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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)
Metabolic alterations in ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH)-lesioned rats were investigated by examining daily changes of enzyme activities and urea concentrations three weeks after the operation. VMH-lesions in female adult rats caused a significant elevation in the activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase in the liver and parametrial adipose tissue. These changes suggest an increased lipogenesis. VMH-lesions also elicited an increase in activities of glucokinase (GK), pyruvate kinase (PK) and fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase), and a decrease in activities of phosphofructokinase (PFK),
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G6Pase
) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) in the liver. The apparently inconsistent changes in activities of key glycolytic enzymes, GK, PK and PFK, and key gluconeogenic enzymes,
G6Pase
, PEPCK and FBPase in the liver may be explained by the fact that they were favorable for glucose oxidation through pentose phosphate cycle and provide NADPH for lipogenesis in the liver. Furthermore, VMH-lesions induced an increase in urea contents of the liver and serum, and elicited an increase in activity of liver
tyrosine aminotransferase
(
TAT
) and a decrease in activity of liver histidase. These changes suggest an accelerated amino acid and protein catabolism, and favor an increment in the supply of the substrate for lipogenesis. Daily rhythms of
TAT
, histidase activities and serum urea concentration observed in the control rats were abolished by VMH-lesions. These findings suggest that VMH-lesions elicit the loss of these daily rhythms, probably through the disturbance of the circadian rhythm of feeding behavior at this dynamic phase (three weeks after operation) of obesity.
...
PMID:Shift of metabolism in rats with ventromedial hypothalamic lesions with respect to changes in daily rhythms of enzyme activity. 614 67
Primary cultures of liver cells isolated from adult rats by trypsin and collagenase perfusion techniques were carried out to compare cytologic and biochemical properties between the differently prepared cells. Trypsin-dispersed cells consisted of comparatively smaller cells, whereas collagenase-dispersed cells consisted of larger cells. The cell attachment efficiency on culture day 1 was about twice as high in the liver cells prepared with collagenase than those prepared with trypsin. Mature hepatocytes isolated by collagenase perfusion could be maintained in the primary culture for a longer period than those isolated by trypsin perfusion. Epithelial-like clear cells started to grow much earlier in the primary culture of the trypsin-dispersed liver cells than in that of the collagenase-dispersed liver cells. Earlier proliferation of epithelial-like clear cells could not be induced by in vitro trypsinization of the collagenase-dispersed liver cells. Both kinds of enzymatically prepared liver cells showed albumin production and exhibited glucose 6-phosphatase (
D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase
,
EC 3.1.3.9
, G6Pase) and
tyrosine aminotransferase
(L-tyrosine: 2-oxoglutarate amino-transferase, EC 2.6.1.5,
TAT
) activities for 1 week in the primary culture. Albumin production was higher in the liver cells prepared with collagenase than those prepared with trypsin, whereas G6Pase activity was almost the same between them.
TAT
activity up to culture day 2 was about 3-fold higher in the liver cells prepared with collagenase than in those prepared with trypsin. Combined supplementation of dexamethasone (1 X 10(-5)M) and insulin (10 micrograms/ml) consistently improved the cell attachment efficiency and was very effective in the maintenance of mature hepatocytes in both types. Furthermore, these hormones enhanced the albumin production and
TAT
activity in both types.
...
PMID:Comparison of cytologic and biochemical properties between liver cells isolated from adult rats by trypsin perfusion and those isolated by collagenase perfusion. 614 85
We describe protocols for the fractionation of isolated hepatocytes into eight sub-populations using centrifugal elutriation. The distribution of fluorescein isothiocyanate and acridine orange in hepatocytes prepared from livers pre-perfused with one of these dyes is described and used as an indicator of acinar zone derivation for each population. The cytochrome P-450 content and response to induction by 3-methylcholanthrene and phenobarbitone; the distribution of lactate dehydrogenase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, pyruvate kinase and
tyrosine aminotransferase
activities in the sub-populations is also reported. A marked asymmetry of distribution in all these activities was observed. On the basis of putative zone derivations (based on data of fluorescent dye distribution) of eight factors studied, the distributions of six were consistent with the sub-populations being derived from different acinar zones. Two major discrepancies were noted however, the distribution of pyruvate kinase activity and the response of the sub-populations to phenobarbitone. We conclude from this study that while a metabolic heterogeneity was revealed in the sub-populations generated, further characterisation is required to determine whether acinar zone separation has occurred and if so to what extent.
...
PMID:Characterisation of hepatocyte sub-populations generated by centrifugal elutriation. 641 67
Liver cells obtained from newborn mice homozygous for any one of several overlapping deletions in chromosome 7 fail to express a number of liver-specific differentiated traits. Among these is the activity of the membrane-bound liver-specific enzyme
glucose-6-phosphatase
(Glc-6-Pase;
D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase
,
EC 3.1.3.9
). Previous studies have led to the suggestion that the region of the genome covered by these deletions includes genes that normally regulate the expression of structural genes encoding liver-specific enzymes and proteins mapping elsewhere in the genome. To find out whether the deficiency of Glc-6-Pase may be caused by the deletion of the relevant structural gene, mouse liver cells homozygous for the deletion c14CoS were hybridized with 2S Faza rat hepatoma cells, and the hybrid cell cultures were analyzed for mouse and rat Glc-6-Pase activity. Hybrids showed expression of mouse Glc-6-Pase activity, proving that the structural gene for this enzyme is not included in the deletion c14CoS in chromosome 7. In the hybrid cells the rat hepatoma genome apparently contributes a factor that activates the structural gene of the mouse and corrects its failure of expression, which most likely resulted from the deletion of an essential regulatory or processing gene. By using as a marker glucose-6-phosphate isomerase (Glc-6-PIase; glucosephosphate isomerase, D-glucose-6-phosphate ketolisomerase, EC 5.3.1.9), known to map on chromosome 7, this entire chromosome could be excluded as a possible carrier of the Glc-6-Pase structural gene. In addition, the structural genes for Glc-6-Pase and for
tyrosine aminotransferase
(TyrATase; L-tyrosine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase, EC 2.6.1.5), another enzyme deficient in lethal deletion homozygotes, were shown to map on two different chromosomes. Together with our previous studies of TyrATase gene regulation, the present experiments suggest that the region of the mouse genome defined by the deletions includes one or more genes regulating the expression of several structural genes that map on different chromosomes and that encode liver-cell-type specific traits.
...
PMID:Correction of a genetically caused enzyme defect by somatic cell hybridization. 657 48
The role of glucocorticosteroid and thyroid hormone and of glucagon and insulin in the pre- and postnatal developmental formation of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase, ornithine transcarbamoylase, arginase, glutamate dehydrogenase,
tyrosine aminotransferase
,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, hexokinase and glucokinase activities in rat liver was investigated. Glucocorticosteroids and a low insulin/glucagon ratio always stimulate formation of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase, ornithine transcarbamoylase, arginase, glutamate dehydrogenase,
tyrosine aminotransferase
and
glucose-6-phosphatase
, while glucocorticosteroids and a high insulin/glucagon ratio stimulate formation of glucokinase. Thyroid hormone stimulates the formation of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase, arginase and
tyrosine aminotransferase
only before birth, whereas it stimulates the formation of glutamate dehydrogenase and
glucose-6-phosphatase
both before and after birth. Ornithine transcarbamoylase activity is depressed after thyroid-hormone treatment before and after birth. DNA content is always decreased by glucocorticosteroids and increased by thyroid hormone. The effect of these hormones on hexokinase is complex, probably due to different responses of the constitutive isozymes. With the exception of the effects of thyroid hormone on carbamoyl-phosphate synthase, arginase and
tyrosine aminotransferase
before birth, which may be indirect, the responses of enzyme activities and DNA content to treatment with glucocorticosteroid hormones, glucagon, insulin and thyroid hormone are qualitatively the same in fetuses, neonates, sucklings, weanlings and adults. Thus, the developmental profiles of the enzyme clusters reflect the changing levels of the relevant hormones. The enzymes that are stimulated by glucocorticosteroids and the insulin/glucagon ratio show increases in enzyme activity perinatally and around weaning, and relatively low activities in between, while those enzymes that are additionally stimulated by thyroid hormone differ in exhibiting relatively high activities between birth and weaning.
...
PMID:Multihormonal control of enzyme clusters in rat liver ontogenesis. II. Role of glucocorticosteroid and thyroid hormone and of glucagon and insulin. 702 60
The role of glucocorticosteroid hormones in the developmental formation of carbamoyl-phosphate synthase, ornithine transcarbamoylase, arginase, glutamate dehydrogenase,
tyrosine aminotransferase
,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, hexokinase and glucokinase activities in rat liver was investigated. Steroid hormone producing glands were either inactivated by hypophysectomy (before birth) or removed by adrenalectomy and/or gonadectomy (after birth). These procedures strongly depressed corticosterone levels. Furthermore, they decreased enzyme activities when performed before birth or after the second postnatal week. However, adrenalectomy at 1 week of age was less effective: the developmental increases in carbamoyl-phosphate synthase, ornithine transcarbamoylase, arginase,
tyrosine aminotransferase
and
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity persisted despite the absence of increasing levels of circulating corticosterone.
...
PMID:Multihormonal control of enzyme clusters in rat liver ontogenesis. I. Effects of adrenalectomy and gonadectomy. 727 92
The rats flown aboard Cosmos-782 showed a significant increase in the activity of
tyrosine aminotransferase
and tryptophan pyrolase, i. e. the enzymes whose activity depends on the corticosterone level. The synchronous rats displayed a small increase in the enzyme activity. The flight and synchronous animals exhibited a slight increase in the activity of gluconeogenetic enzymes and a decrease in the activity of
glucose-6-phosphatase
. Immediately after flight and, to a lesser extent, after the synchronous experiment the activity of lipogenetic enzymes decreased. On the R+25 day the enzyme activity remained unchanged. The study of lipogenesis in the epididymal fat, using C14-glucose incorporation into lipids, did not reveal any differences in the flight and synchronous rats. The findings demonstrated that changes in the enzyme activity induced by the flight and synchronous experiments returned to the normal during readaptation.
...
PMID:[Enzymatic activity in the liver and lipogenesis processes in the fatty tissue of rats after a space flight]. 738 1
The pattern of mRNA expression for liver-specific proteins and liver-enriched transcription factors was studied in two models of facultative gut epithelial progenitor cells activation: D-galactosamine (GalN)-induced liver injury and dietary copper depletion leading to pancreatic acinar atrophy. After 5 weeks of copper deficiency (CuD), pancreatic acini of Fischer 344 rats underwent atrophy, associated with intense proliferation of small duct-like cells with oval-shaped nuclei. These cells resemble morphologically epithelial progenitor cells of the liver that proliferate after GalN administration. Activated pancreatic epithelial cells express mRNAs for liver-specific genes normally expressed in fetal liver, including alpha-fetoprotein, albumin, alpha-1 antitrypsin,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, and others, but not genes that are turned on after birth such as serine dehydratase,
tyrosine aminotransferase
, and multidrug resistance gene-1b. They express mRNAs for liver-enriched transcription factors including HNF-1 alpha, HNF-3 beta and gamma, HNF-4, and members of the CCAAT-enhancer binding protein (C/EBP) family. The only mRNA for a liver-enriched transcription factor not detected in the pancreas of CuD animals was HNF-3 alpha. Expression of HNF-3 alpha, beta, and gamma, and C/EBP-beta mRNA was highly activated in proliferating liver epithelial cells on days 2 and 3 after GalN injury. Increased expression of C/EBP-delta was observed first in the liver on day 1 after GalN administration and in the pancreas at 4 weeks after initiating CuD. We suggest that C/EBP-delta could be involved in the initial activation of epithelial progenitor cells and that HNF-3 alpha, beta, and gamma, and C/EBP-beta might participate in their maturation. We conclude further that pancreatic epithelial progenitor cells undertake differentiation through the hepatocyte lineage but cannot complete the differentiation program within the pancreatic milieu.
...
PMID:Transcription factor and liver-specific mRNA expression in facultative epithelial progenitor cells of liver and pancreas. 749 89
Expression of many genes is modulated by intracellular variations of cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels in response to different signals from the environment. This regulation is mediated via a cAMP-response element (CRE). This report addresses the role of cAMP in the physiological activation of a subset of liver-specific genes which are perinatally activated. The
tyrosine aminotransferase
(
TAT
) gene and other genes such as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxyquinase (PEPCK) and
glucose-6-phosphatase
, involved in gluconeogenesis, belong to this category. CRE elements derived from the rat
TAT
-3.6 kb enhancer have been positioned in chimeric constructs, such that the activity of the reporter gene LacZ is dependent on cAMP. The tissue-specificity of these constructs is guaranteed by the presence of the liver-specific enhancers of the alpha fetoprotein gene. These constructs have been tested in cells and transgenic mice demonstrating cAMP regulation, liver-specific expression and perinatal activation of the reporter gene. The CRE is recognized by a number of related proteins of which the cAMP-response element-binding factor (CREB) has been best studied. To assess the role of CREB in the in vivo transduction of cAMP signalling, mice deficient in CREB protein have been generated by homologous recombination in embryonic stem (ES) cells. Homozygous mutant mice, although recovering at a lower ratio than expected, do not display impairment of growth or development. The cAMP-dependent LacZ transgenic mice in a CREB mutant genetic background also show perinatal activation of the reporter gene.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Analysis of the cAMP response on liver-specific gene expression in transgenic mice. 791 84
The molecular mechanisms underlying increased hepatic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) gene transcription and gluconeogenesis in type II diabetes are largely unknown. To examine the involvement of glucocorticoids and the cis-acting insulin response sequence (IRS, -416/-407) in the genetically obese db/db mouse model, we generated crosses between C57BL/KsJ-db/+ mice and transgenic mice that express -460 or -2000 base pairs of the rat PEPCK gene promoter containing an intact or mutated IRS, linked to a reporter gene. Transgenic mice expressing the intact PEPCK(460)-CRP (C-reactive protein) transgene bred to near homozygosity at the db locus were obese, hyperinsulinemic, and developed fasting hyperglycemia (389 +/- 26 mg/100 ml) between 4 and 10 weeks of age. Levels of CRP reporter gene expression were increased 2-fold despite severe hyperinsulinemia compared with non-diabetic non-obese transgenic mice. Reporter gene expression was also increased 2-fold in transgenic obese diabetic db/db mice bearing a mutation in the IRS, -2000(IRS)-hGx, compared with non-obese non-diabetic transgenic 2000(IRS)-hGx mice. Treatment of obese diabetic db/db transgenic mice with the glucocorticoid receptor blocker RU 486 decreased plasma glucose by 50% and reduced PEPCK, GLUT2,
glucose-6-phosphatase
,
tyrosine aminotransferase
, CRP, and hGx reporter gene expression to levels similar to those of non-obese normoglycemic transgenic mice. Taken together, these results establish that -460 bp of 5'-flanking sequence is sufficient to mediate the induction of PEPCK gene transcription in genetically obese db/db mice during the development of hyperglycemia. The results further demonstrate that the mechanism underlying increased expression of gluconeogenic enzymes in the db/db mouse requires the action of glucocorticoids and occurs independently of factors acting through the PEPCK IRS (-416/-407) promoter binding site.
...
PMID:Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (GTP) gene transcription and hyperglycemia are regulated by glucocorticoids in genetically obese db/db transgenic mice. 939 82
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