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1.
Normal rats fed an isocaloric sucrose-rich diet (SRD) for 3 weeks developed high levels of triacylglycerol in plasma (P) (mmol triacylglycerol I-1) heart (H) and liver (L) tissues (mumol triacylglycerol mg DNA-1) as compared to control rats fed the standard chow (STD) (X +/- SEM; P: SRD 1.32 +/- 0.06 vs STD 0.49 +/- 0.05, P less than 0.001; H: SRD 2.1 +/- 0.17 vs STD 0.94 +/- 0.01, P less than 0.001; L: SRD 8.48 +/- 1.47 vs STD 1.71 +/- 0.12, P less than 0.001). A simultaneous drop in the activities (mumol glycerol ml-1 hr-1) of several plasma post heparin lipolytic enzymes was observed; total triglyceride lipase (T-TGL): SRD 5.32 +/- 0.34 vs STD 7.48 +/- 0.64, P less than 0.01; lipoprotein lipase (LPL): SRD 1.61 +/- 0.26 vs STD 2.42 +/- 0.41, P less than 0.05; hepatictriglyceride lipase (H-TGL): SRD 3.71 +/- 0.28 vs STD 5.05 +/- 0.69, P less than 0.05 and monoglyceride hydrolase (MGH) (mumol glycerol I-1 min-1): SRD 558 +/- 108 vs STD 1165 +/- 45, P less than 0.001. Rats fed the SRD presented glucose intolerance after i.v. glucose (Kg X 10(-2); 1.06 +/- 0.09 vs 2.61 +/- 0.14 of STD, P less than 0.001) in spite of the presence of hyperinsulinism (sigma plasma IRI microU/ml from 0 to 30 min: 184.6 +/- 23.6 vs 100.5 +/- 9.7 of STD, P less than 0.01) suggesting that a state of insulin resistance had developed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Male Wistar rats chronically (15 weeks) fed a sucrose-rich diet (SRD; 63% w/w) developed hypertriglyceridemia and impaired glucose homeostasis. Hearts from these animals were isolated and perfused using the Langendorff recirculating method. Glucose at levels similar to those found in the animal in vivo was used as the only exogenous substrate. The hearts were perfused for 30 minutes in the presence or absence of insulin (30 mU/mL) in the perfusion medium. In the absence of the hormone, glucose uptake was impaired and the glucose utilization was reduced, with a significant increase of lactate release. Glucose oxidation, which was estimated from the activation state of the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHc), was depressed mainly due to both an increase of PDH kinase and a decrease of PDHa (active form of PDHc) activities. Although the addition of insulin in the perfusion medium improved the above parameters, it was unable to normalize them. The present results suggest that at least two different mechanisms might contribute to insulin resistance and to the impaired glucose metabolism in the perfused hearts of the dyslipemic SRD-fed animals: (1) reduced basal and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and its utilization or (2) increased availability and oxidation of lipids (low PDHa and high PDH kinase activities), which in turn decrease glucose uptake and utilization. Thus, this nutritional experimental model may be useful to study how impaired glucose homeostasis, increases plasma free fatty acid levels and hypertriglyceridemia could contribute to heart tissue malfunction.  相似文献   

3.
The percentages of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH) in the active form (PDHa) in two lipogenic tissues (liver and brown adipose tissue) in the fed state were 12.0% and 13.4% respectively. After acute (0.5 h) insulin treatment, PDHa activities had increased by 77% in liver and by 234% in brown fat. Significant decreases in PDHa activities were observed in both tissues by 5 h after the removal of food. The patterns of decline in PDHa activities in the two lipogenic tissues were similar in that the major decreases in activities were observed within the first 7 h of starvation. The significant decreases in PDHa activities observed after starvation for 6 h were accompanied by decreased rates of lipogenesis. Hepatic and brown-fat PDHa activities after acute (30 min) exposure to exogenous insulin were less in 6 h-starved than in fed rats, but the absolute increases in PDHa activities over the 30 min exposure period were similar in fed and 6 h-starved rats. Increases in PDHa activities were paralleled by increases in lipid synthesis in both tissues. Re-activation of PDH in response to insulin treatment or chow re-feeding after 48 h starvation occurred more rapidly in brown adipose tissue than in liver. The results are discussed in relation to the importance of the activity of the PDH complex as a determinant of the total rate of lipogenesis during the fed-to-starved transition and after insulin challenge or re-feeding.  相似文献   

4.
1. The effect of exercise (2 hr treadmill running at 28 m/min) on PDHa (the activity of the active form of pyruvate dehydrogenase) in untrained rats, trained rats (2 hr/d at 25 m/min for 4 wk), and in 24 hr fasted rats was determined. 2. Exercise increased PDHa activity approximately 2 fold in fed-untrained rats. 3. Fasting decreased PDHa activity in sedentary rats to approximately half the activity in fed rats. 4. The increase in PDHa activity during exercise was less in fasted than fed rats. 5. Training did not change the total activity of PDH (phosphorylated plus nonphosphorylated forms) but the percent of PDH in the active form was increased in muscle of trained-rested rats. 6. PDHa activity was unchanged by acute exercise (2.5 hr at 40 m/min) in the trained rats.  相似文献   

5.
In the present study we investigated: (1) the contribution of the skeletal muscle to the mechanisms underlying the impaired glucose homeostasis and insulin sensitivity present in dyslipemic rats fed a sucrose-rich diet (SRD) over a long period of time and (2) the effect of fish oil on these parameters when there was a stable hypertriglyceridemia before the source of fat (corn oil) in the diet was replaced by isocaloric amounts of cod liver oil. Our results show an increased triglyceride content in the gastrocnemius muscle with an impaired capacity for glucose oxidation in the basal state and during euglycemic clamp. This was mainly due to a decrease of the active form of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHa) and an increase of PDH kinase activities. Hyperglycemia, normoinsulinemia, and diminished peripheral insulin sensitivity also were found. Even though there were no changes in the insulin levels, the former metabolic abnormalities were completely reversed when the source of fat was changed from corn oil to cod liver oil. The data also suggest that in the gastrocnemius muscle of rats fed a SRD over an extended period, an increased availability and oxidation of the lipid fuel, which in turn impairs the glucose oxidation, contributes to the abnormal glucose homeostasis and to the peripheral insulin insensitivity. Moreover, the parallel effect on insulin sensitivity, glucose, and lipid homeostasis attained through the manipulation of dietary fat (n-3) in the SRD suggests a role of n-3 fatty acid in the management of dyslipidemia and insulin resistance.  相似文献   

6.
1. The in vivo and in vitro conditions which allow a response of rat circulating lymphocyte PDH to insulin are investigated. 2. In vivo tests show that inactive PDH (PDHi) prevails in diabetic rats and active PDH (PDHa) in hyperinsulinemic rats; in treated with insulin diabetic rats the PDHa/PDHi ratio (1.7) is similar to that of normal rats (PDHa/PDHi ratio = 2). 3. In vitro tests show a responsiveness of PDH to insulin only when 50 microM Ca2+ -Mg2+ and intact lymphocytes are used in the incubation medium. Insulin concentrations and contact time are important variables.  相似文献   

7.
Y B Lombardo  L A Menahan 《Life sciences》1978,22(12):1033-1042
The active form (PDHa) and total activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) were measured in homogenates from heart muscle, epididymal fat pads and liver of genetically obese hyperglycemic mice and compared with similar data derived from lean controls or Swiss albino mice. Both PDHa and total PDH activities were similar in heart muscle from all mice with a precipitous decrease in the PDHa upon fasting. Adipose tissue and liver of obese mice had a PDHa level that was almost two-fold higher than either lean control or Swiss albino mice. Fasting for 24 hours decreased the elevated activity of PDHa in adipose tissue and liver in obese mice to a value that was comparable to lean control or Swiss albino mice, fasted similarly. The elevation in both the active form and total activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase in livers from obese mice could explain the increased provision of acetyl-CoA units necessary for the accelerated hepatic lipogenesis observed with this mouse, a model for human obesity and insulin resistance.  相似文献   

8.
We have previously reported that normal Wistar rats fed an isocaloric, sucrose-rich (63%) diet (SRD) developed glucose intolerance and elevated triglyceride levels in plasma (P) as well as in heart (H) and liver (L) tissue. This metabolic state was accompanied by hyperinsulinism both in vivo and in vitro, suggesting that a state of insulin resistance has developed. In order to gather information on the role of hyperinsulinemia and glucose intolerance in the development of the above lipid metabolism abnormalities, diazoxide, a known insulin release blocking agent was administered (120 mg/kg/day) together with the diet (SRD + DZX) for 22 days. Control groups fed a standard chow (STD) or the STD plus diazoxide (STD + DZX) were included in the study. Under the present experimental design, DZX was able to prevent the development of hyperinsulinism, glucose intolerance and elevated levels of triacylglycerol in plasma, heart and liver present in animals fed on a sucrose rich diet. Our results suggest that mechanisms involved in the development of this nutritionally induced syndrome may include an interaction of hyperinsulinemia, with a direct effect of sucrose on several steps of lipid metabolism.  相似文献   

9.
Meal-fed rats and rats fed ad libitum had similar rates of hepatic glycogenesis at 60 min after the initiation of re-feeding a chow meal after 22 h starvation, but hepatic PDHa (active form of pyruvate dehydrogenase) activities were 4-fold higher in the meal-fed group. In heart, PDHa activities were 3-fold higher before re-feeding and 2-fold higher after re-feeding in the meal-fed group compared with the group fed ad lib. The blood metabolite profile suggested diminished fat oxidation in starved meal-fed rats and accelerated flux through PDH in meal-fed re-fed rats compared with the group fed ad lib.  相似文献   

10.
We assessed the myocardial susceptibility to ischemic-reperfusion injury in obese rat hearts in the absence and the presence of predicted circulating concentrations of insulin and fatty acids. Feeding rats a high-calorie diet resulted in increases in body weight, visceral fat content, cardiac hypertrophy, plasma insulin, nonesterified free fatty acid, and triglyceride concentrations. In the absence of both insulin and fatty acids in the coronary perfusate, the hearts of obese rats developed an increased infarct size (41.9 +/- 1.9% for obese vs. 22.9 +/- 2.3% for control, P < 0.05) and a reduced percent recovery of aortic output (4.2 +/- 4.2% for obese vs. 27.7 +/- 3.4% for controls, P < 0.05) after coronary artery occlusion and reperfusion. In the presence of insulin in the coronary perfusate, a cardioprotective effect was noted in both groups, an action that was greater in hearts from obese compared with control rats and which abolished the obesity-induced changes in infarct size (13.8 +/- 1.2% for controls vs. 21.0 +/- 1.6% for obese), and percent recovery of aortic output (60.2 +/- 4.7% for controls vs. 45.7 +/- 9.4% for obese). Fatty acids (0.7 mM, control; and 1.5 mM, obese) added to the coronary perfusate with in vivo concentrations of insulin dramatically increased infarct size (48.2 +/- 3.1% for obese, and 37.5 +/- 2.7% for control; P < 0.05 vs. without fatty acids) and decreased percent aortic output recovery (control, 10.4 +/- 5.2%, and obese 7.8 +/- 3.5%; P < 0.05 vs. without fatty acids) in both groups to similar values. In conclusion, in obesity, the impact of an increased susceptibility of the myocardium to ischemic-reperfusion injury on myocardial injury is likely to be overshadowed by the comparatively greater roles played by predicted increases in circulating insulin and fatty acids found in vivo. These data support the notion that adiposity per se is unlikely to be a valuable predictor of outcomes in ischemic-reperfusion injury.  相似文献   

11.
Objective: The objective of this study was to determine whether down‐regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase (PDP) is responsible for poorly active pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) in circulating lymphocytes (CLs) of obese subjects (ObS), and if so, whether it improves when their plasma insulin rises. Research Methods and Procedures: PDH activity was compared in lysed CLs of 10 euglycemic ObS and 10 sex‐ and age‐matched controls before and during plasma insulin enhancement in an oral glucose tolerance test. It was evaluated without (PDHa) or with Mg/Ca or Mg at various concentrations to assess PDP1 or PDP2 activities or with Mg/Ca and exogenous PDP to determine total PDH activity (PDHt), which is an indirect measure of the amount of PDH. The insulin sensitivity index was calculated, and PDP1 and PDP2 mRNA was sought in the CLs. Results: At T0 in ObS, PDHt was normal, whereas PDHa and PDP1 activity was below normal at all Mg/Ca concentrations. PDP2 activity was undetectable in both groups. PDP1 and PDP2 mRNA was identified, and insulin sensitivity index and PDHa were directly correlated. During the oral glucose tolerance test, plasma insulin rose considerably more in ObS than in controls; PDHa and PDP1 activity also increased but remained significantly below normal, and PDHt was unvaried in both groups. Discussion: PDP1 is down‐regulated in CLs of ObS because it is poorly sensitive to Mg/Ca; this defect is attenuated when plasma insulin is greatly enhanced.  相似文献   

12.
Pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) is an important regulator of carbohydrate oxidation during exercise, and its activity can be downregulated by an increase in dietary fat. The purpose of this study was to determine the acute metabolic effects of differential dietary fatty acids on the activation of the PDH complex (PDHa activity) at rest and at the onset of moderate-intensity exercise. University-aged male subjects (n = 7) underwent two fat-loading trials spaced at least 2 wk apart. Subjects consumed approximately 300 g saturated (SFA) or n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) fat over the course of 5 h. Following this, participants cycled at 65% of their maximum oxygen uptake for 15 min. Muscle biopsies were taken before and following fat loading and at 1 min exercise. Plasma free fatty acids increased from 0.15 +/- 0.07 to 0.54 +/- 0.19 mM over 5 h with SFA and from 0.11 +/- 0.04 to 0.35 +/- 0.13 mM with n-6 PUFA and were significantly lower throughout the n-6 PUFA trial. PDHa activity was unchanged following fat loading but increased at the onset of exercise in the SFA trial, from 1.18 +/- 0.27 to 2.16 +/- 0.37 mmol x min(-1) x kg wet wt(-1). This effect was negated in the n-6 PUFA trial (1.04 +/- 0.20 to 1.28 +/- 0.36 mmol x min(-1) x kg wet wt(-1)). PDH kinase was unchanged in both trials, suggesting that the attenuation of PDHa activity with n-6 PUFA was a result of changes in the concentrations of intramitochondrial effectors, potentially intramitochondrial NADH or Ca(2+). Our findings suggest that attenuated PDHa activity contributes to the preferential oxidation of n-6 PUFA during moderate-intensity exercise.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of carbohydrate deprivation on the regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) were studied at rest and during moderate-intensity exercise. An inhibitory effect of a chronic low-carbohydrate diet (LCD) on the active form of PDH (PDHa) mediated by a stable increase in PDH kinase (PDHK) activity has recently been reported (Peters SJ, Howlett RA, St. Amand TA, Heigenhauser GJF, and Spriet LL. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 275: E980-E986, 1998.). In the present study, seven males cycled at 65% maximal O(2) uptake for 30 min after a 6-day LCD. Exercise was repeated 1 wk later after a mixed diet (MD). Muscle biopsies were sampled from the vastus lateralis at rest and at 2 and 30 min of exercise. At rest, PDHa activity (0.18 +/- 0.04 vs. 0.63 +/- 0.18 mmol x min(-1) x kg wet wt(-1)), muscle glycogen content (310.2 +/- 36.9 vs. 563.9 +/- 32.6 mmol/kg dry wt), and muscle lactate content (2.6 +/- 0.3 vs. 4.2 +/- 0.6 mmol/kg dry wt) were significantly lower after the LCD. Resting muscle acetyl-CoA (10.8 +/- 1.9 vs. 7.4 +/- 0.8 micromol/kg dry wt) and acetylcarnitine (5.3 +/- 1.4 vs. 1.6 +/- 0.3 mmol/kg dry wt) contents were significantly elevated after the LCD. During exercise, PDHa, glycogenolytic rate (LCD 5.8 +/- 0.4 vs. MD 6.9 +/- 0.2 mmol x min(-1) x kg dry wt(-1)), and muscle concentrations of acetylcarnitine, pyruvate, and lactate increased to the same extent in both conditions. The results of the present study suggest that inhibition of resting PDH by elevated PDHK activity after a LCD may be overridden by the availability of muscle pyruvate during exercise.  相似文献   

14.
We investigated the effects of in vivo treatment with the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACE-I) captopril and/or of in vitro administration of L-arginine on the metabolism and ischemia-reperfusion injury of the isolated perfused rat myocardium. Captopril (50 mg/l in drinking water, 4 weeks) raised the myocardial content of glycogen. After 25-min global ischemia, captopril treatment, compared with the controls, resulted in lower rates of lactate dehydrogenase release during reperfusion (8.58 +/- 1.12 vs. 13.39 +/- 1.88 U/heart/30 min, p<0.05), lower myocardial lactate contents (11.34 +/- 0.93 vs. 21.22 +/- 4.28 micromol/g d.w., p<0.05) and higher coronary flow recovery (by 25%), and prevented the decrease of NO release into the perfusate during reperfusion. In control hearts L-arginine added to the perfusate (1 mmol/l) 10 min before ischemia had no effect on the parameters evaluated under our experimental conditions, presumably because of sufficient saturation of the myocardium with L-arginine. In the hearts of captopril-treated rats, L-arginine further increased NO production during reperfusion and the cGMP content before ischemia. Our results have shown that long-term captopril treatment increases the energy potential and has a beneficial effect on tolerance of the isolated heart to ischemia. L-arginine added into the perfusate potentiates the effect of captopril on the NO signaling pathway.  相似文献   

15.
Clinical and experimental evidence suggest that increased rates of fatty acid oxidation in the myocardium result in impaired contractile function in both normal and diabetic hearts. Glucose utilization is decreased in type 1 diabetes, and fatty acid oxidation dominates for energy production at the expense of an increase in oxygen requirement. The objective of this study was to examine the effect of chronic treatment with trimetazidine (TMZ) on cardiac mechanical function and fatty acid oxidation in streptozocin (STZ)-diabetic rats. Spontaneously beating hearts from male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to a 60-minute aerobic perfusion period with a recirculating Krebs-Henseleit solution containing 11 mmol/L glucose, 100 muU/mL insulin, and 0.8 mmol/L palmitate prebound to 3% bovine serum albumin (BSA). Mechanical function of the hearts, as cardiac output x heart rate (in (mL/min).(beats/min).10-2), was deteriorated in diabetic (73 +/- 4) and TMZ-treated diabetic (61 +/- 7) groups compared with control (119 +/- 3) and TMZ-treated controls (131 +/- 6). TMZ treatment increased coronary flow in TMZ-treated control (23 +/- 1 mL/min) hearts compared with untreated controls (18 +/- 1 mL/min). The mRNA expression of 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (3-KAT) was increased in diabetic hearts. The inhibitory effect of TMZ on fatty acid oxidation was not detected at 0.8 mmol/L palmitate in the perfusate. Addition of 1 mumol/L TMZ 30 min into the perfusion did not affect fatty acid oxidation rates, cardiac work, or coronary flow. Our results suggest that higher expression of 3-KAT in diabetic rats might require increased concentrations of TMZ for the inhibitory effect on fatty acid oxidation. A detailed kinetic analysis of 3-KAT using different concentrations of fatty acid will determine the fatty acid inhibitory concentration of TMZ in diabetic state where plasma fatty acid levels are increased.  相似文献   

16.
In the fed state, the percentages of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH) in the active form (PDHa) in diaphragm and a selection of skeletal muscles (adductor longus, soleus, extensor digitorum longus, tibialis anterior, gastrocnemius) ranged from 8% (soleus) to 38% (gastrocnemius). Major decreases in PDHa activities in all of these muscles were observed after 15 h of starvation, by which time activities were less than 40% of the fed values. In general, the response to starvation was observed more rapidly in muscles of high oxidative capacity. The patterns of changes in skeletal-muscle PDH activities during the fed-to-starved transition are discussed in relation to changes in lipid-fuel supply and oxidation.  相似文献   

17.
The in vivo responses of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex to starvation and insulin was assessed in heart, diaphragm and red quadriceps muscle. PDH complex activity was decreased by starvation (3.4–10.2-fold), the magnitude of change depending on muscle type. Insulin increased PDH activity in all muscle types. In fed rats, this effect was relatively small (1.25–1.29-fold). In starved rats there were effects in heart (4.3-fold) and red quadriceps (1.7-fold) but no effect in diaphragm. These results demonstrate that PDH complex in different groups of muscle has different insulin sensitivity (particularly in tissues from starved animals).  相似文献   

18.
In a mixture of plasma membranes/mitochondria from normal rat brain, pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) is present in the active (PDHa) and the inactive (PDHi) form; the latter is converted into the former by preincubation with Ca2+ and Mg2+ and represents about 40% of total PDH (PDHt = PDHa + PDHi). Incubation with increasing insulin concentrations activates PDHa and PDHt, the maximum being reached at 25 microU/ml insulin; inhibition appears with further insulin increase. In a mixture of plasma membranes and mitochondria from alloxan rat brain PDHa activity markedly decreases; no activation is achieved by preincubation with Ca2+ and Mg2+. However an activating effect of Ca2+ and Mg2+ appears when the mixture is added and incubated with increasing insulin concentrations. PDHa and PDHt activity reaches a maximum of stimulation at 25 microU/ml insulin; the activation is reduced at higher concentrations of insulin though no inhibition appears. ATP partially inhibits PDHa in normal and alloxan rat brain plasma membrane/mitochondria mixtures; this effect is completely cancelled by 25 microU/ml insulin.  相似文献   

19.
The hyperinsulinaemic-glucose-clamp technique, in combination with measurement of glucose turnover in conscious unrestrained rats, was used to assess the effects of nutritional status on insulin sensitivity in vivo and glucose metabolism. Liver, heart and quadriceps skeletal-muscle glycogen content and activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) and glycogen synthase were measured both basally and at the end of a 2.5 h glucose clamp (insulin 85 munits/h) in rats 6, 24 and 48 h after food withdrawal. Clamp glucose requirement and glucose turnover were unchanged by fasting. Activation of glycogen synthase and glycogen deposition in liver and skeletal muscle during the clamps were also not impaired in rats after a prolonged fast. By contrast with skeletal muscle, activation of cardiac-muscle glycogen synthase and glycogen deposition during the clamps were markedly impaired by 24 h of fasting and were undetectable at 48 h. Skeletal-muscle PDH activity fell with more prolonged fasting (6 h, 15.3 +/- 3.4%; 24 h, 4.7 +/- 0.7%; 48 h, 4.3 +/- 0.6% active; P less than 0.005), but at 24 and 48 h was stimulated by the clamp to values unchanged by the duration of fasting. Stimulation of cardiac PDH activity by the clamp was, however, impaired in rats fasted for 24 or 48 h. Basal hepatic PDH did not change significantly with fasting (6 h, 5.3 +/- 1.1%; 24 h, 4.6 +/- 0.7%; 48 h, 3.9 +/- 0.5%), and, although it could be partly restored at 24 h, very little stimulation occurred at 48 h. Hepatic pyruvate kinase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity were both stimulated by the clamps, and this was not impaired with more prolonged fasting. During the glucose clamps, blood concentrations of lactate, pyruvate and alanine were increased to a greater extent in rats fasted for 24 and 48 h than in rats studied 6 h after food withdrawal. The findings suggest that, although sensitivity to insulin of whole-body glucose disposal is unchanged with fasting, there may be qualitative differences in the metabolism of glucose.  相似文献   

20.
The amount of pyruvate dehydrogenase in the active form (PDHa) was increased 1.7-fold compared with controls in heart muscle of mice 1 week after induction of obesity with a single injection of gold-thioglucose. At 4 weeks post injection, the amount of PDHa was decreased to 32% of control, a value which was observed in later stages of the obesity syndrome. In contrast, liver PDHa was increased and remained at an increased activity during the development of obesity. Despite normal post-prandial serum insulin contents, liver membrane insulin-receptor numbers were decreased 1 week after gold-thioglucose injection, and there was no change in receptor affinity. The decrease in heart PDHa in the obese animals was reversed by a single dose of 2-tetradecylglycidic acid, but this inhibitor of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation did not affect liver PDHa in these animals. These early and diverse changes in PDHa argue for a multifactorial aetiology in the development of the whole-body insulin resistance seen in older gold-thioglucose-treated obese animals.  相似文献   

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