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Query: EC:3.1.3.9 (
glucose-6-phosphatase
)
3,081
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An algorithm has been devised to facilitate the diagnostic approach to the causes of hypoglycemia. This systematic approach enables the physician to reach the final diagnosis in a logical way without subjecting the child to unnecessary and possibly hazardous investigations. The algorithm is based on the following measurements as required by each patient: concentrations of blood glucose, lactate, ketone bodies, and glucose-regulating hormones. These measurements are performed with the patient in the fasting state and after loading tests (
glycerol
and galactose) as needed. If indicated, an enzymatic test is performed to establish the final diagnosis. Eighteen children aged 1 month to 7 years who had persistent or recurrent hypoglycemia have been examined according to this algorithm. The correct diagnosis was arrived at in 17 patients. The diagnosis was not reached in one neonate who had
glucose-6-phosphatase
deficiency and initially did not have lactic acidosis; once lactic acidosis developed, his illness fitted perfectly into the algorithm.
...
PMID:An algorithmic approach to diagnosis of hypoglycemia. 381 39
An 8-month-old female, maintained on breast feeding for 6 months, experienced numerous attacks of hyperventilation when weaned to baby food and was admitted with severe lactic acidosis (20 mM) and hypoglycemia. Physical examination was negative except for hepatomegaly. Fasting (18 hr) after stabilization on a high carbohydrate diet resulted in hypoglycemia (plasma glucose 40 mg/100 ml), lactic acidosis (6-10 mM), and a rise in plasma alanine. Glucagon produced a glycemic response after 6 hr, but not after 18 hr fasting. Intravenous galactose increased plasma glucose (Delta 45 mg/100 ml) but intravenous fructose,
glycerol
, and alanine caused a 40-50% fall in plasma glucose and a significant rise in lactate (Delta 3-4 mM). Liver biopsy showed fatty infiltration. Liver slices incubated with galactose, lactate, fructose, alanine, or
glycerol
converted only galactose to glucose. Hepatic glycolytic intermediates were increased below the level of fructose-1,6-diphosphate and decreased above. Hepatic phosphorylase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, amylo-1,6-glucosidase, phosphofructokinase, fructose-1-phosphate aldolase, and fructose-1,6-diphosphate aldolase levels were normal, but no fructose-1,6-diphosphatase (FDPase) activity was detected. Further studies on the liver homogenate of this patient revealed the presence of an acid-precipitable activator of FDPase. Normal plasma glucose and lactate levels were maintained on an 800 cal diet of 66% carbohydrate (sucrose and fructose excluded). 5% protein, and 20% fat. When carbohydrate was reduced to 35% and protein or fat increased to 23 and 53% respectively, lactic acidosis and hypoglycemia recurred. These studies show that a deficiency of FDPase produced infantile lactic acidosis and hypoglycemia and can be controlled by an appropriate diet.
...
PMID:Hepatic fructose-1,6-diphosphatase deficiency. A cause of lactic acidosis and hypoglycemia in infancy. 434 Oct 15
Palmitate, glucose, and
glycerol
oxidation to CO(2) have been investigated in the fasted state in ten normal subjects and nine patients (six hyperlipoproteinemias, one xanthomatosis, and two glycogenosis) after intravenous injection of [1-(14)C]palmitate, [1-(14)C]glucose, or [1-(14)C]
glycerol
in tracer amounts. The specific activities and concentrations of plasma palmitate,
glycerol
, or glucose and expired CO(2) were measured at various intervals after the injection for a period of 24 h. All the studies were analyzed in terms of a multicompartment model describing the structure for each of the subsystems, the transfer of carbon label between subsystems, and the oxidation to CO(2). A bicarbonate subsystem was also included in the model to account for its role in shaping the CO(2) curves. All the CO(2) activity following a palmitate injection could be accounted for by a direct oxidative pathway from plasm FFA with the addition of a 20-min delay compartment. The same also applied to glucose, except that the delay compartment had a mean time of about 150 min. Only about a third of the injected
glycerol
was directly oxidized to CO(2) from plasma; the delay time was about 4 min. Most of the remainder was converted to glucose. In normals about 45% of the FFA is oxidized to CO(2) directly. This constitutes about 30% of the total CO(2) output. In hyperlipemia the CO(2) output is nearly unchanged and the contribution from FFA is nearly the same. There is a considerable increase (factor of 2), however, in FFA mobilization, most of which is probably diverted to triglyceride synthesis. The glucose and
glycerol
subsystems are roughly the same in normals and hyperlipemics. About 50% of glucose is oxidized by the direct pathways which accounts for about 35% of the CO(2) output.
Glycerol
accounts for only 1.5% of the CO(2) produced. Major changes occurred in the
glycerol
and glucose subsystems in glycogenosis. The changes are consistent with the known deficiency in
glucose-6-phosphatase
in this disorder. There is a considerable reduction (factor of 2 or more) in the release of glucose to plasma (gluconeogenesis) and in the conversion of
glycerol
to glucose. Despite the integration of the kinetics of the glucose,
glycerol
, and FFA subsystems over a 24-h period, 36% of the CO(2) production was still unaccounted for in normals and 50% in hyperlipemics. Thus, some of the carbon must wind up in very slowly turning-over pools which supply CO(2) through subsystems not covered in these studies (triglycerides, glycogen, amino acids, etc.). All the modeling was carried out with the aid of the SAAM25 computer program.
...
PMID:Interrelations in the oxidative metabolism of free fatty acids, glucose, and glycerol in normal and hyperlipemic patients. A compartmental model. 452 90
The metabolic response to the first fast experienced by all mammals has been studied in the newborn rat. Levels of fuels and hormones have been compared in the fetal and maternal circulations at term. Then, after cesarean section just before the normal time of birth, sequential changes in the same parameters were quantified during the first 16 h of the neonatal period. No caloric intake was permitted, and the newborns were maintained at 37 degrees C. Activities of three key hepatic enzymes involved in glucose production were estimated. Marked differences in maternal and fetal hormones and fuels were observed. Lower levels of glucose, free fatty acids, and
glycerol
but higher levels of lactate, alpha-amino nitrogen, alanine, and glutamine were present in the fetus. Pyruvate, glutamate, and ketone bodies were not significantly different. The combination of a strikingly higher fetal immunoreactive insulin and a slightly lower immunoreactive glucagon (pancreatic) resulted in a profound elevation in the insulin-to-glucagon ratio, a finding consistent with an organism in an anabolic state. The rat at birth presents a body composition with respect to fuels available for mobilization and conversion which is dominated by carbohydrate and protein, since little fat is present. However, at birth a transient period of hypoglycemia occurred, associated with a rapid fall in insulin and rise in glucagon, causing reversal of the insulin-to-glucagon relationship toward ratios such as were observed in the mother. After a lag period, hepatic activities of phosphorylase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase increased. Concurrent with these enzyme changes, the blood glucose returned to levels at or above those of the fetus. Interestingly, the fall observed in levels of the gluconeogenic precursors, lactate and amino acids, preceded the rise in enzyme activities and restoration of blood glucose. After 4 h, however, hypoglycemia recurred, during a period of decreasing hepatic glycogen content and blood lactate, pyruvate, and
glycerol
levels but of stable or increasing amino acid concentrations. Hepatic gluconeogenesis in this phase of depleted glycogen stores was insufficient to maintain euglycemia. Substrates derived from fat showed early changes of smaller magnitude. The rise in free fatty acids which occurred was less than twofold the value at birth, though this rise persisted up to 6 h. Whereas
glycerol
rose transiently, acetoacetate did not change and beta-hydroxybutyrate concentration fell. Both ketone bodies showed a marked rise at 16 h. at a time of diminished free fatty acid levels. Plasma growth hormone, though higher in the fetal than the maternal circulation, showed no consistent change during the period of observation. The changes in levels of the endocrine pancreatic hormones at birth were appropriate in time, magnitude, and direction to be implicated as prime regulators of the metabolic response during the neonatal period in the rat.
...
PMID:Fuels, hormones, and liver metabolism at term and during the early postnatal period in the rat. 475 Apr 49
Enzyme histochemical methods were performed on sporozoite infected liver tissue of rats in order to gain insight into the nutrition and metabolism of exoerythrocytic forms of Plasmodium berghei. The following enzymes were demonstrated in the hepatocytic stages of the parasites, obtained 41 and 48 h after inoculation of sporozoites: acid phosphatase, cytochrome oxidase, NADH-tetrazolium reductase, succinate dehydrogenase, NAD+ and NADP+ dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase, NADP+-dependent malate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenases, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenases and alpha-
glycerol
-phosphate dehydrogenase. The results suggest that a conventional Embden-Meyerhoff pathway, pentose phosphate pathway and Krebs' citric acid cycle may in part be present in these exoerythrocytic parasites. Alkaline phosphatase, nucleoside polyphosphatase, 5' nucleotidase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, alpha-glucan phosphorylase, NAD+ dependent malate dehydrogenase, amino-peptidase M and non-specific esterases were not detected by our techniques in the parasite. The enzyme distribution of this intrahepatocytic malaria parasite revealed by histochemistry is compared with the enzyme distribution in the other phases of the parasite's life cycle.
...
PMID:Histochemical observations on the exoerythrocytic malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei in rat liver. 608 94
The effects of 1-naphthyl-N-methylcarbamate (carbaryl) upon glucose production from several precursors (lactate,
glycerol
, alanine, fructose and pyruvate) and on activities of gluconeogenic enzymes (
glucose-6-phosphatase
, lactate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase) in isolated rat hepatocytes was studied. The results show that carbaryl inhibits lactate-gluconeogenesis at all concentrations of substrate studied. Gluconeogenesis from 10 mM fructose or 10 mM pyruvate or 10 mM alanine is also inhibited by carbaryl 1 mM. However,
glycerol
-gluconeogenesis is unaffected. Concentrations of carbaryl at 0.01 and 0.1 mM did not significantly modify lactic dehydrogenase activity, but at 1.0 mM this activity was reduced by 38% in relation to the dimethylsulphoxide-treated group. The synthetic activity of
glucose-6-phosphatase
is enhanced by carbaryl, but the increase is only significant for 1 mM carbaryl. In the study of aspartate aminotransferase activities two fractions, cytoplasmic and mitochondrial, are differentiated; and, it is observed that both fractions are inhibited by 0.1 and 1.0 mM carbaryl. The results indicate that carbaryl produces major decreases of the glucose production by hepatic cells, and suggest that the carbaryl-induced hyperglycemia in the fasted animal would be due to deficiencies in the peripheral utilization of the glucose.
...
PMID:The interaction of carbaryl with the metabolism of isolated hepatocytes: II. Effect on gluconeogenesis. 609 5
1. The development of rat liver acyl-CoA:sn-
glycerol
-3-phosphate-O-acyl-transferase (EC 2.3.1.15) is characterized by an increase and decrease in activity during the neonatal period, followed by a second increase and decrease during the late weaning period. Kidney acyltransferase exhibits a similar peak in activity during the neonatal period before increasing to adult levels of activity during the late weaning period. 2. Nucleosidediphosphatase activity increases rapidly during the neonatal period and thereafter gradually rises to adult levels in both liver and kidney. The latency of the enzyme increases rapidly after birth and thereafter shows little change with age. The enzyme appears to be more latent in the liver than in the kidney at all ages studied. 3. NADPH-cytochrome c reductase of liver has a single steep maximum and minimum in activity during the neonatal period, before increasing again to adult levels during the late weaning period. The enzyme in kidney shows a similar developmental pattern but at much lower levels of specific activity. 4. sn-Glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity was significantly higher in rough than in smooth membranes throughout the neonatal period of rapid smooth membrane proliferation. This distribution of enzyme activity is unlike that reported by others in phenobarbital-induced smooth membrane proliferation and suggests a major role for rough membranes in phospholipid synthesis during the neonatal period. 5. The qualitative similarity in development in rough and smooth microsomal subfractions for each of these enzymes is in distinct contrast with results previously reported for
glucose-6-phosphatase
.
...
PMID:Postnatal development of some membrane-bound enzymes of rat liver and kidney. 626 Feb 25
The cytochemical localization of
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G6Pase
) and its biochemical quantification were studied in isolated and cultured adult rat parenchymal cells. Appropriate technical conditions were chosen to assume adequate ultrastructural preservation and retention of enzyme activity. Isolated hepatocytes separated by collagenase perfusion were shortly fixed in glutaraldehyde and entrapped in a pellet of fibrin. Frozen sections, 50 microns in thickness were incubated for cytochemical demonstration of
G6Pase
, in a slightly modified Wachstein-Meisel medium. Hepatocytes in culture, fixed for 1 min in glutaraldehyde, were impregnated in a 10% cryoprotective
glycerol
solution and quickly frozen in liquid nitrogen at -170 degrees C in order to induce penetration of the substrate. In these conditions, a homogeneous distribution of the enzyme was observed in both isolated and cultured cells. The cytochemical reaction appears continuous in the smooth and rough endoplasmic cisternae and in the nuclear envelope. Lead phosphate deposits, although evenly distributed, are reduced in intensity after 48 h culture. Biochemical determinations reveal the presence of a high specific enzymatic activity in isolated cells (108 nmolP/min/mg proteins), which decreases in culture, respectively to 70 and 50% of the original value, after 24 and 48 h culture.
G6Pase
induction by glucagon was obtained after 48 and 72 h in culture.
...
PMID:Glucose-6-phosphatase distribution in isolated and cultured adult rat hepatocytes. 626 35
1,2-Diacyl-sn-
glycerol
: CDPcholine cholinephosphotransferase (EC 2.7.8.2) and acyl-CoA : 1-acyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.23) activities of rat liver microsomes can be inhibited by centrophenoxine (N,N-dimethylaminoethyl p-chlorophenoxyacetate). This inhibition is brought about by the intact centrophenoxine molecule rather than by the products of hydrolysis. A nonhydrolyzable ether analog of centrophenoxine was synthesized (neophenoxine; N,N-dimethylaminoethyl p-chlorophenoxyethyl ether) and proved most effective in inhibiting the two routes of phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis. While 50% inhibition of the cholinephosphotransferase was attained at 5 mM neophenoxine, 50% inhibition of the acyltransferase required 0.6 mM neophenoxine levels only. Inhibition of the cholinephosphotransferase (Ki approximately 1.5 mM) and the acyltransferase (Ki approximately 1 mM) by neophenoxine was shown to be noncompetitive. Other membrane-bound enzymes, such as
glucose-6-phosphatase
, monoacylglycerol lipase, alkaline phosphatase or phospholipase A2 were not affected by the inhibitors. Because of this specificity, and because of the high affinity of the microsomal membrane for such agents, centrophenoxine and neophenoxine should prove useful for controlling phosphatidylcholine synthesis and for modulating the phosphatidylcholine deacylation-reacylation cycle.
...
PMID:Modulation of phosphatidylcholine synthesis in vitro. Inhibition of diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase and lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase by centrophenoxine and neophenoxine. 626 46
The main substrates for brain energy metabolism were measured in blood samples taken from the carotid artery and the internal jugular bulb of four children with glycogen storage disease caused by deficiency of
glucose-6-phosphatase
. Multiple paired arterial and venous blood samples were analyzed for glucose, lactate, pyruvate, D-beta-hydroxybutyrate, acetoacetate,
glycerol
and O2, and the arteriovenous differences of the concentrations were calculated. In the first three patients the substrates were measured in two successive conditions with lower and higher glucose-intake, respectively, inducing reciprocally higher and lower concentrations of blood lactate. In the fourth patient medium chain triglycerides were administered simultaneously with the glucose-containing gastric drip feeding. Lactate appeared to be taken up significantly. It consumed, if completely oxidized, between 40-50% of the total O2 uptake in most cases. Only once in one patient the uptake of lactate switched to its release, when the blood lactate level decreased to normal. D-beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate arteriovenous (A-V) differences were small to negligible and these ketone bodies, therefore, did not contribute substantially to the brain's energy expenditure.
Glycerol
was not metabolized by the brain. Lactate thus appeared to be the second brain fuel next to glucose. It may protect the brain against fuel depletion in case of hypoglycemia.
...
PMID:Lactate as a cerebral metabolic fuel for glucose-6-phosphatase deficient children. 658 74
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