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1.
The beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol inhibited the glycogenolytic response of platelet-activating factor (AGEPC, 1-O-hexadecyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) in perfused livers derived from fed rats. AGEPC-stimulated hepatic vasoconstriction, measured by increases in portal vein pressure, also was inhibited by prior isoproterenol infusion. Isoproterenol-mediated inhibition of these hepatic responses to AGEPC was not apparent when isoproterenol (10 microM) was coinfused with the beta-receptor antagonist propranolol (75 microM) or when isoproterenol was replaced with the alpha-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine (10 microM). alpha-Agonist-induced glycogenolysis and vasoconstriction in the perfused liver was unaffected by isoproterenol infusion. Glucagon (2.3 nM) had no effect on the glycogenolytic or vasoconstrictive responses of the liver to AGEPC despite the fact that glucagon increased hepatic cAMP levels to a far greater extent than isoproterenol. Additionally, inhibition of the hepatic responses to AGEPC by isoproterenol occurred in perfused livers from mature rats (i.e. greater than 300 g) in which liver parenchymal cells lack functional beta-adrenergic receptors. The data presented in this study illustrate a specific inhibition of AGEPC-induced hepatic glycogenolysis and vasoconstriction by beta-adrenergic stimulation of the perfused liver. This inhibition appears to be mediated by interaction of isoproterenol with nonparenchymal cells within the liver. These findings are consistent with the concept that AGEPC stimulates hepatic glycogenolysis by an indirect mechanism involving hepatic vasoconstriction.  相似文献   

2.
Endothelin, a potent peptide agonist in the liver   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Endothelin, a peptide mediator produced by vascular endothelial cells, caused sustained vasoconstriction of the portal vasculature in the perfused rat liver. The vasoactive effect of endothelin was accompanied by increased glycogenolysis and alterations in hepatic oxygen consumption. The endothelin-induced increase in the portal pressure was concentration-dependent with an EC50 of 1 nM. Endothelin-induced hepatic glycogenolysis was dose-dependent but exhibited a different EC50 than for the vasoconstrictive effects of endothelin. Hepatic vasoconstriction and glycogenolysis following endothelin infusion were inhibited when Ca2+ was removed from the perfusion medium. The endothelin-induced responses in the liver were not altered by prior infusion of phenylephrine (alpha-adrenergic agonist), isoproterenol (beta-adrenergic agonist), angiotensin II, glucagon, platelet-activating factor, or the platelet-activating factor antagonist, BN52021. However, repeated infusion of endothelin resulted in desensitization of the glycogenolytic response but was without a significant effect on hepatic vasoconstriction. Endothelin also stimulated metabolism of inositol phospholipids in isolated hepatocytes and Kupffer cells in primary culture. The present experiments demonstrate, for the first time, that endothelin is a very potent agonist in the liver eliciting both a sustained vasoconstriction of the hepatic vasculature and a significant increase in hepatic glucose output.  相似文献   

3.
Infusion of platelet-activating factor (alkyl acetylglycerophosphocholine (AGEPC] into isolated perfused rat livers caused a dose-dependent, transient increase in portal vein pressure, indicative of constriction of the hepatic vasculature. A close correlation was observed between the changes in portal pressure and concomitant transient increases in hepatic glucose output. The two processes displayed similar dose dependence and were attenuated to a similar extent by reducing the perfusate calcium concentration. Reducing the perfusate free calcium concentration to 1 nM by co-infusion of EGTA did not abolish completely the hepatic responses to AGEPC. Verapamil inhibited both the hemodynamic and glycogenolytic responses to AGEPC in a dose-dependent fashion; the IC50 was approximately 10 microM at an AGEPC concentration of 6.6 X 10(-11) M. Also, both responses displayed similar degrees of tachyphylaxis in response to repeated short infusions of AGEPC. Measurement of glycogen phosphorylase a in extracts from freeze-clamped livers demonstrated a rapid increase in phosphorylase a in response to infusion of AGEPC. A small but significant increase in whole tissue ADP was found in response to AGEPC (2 X 10(-8) M); cAMP levels were not changed by AGEPC infusion. It is concluded that glycogenolysis in the perfused liver in response to AGEPC may be a result of the hemodynamic effects of AGEPC, rather than a direct effect of the phospholipid mediator on the hepatocyte.  相似文献   

4.
Infusion of the thromboxane A2 analogue U-46619 into isolated perfused rat livers resulted in dose-dependent increases in glucose output and portal vein pressure, indicative of constriction of the hepatic vasculature. At low concentrations, e.g. less than or equal to 42 ng/ml, glucose output occurred only during agonist infusion; whereas at concentrations greater than or equal to 63 ng/ml, a peak of glucose output also was observed upon termination of agonist infusion coincident with relief of hepatic vasoconstriction. Effluent perfusate lactate/pyruvate and beta-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratios increased significantly in response to U-46619 infusion. Hepatic oxygen consumption increased at low U-46619 concentrations (less than or equal to 20 ng/ml) and became biphasic with a transient spike of increased consumption followed by a prolonged decrease in consumption at higher concentrations. Increased glucose output in response to 42 ng/ml U-46619 was associated with a rapid activation of glycogen phosphorylase, slight increases in tissue ADP levels, and no increase in cAMP. At 1000 ng/ml, U-46619 activation of glycogen phosphorylase was accompanied by significant increases in tissue levels of AMP and ADP, decreases in ATP, and slight increases in cAMP. In isolated hepatocytes, U-46619 did not stimulate glucose output or activate glycogen phosphorylase. Reducing the perfusate calcium concentration from 1.25 to 0.05 mM resulted in a marked reduction of the glycogenolytic response to U-46619 (42 ng/ml) with no efflux of calcium from the liver. U-46619-induced glucose output and vasoconstriction displayed a similar dose dependence upon the perfusate calcium concentration. Thus, U-46619 exerts a potent agonist effect on glycogenolysis and vasoconstriction in the perfused rat liver. The present findings support the concept that U-46619 stimulates hepatic glycogenolysis indirectly via vasoconstriction-induced hypoxia within the liver.  相似文献   

5.
Infusion of latex beads into isolated perfused rat livers transiently increased glucose output, perfusate lactate/pyruvate ratio and portal vein pressure, mimicking hepatic effects of heat-aggregated IgG (HAG). Indomethacin attenuated hepatic responses to latex beads, and extracellular calcium was required for full expression of hepatic responses. Prior infusion of HAG inhibited the glycogenolytic response to latex beads, supporting a common mechanism of action for the two agents.  相似文献   

6.
Infusion of adenine nucleotides and adenosine into perfused rat livers resulted in stimulation of hepatic glycogenolysis, transient increases in the effluent perfusate [3-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate] ratio, and increased portal vein pressure. In livers perfused with buffer containing 50 microM-Ca2+, transient efflux of Ca2+ was seen on stimulation of the liver with adenine nucleotides or adenosine. ADP was the most potent of the nucleotides, stimulating glucose output at concentrations as low as 0.15 microM, with half-maximal stimulation at approx. 1 microM, and ATP was slightly less potent, half-maximal stimulation requiring 4 microM-ATP. AMP and adenosine were much less effective, doses giving half-maximal stimulation being 40 and 20 microM respectively. Non-hydrolysed ATP analogues were much less effective than ATP in promoting changes in hepatic metabolism. ITP, GTP and GDP caused similar changes in hepatic metabolism to ATP, but were 10-20 times less potent than ATP. In livers perfused at low (7 microM) Ca2+, infusion of phenylephrine before ATP desensitized hepatic responses to ATP. Repeated infusions of ATP in such low-Ca2+-perfused livers caused homologous desensitization of ATP responses, and also desensitized subsequent Ca2+-dependent responses to phenylephrine. A short infusion of Ca2+ (1.25 mM) after phenylephrine infusion restored subsequent responses to ATP, indicating that, during perfusion with buffer containing 7 microM-Ca2+, ATP and phenylephrine deplete the same pool of intracellular Ca2+, which can be rapidly replenished in the presence of extracellular Ca2+. Measurement of cyclic AMP in freeze-clamped liver tissue demonstrated that adenosine (150 microM) significantly increased hepatic cyclic AMP, whereas ATP (15 microM) was without effect. It is concluded that ATP and ADP stimulate hepatic glycogenolysis via P2-purinergic receptors, through a Ca2+-dependent mechanism similar to that in alpha-adrenergic stimulation of hepatic tissue. However, adenosine stimulates glycogenolysis via P1-purinoreceptors and/or uptake into the cell, at least partially through a mechanism involving increase in cyclic AMP. Further, the hepatic response to adenine nucleotides may be significant in regulating hepatic glucose output in physiological and pathophysiological states.  相似文献   

7.
Interactions between phenylephrine-induced oxygen consumption, lactate and pyruvate output, and urea and glucose production were examined in perfused livers from fed or 48-h-fasted rats. Within 2 min of phenylephrine infusion, oxygen consumption in perfused livers was increased by approximately 40%. Increases in oxygen consumption induced by phenylephrine were essentially abolished in the presence of carboxyatractyloside, whereas those induced by dinitrophenol were still evident. Phenylephrine-induced increases in oxygen consumption were accompanied by enhanced rates of gluconeogenesis and ureogenesis in livers from fed or 48-h-fasted animals. These data indicate that phenylephrine-induced increases in respiration in perfused rat liver may result from an enhanced rate of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation in response to an increased cellular energy requirement.  相似文献   

8.
1. The metabolic and hemodynamic effects of prostaglandin F2 alpha, leukotriene C4 and the thromboxane A2 analogue U-46619 were studied during physiologically antegrade (portal to hepatic vein) and retrograde (hepatic to portal vein) perfusion and in a system of two rat livers perfused in sequence. 2. The stimulatory effects of prostaglandin F2 alpha (3 microM) on hepatic glucose release, perfusion pressure and net Ca2+ release were diminished by 77%, 95% and 64%, respectively, during retrograde perfusion when compared to the antegrade direction, whereas the stimulation of 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate by prostaglandin F2 alpha (which largely reflects the metabolism of perivenous hepatocytes) was lowered by only 20%. Ca2+ mobilization and glucose release from the liver comparable to that seen during antegrade perfusion could also be observed in retrograde perfusions; however, higher concentrations of the prostaglandin were required. 3. The glucose, Ca2+ and pressure response to leukotriene C4 (20 nM) or the thromboxane A2 analogue U-46619 (200 nM) of livers perfused in the antegrade direction were diminished by about 90% during retrograde perfusion. Sodium nitroprusside (20 microM) decreased the pressure response to leukotriene C4 (20 nM) and U-46619 (200 nM) by about 40% and 20% in antegrade perfusions, respectively, but did not affect the maximal increase of glucose output. 4. When two livers were perfused antegradely in series, such that the perfusate leaving the first liver (liver I) entered a second liver (liver II), infusion of U-46619 at concentrations below 200 nM to the influent perfusate of liver I increased the portal pressure of liver I, but not of liver II. At higher concentrations of U-46619 there was also an increase of the portal pressure of liver II and with concentrations above 800 nM the pressure responses of both livers were near-maximal [19.6 +/- 0.8 (n = 7) cm H2O and 16.5 +/- 1.1 (n = 8) cm H2O for livers I and II, respectively]. There was a similar behaviour of glucose release from livers I and II in response to U-46619 infusion. When liver I was perfused in the retrograde direction, a significant pressure or glucose response of liver II (antegrade perfusion) could not be observed even with U-46619 concentrations up to 1000 nM. 5. Similarly, the perfusion pressure increase and glucose release induced by leukotriene C4 (10 nM) observed with liver II was only about 20% of that seen with liver I.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
In an attempt to elucidate the mechanism by which calcitonin modulates glucose metabolism, the effect of elcatonin ([Asu1 . 7]-eel calcitonin), a potent synthetic eel calcitonin analogue, on hepatic glycogenolysis was investigated by use of perfused liver from fed rats. Elcatonin, as infused into the portal vein at concentrations between 10 mU/ml and 200 mU/ml did not affect glucose output into the hepatic venous effluent. At concentrations higher than 100 mU/ml, it inhibited the glycogenolysis stimulated by submaximal concentrations of glucagon which was perfused concurrently. This aspect of elcatonin effect was reproduced by synthetic salmon calcitonin. Though elcatonin showed a marked inhibition of the glycogenolytic activity induced by glucagon at or less than 5.7 X 10(-11) M, the inhibitory effect became undetectable when higher concentrations of glucagon were employed. Elcatonin did not inhibit the glycogenolysis induced by dibutyryl cyclic AMP at near (0.5 microM) or less than half-maximally effective (0.2 microM) concentrations. In addition, it did not inhibit the glycogenolytic activity half-maximally stimulated by alpha-adrenergic agonist (phenylephrine, 0.4 microM) or vasopressin (0.2 mU/ml). Elcatonin inhibited the cyclic AMP production of the tissue induced by glucagon infusion. These data indicate that elcatonin modulates hepatic glycogenolysis by preventing the glucagon effect at a step before cyclic AMP production and with an apparently competitive kinetics. In view of the concept that Ca++ is involved in the glycogenolytic effect of alpha-adrenergic agonist and vasopressin, the fact that elcatonin did not influence the action of these agents suggests that Ca++ fluxes are not involved in the elcatonin effect on liver.  相似文献   

10.
Glucose output from perfused livers of 48 h-starved rats was stimulated by phenylephrine (2 microM) when lactate, pyruvate, alanine, glycerol, sorbitol, dihydroxyacetone or fructose were used as gluconeogenic precursors. Phenylephrine-induced increases in glucose output were immediately preceded by a transient efflux of Ca2+ and a sustained increase in oxygen uptake. Phenylephrine decreased the perfusate [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio when sorbitol or glycerol was present, but increased the ratio when alanine, dihydroxyacetone or fructose was present. Phenylephrine induced a rapid increase in the perfusate [beta-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate] ratio and increased total ketone-body output by 40-50% with all substrates. The oxidation of [1-14C]octanoate or 2-oxo[1-14C]glutarate to 14CO2 was increased by up to 200% by phenylephrine. All responses to phenylephrine infusion were diminished after depletion of the hepatic alpha-agonist-sensitive pool of Ca2+ and returned toward maximal responses after Ca2+ re-addition. Phenylephrine-induced increases in glucose output from lactate, sorbitol and glycerol were inhibited by the transaminase inhibitor amino-oxyacetate by 95%, 75% and 66% respectively. Data presented suggest that the mobilization of an intracellular pool of Ca2+ is involved in the activation of gluconeogenesis by alpha-adrenergic agonists in perfused rat liver. alpha-Adrenergic activation of gluconeogenesis is apparently accompanied by increases in fatty acid oxidation and tricarboxylic acid-cycle flux. An enhanced transfer of reducing equivalents from the cytoplasmic to the mitochondrial compartment may also be involved in the stimulation of glucose output from the relatively reduced substrates glycerol and sorbitol and may arise principally from an increased flux through the malate-aspartate shuttle.  相似文献   

11.
In perfused rat liver perivascular nerve stimulation (7.5 Hz, 20 V, 2 ms, 5 min) at the liver hilus caused an increase in glucose and lactate output and a decrease in flow. The influence of the alpha 1-receptor blocker prazosine and the beta-blocker propranolol on these nerve effects was studied in the isolated rat liver perfused classically via the portal vein only and, as developed recently, via both the hepatic artery and the portal vein. 1) In livers perfused via the portal vein only the nerve stimulation-dependent metabolic alterations were nearly completely inhibited by prazosine (5 microM), but not influenced by propranolol (10 microM). The hemodynamic changes were lowered to only 33% by prazosine and not altered by propranolol either. 2) In livers perfused via the hepatic artery (100 mm Hg, 20-40% of flow) and the portal vein (10 mm Hg, 80-60% of flow)--similar to portal perfusions--the nerve stimulation--dependent metabolic alterations were almost completely blocked by arterial, portal or simultaneously applied arterial and portal prazosine. However--in contrast to portal perfusions--the metabolic alterations were reduced to about 20% (glucose) and 50% (lactate) also by propranolol independently of its site of application. The decrease in flow was reduced by prazosine to about 60%, 50% and 30% when applied via the artery, the portal vein or via both vessels, respectively. The hemodynamic alterations were not influenced by propranolol. These results allow the following conclusions: A subpopulation of beta-receptors can play a permissive role in the alpha 1-receptor-mediated sympathetic nerve action on glucose and lactate metabolism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The role of extracellular calcium in the glycogenolytic effects of calcium-dependent hormones was examined in a rat liver perfusion system. Decreasing the perfusate CaCl2 concentration resulted in a concentration-dependent inhibition of glucose output by maximal concentrations of vasopressin (20 nM) and angiotensin II (10 nM), but not of glucagon (1.4 nM), cyclic AMP (100 microM), dibutyryl cyclic AMP (10 microM) or phenylephrine (5 microM). However, the effect of phenylephrine was inhibited when livers were perfused with CaCl2-free perfusate containing 0.5 mM EGTA in a duration-dependent manner. These effects were exerted through the inhibition of the maximal response of each hormone, and were associated with a parallel decrease in phosphorylase activation but not with changes in tissue cyclic AMP concentrations. When livers were preloaded with 45Ca for 45 min and then washed for either 15 min or 45 min, these hormones elicited a rapid and transient 45Ca efflux regardless of the perfusate calcium concentration. The sequential perfusion of two hormones resulted in the loss of 45Ca efflux by the second hormone. These results suggest that the glycogenolytic effects of vasopressin and angiotensin II depend on the extracellular calcium and that of phenylephrine primarily on the cellular calcium. It was also demonstrated that these calcium-dependent hormones mobilize calcium from the same pools. However, the mobilization of cellular calcium does not necessarily correlate directly with the glycogenolytic actions of vasopressin and angiotensin II.  相似文献   

13.
Infusion of adenosine into perfused rat livers resulted in transient increases in glucose output, portal-vein pressure, the effluent perfusate [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio, and O2 consumption. 8-Phenyltheophylline (10 microM) inhibited adenosine responses, whereas dipyridamole (50 microM) potentiated the vasoconstrictive effect of adenosine. The order of potency for adenosine analogues was: 5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine (NECA) greater than L-phenylisopropyladenosine greater than cyclohexyladenosine greater than D-phenylisopropyladenosine greater than 2-chloroadenosine greater than adenosine, consistent with adenosine actions modulated through P1-purine receptors of the A2-subtype. Hepatic responses exhibited homologous desensitization in response to repeated infusion of adenosine. Adenosine effects on the liver were attenuated at lower perfusate Ca2+ concentrations. Indomethacin decreased hepatic responses to both adenosine and NECA. Whereas adenosine stimulated glycogen phosphorylase activity in isolated hepatocytes, NECA caused no effect in hepatocytes. The response to adenosine in hepatocytes was inhibited by dipyridamole (50 microM), but not 8-phenyltheophylline (10 microM). The present study indicates that, although adenosine has direct effects on parenchymal cells, indirect effects of adenosine, mediated through the A2-purinergic receptors on another hepatic cell type, appear to play a role in the perfused liver.  相似文献   

14.
1-O-Alkyl-2-acetyl-sn-glyceryl 3-phosphorylcholine or acetylglyceryl ether phosphorylcholine (AGEPC) stimulated glycogenolysis in perfused livers from fed rats at concentrations as low as 10(-11) M. At the lower AGEPC concentrations, e.g. 2 X 10(-10) M, a single transient phase of enhanced hepatic glucose output was elicited upon infusion of this agonist. At higher concentrations, e.g. 2 X 10(-8) M, a sharp transient spike of glucose output was observed, followed by a stable elevated steady state rate of glucose output until the AGEPC infusion was terminated. Increased rates of lactate and acetoacetate output and a diminished hepatic oxygen consumption were characteristic of the response of the livers to AGEPC at 2 X 10(-10) M. Neither alpha- nor beta-adrenergic antagonists blocked the glycogenolytic response of AGEPC. Repeated infusion of AGEPC led to homologous desensitization of the response, but the response of the liver to the alpha-adrenergic agonist, phenylephrine, or to glucagon, subsequent to AGEPC stimulation, was unaffected. Increasing the period of perfusion between successive additions of AGEPC, from 7 to 30 min, resulted in an increased glycogenolytic response to this agonist. When the perfusate calcium concentration was reduced from 1.25 to 0.05 mM, the glycogenolytic response to AGEPC was markedly diminished; calcium efflux from the liver following stimulation with AGEPC was not observed. The data presented in this study illustrate a potent agonist effect of AGEPC on the glycogenolytic system in the rat liver.  相似文献   

15.
The hepatic anaphylactic venoconstriction is partly involved in anaphylactic hypotension, and is characterized by significant post-sinusoidal constriction and liver congestion in guinea pigs. We determined what chemical mediators are involved in anaphylaxis-induced segmental venoconstriction and liver congestion in perfused livers isolated from ovalbumin sensitized guinea pigs. Livers were perfused portally and recirculatingly at constant flow with diluted blood. The sinusoidal pressure was measured by the double occlusion pressure (Pdo), and was used to determine the pre-sinusoidal (Rpre) and post-sinusoidal (Rpost) resistances. An antigen injection increased both the portal vein pressure and Pdo, resulting in 4.1- and 2.3-fold increases in Rpre and Rpost, respectively. Hepatic congestion was observed as reflected by liver weight gain. Pretreatment with TCV-309 (10microM, platelet-activating factor (PAF) receptor antagonist) or ONO-1078 (100microM, human cysteinyl-leukotriene (Cys-LT) receptor 1 antagonist), but not indomethacin (10microM, cyclooxygenase inhibitor), ketanserin (10microM, serotonin receptor antagonist), or diphenhydramine (100microM, histamine H1 antagonist), significantly attenuated this anaphylactic hepatic venoconstriction. Anaphylaxis-induced increases in Rpre and Rpost were significantly inhibited by TCV-309 (by 48%) and ONO-1078 (by 36%), respectively. Combined TCV-309 and ONO-1078 pretreatment exerted additive inhibitory effects on anaphylactic hepatic venoconstriction. Anaphylactic hepatic weight gain was converted to weight loss when post-sinusoidal constriction was attenuated. It is concluded that anaphylaxis-induced pre-sinusoidal constriction is mainly caused by PAF and the post-sinusoidal constriction by Cys-LTs in guinea pig livers.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of acetylcholine on glucose and lactate balance and on perfusion flow were studied in isolated rat livers perfused simultaneously via the hepatic artery (100 mmHg, 25-35% of flow) and the portal vein (10 mmHg, 75-65% of flow) with a Krebs-Henseleit bicarbonate buffer containing 5 mM-glucose, 2 mM-lactate and 0.2 mM-pyruvate. Arterial acetylcholine (10 microM sinusoidal concentration) caused an increase in glucose and lactate output and a slight decrease in arterial and portal flow. These effects were accompanied by an output of noradrenaline and adrenaline into the hepatic vein. Portal acetylcholine elicited only minor increases in glucose and lactate output, a slight decrease in portal flow and a small increase in arterial flow, and no noradrenaline and adrenaline release. The metabolic and haemodynamic effects of arterial acetylcholine and the output of noradrenaline and adrenaline were strongly inhibited by the muscarinic antagonist atropine (10 microM). The acetylcholine-dependent alterations of metabolism and the output of noradrenaline were not influenced by the alpha 1-blocker prazosin (5 microM), whereas the output of adrenaline was increased. The acetylcholine-dependent metabolic alterations were not inhibited by the beta 2-antagonist butoxamine (10 microM), although the overflow of noradrenaline was nearly completely blocked and the output of adrenaline was slightly decreased. These results allow the conclusion that arterial, but not portal, acetylcholine caused sympathomimetic metabolic effects, without noradrenaline or adrenaline being involved in signal transduction.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of noradrenaline on oxygen uptake, on periportal and perivenous oxygen tension at surface acini, on microcirculation and on glucose output were studied in isolated rat livers perfused at constant flow with Krebs-Henseleit-hydrogen carbonate buffer containing 5mM glucose and 2mM lactate. Noradrenaline at 1 microM concentration caused a decrease in oxygen uptake, while at 0.1 microM it led to an increase. Both high and low doses of noradrenaline decreased the tissue surface oxygen tension in periportal and - after a transient rise - in perivenous areas. Noradrenaline at an overall constant flow caused an increase of portal pressure and an alteration of the intrahepatic distribution of the perfusate: at the surface of the liver and in cross sections infused trypan blue led to only a slightly heterogeneous staining after a low dose of noradrenaline but to a clearly heterogeneous staining after a high dose. Both high and low doses of noradrenaline stimulated glucose release. All effects could be inhibited by the alpha-blocking agent phentolamine. In conclusion, control of hepatic oxygen consumption by circulating noradrenaline is a complex result of opposing hemodynamic and metabolic components: the microcirculatory changes inhibit oxygen uptake; they dominate after high catecholamine doses. The metabolic effects include a stimulation of oxygen utilization; they prevail at low catecholamine levels. The noradrenergic control of glucose release is also very complex, involving direct, metabolic and indirect, hemodynamic components.  相似文献   

18.
Lipid mediators, thromboxane A2 (TxA2) and platelet-activating factor (PAF), are potent vasoconstrictors, and have been implicated as mediators of liver diseases, such as ischemic-reperfusion injury. We determined the effects of a TxA2 analogue (U-46619) and PAF on the vascular resistance distribution and liver weight (wt) in isolated guinea pig livers perfused with blood via the portal vein. The sinusoidal pressure was measured by the double occlusion pressure (P(do)), and was used to determine the pre- (R(pre)) and post-sinusoidal (R(post)) resistances. U-46619 and PAF concentration-dependently increased the hepatic total vascular resistance (R(t)). The minimum concentration at which significant vasoconstriction occurs was 0.001 microM for PAF and 0.1 microM for U-46619. Moreover, the concentration of U-46619 required to increase R(t) to the same magnitude is 100 times higher than PAF. Thus, the responsiveness to PAF was greater than that to U-46619. Both agents increased predominantly R(pre) over R(post). U-46619 caused a sustained liver weight loss. In contrast, PAF also caused liver weight loss at lower concentrations, but it produced liver weight gain at higher concentrations (2.5 +/- 0.3 per 10g liver weight at 1 microM PAF), which was caused by substantial post-sinusoidal constriction and increased P(do). In conclusion, both TxA2 and PAF contract predominantly the pre-sinusoidal veins. TxA2 causes liver weight loss, while PAF at high concentrations increases liver weight due to substantial post-sinusoidal constriction in isolated guinea pig livers.  相似文献   

19.
Hepatocyte heterogeneity in response to extracellular ATP   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
1. The metabolic and hemodynamic effects of extracellular ATP in perfused rat liver were compared during physiologically antegrade (portal to hepatic vein) and retrograde (hepatic to portal vein) perfusion. ATP in concentrations up to 100 microM was completely hydrolyzed during a single liver passage regardless of the perfusion direction. 2. The ATP(20 microM)-induced increases of glucose output, perfusion pressure and ammonium ion release seen during antegrade perfusions were diminished by 85-95% when the perfusion was in the retrograde direction, whereas the amount of Ca2+ mobilized from the liver was decreased by only 60%. The maximal rate of initial K+ uptake following ATP was dependent on the amount of Ca2+ mobilized regardless of the direction of perfusion. In the presence of UMP (1 mM), an inhibitor of ATP hydrolysis by membrane-bound nucleotide pyrophosphatase, the effect of the direction of perfusion on the glycogenolytic response to ATP (20 microM) was largely diminished. 3. For a maximal response of glucose output, Ca2+ release and perfusion pressure to extracellular ATP, concentrations of about 20 microM, 50 microM and 100 microM were required during antegrade perfusion, respectively. These maximal responses could also be obtained during retrograde perfusion, but higher ATP concentrations were required (120 microM, 80 microM, above 200 microM, respectively). 4. 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glutamate which occurs predominantly in the perivenous hepatocytes capable of glutamine synthesis was stimulated by extracellular ATP (20 microM); it was only slightly affected by the direction of perfusion. In antegrade perfusions, ATP (20 microM) increased 14CO2 production from 88 to 162 nmol g-1 min-1, compared to an increase from 91 to 148 nmol g-1 min-1 in retrograde perfusion. 5. The data are interpreted to suggest that (a) extracellular ATP is predominantly hydrolyzed by a small hepatocyte population located at the perivenous outflow of the acinus; (b) glycogenolysis to glucose is predominantly localized in the periportal area; (c) contractile elements (sphincters) exist near the inflow of the sinusoidal bed; (d) a considerable portion of the Ca2+ mobilized by ATP is derived from liver cells that do not contribute to hepatic glucose output.  相似文献   

20.
We previously reported that sympathetic nerve-induced vasoconstriction in the intestine resulted in shear stress induced release of nitric oxide (NO) that led to presynaptic inhibition of transmitter release. In contrast, studies in the liver suggested a postsynaptic inhibition of vascular responses, thus leading to the hypothesis tested here that maintained catecholamine release in the liver would result in maintained metabolic catecholamine action in the face of inhibition of vascular responses. In rats, norepinephrine (NE) induced elevations in arterial glucose content were inhibited by NO synthase antagonism (N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), 10 mg/kg, intraportal) but potentiated by NO donor administration (3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1), 0.2 mg/kg, intraportal). The potentiated effect of SIN-1 was abolished by indomethacin (7.5 mg/kg, intraportal). To confirm the hepatic site of metabolic effect, cats were used so that blood flow and hepatic glucose balance could be determined. SIN-1 potentiated NE-induced glucose output from the liver from 5.0 +/- 0.4 to 7.2 +/- 0.6 mg x min(-1) x kg(-1). The potentiation was blocked by methylene blue, a guanylate cyclase inhibitor. Contrary to the glucose response, L-NAME potentiated but SIN-1 attenuated NE-induced portal vasoconstriction. Thus NO is shown to produce differential modulation of vascular and metabolic effects of NE. Vasoconstriction of the hepatic vasculature is inhibited by NO, whereas the glycogenolytic response to NE is potentiated, responses that are probably mediated by prostaglandin.  相似文献   

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