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1.
The effects of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) on fatty acid oxidation in isolated rat enterocytes were investigated. VIP (10(-7) M) increased more than 2-fold the production of 14CO2 from [U-14C]palmitate. This effect was dose-dependent (K0.5 = 5.10(-11) M) and appeared to be related to the stimulation of cAMP production since it was mimicked by forskolin (10(-4) M). VIP also stimulated oxygen consumption of the cells, an effect accounted for by the stimulation of the oxidation of both exogenous added palmitate (0.12 mM) and endogenous fatty acids produced by lipolysis. VIP appeared to specifically enhance the oxidation of long-chain fatty acids since its effects were counteracted by 5.10(-5) M sodium 2-[6-(chlorophenoxy)hexyl]oxirane-2-carboxylate, a potent inhibitor of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1, and since VIP did not affect cell respiration in the presence of octanoate. These results suggested that VIP stimulated long-chain fatty acid oxidation by increasing their translocation into the mitochondria. Therefore, we examined the effect of VIP on the activity of acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase, the enzyme responsible for the biosynthesis of malonyl-CoA, a physiological inhibitor of carnitine acyltransferase 1. VIP produced an acute, dose-dependent (Ki = 3.10(-11) M), 90% inhibition of acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase activity. These results allow us to elucidate the mechanism of the recently reported inhibitory effect of VIP on glucose oxidation (Vidal, H., Comte, B., Beylot, M., and Riou, J. P. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 9206-9211) and demonstrate for the first time that balance between fatty acids and glucose as energetic fuels is under neurohormonal control in isolated rat enterocytes.  相似文献   

2.
1. Glucose synthesis from lactate plus pyruvate and from lactate plus alanine was measured in the presence or absence of 1mM-oleate or 2mM-octanoate at low (2mM) or high (8mM) concentrations of NH4Cl. 2. Both fatty acids alone or with 2mM-NH4Cl doubled glucose production from lactate plus pyruvate. Glucose synthesis from lactate plus alanine, in the presence of oleate, was decreased 16% by 2mM-NH4Cl. 3. In the presence of fatty acids, 8mM-NH4Cl decreased gluconeogenesis by 60-65% from both lactate plus pyruvate and lactate plus alanine. This inhibition was correlated with a high accumulation of aspartate and a drastic decrease in 2-oxoglutarate and malate in the cells. 4. In the presence of 2mM- or 8 mM-NH4Cl, oleate and glucogenic precursors, the addition of 2.5mM-ornithine stimulated urea synthesis. 5. This was paralleled by a decrease of 16% in glucose synthesis from lactate plus pyruvate in the presence of 2mM-NH4Cl and had no effect at 8mM-NH4Cl. In the system producing glucose from lactate plus alanine, ornithine completely reversed the inhibition caused by 2mM-NH4Cl and only partly that by 8mM-NH4Cl. 6. Gluconeogenesis from pyruvate was also inhibited by 2mM-NH4Cl in the presence of oleate or ethanol. This way due to the decrease of malate, which is the C4 precursor of glucose in this system. 7. The limitation of gluconeogenesis by 2-oxoglutarate and malate concentrations in the liver cell and the competition for energy between glucose and urea synthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
1. Effects of alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate and alpha-cyanocinnamate on a number of enzymes involved in pyruvate metabolism have been investigated. Little or no inhibition was observed of any enzyme at concentrations that inhibit completely mitochondrial pyruvate transport. At much higher concentrations (1 mM) some inhibition of pyruvate carboxylase was apparent. 2. Alpha-Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate (1-100 muM) specifically inhibited pyruvate oxidation by mitochondria isolated from rat heart, brain, kidney and from blowfly flight muscle; oxidation of other substrates in the presence or absence of ADP was not affected. Similar concentrations of the compound also inhibited the carboxylation of pyruvate by rat liver mitochondria and the activation by pyruvate of pyruvate dehydrogenase in fat-cell mitochondria. These findings imply that pyruvate dehydrogenase, pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase and pyruvate carboxylase are exposed to mitochondrial matrix concentrations of pyruvate rather than to cytoplasmic concentrations. 3. Studies with whole-cell preparations incubated in vitro indicate that alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate or alpha-cyanocinnamate (at concentrations below 200 muM) can be used to specifically inhibit mitochondrial pyruvate transport within cells and thus alter the metabolic emphasis of the preparation. In epididymal fat-pads, fatty acid synthesis from glucose and fructose, but not from acetate, was markedly inhibited. No changes in tissue ATP concentrations were observed. The effects on fatty acid synthesis were reversible. In kidney-cortex slices, gluconeogenesis from pyruvate and lactate but not from succinate was inhibited. In the rat heart perfused with medium containing glucose and insulin, addition of alpha-cyanocinnamate (200 muM) greatly increased the output and tissue concentrations of lactate plus pyruvate but decreased the lactate/pyruvate ratio. 4. The inhibition by cyanocinnamate derivatives of pyruvate transport across the cell membrane of human erythrocytes requires much higher concentrations of the derivatives than the inhibition of transport across the mitochondrial membrane. Alpha-Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate appears to enter erythrocytes on the cell-membrane pyruvate carrier. Entry is not observed in the presence of albumin, which may explain the small effects when these compounds are injected into whole animals.  相似文献   

4.
Despite the fact that lactate and pyruvate are potential substrates for energy production in vivo, our understanding of the control and regulation of carbohydrate metabolism is based principally on studies where glucose is the only available carbohydrate. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the contributions of lactate, pyruvate, and glucose to energy production in the isolated, perfused rat heart over a range of insulin concentrations and after activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase with dichloroacetate (DCA). Hearts were perfused with physiological concentrations of [1-13C]glucose, [U-13C]lactate, [2-13C]pyruvate, and unlabeled palmitate for 45 min. Hearts were freeze clamped, and 13C NMR glutamate isotopomer analysis was performed on tissue extracts. Glucose, lactate, and pyruvate all contributed significantly to myocardial energy production; however, in the absence of insulin, glucose contributed only 25-30% of total pyruvate oxidation. Even under conditions where carbohydrates represented >95% of substrate entering the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, we found that glucose contributed at most 50-60% of total carbohydrate oxidation. Despite being present at only 0.1 mM, pyruvate contributed between approximately 10% and 30% of total acetyl-CoA entry into the TCA cycle. We also found that insulin and DCA not only increased glucose oxidation but also exogenous pyruvate oxidation; however, lactate oxidation was not increased. The differential effects of insulin and DCA on pyruvate and lactate oxidation provide further evidence for compartmentation of cardiac carbohydrate metabolism. These results may have important implications for understanding the mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects of increasing cardiac carbohydrate metabolism.  相似文献   

5.
alpha-Ketoisocaproate (ketoleucine) is shown to be metabolized to ketone bodies rapidly by isolated rat liver cells. Acetoacetate is the major end product and maximum rates were observed with 2 mM substrate. Studies with 2-tetradecylglycidic acid (an inhibitor of long chain fatty acid oxidation) showed that ketogenesis from alpha-ketoisocaproate and from endogenous fatty acids were additive. With alpha-ketoisocaproate present as soole substrate at 2 mM, leucine production was less than 10% of alpha-ketoisocaproate uptake and only 30% of the acetyl coenzyme A generated was oxidized in the citric acid cycle. Metabolism of alpha-ketoisocaproate was inhibited by fatty acids, alpha-ketoisovalerate, alpha-keto-beta-methylvalerate, and pyruvate. Oxidation of acetyl-CoA generated from alpha-ketoisocaproate was suppressed by oleate and by pyruvate, but was enhanced by lactate. Metabolism between the different branched chain alpha-ketoacids was mutually competitive. When alpha-ketoisocaproate (2 mM) was added in the presence of high pyruvate concentrations (4.4 mM), flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase was decreased, and the proportion of total pyruvate dehydrogenase in the active form (PDHa) also fell. With lactate as substrate, PDHa was only 25% of total activity and was little affected by addition of alpha-ketoisocaproate. These data suggest that enhanced oxidation of acetyl-CoA from alpha-ketoisocaproate by lactate addition is caused by a low activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase combined with increased flux through the citric acid cycle in response to the energy requirements for gluconeogenesis. However, acetyl-CoA generation from pyruvate is apparently insufficiently inhibited by alpha-ketoisocaproate to cause a diversion of acetyl-CoA formed during alpha-ketoisocaproate metabolism from ketone body formation to oxidation in the citric acid cycle. Measurements of the cell contents of CoASH, acetyl-CoA, acid-soluble acyl-CoA, and acid-insoluble fatty acyl-CoA indicated that when the branched chain alpha-ketoacids were added as sole substrate, their oxidation was limited at a step distal to the branched chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase. Acid-soluble acyl-CoA derivatives were depleted after oleate addition in the presence of alpha-ketoisocaproate, suggesting an inhibition of the branched chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase by the elevation of the mitochondrial NADH/NAD+ ratio observed during fatty acid oxidation. This effect was not observed in the presence of oleate and 2-tetradecylglycidic acid.  相似文献   

6.
Oxamate, a structural analog of pyruvate, known as a potent inhibitor of lactic dehydrogenase, lactic dehydrogenase, produces an inhibition of gluconeogenic flux in isolated perfused rat liver or hepatocyte suspensions from low concentrations of pyruvate (less than 0.5 mM) or substrates yielding pyruvate. The following observations indicate that oxamate inhibits flux through pyruvate carboxylase: accumulation of substrates and decreased concentration of all metabolic intermediates beyond pyruvate; decreased levels of aspartate, glutamate, and alanine; and enhanced ketone body production, which is a sensitive indicator of decreased mitochondrial free oxaloacetate levels. The decreased pyruvate carboxylase flux does not seem to be the result of a direct inhibitory action of oxamate on this enzyme but is secondary to a decreased rate of pyruvate entry into the mitochondria. This assumption is based on the following observations: Above 0.4 mM pyruvate, no significant inhibitory effect of oxamate on gluconeogenesis was observed. The competitive nature of oxamate inhibition is in conflict with its effect on isolated pyruvate carboxylase which is noncompetitive for pyruvate. Fatty acid oxidation was effective in stimulating gluconeogenesis in the presence of oxamate only at concentrations of pyruvate above 0.4 mM. Since only at low pyruvate concentrations its entry into the mitochondria occurs via the monocarboxylate translocator, from these observations it follows that pyruvate transport across the mitochondrial membrane, and not its carboxylation, is the first nonequilibrium step in the gluconeogenic pathway. In the presence of oxamate, fatty acid oxidation inhibited gluconeogenesis from lactate, alanine, and low pyruvate concentrations (less than 0.5 mM), and the rate of transfer of reducing equivalents to the cytosol was significantly decreased. Whether fatty acids stimulate or inhibit gluconeogenesis appears to correlate with the rate of flux through pyruvate carboxylase which ultimately seems to rely on pyruvate availability. Unless adequate rates of oxaloacetate formation are maintained, the shift of the mitochondrial NAD couple to a more reduced state during fatty acid oxidation seems to decrease mitochondrial oxaloacetate resulting in a decreased rate of transfer of carbon and reducing power to the cytosol.  相似文献   

7.
This work was performed to gain more information on the role of pyruvate kinase isoenzymes in the regulation of renal carbohydrate metabolism. Immunohistochemically, pyruvate kinase type L is shown to be localized in the proximal tubule of the nephron and pyruvate kinase type M2 in the distal tubule and the collecting duct. a tight relationship between gluconeogenesis and pyruvate recycling was found. The rate of gluconeogenesis (8 mumol/g wet wt. per 30 min) was of the same order of magnitude as the rate of pyruvate recycling (10.92 mumol/g wet wt. per 30 min). Stimulation of gluconeogenesis from 20 mM lactate in kidney cortex slices of 24-h-starved rats by dibutyryl-cAMP, alanine and parathyroid hormone was connected with a decrease in pyruvate recycling; inhibition of gluconeogenesis due to a lack of Ca2+ in the incubation medium was linked with an increase in pyruvate recycling. The degradation of [6-14C]glucose to lactate, pyruvate, ketone bodies and CO2 and of [2-14C]lactate was unaffected by dibutyryl-cAMP, alanine, epinephrine, vasopressin or the omission of Ca2+ from the incubation medium. 1 mM dibutyryl-cAMP or 5 mM alanine did not alter the activities of oxaloacetate decarboxylase, 'malic' enzyme and malate dehydrogenase from rat kidney cortex. Since aerobic glycolysis in the distal tubules and the collecting ducts is not influenced by hormones, dibutyryl-cAMP and Ca2+, pyruvate kinase type M2 residing in this tissue is unlikely to be a control point of glycolysis. Since this tissue degrades only one-seventh of the glucose formed via gluconeogenesis, it does not contribute significantly to pyruvate recycling. Therefore, the decrease of pyruvate recycling in the presence of dibutyryl-cAMP and alanine in rat kidney cortex slices, leading to increased renal gluconeogenesis, has to be ascribed to the regulation of pyruvate kinase type L.  相似文献   

8.
Dichloroacetate has effects upon hepatic metabolism which are profoundly different from its effects on heart, skeletal muscle, and adipose tissue metabolism. With hepatocytes prepared from meal-fed rats, dichloroacetate was found to activate pyruvate dehydrogenase, to increase the utilization of lactate and pyruvate without effecting an increase in the net utilization of glucose, to increase the rate of fatty acid synthesis, and to decrease slightly [1-14C]oleate oxidation to 14CO2 without decreasing ketone body formation. With hepatocytes isolated from 48-h-starved rats, dichloroacetate was found to activate pyruvate dehydrogenase, to have no influence on net glucose utilization, to inhibit gluconeogenesis slightly with lactate as substrate, and to stimulate gluconeogenesis significantly with alanine as substrate. The stimulation of fatty acid synthesis by dichloroacetate suggests that the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase can be rate determining for fatty acid synthesis in isolated liver cells. The minor effects of dichloroacetate on gluconeogenesis suggest that the regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase is only of marginal importance in the control of gluconeogenesis.  相似文献   

9.
In Ca-tolerant adult cardiomyocytes the contribution of endogenous substrates (glycogen, tri- and diacylglycerol) to oxidative substrate metabolism was investigated. After 4 h in culture medium (M 199 plus 4% fetal calf serum) the cellular triacylglycerol content is 3.6-fold higher than in fresh myocardium and reflects the free fatty acid composition of the medium. When triacylglycerol is degraded, all long-chain fatty acids are hydrolysed at equal rates. In these quiescent cells, the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase is low (10% of full activity, in Tyrode solution with 5 mM glucose). Up to 30% of full pyruvate dehydrogenase activity, the contribution of non-lipid substrates (glycogen, glucose, lactate and pyruvate) to oxidative energy production is correlated to pyruvate dehydrogenase activity. At 5 mM medium concentration, glucose, lactate and pyruvate share in energy production the proportions of 15, 36 and 50%, whereas endogenous lipolysis accounts for 78, 61 and 46%. It is concluded that these quiescent cardiomyocytes represent cardiac metabolism in a basal state in which the preference for fatty acids, especially from endogenous lipids, is very pronounced. The utilization of endogenous substrates therefore has to be considered in all studies investigating the oxidative metabolism of these isolated cells.  相似文献   

10.
1. Sodium dichloroacetate (1mM) inhibited glucose production from L-lactate in kidney-cortex slices from fed, starved or alloxan-diabetic rates. In general gluconeogenesis from other substrates was no inhibited. 2. Sodium dichloracetate inhibited glucose production from L-lactate but no from pyruvate in perfused isolated kidneys from normal or alloxan-diabetic rats. 3. Sodium dichloroacetate is an inhibitor of the pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase reaction and it effected conversion of pyruvate dehydrogenase into its its active (dephosphorylated) form in kidney in vivo. In general, pyruvate dehydrogenase was mainly in the active form in kidneys perfused or incubated with L-lactate and the inhibitory effect of dichloroacetate on glucose production was not dependent on activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase. 4. Balance data from kidney slices showed that dichloroacetate inhibits lactate uptake, glucose and pyruvate production from lactate, but no oxidation of lactate. 5. The mechanism of this effect of dichloroactetate on glucose production from lactate has not been fully defined, but evidence suggests that it may involve a fall in tissue pyruvate concentration and inhibition of pyruvate carboxylation.  相似文献   

11.
1. Monochloroacetate, dichloroacetate, trichloroacetate, difluoroacetate, 2-chloropropionate, 2,2'-dichloropropionate and 3-chloropropionate were inhibitors of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase. Dichloroacetate was also shown to inhibit rat heart pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase. The inhibition was mainly non-competitive with respect to ATP. The concentration required for 50% inhibition was approx. 100mum for the three chloroacetates, difluoroacetate and 2-chloropropionate and 2,2'-dichloropropionate. Dichloroacetamide was not inhibitory. 2. Dichloroacetate had no significant effect on the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate phosphatase when this was maximally activated by Ca(2+) and Mg(2+). 3. Dichloroacetate did not increase the catalytic activity of purified pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase. 4. Dichloroacetate, difluoroacetate, 2-chloropropionate and 2,2'-dichloropropionate increased the proportion of the active (dephosphorylated) form of pyruvate dehydrogenase in rat heart mitochondria with 2-oxoglutarate and malate as respiratory substrates. Similar effects of dichloroacetate were shown with kidney and fat-cell mitochondria. Glyoxylate, monochloroacetate and dichloroacetamide were inactive. 5. Dichloroacetate increased the proportion of active pyruvate dehydrogenase in the perfused rat heart, isolated rat diaphragm and rat epididymal fat-pads. Difluoroacetate and dichloroacetamide were also active in the perfused heart, but glyoxylate, monochloroacetate and trichloroacetate were inactive. 6. Injection of dichloroacetate into rats starved overnight led within 60 min to activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase in extracts from heart, psoas muscle, adipose tissue, kidney and liver. The blood concentration of lactate fell within 15 min to reach a minimum after 60 min. The blood concentration of glucose fell after 90 min and reached a minimum after 120 min. There was no significant change in plasma glycerol concentration. 7. In epididymal fatpads dichloroacetate inhibited incorporation of (14)C from [U-(14)C]glucose, [U-(14)C]fructose and from [U-(14)C]lactate into CO(2) and glyceride fatty acid. 8. It is concluded that the inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase by dichloroacetate may account for the activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase and pyruvate oxidation which it induces in isolated rat heart and diaphragm muscles, subject to certain assumptions as to the distribution of dichloroacetate across the plasma membrane and the mitochondrial membrane. 9. It is suggested that activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase by dichloroacetate could contribute to its hypoglycaemic effect by interruption of the Cori and alanine cycles. 10. It is suggested that the inhibitory effect of dichloroacetate on fatty acid synthesis in adipose tissue may involve an additional effect or effects of the compound.  相似文献   

12.
The phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitor, enoximone, enhances the oxidation of fatty acids in cardiac myocytes. Since carbohydrate oxidation is tightly coupled and inversely related in cardiac tissue to fatty acid oxidation, this study was designed to investigate enoximone's effects on glucose metabolism in the heart. To determine if enoximone alters this reciprocal relationship, the effects of enoximone on [U-14C]glucose and [2-14C]pyruvate oxidation were determined in isolated cardiac myocytes. The effect of PDE inhibitors was also examined on pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH) activity, a key component of oxidative glucose metabolism. Two PDE inhibitors, enoximone and milrinone, decreased PDH activity by 69 and 64%, respectively at 0.5 mM. This inhibition of PDH activity by enoximone was completely reversed after removing enoximone from the myocyte medium. PDH activity was unaffected by agents which alter cyclic nucleotide signaling: cGMP, dibutyryl cyclic AMP, and AMP. The effect of enoximone on [2-14C]pyruvate oxidation was similar to that on PDH. Interestingly, the oxidation of glucose was decreased 35% by 0.5 mM enoximone. In isolated rat heart mitochondria (RHM), enoximone decreased PDH activity by 37%. These studies suggest that PDE inhibitors decrease carbohydrate utilization by inhibiting the PDH complex in the heart. The inhibition of PDH by PDE inhibitors appears unrelated to their effects on cAMP or cGMP. This inhibition of PDH by PDE inhibitors may occur, at least in part, secondary to stimulating fatty acid oxidation.  相似文献   

13.
The PDC (pyruvate dehydrogenase complex) is strongly inhibited by phosphorylation during starvation to conserve substrates for gluconeogenesis. The role of PDHK4 (pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase isoenzyme 4) in regulation of PDC by this mechanism was investigated with PDHK4-/- mice (homozygous PDHK4 knockout mice). Starvation lowers blood glucose more in mice lacking PDHK4 than in wild-type mice. The activity state of PDC (percentage dephosphorylated and active) is greater in kidney, gastrocnemius muscle, diaphragm and heart but not in the liver of starved PDHK4-/- mice. Intermediates of the gluconeogenic pathway are lower in concentration in the liver of starved PDHK4-/- mice, consistent with a lower rate of gluconeogenesis due to a substrate supply limitation. The concentration of gluconeogenic substrates is lower in the blood of starved PDHK4-/- mice, consistent with reduced formation in peripheral tissues. Isolated diaphragms from starved PDHK4-/- mice accumulate less lactate and pyruvate because of a faster rate of pyruvate oxidation and a reduced rate of glycolysis. BCAAs (branched chain amino acids) are higher in the blood in starved PDHK4-/- mice, consistent with lower blood alanine levels and the importance of BCAAs as a source of amino groups for alanine formation. Non-esterified fatty acids are also elevated more in the blood of starved PDHK4-/- mice, consistent with lower rates of fatty acid oxidation due to increased rates of glucose and pyruvate oxidation due to greater PDC activity. Up-regulation of PDHK4 in tissues other than the liver is clearly important during starvation for regulation of PDC activity and glucose homoeostasis.  相似文献   

14.
Stimulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) improves functional recovery of postischemic hearts. This study examined the potential for a mechanism mediated by substrate-dependent proton production and intracellular pH. After 20 min of ischemia, isolated rabbit hearts were reperfused with or without 5 mM dichloroacetate (DCA) in the presence of either 5 mM glucose, 5 mM glucose + 2.5 mM lactate, or 5 mM glucose + 2.5 mM pyruvate. DCA inhibits PDH kinase, increasing the proportion of dephosphorylated, active PDH. Unlike pyruvate or glucose alone, lactate + glucose did not support the effects of DCA on the recovery of rate-pressure product (RPP) (without DCA, RPP = 14,000 +/- 1,200, n = 6; with DCA, RPP = 13,700 +/- 1,800, n = 9). Intracellular pH, from (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance spectra, returned to normal within 2.1 min of reperfusion with all substrates except for lactate + glucose + DCA or lactate + DCA, which delayed pH recovery for up to 12 min (at 2.1 min pH = 6. 00 +/- 0.08, lactate + glucose + DCA; pH = 6.27 +/- 0.34, for lactate + DCA). Hearts were also reperfused after 10 min of ischemia with 0.5 mM palmitate + 5 mM DCA and either 2.5 mM pyruvate or 2.5 mM lactate. Again, intracellular pH recovery was delayed in the presence of lactate. PDH activation in the presence of lactate also decreased coupling of oxidative metabolism to mechanical work. These findings have implications for therapeutic use of stimulated carbohydrate oxidation in stunned hearts.  相似文献   

15.
The ability of carbohydrate fuels (lactate, pyruvate, glucose) and the ketone bodies (acetoacetate, beta-hydroxybutyrate) to compete with fatty acids as fuels of respiration in the isolated Langendorf-perfused heart was studied. Oleate and octanoate were used as fatty acid fuels since oleate requires carnitine for entry into mitochondria, whereas octanoate does not. The two ketone bodies inhibited the oxidation of both oleate and octanoate implying an intramitochondrial site of action. Pyruvate, lactate, and lactate plus glucose inhibited oleate oxidation but not octanoate oxidation, indicating a mechanism of inhibition that involves the carnitine system. Pyruvate was a more potent inhibitor than lactate at equal concentrations, but the effect of lactate could be greatly increased by dichloroacetate, an inhibitor of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase. The physiological and mechanistic implications of these observations are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The regulation of the gluconeogenic pathway from the 3-carbon precursors pyruvate, lactate, and alanine was investigated in the isolated perfused rat liver. Using pyruvate (less than 1 mM), lactate, or alanine as the gluconeogenic precursor, infusion of the acetoacetate precursors oleate, acetate, or beta-hydroxybutyrate stimulated the rate of glucose production and, in the case of pyruvate (less than 1 mM), the rate of pyruvate decarboxylation. alpha-Cyanocinnamate, an inhibitor of the monocarboxylate transporter, prevented the stimulation of pyruvate decarboxylation and glucose production due to acetate infusion. With lactate as the gluconeogenic precursor, acetate infusion in the presence of L-carnitine stimulated the rate of gluconeogenesis (100%) and ketogenesis (60%) without altering the tissue acetyl-CoA level usually considered a requisite for the stimulation of gluconeogenesis by fatty acids. Hence, our studies suggest that gluconeogenesis from pyruvate or other substrates which are converted to pyruvate prior to glucose synthesis may be limited or controlled by the rate of entry of pyruvate into the mitochondrial compartment on the monocarboxylate translocator.  相似文献   

17.
The rate of cardiac fatty acid oxidation is regulated by the activity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase-I (CPT-I), which is inhibited by malonyl-CoA. We tested the hypothesis that the activity of the enzyme responsible for malonyl-CoA degradation, malonyl-CoA decarboxlyase (MCD), regulates myocardial malonyl-CoA content and the rate of fatty acid oxidation during demand-induced ischemia in vivo. The myocardial content of malonyl-CoA was increased in anesthetized pigs using a specific inhibitor of MCD (CBM-301106), which we hypothesized would result in inhibition of CPT-I, reduction in fatty acid oxidation, a reciprocal activation of glucose oxidation, and diminished lactate production during demand-induced ischemia. Under normal-flow conditions, treatment with the MCD inhibitor significantly reduced oxidation of exogenous fatty acids by 82%, shifted the relationship between arterial fatty acids and fatty acid oxidation downward, and increased glucose oxidation by 50%. Ischemia was induced by a 20% flow reduction and beta-adrenergic stimulation, which resulted in myocardial lactate production. During ischemia MCD inhibition elevated malonyl-CoA content fourfold, reduced free fatty acid oxidation rate by 87%, and resulted in a 50% decrease in lactate production. Moreover, fatty acid oxidation during ischemia was inversely related to the tissue malonyl-CoA content (r = -0.63). There were no differences between groups in myocardial ATP content, the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase, or myocardial contractile function during ischemia. Thus modulation of MCD activity is an effective means of regulating myocardial fatty acid oxidation under normal and ischemic conditions and reducing lactate production during demand-induced ischemia.  相似文献   

18.
1. The concentration of carbamylcholine, bombesin, pancreozymin, pentagastrin and secretin evoking a similar 4--5-fold maximal increase in amylase secretion from rat pancreatic fragments were 3.10(-6), 10(-7), 10(-8), 3.10(-6), and 3.10(-6) M, respectively. The maximal concentration of vasoactive intestinal peptide tested (3.10(-6) M) increased amylase secretion by 250%. The six secretagogues could be separated into two groups according to their effects on lipid metabolism and ATP levels. 2. When used at their optimal concentrations, carbamylcholine, bombesin, pancreozymin, and pentagastrin lowered pancreatic ATP levels by 18-26% and increased net release of free fatty acids by 68-105%. 3. The effects of 3.10(-6) M carbamylcholine and 10(-8) M pancreozymin on the metabolism of 3H2O, D-[U-14C]glucose and [1-14C]acetate were similar; the incorporation of radioactivity in the fatty acid moiety of glycerolipids decreased by 20--50% whereas the incorporation of 3H from 3H2O and of 14C from [U-14C]glucose increased by 20--35% in the glycerol moiety. In addition, the oxidation of [U-14C]glucose, [1-14C]acetate and [1-14C]palmitate to 14CO2 increased by 15--32% while the esterification of [1-14C]palmitate, [1-14C]-linoleate, and [1-14C]arachidonate was inhibited by 14--23%. The spectrum of fatty acids labeled with [1-14C]acetate indicated an inhibition of the malonic acid pathway whereas the elongation of polyenoic fatty acids was unaltered.  相似文献   

19.
Isolated hepatocytes from 24-h-starved rats were used to assess the possible effect of Ahe hypoglycaemic agent 3-mercaptopicolinate on flux through the hepatic pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Increasing the extraceIIular pyruvate concentration from 1 mM to 2 mM or 5 mM resulted in an increase in flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase and the tricarboxylic acid cycle as measured by14CO2 evolution from [1-14C]pyruvate and [3-14C]pyruvate. Gluconeogenesis was inhibited by 3-mercaptopicolinate from both 1 mM and 2 mM pyruvate, but significant increases in malate and citrate concentrations only occurred in cells incubated with 1 mM pyruvate. Flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase was stimulated by 3-mercaptopicolinate with 1 mM pyruvate but was unaltered with 2 mM pyruvate. Dichloroacetate stimulated flux through pyruvate dehydrogenase with no effect on gluconeogenesis in the presence of I mM pyruvate. There was no effect of 3-mercaptopicolinate, administered in vivo, to 24-h-starved rats on the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase in freeze-clamped heart or liver tissue, although the drug did decrease blood glucose concentration and increase the blood concentrations of lactate and alanine. Dichloroacetate, administered in vivo to 24-h-starved rats, increased the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase in freeze-clamped heart and liver, and caused decreases in the blood concentrations of glucose, lactate , and alanine. The results suggest that 3-mercaptopicolinate increases flux through hepatocyte pyruvate dehydrogenase by an indirect mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
The oxidation of ten substrates: monosaccharides, fatty acids and amino acids, was studied in the isolated perfused rat kidney. Glucose, when offered 3.75 mM, contributed to tissue respiration by a rate equivalent to 18% of the total O2-consumption of the preparation. The corresponding data for the other nine substrates, each offered in the presence of 3.75 mM glucose, were as follows: pyruvate: 66 %, lactate: 45 %, acetate: 34 %, palmitate: 30 %, glutamate: 25 %, fructose: 18 %, propionate: 12 %, alanine: 10 %, and tyrosine: < 1 %. Under the conditions used less than 2.2 % of the metabolized glucose, pyruvate, lactate and acetate respectively were recovered in the lipid fraction of the kidney, indicating direct oxidation of the respiratory fuels offered and a rather low turnover rate of the endogeneous lipid pool.  相似文献   

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