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)

The effect of vasopressin on the short-term regulation of fatty acid synthesis was studied in isolated hepatocytes from rats fed ad libitum. Vasopressin stimulates fatty acid synthesis by 30-110%. This increase is comparable with that obtained with insulin. Angiotensin also stimulates fatty acid synthesis, whereas phenylephrine does not. The dose-response curve for vasopressin-stimulated lipogenesis is similar to the dose-response curve for glycogenolysis and release of lactate plus pyruvate. Vasopression also stimulates acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity in a dose-dependent manner. Vasopressin does not relieve glucagon-inhibited lipogenesis, whereas insulin does. The action of vasopressin on hepatic lipogenesis is decreased, but not suppressed, in Ca2+-depleted hepatocytes. The results suggest that vasopressin acts on lipogenesis by increasing availability of lipogenic substrate (lactate + pyruvate) and by activating acetyl-CoA carboxylase.
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PMID:Stimulation of hepatic lipogenesis and acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase by vasopressin. 611 87

Ketone bodies accumulate in the plasma in conditions of fasting and uncontrolled diabetes. The initiating event is a change in the molar ratio of glucagon:insulin. Insulin deficiency triggers the lipolytic process in adipose tissue with the result that free fatty acids pass into the plasma for uptake by liver and other tissues. Glucagon appears to be the primary hormone involved in the induction of fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis in the liver. It acts by acutely dropping hepatic malonyl-CoA concentrations as a consequence of inhibitory effects exerted in the glycolytic pathway and on acetyl-CoA carboxylase (EC 6.4.1.2). The fall in malonyl-CoA concentration activates carnitine acyltransferase I (EC 2.3.1.21) such that long-chain fatty acids can be transported through the inner mitochondrial membrane to the enzymes of fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis. The latter are high-capacity systems assuring that fatty acids entering the mitochondria are rapidly oxidized to ketone bodies. Thus, the rate-controlling step for ketogenesis is carnitine acyltransferase I. Administration of food after a fast, or of insulin to the diabetic subject, reduces plasma free fatty acid concentrations, increases the liver concentration of malonyl-CoA, inhibits carnitine acyltransferase I and reverses the ketogenic process.
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PMID:The regulation of ketogenesis. 612 45

1. Adipocytes isolated from epididymal fat-pads of fed rats were incubated with different concentrations of glucagon, insulin, adrenaline and adenosine deaminase, and the effects of these agents on the ;initial' activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase in the cells were studied. 2. Glucagon (at concentrations between 0.1 and 10nm) inhibited acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity. Maximal inhibition was approx. 70% of the ;control' activity in the absence of added hormone, and the concentration of hormone required for half-maximal inhibition was 0.3-0.5nm-glucagon. 3. Incubation of cells with adenosine deaminase resulted in a similar inhibition of acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity. Preincubation of adipocytes with adenosine deaminase did not alter either the sensitivity of carboxylase activity to increasing concentrations of glucagon or the maximal extent of inhibition. 4. Adrenaline inhibited acetyl-CoA carboxylase to the same extent as glucagon. Preincubation of the cells with glucagon did not alter the sensitivity of enzyme activity to adrenaline or the degree of maximal inhibition. 5. Insulin activated the enzyme by 70-80% of ;control' activity. Preincubation of the cells with glucagon did not alter the concentration of insulin required to produce half the maximal stimulatory effect (about 12muunits of insulin/ml). The effects of insulin and glucagon appeared to be mediated completely independently, and were approximately quantitatively similar but opposite. These characteristics resulted in the mutual cancellation of the effects of the two hormones when they were both present at equally effective concentrations. 6. The implications of these findings with regard to current concepts about the mechanism of regulation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase and to the regulation of the enzyme in vivo are discussed.
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PMID:Inhibition of acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity in isolated rat adipocytes incubated with glucagon. Interactions with the effects of insulin, adrenaline and adenosine deaminase. 613 71

Current studies on the synthesis of long-chain fatty acids by isolated rat liver cells are largely concerned with the regulation of the activity of previously existing acetyl-CoA carboxylase and fatty acid synthetase, and with the regulation of the quantity of these enzymes. These studies have required the development of methods for obtaining high yields of viable hepatocytes that respond to hormonal treatment. Such methods have been developed over the past 10-15 years through the efforts of several laboratories. These studies have also required the development of a method to determine whether a change in the activity of an enzyme is due to a modification of preexisting enzyme or to a change in quantity of that enzyme. The most satisfactory method to use for such studies is immunotitration of enzyme activity. In recent years studies on the regulation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase have largely centered upon the effect of phosphorylation-dephosphorylation on the activity of this enzyme and whether glucagon inhibits the activity of this enzyme through this process. Much data from a number of laboratories have suggested that glucagon regulates the activity of this enzyme through phosphorylation-dephosphorylation. However, several of these studies involved the use of crude systems in which competing enzymes and substrates that can significantly interfere with acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity measurements were still present. Hence, a confirmation of these studies needs to be carried out under conditions in which the effects of competing enzymes and substrates are eliminated. Studies on changes in quantity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase and fatty acid synthetase have shown that these enzymes are induced by the fasting and refeeding of animals. They have also shown that insulin stimulates (10- to 30-fold) the induction of these enzymes. This induction appears to be due to a change in the quantity of translatable mRNA which may, in turn, be due to a change in the rate of transcription of the genes coding for these enzymes.
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PMID:Induction of fatty acid synthetase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase by isolated rat liver cells. 613 62

If isolated rat hepatocytes are preincubated for 90 min before addition of hormone, glucagon causes a significant (50%) decrease in fatty acid synthesis without concomitant large decreases in the cellular content of the allosteric activator, citrate. We present evidence that this inhibition can be entirely accounted for by the phosphorylation of the rate-limiting enzyme, acetyl-CoA carboxylase, by cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase. In particular: (1) the effect is associated with a 50% decrease in acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity (measured at physiological citrate concentration) which survives purification of the enzyme; (2) the effect is associated with a selective increase in the phosphorylation of a chymotryptic peptide (peptide 1) which is identical to the peptide containing the major site phosphorylated on purified acetyl-CoA carboxylase by cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase; (3) the effects of glucagon on the kinetic parameters of the enzyme are very similar to the effect of phosphorylation of the purified enzyme, i.e. a decrease in V and an increase in Ka for citrate; and (4) all of these effects occur at physiological concentrations of glucagon identical to those producing inhibition of fatty acid synthesis.
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PMID:Glucagon inhibits fatty acid synthesis in isolated hepatocytes via phosphorylation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase by cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase. 614 65

The activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, measured in various ways, was studied in 15000g extracts of rat liver hepatocytes and compared with the rate of fatty acid synthesis in intact hepatocytes incubated with insulin or glucagon. Hepatocyte extracts were prepared by disruption of cells with a Dounce homogenizer or by solubilization with 1.5% (v/v) Triton X-100. Sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation demonstrated that the sedimentation coefficient of acetyl-CoA carboxylase from cell extracts was 30-35S, regardless of the conditions of incubation or disruption of hepatocytes. Solubilization of cells with 1.5% Triton X-100 yielded twice as much enzyme activity (measured by [14C]bicarbonate fixation) in the sucrose-gradient fractions as did cell disruption by the Dounce homogenizer. Analysis by high-performance liquid chromatography of acetyl-CoA carboxylase reaction mixtures showed that [14C]malonyl-CoA accounted for 10-60% of the total acid-stable radioactivity, depending on the method for disrupting hepatocytes and on the preincubation of the 15000g extract, with or without citrate, before assay. Under conditions in which incubation of cells with insulin or glucagon caused an activation or inhibition, respectively, of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, only 25% of the acid-stable radioactivity was [14C]malonyl-CoA and enzyme activity was only 13% (control), 16% (insulin), and 57% (glucagon) of the rate of fatty acid synthesis. Under conditions when up to 60% of the acid-stable radioactivity was [14C]malonyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity was comparable with the rate of fatty acid synthesis, there was no effect of insulin or glucagon on enzyme activity.
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PMID:Studies on the assay, activity and sedimentation behaviour of acetyl-CoA carboxylase from isolated hepatocytes incubated with insulin or glucagon. 614 77

Short-term (6 hr) withdrawal of chow diet from lactating rats decreases the rate of lipogenesis in mammary gland by 87%. This inhibition is in part explained by a 60% decrease in the extraction of glucose (the major lipogenic precursor) by the mammary tissue. These changes are not accompanied by any significant alteration in the arterial concentrations of glucose, lactate or insulin; the concentration of acetoacetate did increase by about 30%. Removal of food for 6 hr did not alter the activation state of acetyl-CoA carboxylase or the total activity of the enzyme. Glucose utilization by mammary gland acini from short-term starved rats was not depressed although a higher proportion of the glucose appeared as lactate in the medium and consequently less glucose was converted to lipid. Insulin was able to reverse these changes. Glucagon, adrenaline or cAMP did not inhibit glucose utilization or lipogenesis in isolated acini. It is concluded that the inhibition of lipogenesis in mammary gland after short-term withdrawal of food is mainly due to decreased extraction of glucose. The signal for this change does not appear to be an alteration in plasma insulin and it is postulated that there may be an intestinal factor(s) which acts synergistically with insulin.
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PMID:Short-term dietary regulation of lipogenesis in the lactating mammary gland of the rat. 615 28

Using primary cultures of adult rat hepatocytes, the regulation of the following lipogenic enzymes was studied: glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, malic enzyme, ATP-citrate lyase, acetyl-CoA carboxylase, fatty acid synthetase, and stearoyl-CoA desaturase. The addition to the culture medium of either insulin or triiodothyronine produced a 2-3-fold increase in each of the individual enzyme activities whereas glucagon slightly decreased enzyme activities. The addition to the medium of 8-bromoguanosine 3,'5'-monophosphate had no effect on any of the enzyme activities unless glucose was also added to the culture medium. Glucose addition alone to the culture medium was without any effect; however, glucose enhanced the stimulation of enzyme activity due to insulin. The addition of fructose or glycerol, even in the absence of insulin, increased the activities of each of the enzymes studied 2-3-fold. The increases in enzyme activity brought about by insulin or fructose were apparently the result of de novo enzyme synthesis, as indicated by the observation that the increases were not noted in the presence of cordycepin or cycloheximide. Immunoprecipitation of ATP-citrate lyase from hepatocytes pulse-labeled with [3H]leucine indicated that the induction of this enzyme in response to the addition of fructose or glycerol to the culture medium was the result of an increase in the rate of synthesis of the enzyme. These results indicate that the activity and synthesis of individual enzymes involved in lipogenesis are increased in response to the metabolism of carbohydrate independently in part from hormonal effects.
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PMID:Induction of lipogenic enzymes in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes. Relationship between lipogenesis and carbohydrate metabolism. 629 23

Studies were conducted to clarify the relationship between the external fatty acid concentration and glucagon in the regulation of hepatic fatty acid metabolism. Hepatocytes from fed rats were incubated with increasing concentrations of oleate (up to 1 mM) in the presence and absence of glucagon and the time sequence of changes in cellular malonyl-CoA levels, fatty acid synthesis, fatty acid oxidation, and ketogenesis were measured. At low concentrations of fatty acid the effect of glucagon was to abolish malonyl-CoA synthesis and lipogenesis and to produce a marked stimulation of fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis. Similar effects were obtained with high concentrations of fatty acid in the absence of glucagon and, under these conditions, the additional presence of the hormone produced little further response. The results are consistent with the concept that the rate of fatty acid oxidation in liver is dictated largely by the relative concentrations of long-chain acyl-CoA (substrate for carnitine acyltransferase I) and malonyl-CoA (inhibitor of the transferase). They also indicate that the preemptive effect of fatty acids on glucagon-induced changes in fatty acid metabolism stems from their ability to reduce the tissue malonyl-CoA content, probably through long-chain acyl-CoA suppression of acetyl-CoA carboxylase.
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PMID:Effects of exogenous fatty acid concentration on glucagon-induced changes in hepatic fatty acid metabolism. 738 Jan 10

Incubation of intact rat hepatocytes with insulin and glucagon resulted in increased and decreased rates of de novo fatty acid biosynthesis, respectively. These changes were paralleled by corresponding alterations in the activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, an important regulatory enzyme of this pathway. The hormonal conditions imposed on the hepatocytes did not change the cellular or the cytosolic level of citrate. Incubation of hepatocytes with octanoate showed a parallel increase in the rate of fatty acid synthesis and acetyl-CoA carboxylase with a concomitant elevation of the cellular citrate level. The increase in whole-cell citrate was mainly due to a marked increase in the level of cytosolic citrate. Collectively, our data indicate that insulin and glucagon-determined changes in acetyl-CoA carboxylase are not mediated by changes in cytosolic citrate levels.
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PMID:The role of citrate in the regulation of hepatic fatty acid synthesis by insulin and glucagon. 790 66


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