-supplemented medium. Insect cells oxidized glucose and pyruvate in addition to glutamine. Furthermore, insect cells produced little or no lactate and were able to channel glycolytic intermediates into the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Metabolic profiles of the type presented here for a variety of cell lines may eventually enable one to interfere with the metabolic patterns of cells relevant to biotechnology, with the hope of improving growth rate and/or productivity. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
A sharp and strong suppression of protein synthesis by cycloheximide in liver cells of starving rats is paralleled with activation of RNA synthesis and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase production. Subsequent reconstitution and stimulation of protein synthesis (6-12 hrs after cycloheximide injection) result in activation of hexokinase. Upon stimulation of DNA synthesis (48-60 hrs after cycloheximide injection) the activity of both enzymes is very low. Since glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase appears to be the limiting step of glucose decay via the pentose phosphate pathway, and hexokinase is the limiting step of glycolysis, it was assumed that RNA synthesis predominantly occurs via the pentose phosphate pathway, while that of proteins via glycolysis.  相似文献   

7.
1. Glycolysis by the supernatant fraction of homogenates of liver from guinea pigs and rats at various stages of development (foetal, newborn and adult) has been examined in a suitably fortified medium by measurement of inorganic phosphate uptake and production of lactate and glycerol 1-phosphate. 2. Starting with glucose as substrate, two rate-determining steps in glycolysis occur at the stages of glucose phosphorylation and the phosphofructokinase reaction in liver tissue from animals of all ages. Effects of the post-natal development of glucokinase are recorded. 3. The appearance of microsomal glucose 6-phosphatase activity around birth has an effect on glycolysis owing to competition for glucose 6-phosphate. 4. A stimulating effect of the nuclear fraction, especially from foetal liver, on glycolysis by the supernatant fraction is interpreted as being due to stimulation by adenosine-triphosphatase activity at the 3-phosphoglycerate-kinase stage.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Intensity of glycolysis and the pentose phosphate cycle in staphylococci sensitive and resistant to novobiocin was studied. The resistant variants did not practically store lactate and the activity of glycolytic enzymes i.e. hexokinase and aldolase was lowered by 15-20 and 53-59 per cent, respectively. Monoiodoacetate, a glycolysis inhibitor suppressed the glucose oxidation rate by 53.3-66.9 per cent in the sensitive variants and by 16-21.8 per cent in the resistant variants. At the same time it was characteristic of the resistant variants to increase the activity of the pentose phosphate cycle enzymes; glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase by 25-38.1 per cent transketolase by 21.5-27.3 per cent and transaldolase by 30-57.1 per cent. No differences in the transhydrogenase reaction kinetics of both the novobiocin sensitive and the novobiocin resistant variants were observed.  相似文献   

10.
1. The effect of acetoacetate on glucose metabolism was compared in the soleus, a slow-twitch red muscle, and the extensor digitorum longus, a muscle composed of 50% fast-twitch red and 50% white fibres. 2. When incubated for 2h in a medium containing 5 mM-glucose and 0.1 unit of insulin/ml, rates of glucose uptake, lactate release and glucose oxidation in the soleus were 19.6, 18.6 and 1.47 micronmol/h per g respectively. Acetoacetate (1.7 mM) diminished all three rates by 25-50%; however, it increased glucose conversion into glycogen. In addition, it caused increases in tissue glucose, glucose 6-phosphate and fructose 6-phosphate, suggesting inhibition of phosphofructokinase. The concentrations of citrate, an inhibitor of phosphofructokinase, and of malate were also increased. 3. Rates of glucose uptake and lactate release in the extensor digitorum longus were 50-80% of those in the soleus. Acetoacetate caused moderate increases in tissue glucose 6-phosphate and possibly citrate, but it did not decrease glucose uptake or lactate release. 4. The rate of glycolysis in the soleus was approximately five times that previously observed in the perfused rat hindquarter, a muscle preparation in which acetoacetate inhibits glucose oxidation, but does not alter glucose uptake or glycolysis. A similar rate of glycolysis was observed when the soleus was incubated with a glucose-free medium. Under these conditions, tissue malate and the lactate/pyruvate ratio in the medium were decreased, and acetoacetate did not decrease lactate release or increase tissue citrate or glucose 6-phosphate. An intermediate rate of glycolysis, which was not decreased by acetoacetate, was observed when the soleus was incubated with glucose, but not insulin. 5. The data suggest that acetoacetate glucose inhibits uptake and glycolysis in red muscle under conditions that resemble mild to moderate exercise. They also suggest that the accumulation of citrate in these circumstances is linked to the rate of glycolysis, possibly through the generation of cytosolic NADH and malate formation.  相似文献   

11.
It is shown in experiments on rats that the early postischemic period after 1- and 1.5-hour ischemia of kidneys is characterized by a decrease in the damage of the glycolytic system site which induces glucose-6-phosphate transformation into lactate and by an increase in the inhibition intensity of the initial hexokinase reaction of glycolysis. In the postischemic period after more prolonged (2-, 3-hour) ischemia the damage of the glycolytic system develops also at the site of glucose-6-phosphate transformation into lactate. Administration either of the nucleotide complex (NAD and AMP) or calmodulin inhibitors (aminazine and zinc sulphate) to rats prior to two-hour occlusion of kidneys vessels promotes a decrease in the inhibition of the glycolytic system activity in the postischemic period. At the same time the separate and combined application of zinc sulphate and triftazin (the most intensive calmodulin inhibitor) is not efficient. The positive effect of NAD, AMP and aminazine on the state of the glycolytic kidney system in the postischemic period correlates with the improvement of the blood microcirculation processes in them.  相似文献   

12.
Different values exist for glucose metabolism in white matter; it appears higher when measured as accumulation of 2-deoxyglucose than when measured as formation of glutamate from isotopically labeled glucose, possibly because the two methods reflect glycolytic and tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle activities, respectively. We compared glycolytic and TCA cycle activity in rat white structures (corpus callosum, fimbria, and optic nerve) to activities in parietal cortex, which has a tight glycolytic-oxidative coupling. White structures had an uptake of [(3)H]2-deoxyglucose in vivo and activities of hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphate isomerase, and lactate dehydrogenase that were 40-50% of values in parietal cortex. In contrast, formation of aspartate from [U-(14)C]glucose in awake rats (which reflects the passage of (14)C through the whole TCA cycle) and activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, and fumarase in white structures were 10-23% of cortical values, optic nerve showing the lowest values. The data suggest a higher glycolytic than oxidative metabolism in white matter, possibly leading to surplus formation of pyruvate or lactate. Phosphoglucomutase activity, which interconverts glucose-6-phosphate and glucose-1-phosphate, was similar in white structures and parietal cortex ( approximately 3 nmol/mg tissue/min), in spite of the lower glucose uptake in the former, suggesting that a larger fraction of glucose is converted into glucose-1-phosphate in white than in gray matter. However, the white matter glycogen synthase level was only 20-40% of that in cortex, suggesting that not all glucose-1-phosphate is destined for glycogen formation.  相似文献   

13.
Besides its essential role at regulating neural functions through cyclic GMP, nitric oxide is emerging as an endogenous physiological modulator of energy conservation for the brain. Thus, nitric oxide inhibits cytochrome c oxidase activity in neurones and glia, resulting in down-regulation of mitochondrial energy production. The subsequent increase in AMP facilitates the activation of 5'-AMP-dependent protein kinase, which rapidly triggers the activation of 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase--the master regulator of the glycolytic pathway--and Glut1 and Glut3--the main glucose transporters in the brain. In addition, nitric oxide activates glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, the first and rate-limiting step of the pentose-phosphate pathway. Here, we review recent evidences suggesting that nitric oxide exerts a fine control of neuronal energy metabolism by tuning the balance of glucose-6-phosphate consumption between glycolysis and pentose-phosphate pathway. This may have important implications for our understanding of the mechanisms controlling neuronal survival during oxidative stress and bioenergetic crisis.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of cold hypoxia were examined during a time-course at 2 °C on levels of glycolytic metabolites: glycogen, glucose, glucose-1-phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate, fructose-6-phosphate, fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, phosphoenolpyruvate, pyruvate, lactate and energetics (ATP, ADP, AMP) of livers from rats and columbian ground squirrels. Responses of adenylate pools reflected the energy imbalance created during cold hypoxia in both rat and ground squirrel liver within minutes of organ isolation. In rat, ATP levels and energy charge values for freshly isolated livers were 2.54 mol·g-1 and 0.70, respectively. Within 5 min of cold hypoxia, ATP levels had dropped well below control values and by 8 h storage, ATP, AMP, and energy charge values were 0.21 mol·g-1, 2.01 mol·g-1, and 0.17, respectively. In columbian ground squirrels the patterns of rapid ATP depletion and AMP accumulation were similar to those found in rat. In rat liver, enzymatic regulatory control of glycolysis appeared to be extremely sensitive to the decline in cellular energy levels. After 8 h cold hypoxia levels of fructose-6-phosphate decreased and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate increased, thus reflecting an activation of glycolysis at the regulatory step catalysed by phospho-fructokinase fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase. Despite an initial increase in flux through glycolysis over the first 2 min (lactate levels increased 3.7 mol·g-1), further flux through the pathway was not permitted even though glycolysis was activated at the phosphofructokinase/fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase locus at 8 h, since supplies of phosphorylated substrate glucose-1-phosphate or glucose-6-phosphate remained low throughout the duration of the 24-h period. Conversely, livers of Columbian ground squirrels exhibited no activation or inactivation of two key glycolytic regulatory loci, phosphofructokinase/fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and pyruvate kinase/phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and pyruvate carboxylase. Although previous studies have shown similar allosteric sensitivities to adenylates to rat liver phospho-fructokinase, there was no evidence of an activation of the pathway as a result of decreasing high energy adenylate, ATP or increasing AMP levels. The lack of any apparent regulatory control of glycosis during cold hypoxia may be related to hibernator-specific metabolic adaptations that are key to the survival of hypothermia during natural bouts of hibernation.Abbreviations DHAP dihydroxyacetonephosphate - EC energy charge - F1,6P2 fructose-1,6-bisphosphate - F2,6P2 fructose-2,6-bisphosphate - F6P fructose-6-phosphate - FBP fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase - G1P glucose-1-phosphate - G6P glucose-6-phosphate - GAP glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate - GAPDH glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase - L/R lactobionate/raffinose-based solution - MR metabolic rate - PDH pyruvate dehydrogenase - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPCK & PC phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and pyruvate carboxylase - PFK phosphofructokinase; PK, pyruvate kinase - Q 10 the effect of a 10 °C drop in temperature on reaction rates (generally, Q 10=2–3) - TA total adenylates - UW solution University of Wisconsin solution (L/R-based)  相似文献   

15.
Changes were measured in the rates of respiration and in the levels of glycolytic intermediates during the first 5 min after addition of 1.6 mM glucose to a suspension (5%, v/v) of respiring Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells incubated in an isotonic 50 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)methylglycine buffer (pH 7.4) at 38 °C. The rates of accumulation of lactate and glycolytic intermediates were used to calculate the in vitro velocities of glycolytic enzymes.The initial velocities of hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1), fructose-6-phosphate kinase (EC 2.7.1.11) and lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) in μmoles glucose equivalents/ ml cells per min were 14, 11 and 4, respectively. The velocities of the two kinases fell sharply to less than 5 between 5 and 10 s, while the velocity of the dehydrogenase declined gradually over the first minute. The initial burst of activity in the kinases, which lasted for about 8 s, was associated with a rapid accumulation of phosphate ester and a negative net ATP generation by glycolysis. The accumulation of phosphate ester is almost exactly matched by the generation of ATP by the “tail end” of glycolysis (triose-P to lactate) in this period. After this time (10–25 s) the rate of oxidative phosphorylation calculated as six times the rate of O2 consumption, is nearly identical to the combined rate of ATP utilization by hexokinase and fructose-6-phosphate kinase. As observed previously, oxamate (42 mM) blocked lactate dehydrogenase but did not depress the rate of phosphate ester accumulation.These various observations and correlations can be interpreted in terms of a dual glycolytic system. The accumulation of phosphate ester during the first 8 s is attributed to the operation of a partial glycolytic system, System B, which includes only the first three or four enzymes of glycolysis, and which draws upon an ATP pool (Pool I) previously employed in assorted cytoplasmic phosphorylations. The ADP generated by System B is rephosphorylated by and regulates the rate of a complete glycolytic system A, which converts glucose to lactate with little intermediate accumulation. The tail end of System A generates a new pool of ATP (Pool II) and controls the rate of glucose input through its head end, which is supplied by ATP being produced by oxidative phosphorylation. This scheme of interlocking controls is transient and alters after 8 s, when System B slows to a stop.  相似文献   

16.
This study examined the question of whether increases in plasma volume (hypervolemia) induced through exercise affect muscle substrate utilization and muscle bioenergetics during prolonged heavy effort. Six untrained males (19-24 yr) were studied before and after 3 consecutive days of cycling (2 h/day at 65% of peak O2 consumption) performed in a cool environment (22-23 degrees C, 25-35% relative humidity). This protocol resulted in a 21.2% increase in plasma volume (P less than 0.05). During exercise no difference was found in the blood concentrations of glucose, lactate, and plasma free fatty acids at either 30, 60, 90, or 120 min of exercise before and after the hypervolemia. In contrast, blood alanine was higher (P less than 0.05) during both rest and exercise with hypervolemia. Measurement of muscle samples extracted by biopsy from the vastus lateralis muscle at rest and at 60 and 120 min of exercise indicated no effect of training on high-energy phosphate metabolism (ATP, ADP, creatine phosphate, creatine) or on selected glycolytic intermediate concentrations (glucose 1-phosphate, glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, lactate). In contrast, training resulted in higher (P less than 0.05) muscle glucose and muscle glycogen concentrations. These changes were accompanied by blunting of the exercise-induced increase (P less than 0.05) in both blood epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations. Plasma glucagon and serum insulin were not affected by the training. The results indicate that exercise-induced hypervolemia did not alter muscle energy homeostasis. The reduction in muscle glycogen utilization appears to be an early adaptive response to training mediated either by an increase in blood glucose utilization or a decrease in anaerobic glycolysis.  相似文献   

17.
Flux through the glucose/glucose 6-phosphate cycle in cultured hepatocytes was measured with radiochemical techniques. Utilization of [2-3H]glucose was taken as a measure of glucokinase flux. Liberation of [14C]glucose from [U-14C]glycogen and from [U-14C]lactate, as well as the difference between the utilization of [2-3H]glucose and of [U-14C]glucose, were taken as measures of glucose-6-phosphatase flux. At constant 5 mM-glucose and 2 mM-lactate concentrations insulin increased glucokinase flux by 35%; it decreased glucose-6-phosphatase flux from glycogen by 50%, from lactate by 15% and reverse flux from external glucose by 65%, i.e. overall by 40%. Glucagon had essentially no effect on glucokinase flux; it enhanced glucose-6-phosphatase flux from glycogen by 700%, from lactate by 45% and reverse flux from external glucose by 20%, i.e. overall by 110%. At constant glucose concentrations cellular glucose 6-phosphate concentrations were essentially not altered by insulin, but were increased by glucagon by 230%. In conclusion, under basic conditions without added hormones the glucose/glucose 6-phosphate cycle showed only a minor net glucose uptake, of 0.03 mumol/min per g of hepatocytes; this flux was increased by insulin to a net glucose uptake of 0.21 mumol/min per g and reversed by glucagon to a net glucose release of 0.22 mumol/min per g. Since the glucose 6-phosphate concentrations after hormone treatment did not correlate with the glucose-6-phosphatase flux, it is suggested that the hormones influenced the enzyme activity directly.  相似文献   

18.
Several metabolic intermediates of glycolysis have been assayed by sensitive, quantitative microtechniques in an experimental mouse ependymoblastoma growing in brain and in cerebral hemispheres of the tumour-bearing animals after exposure to varying periods of ischaemia prior to freezing. Initial levels of glucose and lactate were higher, and ATP and glucose-6-phosphate lower, in the ependymoblastoma than in brain. During ischaemia glucose fell and lactate increased less rapidly in the tumour than in brain. The overall patterns of change in glucose-6-phosphate were similar in tumour and brain although the level of glucose-6-phosphate was consistently lower in the ependymoblastoma. ATP was very low in the tumour at the time of decapitation and it declined less precipitously than in brain, so that after 2 min of ischaemia levels were similar in the two tissues.  相似文献   

19.
Chronic metabolic alkalosis was induced in rats drinking 0.3 M NaHCO3 and receiving 1 mg furosemide/100 g body weight per day intraperitoneally. Another group of animals received a potassium supplement in the form of 0.3 M KHCO3. In this group, hypokalemia did not develop and muscle potassium fell by only 18% versus 50% in those not receiving potassium. In vitro renal production of ammonia and uptake of glutamine fell by 40% with a decrease in the activity of glutaminase I and glutamate dehydrogenase. Activity of phosphofructokinase, a major enzyme of glycolysis, rose only in the kidney of animals receiving a potassium supplement. Fructose-1,6-diphosphatase fell as well as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Malate dehydrogenase also fell. The activity of phosphofructokinase also rose in the liver, heart, and leg muscle. The major biochemical changes in the renal cortex were the following: glutamate, alpha-ketoglutarate, malate, lactate, pyruvate, alanine, aspartate, and citrate rose as well as calculated oxaloacetate. The concentration of intermediates like 2-phosphoglycerate, 3-phosphoglycerate, and glucose-6-phosphate fell. The cytosolic redox potential (NAD+/NADH) decreased. In addition to the fall in ammoniagenesis, it could be demonstrated in vitro that the renal tubules incubated with glutamine showed decreased glucose production and increased production of lactate and pyruvate. The concentration of lactate was elevated in all tissues examined including liver, heart, and leg muscle. This study confirms in the rat that decreased renal ammoniagenesis takes place following decreased uptake of glutamine in metabolic alkalosis. All other changes are accounted for by the process of increased glycolysis, which appears to take place in all tissues in metabolic alkalosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
In normal rat kidney (NRK) cell cultures, increased cell density results in a decrease in the rates of hexose transport, glucose utilization, and lactate production and an increase in the level of hexokinase activity. A murine sarcoma virus (Kirsten)-transformed cell line (KNRK) showed little or no density-dependent variation in sugar uptake, glucose consumption, or lactate production. On the other hand, hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase activities were elevated in dense transformed cultures as compared to sparse or uninfected cultures. In another virus-transformed cell line (ts339/NRK) exhibiting temperature-dependent morphology, growth pattern, and transport of 2-deoxy- -glucose, the levels of glycolytic enzyme activity were related to cell density but not to the culture temperature. The lack of correlation between glycolytic enzyme activity and lactate production by either uninfected or murine sarcoma virus-transformed cultures supports the suggestion that enhanced growth and/or hexose transport capacity rather than elevated glycolytic enzyme activity are responsible for the increased rate of lactate production by virus-transformed NRK cells.  相似文献   

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