Abstract: | To determine the relative contributions of glucose, insulin, dexamethasone, and triiodothyronine to the induction of hepatic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, hepatocytes isolated from normal or adrenalectomized rats, either fasted or fed, were examined in culture. Addition of insulin (42 milliunits/ml, 0.9 microM) and dexamethasone (1 microM) to hepatocytes obtained from 3-day-fasted rats and cultured for 48 h in serum-free Dulbecco's medium resulted in a 7- to 11-fold increase in Glc-6-P dehydrogenase specific activity compared with a 2- to 3-fold increase in activity in control cultures incubated without added hormones. The effects of insulin and dexamethasone were independent of DNA synthesis, dose-dependent, and additive; each contributing about one-half of the total response. Medium glucose was neither sufficient nor necessary for the insulin- or dexamethasone-stimulated increase in Glc-6-P dehydrogenase specific activity. Addition of triiodothyronine (10 microM) preferentially blocked the dexamethasone-stimulated increase in Glc-6-P dehydrogenase specific activity. Insulin failed to stimulate the induction of Glc-6-P dehydrogenase in hepatocytes obtained from normal fed rats or from fasted and fed adrenalectomized rats. However, insulin caused a significant increase in the Glc-6-P dehydrogenase specific activity of these cells when dexamethasone was concurrently added to the culture medium. |