Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

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

1. The subcellular distribution of adenine nucleotides, acetyl-CoA, CoA, glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, malate, oxaloacetate, pyruvate, phosphoenolpyruvate, 3-phosphoglycerate, glucose 6-phosphate, aspartate and citrate was studied in isolated hepatocytes in the absence and presence of glucagon by using a modified digitonin procedure for cell fractionation. 2. In the absence of glucagon, the cytosol contains about two-thirds of cellular ATP, some 40-50% of ADP, acetyl-CoA, citrate and phosphoenolpyruvate, more than 75% of total 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, malate, oxaloacetate, pyruvate, 3-phosphoglycerate and aspartate, and all of glucose 6-phosphate. 3. In the presence of glucagon the cytosolic space shows an increase in the content of malate, phosphoenolpyruvate and 3-phosphoglycerate by more than 60%, and those of aspartate and glucose 6-phosphate rise by about 25%. Other metabolites remain unchanged. After glucagon treatment, cytosolic pyruvate is decreased by 37%, whereas glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate decrease by 70%. The [NAD(+)]/[NADH] ratios calculated from the cytosolic concentrations of the reactants of lactate dehydrogenase and malate dehydrogenase were the same. Glucagon shifts this ratio and also that of the [NADP(+)]/[NADPH] couple towards a more reduced state. 4. In the mitochondrial space glucagon causes an increase in the acetyl-CoA and ATP contents by 25%, and an increase in [phosphoenolpyruvate] by 50%. Other metabolites are not changed by glucagon. Oxaloacetate in the matrix is only slightly decreased after glucagon, yet glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate fall to about 25% of the respective control values. The [NAD(+)]/[NADH] ratios as calculated from the [3-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate] ratio and from the matrix [malate]/[oxaloacetate] couple are lowered by glucagon, yet in the latter case the values are about tenfold higher than in the former. 5. Glucagon and oleate stimulate gluconeogenesis from lactate to nearly the same extent. Oleate, however, does not produce the changes in cellular 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate as observed with glucagon. 6. The changes of the subcellular metabolite distribution after glucagon are compatible with the proposal that the stimulation of gluconeogenesis results from as yet unknown action(s) of the hormone at the mitochondrial level in concert with its established effects on proteolysis and lipolysis.
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PMID:Effect of glucagon on metabolite compartmentation in isolated rat liver cells during gluconeogenesis from lactate. 19 59

1. The effects of changes in the cytoplasmic [NADH]/[NAD+] ratio on the efficacy of glucagon to alter rates of metabolism in isolated rat hepatocytes were examined. 2. Under reduced conditions (with 10mM-lactate), 10nM-glucagon stimulated both gluconeogenesis and urea synthesis in isolated hepatocytes from 48h-starved rats; under oxidized conditions (with 10mM-pyruvate), 10nM-glucagon had no effect on either of these rates. 3. The ability of glucagon to alter the concentration of 3':5'-cyclic AMP and the rates of glucose output, glycogen breakdown and glycolysis in cells from fed rats were each affected by a change in the extracellular [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratio; minimal effects of glucagon occurred at low [lactate]/[pyruvate] ratios. 4. Dose-response curves for glucagon-mediated changes in cyclic AMP concentration and glucose output indicated that under oxidized conditions the ability of glucagon to alter each parameter was decreased without affecting the concentration of hormone at which half-maximal effects occurred. 5. The phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (0.05 mM) significantly reversed the inhibitory effects of pyruvate on glucagon-stimulated glucose output. 6. For exogenously added cyclic [3H]AMP(0.1 mM), oxidized conditions decreased the stimulatory effect on glucose output as well as the intracellular concentration of cyclic AMP attained, but did not alter the amount of cyclic [3H]AMP taken up. 7. The effects of lactate, pyruvate, NAD+ and NADH on cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activities of rat hepatocytes were examined. 8. NADH (0.01--1 MM) inhibited the low-Km enzyme, particularly that which was associated with the plasma membrane. 9. The inhibition of membrane-bound cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase by NADH was specific, reversible and resulted in a decrease in the maximal velocity of the enzyme. 10. It is proposed that regulation of the membrane-bound low-Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase by nicotinamide nucleotides provides the molecular basis for the effect of redox state on the hormonal control of hepatocyte metabolism by glucagon.
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PMID:Responsiveness to glucagon by isolated rat hepatocytes controlled by the redox state of the cytosolic nicotinamide--adenine dinucleotide couple acting on adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase. 21 54

The effect of tolbutamide on pyridine nucleotides and insulin secretion stimulated by aminophylline, 3,5-AMP-dibutyrate or glucagon was studied in pancreatic islets of rats previously treated with 6-aminonicotinamide (6-AN), an inhibitor of pyridine nucleotide synthesis. After being incubated for 60 min in a Krebs-Ringer-Bicarbonate-Buffer in the absence of glucose, pancreatic islets of rats i.p. injected with 35 mg/kg of 6-AN 6 hrs before pancreas removal contained about 30% less NADP and NADPH than did islets of control rats. No changes of NDA or NADH were observed in islets of 6-AN-treated animals. Addition of 16.5 mM glucose led to an increase of NADH, NADPH and a decrease of NADP in islets of both groups of animals; NAD levels remained unchanged. In vitro addition of tolbutamide to islets of control rats did not affect the levels of NADPH or NADP in the presence of 5.5 mM glucose. When 16.5 mM glucose were present, a decrease of NADPH and an increase of NADP was obvious. No effect of tolbutamide on insular NADPH or NADP was observed in islets of rats previously treated with 6-AN be it in the presence of 5.5 or 16.5 mM glucose. In islets of 6-AN-treated rats insulin release in response to aminophylline or 3,5-AMP-dibutyrate in the presence of 5.5 mM glucose was significantly depressed, when compared to islets of untreated controls. Addition of tolbutamide increased insulin release due to aminophylline, 3,5-AMP-dibutyrate or glucagon islets of controls. Tolbutamide alone was without effect. In islets of 6-AN-treated rats aminophylline, 3,5-AMP-dibutyrate or glucagon stimulated insulin release only when tolbutamide was present. Our data suggest that there is no direct interference of tolbutamide with pyridine nucleotides of pancreatic islets, and that tolbutamide increases the secretory response of the beta-cell to aminophylline, 3,5-AMP-dibutyrate or glucagon when insulin release due to these agents is inhibited during decrease of insular NADP and NADPH, caused by 6-AN.
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PMID:Effect of tolbutamide on aminophylline-, 3,5-AMP-dibutyrate- or glucagon-induced insulin release from pancreatic islets after impairment of pyridine nucleotide metabolism caused by 6-aminonicotinamide (6-AN). 24 43

Hepatic submitochondrial particles, prepared at neutral pH from rats pretreated with glucagon, exhibited stimulated rates of State 3 and uncoupled respiration when succinate or NADH were the substrates, but not when ascorbate plus N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine were employed. Measurements of 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid fluorescence in the particles indicated that glucagon treatment resulted in a stimulation of energization supported by succinate respiration or ATP hydrolysis. Similarly, the energy-linked pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase and reverse electron flow reactions driven by succinate oxidation or ATP were also stimulated. The results indicate that mitochondrial substrate transport is not the prime locus of glucagon action. It is suggested that the increased level of energization in particles prepared from glucagon-treated rats is a reflection of a stimulation of the respiratory chain, possibly between cytochromes b and c, and the ATP-forming reactions.
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PMID:Glucagon treatment stimulates the metabolism of hepatic submitochondrial particles. 64 75

Gluconeogenesis by isolated hepatocytes resulted in glucose release but insignificant rates of glycogen synthesis. The effectiveness of precursors was similar for hepatocytes from fed and starved chickens except for impaired gluconeogenesis from pyruvate when compared to lactate in lactate starved chicken hepatocytes. The impairment was caused by limitations in cytosolic NADH production as a result of the mitochondrial location of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in chicken liver. The order of effectiveness of precursors on hepatic gluconeogenesis was generally similar to the effects of precursors on increasing the plasma glucose concentration in vivo. The exceptions were caused by interactions with other precursors in vivo. The alteration of the NADH/NAD+ ratio by ethanol and ATP/ADP ratio by adenosine could play significant roles in the control of precursor conversion to glucose. Physiological glucagon concentrations stimulated gluconeogenesis from precursors entering the pathway both above and below the level of triose phosphates, and its effect were mimicked by dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Previous results on the effects of precursor and glucagon injection on the plasma glucose concentration of chickens in vivo can largely be explained by effects at the hepatic level. Isolated chicken and rat hepatocytes share many common features. Qualitatively the ordering of gluconeogenic effectiveness was similar but quantitive differences existed as a result of differing activities and cellular locations of enzymes. Neither preparation readily synthesised glycogen and the sensitivity to glucagon was similar.
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PMID:Hepatic gluconeogenesis in chickens. 74 98

Rats were acutely administered ethanol as a primed constant infusion in order to produce sustained blood ethanol levels of 8-12 or 55-65 mM. At the end of ethanol infusion the livers were either freeze-clamped in vivo or isolated and perfused for metabolic studies. The rate of gluconeogenesis and its responsiveness to phenylephrine (10 microM), prostaglandin F2 alpha (5 microM) and glucagon (10 nM), as well as the redox state of the cytosolic NAD(+)-NADH system were assessed in livers isolated from acutely ethanol-treated rats, and subsequently perfused without ethanol. For liver clamped in vivo, high- but not low-ethanol treatment decreased the ATP content by 31% and slightly increased ADP and AMP content, resulting in a decreased energy charge (11%). Glutamate and aspartate content was also increased in high-dose ethanol-infused rats with no changes in malate and 2-oxoglutarate content. Gluconeogenesis with saturating concentrations of lactate (4 mM)+pyruvate (0.4 mM) was delayed in reaching a plateau in the livers of high-dose ethanol-treated rats and its response to all three stimulators was impaired. Low-dose ethanol treatment only decreased the liver response to phenylephrine. While the perfused livers of low-dose ethanol-treated rats displayed no changes in adenine nucleotide content, the livers of high-dose ethanol-treated rats had a decreased ATP (35%) and an increased AMP (77%) content, paralleled by a fall in the total adenine nucleotides (14%) and energy charge (14%). No differences were observed between the saline- and ethanol-treated rats with respect to malate-aspartate shuttle intermediate concentration in perfused livers. Also, the livers of high-, but not low-dose ethanol-treated rats had a more negative value of NAD(+)-NADH redox state as compared to the livers of control rats. The data suggest that acute ethanol intoxication produces changes in liver metabolism and its responsiveness to hormones/agonists that are demonstrable for at least 2 hr after isolation and perfusion of the liver.
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PMID:Effects of acute alcohol intoxication on gluconeogenesis and its hormonal responsiveness in isolated, perfused rat liver. 135 76

1) In isolated perfused rat liver, 14CO2 production from [1-14C]alpha-ketoisocaproate or [1-14C]glycine as well as ketogenesis from alpha-ketoisocaproate were stimulated upon exposure to hypoosmotic perfusion media, whereas hyperosmotic exposure inhibited. The effects of anisotonicity were preserved when ketogenesis from alpha-ketoisocaproate and 14CO2 production from [1-14C]glycine were already stimulated by glucagon. On the other hand, ketogenesis from tyrosine (2 mM) or octanoate (0.1 mM) were almost unaffected by anisoosmotic exposure. 2) With all ketogenic substrates studied, hypoosmotic (hyperosmotic) cell swelling (shrinkage) decreased (increased) the beta-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio in effluent perfusate. A shift of the mitochondrial and cytosolic NADH systems to a more oxidized (reduced) state following hypoosmotic (hyperosmotic) exposure was also found upon infusion of beta-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate and lactate/pyruvate as redox indicator metabolite couples. The effects of anisotonicity on the beta-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio were reversible upon normoosmotic reexposure and persisted throughout anisoosmotic exposure despite completion of volume regulatory K+ fluxes within 10-15 min. Hepatic oxygen consumption decreased by about 10% during hyperosmotic cell shrinkage and was transiently stimulated during hypoosmotic exposure. 3) There was a close relationship between ketogenesis from alpha-ketoisocaproate (0.5 mM) and the mitochondrial redox state, as assessed by the beta-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio in effluent, regardless of whether the pathway was modulated by anisotonicity or glucagon. 4) Isoosmotic cell swelling induced by addition of glutamine (3 mM) was without significant effect on ketogenesis from octanoate and stimulated ketogenesis and 14CO2production from [1-14C]alpha-ketoisocaproate only slightly (i.e. by less than 10%); however, in each case the hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio in effluent perfusate decreased by about 20% upon addition of glutamine. 5) Stimulation of 14CO2production from [1-14C]glycine by hypoosmotic exposure and glucagon was only slightly affected when the accompanying decrease of the beta-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio was reversed by addition of beta-hydroxybutyrate. 6) The data are compatible with a hypotonicity (hypertonicity)-induced shift of the mitochondrial NADH system to a more oxidized (reduced) state, probably due to a alterations of respiration. Mitochondrial swelling probably also occurs under the influence of glutamine. Modulation of ketogenesis from alpha-ketoisocaproate, but not of glycine oxidation by anisoosmotic exposure and glucagon can be related to the accompanying redox shifts. The observations support the concept that cell volume may be an important parameter determining liver cell function.
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PMID:Anisoosmostic liver perfusion: redox shifts and modulation of alpha-ketoisocaproate and glycine metabolism. 141 86

Pancreatic B-cells exposed in vivo or in vitro to streptozotocin (SZ), the N-nitrosourea derivative of glucosamide, present a long-lasting impairment in the production and release of insulin while other cell functions are better preserved. This functional impairment is associated with a defective mitochondrial function. To further study the mechanisms behind SZ actions, mouse pancreatic islets were exposed in vitro to SZ (1.5 mM) or to different concentrations of methyl methanesulfonate (MMS; 2, 4 and 6 mM). The effect of the aglucone moiety of SZ, nitroso-N-methylurea (NMU; 2, 4 and 6 mM) was also tested. Islets were either studied immediately after exposure to the drugs (day 0) or after six days in culture following toxin treatment (day 6). On day 0 the islets showed a decrease in the NAD + NADH content, decreased glucose oxidation rates and an impaired insulin release in response to glucose. Six days after exposure to SZ there was still impaired glucose oxidation and insulin release, and decreased islet insulin mRNA and insulin content, but the NAD + NADH content was again similar to the control group. On the other hand, islets which survived for 6 days in culture following exposure to either MMS or NMU were able to regain normal B-cell function. The mouse islets exposed to SZ, NMU and MMS showed on day 6 a 30-40% decrease in the content of the mitochondrial DNA encoded cytochrome b mRNA and a 60-70% decrease in total mitochondrial DNA, as evaluated by dot and Southern blot analysis. Only SZ decreased the insulin mRNA content whereas both MMS and NMU decreased the glucagon mRNA content. As a whole, the data obtained indicate that SZ, NMU and MMS induce damage to the mitochondrial genome, and this may contribute to the B-cell dysfunction observed after SZ treatment. It is conceivable that the glucose moiety of SZ may direct the methylation to other intracellular sites besides the mitochondrial DNA, thus explaining the different functional responses of islets following exposure to SZ and NMU.
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PMID:Exposure of pancreatic islets to different alkylating agents decreases mitochondrial DNA content but only streptozotocin induces long-lasting functional impairment of B-cells. 183 18

Adenylate cyclase activity in isolated rat liver plasma membranes was inhibited by NADH in a concentration-dependent manner. Half-maximal inhibition of adenylate cyclase was observed at 120 microM concentration of NADH. The effect of NADH was specific since adenylate cyclase activity was not altered by NAD+, NADP+, NADPH, and nicotinic acid. The ability of NADH to inhibit adenylate cyclase was not altered when the enzyme was stimulated by activating the cyclase was not altered when the enzyme was stimulated by activating the Gs regulatory element with either glucagon or cholera toxin. Similarly, inhibition of Gi function by pertussis toxin treatment of membranes did not attenuate the ability of NADH to inhibit adenylate cyclase activity. Inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity to the same extent in the presence and absence of the Gpp (NH) p suggested that NADH directly affects the catalytic subunit. This notion was confirmed by the finding that NADH also inhibited solubilized adenylate cyclase in the absence of Gpp (NH)p. Kinetic analysis of the NADH-mediated inhibition suggested that NADH competes with ATP to inhibit adenylate cyclase; in the presence of NADH (1 mM) the Km for ATP was increased from 0.24 +/- 0.02 mM to 0.44 +/- 0.08 mM with no change in Vmax. This observation and the inability of high NADH concentrations to completely inhibit the enzyme suggest that NADH interacts at a site(s) on the enzyme to increase the Km for ATP by 2-fold and this inhibitory effect is overcome at high ATP concentrations.
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PMID:Inhibition of hepatic adenylate cyclase by NADH. 187


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