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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The importance of the so-called phosphorylated pathway for the synthesis of serine in rat liver was confirmed by studies on in vitro serine synthesis and also by the existence of a correlation between the serine-synthesizing activity of liver extracts and the activities of the enzymes involved in the pathway under various dietary conditions. Serine-synthesizing activity was found to be distributed in various rat tissues such as kidney, brain, testis, spleen, pancreas, and fat pad. However, only in the liver was the synthesis regulated by dietary protein. In the liver, the three enzymes of the phosphorylated pathway were found to be repressed by high-protein diets or by starvation and induced by low-protein diets. The dietary induction of the enzymes required the presence of insulin and was suppressed by glucocorticoids. A suggestion is made that the effects of diet or hormones may be mediated by changes in the hepatic pool of essential amino acids.
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PMID:Dietary and hormonal regulation of serine synthesis in the rat. 16 74

When washed spleen slices from fed rats are incubated with 3 mm-[U-14C]glucose, the rate of glucose utilization (46.2 mumol/h per g dry wt.) is sufficient to account, theoretically, for 80% of the O2 consumption. Measurement of net lactate production, however, and the fate of the radioactive carbon, indicates that the contribution of glucose to the respiratory fuel of the tissue is only 25-30% whereas 60-70% of the glucose utilized is converted into lactate. At saturating glucose concentrations (above 5 mm) its contribution to the respiratory fuel of the slice is increased to a maximum value of 34-39%. Only 2% of the glucose utilized is metabolized via the oxidative steps of the pentose phosphate pathway. Starvation for 72 h marginally increases both the rate of glucose utilization (by 21%) and its net contribution to the respiratory fuel (by 29%). Insulin, glucagon, adrenaline and adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate have no significant effect on either the rate of glucose utilization or on the pattern of radioactive isotope distribution. The uptake of glucose is increased by only 20%, whereas the production of lactate doubles when slices are incubated under anaerobic conditions. In assessing the suitability of spleen slices for metabolic studies, the only serious major perturbation, compared with the freeze-clamped organ, is an elevated mitochondrial [NAD+]/[NADH] ratio (connected with increased endogenous NH3 production) that is partially restored to normal values on incubation with glucose. Equal proportions of erythrocytes and leucocytes are found in the washed spleen slice. Metabolic contributions of the constituent cell populations in the washed slice are calculated and it is concluded that lymphocytes account for the major part of the glycolytic metabolism (80-90%), whereas the contribution of erythrocytes is insignificant.
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PMID:Regulation of carbohydrate metabolism in lymphoid tissue. Quantitative aspects of [U-14C]glucose oxidation by rat spleen slices. 17 88

Exposure to glucose in the presence of 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine leads to accumulation of cAMP in islets microdissected from ob/ob mice. This process is dependent on extracellular Ca++ but differs markedly from the glucose action on insulin release in the same in vitro system in disappearing after 18 h of starvation.
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PMID:Effects of starvation and Ca++ on glucose-induced accumulation of cyclic 3',5'-AMP in pancreatic islets. 17 21

The interaction of glucose, the major physiological regulator of insulin secretion, with the beta-cell involves the recognition of glucose as a signal, the transduction of this recognition into an intracellular event and the coupling of the event to the exocytotic discharge of insulin from secretory granules. The following aspects of this system are discussed: (1) the mechanism of insulin release; (2) the evidence implicating Ca2+ and cyclic AMP as coupling factors; (3) the main characteristics of glucose-stimulated insulin release; (4) gluco-receptor models and the evidence for them; (5) possible mechanisms for transduction of the response to glucose; (6) the extent to which the systems of the secretory response to sugars may also be involved in the control of proinsulin biosynthesis; (7) whether starvation induces specific changes in the glucoreceptor system.
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PMID:The control of insulin release by sugars. 18 Dec 21

The present investigations of rates of oxidation of [U-14C] or [1-14C]leucine by homogenates of gastrocnemius muscle of fed and starved rats have indicated that 14CO2 production is mainly the result of alpha-decarboxylation of leucine in this tissue. This incomplete oxidation was not the result of imparied tricarboxylic acid cycle since the oxidation of palmitate proceeded to completion within the experimental conditions. In the subsequent studies, the effect of altered nutrition and metabolic factors on alpha-decarboxylation of leucine by gastrocnemius muscle homogenates was investigated. Starvation increased the rate of alpha-decarboxylation of leucine. Glucose or palmitate (C16) added in physiological concentrations to the incubation medium were without effect on decarboxylation of leucine, but this reaction was stimulated by addition of 1 mM hexanoate (C6) or octanoate (C8) to the incubation medium. However, when fatty acid chain length was elongated to C10 (decanoate), the stimulatory effect was not only abolished, but this fatty acid significantly inhibited the rate of leucine decarboxylation. Addition of insulin, epinephrine, glucagon and cyclic AMP within a wide range of concentrations to the incubation medium did not significantly affect the rate of decarboxylation of leucine. These studies indicate a complex interrelationship between the metabolism of leucine and that of fatty acids.
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PMID:Assessment of effect of starvation, glucose, fatty acids and hormones on alpha-decarboxylation of leucine in skeletal muscle of rat. 18 44

Starvation entails a progressive selection of fat as body fuel. Soon after a meal glucose utilisation by muscle ceases and fatty acids are used instead. Ketoacid levels in blood become elevated over the first week, and the brain preferentially uses these instead of glucose. The net effect is to spare protein even further, as glucose utilisation by brain is diminished. Nevertheless, there is still net negative nitrogen balance, but this can be nullified by amino acid or protein supplementation. Insulin appears to be the principal regulatory hormone. Recent data suggest that decreased levels of active T3 may play a role by sparing otherwise obligated calories by decreasing metabolic needs.
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PMID:Starvation in man. 18 20

Inosine is a potent primary stimulus of insulin secretion from isolated mouse islets. The inosine-induced insulin secretion was totally depressed during starvation, but was completely restored by the addition of 5 mM-caffeine to the medium and partially restored by the addition of 5 mM-glucose. Mannoheptulose (3 mg/ml) potentiated the effect of 10 mM-inosine in islets from fed mice. The mechanism of the stimulatory effect of inosine was further investigated, and it was demonstrated that pancreatic islets contain a nucleoside phosphorylase capable of converting inosine into hypoxanthine and ribose 1-phosphate. Inosine at 10 mM concentration increased the lactate production and the content of ATP, glucose 6-phosphate (fructose 1,6-diphosphate + triose phosphates) and cyclic AMP in islets from fed mice. In islets from starved mice inosine-induced lactate production was decreased and no change in the concentration of cyclic AMP could be demonstrated, whereas the concentration of ATP and glucose 6-phosphate rose. Inosine (10 mM) induced a higher concentration of (fructose 1,6-diphosphate + triose phosphates) in islets from starved mice than in islets from fed mice suggesting that in starvation the activities of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase or other enzymes below this step in glycolysis are decreased. Formation of glucose from inosine was negligible. Inosine had no direct effect on adenylate cyclase activity in islet homogenates. The observed changes in insulin secretion and islet metabolism mimic what is seen when glucose and glyceraldehyde stimulate insulin secretion, and as neither ribose nor hypoxanthine-stimulated insulin release, the results are interpreted as supporting the substrate-site hypothesis for glucose-induced insulin secretion according to which glucose has to be metabolized in the beta-cells before secretion is initiated.
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PMID:Inosine-stimulated insulin release and metabolism of inosine in isolated mouse pancreatic islets. 18 35

The concentration of insulin and glucagon in peripheral blood and the concentration of cAMP in liver was followed in rats throughout a 48 hour starvation period and up to 6 hours afer refeeding glucose or casein. By so changing the insulin/glucagon molar ratio from minimum to maximum values, simultaneous inverse changes in the concentration of hepatic cAMP could be induced. The study, thus, suggests that during a starvation-refeeding cycle the level of cAMP in the liver is regulated predominantly by the insulin/glucagon ratio in the blood. Possible criticisms of this conclusion are discussed.
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PMID:Concentration of cyclic AMP in rat liver as a function of the insulin/glucagon ratio in blood under standardized physiological conditions. 18 53

The dose as well as the time kinetics of insulin and adenosine-3', 5' -monophosphate (cyclic AMP) responses to glucose were compared in pancreatic islets of fed and starved rats. There was a preferential impairment of the early phase of glucose-induced insulin release in perifused islets of rats starved for 16 and 48 h. Similarly, the accumulation of 3H cyclic AMP in islets prelabeled with 3H-2-adenine was less in islets of 48 h starved than fed rats, during the first 10-min of stimulation with 26.7 mM glucose in the presence of 0.1 mM of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, whereas at 30 and 60 min 3H cyclic AMP responses to glucose were similar in fed and starved islets. Also, in 10-min incubations with glucose 3.3, 6.7, 10.0, 13.3, and 26.7 mM without and with 0.1 mM and 1.0 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, insulin release correlated strongly with the accumulation of 3H cyclic AMP in the islets of fed as well as starved rats. The thresholds for glucose-induced insulin and 3H cyclic AMP responses were higher and the maximal responses were lower in starved than fed islets. Preincubation of islets of 48-h starved rats with 16.7 mM glucose for 60 min corrected the impaired insulin and 3H cyclic AMP responses to glucose. Starvation-induced impairment of insulin secretory responses to glucose, and their restoration by preincubation with glucose in vitro, may represent acute regulatory effects of glucose on the adenylate cyclase-cyclic AMP system in the pancreatic beta cell.
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PMID:Insulin release and cyclic AMP accumulation in response to glucose in pancreatic islets of fed and starved rats. 18 86

The physiologic significance of glucocorticoids and insulin in the regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis was investigated during a 48-hr starvation period by studying the factors presumed to control the rate of glucose synthesis in the final gluconeogenetic pathway. Rats were used, in which glucorticoids were removed by adrenalectomy before starvation, and in which serum insulin was kept constant before and after food withdrawal by pre-feeding with a proteinfree diet. It was found that adrenalectomized rats at constantly low serum insulin levels responded to starvation as rapidly, and to the same degree, as intact control subjects (1) by a significant increase in plasma glucagon and, consequently, in hepatic cAMP concentration; (2) by a coordinate elevation of the activities of hepatic pyruvate carboxylase, P-enolpyruvate carboxykinase, and fructose-1,6-diphosphatase; (3) by systematic alterations in the concentration of effectors of gluconeogenetic key enzymes; (4) by a shifting of the cytoplasmic NAD system towards the reduced state; (5) by a decrease in the intrahepatic concentration of glycogenic precursor substrates. These results suggest that the hepatic gluconeogenic response to starvation with respect to the regulatory factors 1-5 occurs independently from changes in the concentration of plasma glucocorticoids and insulin. The crossing over of the gluconeogenetic intermediates between pyruvate and P-enolpyruvate (PEP), which was observed in intact but not in adrenalectomized rats, supports the assumption that during starvation, glucocorticoids enhance the rate of glucose production by the liver predominantly by permitting hepatic cAMP to stimulate the yet undefined mechanism, which has been demonstrated in the isolated perfused rat liver to control the substrate flow between pyruvate and PEP.
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PMID:Physiologic significance of glucocorticoids and insulin in the regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis during starvation in rats. 18 90


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