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Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of fasting on hepatic
endothelial lipase
activity in the liver of adult rats was investigated. We found that, both in male and female rats, fasting produced a progressive decrease of the hepatic
endothelial lipase
activity. Upon refeeding, the activity returned to control values in 48 h. In isolated livers from fed male rats, a sharp peak of hepatic
endothelial lipase
activity appeared in the perfusate upon heparin addition. It accounted for 75% of the total activity (heparin-released + residual) of the tissue. Fasting (24 h) decreased the heparin-releasable activity, and this effect was responsible for most of the decrease found in whole tissue. We suggest that the effect might be due to a decreased synthesis and/or secretion of the enzyme by hepatocytes, since isolated hepatocytes from fasted rats, incubated at 37 C, released 65% less activity to the incubation medium than hepatocytes from fed rats. Adrenaline, but not insulin,
glucagon
, dexamethasone, epidermal growth factor, or T3, decreased the amount of hepatic
endothelial lipase
activity released by hepatocytes isolated from fed rats. The effect of adrenaline appears to be mediated by alpha 1-receptors since phenylephrine but not isoprenaline reproduced, and prazosin but not propranolol blocked, the effect of the catecholamine. In the presence of cycloheximide, adrenaline also decreased the amount of activity released. We suggest that, in our incubation conditions (up to 3 h), the hormone affects the posttranslational processing of the enzyme. In vivo administration of prazosin blocked the effect of both noradrenaline and fasting on hepatic
endothelial lipase
activity in whole liver. Those results suggest that catecholamines are involved in the decreased hepatic
endothelial lipase
activity found in the liver of fasted rats, and points out the role of these hormones in the acute modulation of an enzyme involved in reverse cholesterol transport.
...
PMID:Involvement of catecholamines in the effect of fasting on hepatic endothelial lipase activity in the rat. 193 90
In cold-acclimated (CA) birds, lipids play a crucial role in regulatory thermogenesis by acting both as substrates for and activators of thermogenic processes. The capacity to supply lipids to thermogenic tissues, which could limit cold thermogenesis, was assessed in CA ducklings (5 wk old, 4 degrees C) and compared with thermoneutral controls (TN, 25 degrees C). In CA ducklings, basal lipolytic activity of adipose tissue fragments was higher (202 +/- 9 vs. 130 +/- 14 nmol glycerol released . 100 mg tissue-1 . h-1, +55%) than in TN controls, while
glucagon
had a much higher stimulatory effect (+140 to +500% depending on dose). This was consistent with increased plasma levels of nonesterified fatty acids (FA, +57%) and glycerol (+31%) in vivo. In vitro
endothelial lipase
activity per organ was higher in CA than in TN ducklings in red gastrocnemius muscle (6.3 +/- 0.6 vs. 3.5 +/- 0.3 microeq nonesterified FA released per hour, +80%) and liver (+55%). The intracellular FA-binding capacity of (12-18 kDa) proteins was higher in gastrocnemius muscle (+43%) and liver (+74%) from CA ducklings. In gastrocnemius, it was linked to a higher content (21 +/- 2 vs. 15 +/- 2 microg/mg protein, +37%) of an intracellular 15.4-kDa FA-binding protein. These in vitro results indicate that coordinated increases in FA supply from adipose tissue, cellular uptake of lipoprotein-derived FA, and intracellular FA transport capacity occur in CA ducklings endowed with higher thermogenic capacity and cold endurance.
...
PMID:Increased in vitro fatty acid supply and cellular transport capacities in cold-acclimated ducklings (Cairina moschata). 972 63