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1.
Insulin-stimulated muscle glucose uptake is inversely associated with the muscle glycogen concentration. To investigate whether this association is a cause and effect relationship, we compared insulin-stimulated muscle glucose uptake in noncontracted and postcontracted muscle of GSL3-transgenic and wild-type mice. GSL3-transgenic mice overexpress a constitutively active form of glycogen synthase, which results in an abundant storage of muscle glycogen. Muscle contraction was elicited by in situ electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve. Right gastrocnemii from GSL3-transgenic and wild-type mice were subjected to 30 min of electrical stimulation followed by hindlimb perfusion of both hindlimbs. Thirty minutes of contraction significantly reduced muscle glycogen concentration in wild-type (49%) and transgenic (27%) mice, although transgenic mice retained 168.8 +/- 20.5 micromol/g glycogen compared with 17.7 +/- 2.6 micromol/g glycogen for wild-type mice. Muscle of transgenic and wild-type mice demonstrated similar pre- (3.6 +/- 0.3 and 3.9 +/- 0.6 micromol.g(-1).h(-1) for transgenic and wild-type, respectively) and postcontraction (7.9 +/- 0.4 and 7.0 +/- 0.4 micromol.g(-1).h(-1) for transgenic and wild-type, respectively) insulin-stimulated glucose uptakes. However, the [14C]glucose incorporated into glycogen was greater in noncontracted (151%) and postcontracted (157%) transgenic muscle vs. muscle of corresponding wild-type mice. These results indicate that glycogen synthase activity is not rate limiting for insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in skeletal muscle and that the inverse relationship between muscle glycogen and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake is an association, not a cause and effect relationship.  相似文献   

2.
The activities of glycogen phosphorylases a and b from the body wall musculature of the marine worm Arenicola marina (Annelida, Polychaeta) were determined after various periods of anoxia. Already under normoxic conditions one third of the total activity was produced from the a form. During anoxia the ratio of both forms as well as the total activity did not change. The activity of soluble phosphorylase kinase was comparatively low in this tissue 4.3 +/- 1.2 nmol . min-1 . (g wet wt.)-1; the fast twitching tail muscle of shrimps, e.g., had a 10-fold higher phosphorylase kinase activity, whereas phosphorylase activities in both tissues were about the same 2.3 +/- 0.5 mumol . min-1 . (g wet wt.)-1. Glycogen phosphorylase b was purified from the body wall tissue of the marine worm in one step by 5'-AMP-Sepharose resulting in a single protein band in SDS-PAGE. This preparation was accepted as substrate by the phosphorylase kinase from rabbit muscle but a complete phosphorylation could not be achieved. The molecular mass of native phosphorylase was approximately 216 kDa, that of subunits 95 kDa indicating that the enzyme exists as a dimer. There were no isozymes in this preparation, the RF-value (0.17) of the single band in PAGE ranged between those of the isozymes from mice hearts. The activities of phosphorylases b and a were similarly dependent on pH and temperature but differed drastically in the affinities to phosphate and AMP. In presence of 1 mM AMP the app. Km of phosphorylase a for phosphate was 16 mM, that of phosphorylase b above 100 mM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
1) Glycogen is degraded in the abdominal muscle of the shrimp Crangon crangon (Decapoda, Crustacea) during the recovery period following work. The regulation of post-exercise glycogen breakdown and the properties of glycogen phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1) have been studied: 2) Glycogen phosphorylase exists as unphosphorylated b-form and phosphorylated a-form, the latter contains 1 molecule phosphate/subunit. Both forms of phosphorylase are dimers, isoenzymes have not been detected. 3) The purified b-form is inactive in absence of AMP and has very low affinities for AMP and Pi. For half-maximum activation 0.33 +/- 0.04 mM AMP is necessary, and the Km-value for Pi at 1 mM AMP is 48 +/- 5 mM. IMP does not affect the activity of the b-form. 4) The a-form is active without effectors, its Km-value for Pi is 5.3 +/- 1.5 mM. The proportion of phosphorylase a increases in vivo, from about 25% at rest, to approximately 90% upon work and remains at this high level during the first minutes of recovery. 5) It is concluded that the glycogenolytic flux in the abdominal muscle of the shrimp even during post-exercise periods depends on the level of the a-form the activity of which is restricted in time and extent by the cytoplasmic Pi concentration (Kamp, G. & Juretschke, H. P. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 929, 121-127).  相似文献   

4.
The glycogen-associated protein phosphatase (PP1G/ R(GL))may play a central role in the hormonal control of glycogen metabolism in the skeletal muscle. Here, we investigated the in vivo epinephrine effect of glycogen metabolism in the skeletal muscle of the wild-type and R(GL) knockout mice. The administration of epinephrine increased blood glucose levels from 200 +/- +/- 20 to 325 +/- 20 mg/dl in both wild-type and knockout mice. Epinephrine decreased the glycogen synthase -/+ G6P ratio from 0.24 +/- 0.04 to 0.10 +/- 0.02 in the wild-type, and from 0.17 +/- 0.02 to 0.06 +/- 0.01 in the knockout mice. Conversely, the glycogen phosphorylase activity ratio increased from 0.21 +/- 0.04 to 0.65 +/- 0.07 and from 0.30 +/- 0.04 to 0.81 +/- 0.06 in the epinephrine treated wild-type and knockout mice respectively. The glycogen content of the knockout mice was substantially lower (27 percent) than that of both wild-type mice; and epinephrine decreased glycogen content in the wild-type and knockout mice. Also, in Western blot analysis there was no compensation of the other glycogen targeting components PTG/R5 and R6 in the knockout mice compared with the wild-type. Therefore, R(GL) is not required for the epinephrine stimulation of glycogen metabolism, and rather another phosphatase and/or regulatory subunit appears to be involved.  相似文献   

5.
The binding of rabbit muscle glycogen phosphorylase b to F-actin has been studied by sedimentation in analytical centrifuge in 10 mM Tris-acetate buffer pH 6.8 at 20 degrees C. The adsorption capacity of F-actin is equal to (7.8 +/- 0.9) X 10(-7) mole of glycogen phosphorylase b per 1 g of F-actin; the microscopic dissociation constant for the glycogen phosphorylase-F-actin complex is (5.4 +/- 0.5) X 10(-7) M. It was found that the allosteric activator, AMP, facilitates the adsorption of glycogen phosphorylase b on F-actin, whereas the substrate, Pi, and the inhibitor, ATP, cause an opposite effect.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of skeletal muscle glycogen content on in situ glycogenolysis during short-term tetanic electrical stimulation was examined. Rats were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: normal (N, stimulated only), supercompensated (S, stimulated 21 h after a 3-h swim), and fasted (F, stimulated after a 20-h fast). Before stimulation, glycogen contents in the white (WG) and red gastrocnemius (RG) and soleus (SOL) muscles were increased by 13-25% in S and decreased by 15-27% in F compared with N. Hindlimb blood flow was occluded 60 s before stimulation to produce a predominantly anaerobic environment. Muscles were stimulated with trains of supramaximal impulses (100 ms at 80 Hz) at a rate of 1 Hz for 60 s. Muscle glycogenolysis was measured from the decrease in glycogen content and estimated from the accumulation of glycolytic intermediates in the closed system. The resting glycogen content had no effect on measured or estimated glycogenolysis in all muscles studied. Average glycogenolysis in the WG, RG, and SOL muscles was 98.4 +/- 4.3, 60.9 +/- 4.0, and 11.2 +/- 3.6 mumol glucosyl U/g dry muscle, respectively. Hindlimb tension production was similar across conditions. The results suggest that in vivo glycogen phosphorylase activity in skeletal muscle is not regulated by the content of its substrate glycogen (range 80-165 mumol/g) during short-term tetanic stimulation in an anaerobic environment.  相似文献   

7.
The muscle isozyme of glycogen phosphorylase is potently activated by the allosteric ligand AMP, whereas the liver isozyme is not. In this study we have investigated the metabolic impact of expression of muscle phosphorylase in liver cells. To this end, we constructed a replication-defective, recombinant adenovirus containing the muscle glycogen phosphorylase cDNA (termed AdCMV-MGP) and used this system to infect hepatocytes in culture. AMP-activatable glycogen phosphorylase activity was increased 46-fold 6 days after infection of primary liver cells with AdCMV-MGP. Despite large increases in phosphorylase activity, glycogen levels were only slightly reduced in AdCMV-MGP-infected liver cells compared to uninfected cells or cells infected with wild-type adenovirus. The lack of correlation of phosphorylase activity and glycogen content suggests that the liver cell environment can inhibit the muscle phosphorylase isozyme. This inhibition can be overcome, however, by addition of carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), which increases AMP levels by 30-fold and causes a much larger decrease in glycogen levels in AdCMV-MGP-infected cells than in uninfected or wild-type adenovirus-infected controls. CCCP treatment also caused a preferential decrease in glycogen content relative to glucagon treatment in AdCMV-MGP-infected hepatocytes (74% versus 11%, respectively), even though the two drugs caused equal increases in phosphorylase a activity. Introduction of muscle phosphorylase into hepatocytes therefore confers a capacity for glycogenolytic response to effectors that is not provided by the endogenous liver phosphorylase isozyme. The remarkable efficiency of adenovirus-mediated gene transfer into primary hepatocytes and the demonstration of altered regulation of glycogen metabolism as a consequence of expression of a non-cognate phosphorylase isozyme may have implications for gene therapy of glycogen storage diseases.  相似文献   

8.
Adrenaline and insulin are the major hormones regulating glycogen metabolism in skeletal muscle. We have investigated the effects of these hormones on the rate-limiting enzymes of glycogen degradation and synthesis (phosphorylase and glycogen synthase respectively) in GM-/- mice homozygous for a null allele of the major skeletal muscle glycogen targeting subunit (GM) of protein phosphatase 1 (PP1). Hyperphosphorylation of Ser14 in phosphorylase, and Ser7, Ser640 and Ser640/644 of GS, in the skeletal muscle of GM-/- mice compared with GM+/+ mice indicates that the PP1-GM complex is the major phosphatase that dephosphorylates these sites in vivo. Adrenaline caused a 2.4-fold increase in the phosphorylase (-/+AMP) activity ratio in the skeletal muscle of control mice compared to a 1.4 fold increase in GM-/- mice. Adrenaline also elicited a 67% decrease in the GS (-/+G6P) activity ratio in control mice but only a small decrease in the skeletal muscle of GM-/- mice indicating that GM is required for the full response of phosphorylase and GS to adrenaline. PP1-GM activity and the amount of PP1 bound to GM decreased 40% and 45% respectively, in response to adrenaline in control mice. The data support a model in which adrenaline stimulates phosphorylation of phosphorylase Ser14 and GS Ser7 in GM+/+ mice by both kinase activation and PP1-GM inhibition and the phosphorylation of GS Ser640 and Ser640/644 by PP1-GM inhibition alone. Insulin decreased the phosphorylation of GS Ser640 and Ser640/644 and stimulated the GS (-/+G6P) activity ratio by approximately 2-fold in the skeletal muscle of either GM-/- and or control mice, but the low basal and insulin stimulated GS activity ratios in GM-/- mice indicate that PP1-GM is essential for maintaining normal basal and maximum insulin stimulated GS activity ratios in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
The purpose of the present study was to determine the rates of muscle glycogenolysis and glycogenesis during and after exercise in GLUT-1 transgenic mice and their age-matched littermates. Male transgenic mice (TG) expressing a high level of human GLUT-1 and their nontransgenic (NT) littermates underwent 3 h of swimming. Glycogen concentration was determined in gastrocnemius and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles before exercise and at 0, 5, and 24 h postexercise, during which food (chow) and 10% glucose solution (as drinking water) were provided. Exercise resulted in approximately 90% reduction in muscle glycogen in both NT (from 11.2 +/- 1.4 to 2. 1 +/- 1.3 micromol/g) and TG (from 99.3 +/- 4.7 to 11.8 +/- 4.3 micromol/g) in gastrocnemius muscle. During recovery from exercise, the glycogen concentration increased to 38.2 +/- 7.3 (5 h postexercise) and 40.5 +/- 2.8 micromol/g (24 h postexercise) in NT mice. In TG mice, however, the increase in muscle glycogen concentration during recovery was greater (to 57.5 +/- 7.4 and 152.1 +/- 15.7 micromol/g at 5 and 24 h postexercise, respectively). Similar results were obtained from EDL muscle. The rate of 2-deoxyglucose uptake measured in isolated EDL muscles was 7- to 10-fold higher in TG mice at rest and at 0 and 5 h postexercise. There was no difference in muscle glycogen synthase activation measured in gastrocnemius muscles between NT and TG mice immediately after exercise. These results demonstrate that the rate of muscle glycogen accumulation postexercise exhibits two phases in TG: 1) an early phase (0-5 h), with rapid glycogen accumulation similar to that of NT mice, and 2) a progressive increase in muscle glycogen concentration, which differs from that of NT mice, during the second phase (5-24 h). Our data suggest that the high level of steady-state muscle glycogen in TG mice is due to the increase in muscle glucose transport activity.  相似文献   

10.
The author studied the effect of adrenaline (500 mug/kg s.c.) on the glycogen content of white (extensor digitorum longus -- EDL) and red (soleus -- SOL) muscle of normal and alloxan-diabetic rats. In normal rats, whose nutritional state varied at the time of adrenaline administration (after a 24 hours' fast, fed ad libitum or given 5 g glucose/kg as a 20% solution intragastrically 2 hours before injecting adrenaline), no marked post-adrenaline differences were found between the size of the decrease in the amount of glycogen in white and red muscle. In addition, no significant differences were found between the three groups of animals in glycogen concentration in the EDL (0.3+/-0.05, 0.35+/-0.03 and 0.26+/-0.02 mg/g) or in the SOL, apart from one exception (0.23+/-0.02, 0.2+/-0.01, and 0.51+/-0.03 mg/g), after adrenaline. The glycogen concentration in the white and red muscle of diabetic rats fed ad libitum fell to values similar to those in normal rats after adrenaline (0.32+/-0.05 mg/g in the EDL and 0.18+/-0.02 mg/g in the SOL). These results supoort the view of authors who hold that glycogenolysis is possible without pre-activation of phosphorylase; they also support the idea, expressed by Krebs, of the existence of a reciprocal relationship between phosphorylase activity and the glycogen concentration, according to which glycogen itself may influence its own degradation.  相似文献   

11.
Mice with muscle-specific knockout of the Glut4 glucose transporter (muscle-G4KO) are insulin resistant and mildly diabetic. Here we show that despite markedly reduced glucose transport in muscle, muscle glycogen content in the fasted state is increased. We sought to determine the mechanism(s). Basal glycogen synthase activity is increased by 34% and glycogen phosphorylase activity is decreased by 17% (P < 0.05) in muscle of muscle-G4KO mice. Contraction-induced glycogen breakdown is normal. The increased glycogen synthase activity occurs in spite of decreased signaling through the insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1)-phosphoinositide (PI) 3-kinase-Akt pathway and increased glycogen synthase kinase 3beta (GSK3beta) activity in the basal state. Hexokinase II is increased, leading to an approximately twofold increase in glucose-6-phosphate levels. In addition, the levels of two scaffolding proteins that are glycogen-targeting subunits of protein phosphatase 1 (PP1), the muscle-specific regulatory subunit (RGL) and the protein targeting to glycogen (PTG), are strikingly increased by 3.2- to 4.2-fold in muscle of muscle-G4KO mice compared to wild-type mice. The catalytic activity of PP1, which dephosphorylates and activates glycogen synthase, is also increased. This dominates over the GSK3 effects, since glycogen synthase phosphorylation on the GSK3-regulated site is decreased. Thus, the markedly reduced glucose transport in muscle results in increased glycogen synthase activity due to increased hexokinase II, glucose-6-phosphate, and RGL and PTG levels and enhanced PP1 activity. This, combined with decreased glycogen phosphorylase activity, results in increased glycogen content in muscle in the fasted state when glucose transport is reduced.  相似文献   

12.
The responses of hepatic glycogen synthase and phosphorylase to fasting and refeeding were assessed as part of an investigation into possible sites of insulin resistance in gold thioglucose (GTG) obese mice. The active forms glycogen synthase and phosphorylase (synthase I and phosphorylase a) and the total activity of these enzymes were estimated in lean and GTG mice over 48 h of food deprivation, and for 120 min after glucose gavage (1 g/kg wt). In lean mice there was a maximal reduction in hepatic glycogen content after 12 h of starvation and the activity of phosphorylase a decreased from 23.8 +/- 1.9 to 6.8 +/- 0.7 mumol/g protein/min. These changes were accompanied by an increase in the activity of synthase I (from 0.14 +/- 0.01 to 0.46 +/- 0.04 mumol/g protein/min). In obese mice, similar changes in enzyme activity occurred after 48 h of starvation. These changes were accompanied by a significant reduction in the hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia of the GTG mice. After glucose gavage in both lean and obese mice, the activity of synthase I further increased over the first 30 min and declined thereafter. The activity of phosphorylase a increased progressively after refeeding. Results from this study suggest that despite increased hepatic glycogen deposition, the responses of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase, in livers of obese mice, to fasting and refeeding are similar to those of control mice even in the presence of insulin resistance.  相似文献   

13.
The phosphorylated form of liver glycogen phosphorylase (alpha-1,4-glucan : orthophosphate alpha-glucosyl-transferase, EC 2.4.1.1) (phosphorylase a) is active and easily measured while the dephosphorylated form (phosphorylase b), in contrast to the muscle enzyme, has been reported to be essentially inactive even in the presence of AMP. We have purified both forms of phosphorylase from rat liver and studied the characteristics of each. Phosphorylase b activity can be measured with our assay conditions. The phosphorylase b we obtained was stimulated by high concentrations of sulfate, and was a substrate for muscle phosphorylase kinase whereas phosphorylase a was inhibited by sulfate, and was a substrate for liver phosphorylase phosphatase. Substrate binding to phosphorylase b was poor (KM glycogen = 2.5 mM, glucose-1-P = 250 mM) compared to phosphorylase a (KM glycogen = 1.8 mM, KM glucose-1-P = 0.7 mM). Liver phosphorylase b was active in the absence of AMP. However, AMP lowered the KM for glucose-1-P to 80 mM for purified phosphorylase b and to 60 mM for the enzyme in crude extract (Ka = 0.5 mM). Using appropriate substrate, buffer and AMP concentrations, assay conditions have been developed which allow determination of phosphorylase a and 90% of the phosphorylase b activity in liver extracts. Interconversion of the two forms can be demonstrated in vivo (under acute stimulation) and in vitro with little change in total activity. A decrease in total phosphorylase activity has been observed after prolonged starvation and in diabetes.  相似文献   

14.
Muscle glycogen levels in the perfused rat hemicorpus preparation were reduced two-thirds by electrical stimulation plus exposure to epinephrine (10(-7) M) for 30 min. During the contraction period muscle lactate concentrations increased from a control level of 3.6 +/- 0.6 to a final value of 24.1 +/- 1.6 mumol/g muscle. To determine whether the lactate that had accumulated in muscle during contraction could be used to resynthesize glycogen, glycogen levels were determined after 1-3 h of recovery from the contraction period during which time the perfusion medium (flow-through system) contained low (1.3 mmol/l) or high (10.5 or 18 mmol/l) lactate concentrations but no glucose. With the low perfusate lactate concentration, muscle lactate levels declined to 7.2 +/- 0.8 mumol/g muscle by 3 h after the contraction period and muscle glycogen levels did not increase (1.28 +/- 0.07 at 3 h vs. 1.35 +/- 0.09 mg glucosyl U/g at end of exercise). Lactate disappearance from muscle was accounted for entirely by output into the venous effluent. With the high perfusate lactate concentrations, muscle lactate levels remained high (13.7 +/- 1.7 and 19.3 +/- 2.0 mumol/g) and glycogen levels increased by 1.11 and 0.86 mg glucosyl U/g, respectively, after 1 h of recovery from exercise. No more glycogen was synthesized when the recovery period was extended. Therefore, it appears that limited resynthesis of glycogen from lactate can occur after the contraction period but only when arterial lactate concentrations are high; otherwise the lactate that builds up in muscle during contraction will diffuse into the bloodstream.  相似文献   

15.
Skeletal muscle glycogen content and structure, and the activities of several enzymes of glycogen metabolism are reported for the hepatic glycogen phosphorylase b kinase deficient (gsd/gsd) rat. The skeletal muscle glycogen content of the fed gsd/gsd rat is 0.50 +/- 0.11% tissue wet weight, and after 40 hours of starvation this value is lowered 40% to 0.30 +/- 0.05% tissue wet weight. In contrast the gsd/gsd rat liver has an elevated glycogen content which remains high after starvation. The skeletal muscle phosphorylase b kinase, glycogen phosphorylase, glycogen synthase and acid alpha-glucosidase activities are 17.2 +/- 2.9 units/g tissue, 119.9 +/- 6.4 units/g tissue, 12.2 +/- 0.4 units/g tissue and 1.4 +/- 0.4 milliunits/g tissue, respectively, with approx. 20% of phosphorylase and approx. 24% of synthase in the active form (at rest). These enzyme activities resemble those of Wistar skeletal muscle, and again this contrasts with the situation in the liver where there are marked differences between the Wistar and the gsd/gsd rat. Fine structural analysis of the purified glycogen showed resemblance to other glycogens in branching pattern. Analysis of the molecular weight distribution of the purified glycogen indicated polydispersity with approx. 66% of the glycogen having a molecular weight of less than 250 X 10(6) daltons and approx. 25% greater than 500 X 10(6) daltons. This molecular weight distribution resembles those of purified Wistar liver and skeletal muscle glycogens and differs from that of the gsd/gsd liver glycogen which has an increased proportion of the low molecular weight material.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The effects of 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-d-arabinitol (DAB) were investigated on preparations of glycogen phosphorylase (GP) and in C57BL6J (ob/ob) mice by (13)C NMR in vivo. Independent of the phosphorylation state or the mammalian species or tissue from which GP was derived, DAB inhibited GP with K(i)-values of approximately 400 nM. The mode of inhibition was uncompetitive or noncompetitive, with respect to glycogen and P(i), respectively. The effects of glucose and caffeine on the inhibitory effect of DAB were investigated. Taken together, these data suggest that DAB defines a novel mechanism of action. Intraperitoneal treatment with DAB (a total of 105 mg/kg in seven doses) for 210 min inhibited glucagon-stimulated glycogenolysis in obese and lean mice. Thus, liver glycogen levels were 361 +/- 19 and 228 +/- 19 micromol glucosyl units/g with DAB plus glucagon in lean and obese mice, respectively, compared to 115 +/- 24 and 37 +/- 8 micromol glucosyl units/g liver with glucagon only. Moreover, with glucagon only end-point blood glucose levels were at 29 +/- 2 and 17.5 +/- 2 mM in obese and lean mice, respectively, compared to 17.5 +/- 1 and 12 +/- 1 mM with glucagon plus DAB. In conclusion, DAB is a novel and potent inhibitor of GP with an apparently distinct mechanism of action. Further, DAB inhibited the hepatic glycogen breakdown in vivo and displayed an accompanying anti-hyperglycemic effect, which was most pronounced in obese mice. The data suggest that inhibition of GP may offer a therapeutic principle in Type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

17.
This study examined the relationship between preexercise muscle glycogen content and glycogen utilization in two physiological pools, pro- (PG) and macroglycogen (MG). Male subjects (n = 6) completed an exercise and dietary protocol before the experiment that resulted in one leg with high glycogen (HL) and one with low glycogen (LL). Preexercise PG levels were 312 +/- 29 and 208 +/- 31 glucosyl units/kg dry wt (dw) (P < or = 0.05) in the HL and LL, respectively, and the corresponding values for MG were 125 +/- 37 and 89 +/- 43 mmol glucosyl units/kg dw (P < or = 0.05). Subjects then performed two 90-s exercise bouts at 130% maximal oxygen uptake separated by a 10-min rest period. Biopsies were obtained at rest and after each exercise bout. Preexercise glycogen concentration was correlated to net glycogenolysis for both PG and MG for bout 1 and bouts 1 and 2 (r < or = 0.60). In bout 1, there was no difference in the rate of PG or MG catabolism between HL and LL despite a 26% increase (P < or = 0.05) in glycogen phosphorylase transformation (phos a %) in the HL. In the second bout, more PG was catabolized in the HL vs. LL (38 +/- 9 vs. 9 +/- 6 mmol glucosyl units. kg dw(-1). min(-1)) (P < or = 0.05) with no difference between legs in phos a %. phos a % was increased in HL vs. LL but does not necessarily increase glycogenolysis in either PG or MG. Despite both legs performing the same exercise and having identical metabolic demands, the HL catabolized 2.3 (P < or = 0.05) times more PG and 1.5 (P < or = 0.05) times more MG vs. LL in bouts 1 and 2, indicating that preexercise glycogen concentration is a regulator of glycogenolysis.  相似文献   

18.
Glycogen consumption was investigated in isolated adult rat myocytes incubated for 2 h (37 degrees C) in substrate-free, hypoxic Krebs-Henseleit bicarbonate buffer. No consumption of glycogen occurred after 1 h of incubation, and the residual glycogen after 2 h was 23% despite an 89% reduction of the initial ATP content (from 27.1 +/- 1.8 to 3.1 +/- 0.5 nmol/mg dry weight, n = 12). The residual glycogen was not due to lactate inhibition of glycolytic enzymes, since myocytes incubated in the presence of 5 mM glucose maintained high energy phosphates throughout the incubation period despite a considerable lactate accumulation (1740 +/- 43 nmol/mg dry weight in glucose-supplemented vs. 138 +/- 14 nmol/mg dry weight in substrate-free incubations, n = 12). We have previously shown that the content of cyclic AMP in myocytes is not altered in response to hypoxia, thereby excluding activation of glycogen phosphorylase a. In the present study, the fall in myocyte ATP content was not followed by a rise in AMP, possibly preventing allosteric activation of glycogen phosphorylase b. However, addition of cyanide to the hypoxic incubations increased cellular AMP (initial level 2.1 +/- 0.4 nmol/mg dry weight vs. 9.8 +/- 0.7 after 30 min, n = 12) without increasing the amount of glycogen consumed, also ruling out the lack of glycogen phosphorylase b activation in the myocytes. Therefore, the glycogen rest was probably confined to the 17% of myocytes hypercontracted at the start of incubations.  相似文献   

19.
In liver cells isolated from fed female rats, glucagon (290nM) increased adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cyclic AMP) content and decreased cyclic AMP binding 30 s after addition of hormones. Both returned to control values after 10 min. Glucagon also stimulated cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase activity at 30 s and decreased protein kinase activity assayed in the presence of 2 muM cyclic AMP at 1 min. Glucagon increased the levels of glycogen phosphorylase a, but there was no change in total glycogen phosphorylase activity. Glucagon increased glycogen phosphorylase a at concentrations considerably less than those required to affect cyclic AMP and protein kinase. The phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 1-methyl-3-isobutyl xanthine, potentiated the action of glucagon on all variables, but did not increase the maximuM activation of glycogen phosphorylase. Epinephrine (1muM) decreased cyclic AMP binding and increased glycogen phosphorylase a after a 1-min incubation with cells. Although 0.1 muM epinephrine stimulated phosphorylase a, a concentration of 10 muM was required to increase protein kinase activity. 1-Methyl-3-isobutyl xanthine (0.1 mM) potentiated the action of epinephrine on cyclic AMP and protein kinase. (-)-Propranolol (10muM) completely abolished the changes in cyclic AMP binding and protein kinase due to epinephrine (1muM) in the presence of 0.1mM 1-methyl-3-isobutyl xanthine, yet inhibited the increase in phosphorylase a by only 14 per cent. Phenylephrine (0.1muM) increased glycogen phosphorylase a, although concentrations as great as 10 muM failed to affect cyclic AMP binding or protein kinase in the absence of phosphodiesterase inhibitor. Isoproterenol (0.1muM) stimulated phosphorylase and decreased cyclic AMP binding, but only a concentration of 10muM increased protein kinase. 1-Methyl-3-isobutyl xanthine potentiated the action of isoproterenol on cyclic AMP binding and protein kinase, and propranolol reduced the augmentation of glucose release and glycogen phosphorylase activity due to isoproterenol. These data indicate that both alpha- and beta-adrenergic agents are capable of stimulating glycogenolysis and glycogen phosphorylase a in isolated rat liver cells. Low concentrations of glucagon and beta-adrenergic agonists stimulate glycogen phosphorylase without any detectable increase in cyclic AMP or protein kinase activity. The effects of alpha-adrenergic agents appear to be completely independent of changes in cyclic AMP protein kinase activity.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of the beta-glycosidase inhibitor D-gluconohydroximo-1,5-lactone-N-phenylurethane (PUG) on the kinetic and ultracentrifugation properties of glycogen phosphorylase has been studied. Recent crystallographic work at 2.4 A resolution [D. Barford et al. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 6733-6741] has shown that PUG binds in the catalytic site of phosphorylase b crystals with its gluconohydroximolactone moiety occupying a position similar to that observed for other glucosyl compounds and the N-phenylurethane side chain fitting into an adjacent cavity with little conformational change in the enzyme. In solution, PUG was shown to be a potent inhibitor of phosphorylase b, directly competitive with alpha-D-glucopyranose 1-phosphate (glucose-1-P) (Ki = 0.40 mM) and noncompetitive with respect to glycogen and AMP. When PUG was tested for synergistic inhibition in the presence of caffeine, the Dixon plots of reciprocal velocity versus PUG concentration at different fixed caffeine concentrations provided intersecting lines with interaction constant (alpha) values of 0.95-1.38, indicating that the binding of one inhibitor is not significantly affected by the binding of the other. For glycogen phosphorolysis, PUG was noncompetitive with respect to phosphate, suggesting that it can bind to the central enzyme-AMP-glycogen-phosphate complex. PUG was shown to inhibit phosphorylase alpha (without AMP) activity (Ki = 0.43 mM) in a manner similar to that of the b form. However, in the presence of AMP, PUG exhibited complex kinetics, acting as a noncompetitive inhibitor with respect to glucose-1-P, while a twofold decrease of PUG binding to the enzyme-AMP-glycogen complex was observed. Ultracentrifugation experiments demonstrated that PUG does not cause any significant dissociation of phosphorylase alpha tetramer. Furthermore the dimerization of phosphorylase alpha by glucose is completely prevented in the presence of PUG. These observations are consistent with PUG binding to both the R and the T conformations of phosphorylase.  相似文献   

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