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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The development of long-chain fatty acid (LCFA) oxidation, either in the liver for ketone body and energy productions or in peripheral tissues as oxidative fuels, is essential for the newborn mammals. At least in the liver, the postnatal development of LCFA oxidation and ketogenesis seems regulated by pancreatic hormones which plasmatic concentrations are markedly changed at birth (fall in insulin and rise in
glucagon
levels). In cultured hepatocytes from rabbit fetuses (no LCFA oxidation), the addition of
glucagon
or cyclic AMP induces LCFA oxidation at a level similar to that found in 24-h-old newborns (high LCFA oxidation). The presence of insulin inhibits totally the effects of
glucagon
. It seems that
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
(CPT I), a key enzyme of LCFA oxidation, represents the main site for hormonal control of LCFA oxidation. This regulation is not due to changes in the hepatic malonyl-CoA concentration (a metabolic intermediate in lipogenesis and a potent inhibitor of CPT I) but to modifications in the sensitivity of CPT I to malonyl-CoA inhibition. The molecular mechanisms responsible for the changes in the sensitivity of CPT I are discussed.
...
PMID:Hormonal control of fatty acid oxidation during the neonatal period. 156 51
The effect of insulin on the properties of liver
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
(CPT I) was assessed in conscious starved rats with the euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp. A 24-hour clamp was necessary to fully reverse the effect of starvation on liver malonyl-CoA concentration, CPT I maximal activity, and apparent km and Ki for malonyl-CoA. Since
glucagon
was not decreased during the clamp, insulin is the major factor involved in the regulation of CPT I.
...
PMID:Effect of insulin on the properties of liver carnitine palmitoyltransferase in the starved rat: assessment by the euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp. 186 36
Okadaic acid parallely increased carnitine [corrected] palmitoyltransferase I activity and the rate of palmitate oxidation in isolated rat hepatocytes. Nevertheless, okadaic acid had no significant effect on the rate of octanoate oxidation. Maximal effects of okadaic acid were similar and non-additive to those of dibutyryl-cAMP, forskolin and
glucagon
. Results indicate that
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
activity may be controlled by a mechanism of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation.
...
PMID:Okadaic acid stimulates carnitine palmitoyltransferase I activity and palmitate oxidation in isolated rat hepatocytes. 193 36
Previous work in this laboratory has shown that muscle malonyl-CoA, the inhibitor of
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
(CPT I), decreased during exercise. Hepatic malonyl-CoA content decreases when glucose availability decreases such as during fasting or when the
glucagon
-to-insulin ratio increases such as during prolonged exercise or in response to insulin deficiency. To investigate the effect of glucose infusion on muscle malonyl-CoA during exercise, male rats were anesthetized (pentobarbital via venous catheters) at rest or after running (21 m/min, 15% grade) for 30 or 60 min. During exercise rats were infused with either glucose (0.625 g/ml) or saline at a rate of 1.5 ml/h. Gastrocnemius muscles and liver samples were frozen at liquid nitrogen temperature. Muscle malonyl-CoA decreased from 1.24 +/- 0.06 to 0.69 +/- 0.05 nmol/g with glucose infusion and to 0.43 +/- 0.04 nmol/g with saline infusion during 60 min of exercise. In the liver, glucose infusion prevented the drop in malonyl-CoA. This indicates that glucose infusion attenuates the progressive decline in muscle malonyl-CoA and prevents the decline in liver malonyl-CoA during prolonged exercise.
...
PMID:Effect of glucose infusion on muscle malonyl-CoA during exercise. 205 26
The temporal changes in oleate oxidation, lipogenesis, malonyl-CoA concentration and sensitivity of
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
(CPT 1) to malonyl-CoA inhibition were studied in isolated rabbit hepatocytes and mitochondria as a function of time after birth of the animal or time in culture after exposure to
glucagon
, cyclic AMP or insulin. (1) Oleate oxidation was very low during the first 6 h after birth, whereas lipogenesis rate and malonyl-CoA concentration decreased rapidly during this period to reach levels as low as those found in 24-h-old newborns that show active oleate oxidation. (2) The changes in the activity of CPT I and the IC50 (concn. causing 50% inhibition) for malonyl-CoA paralleled those of oleate oxidation. (3) In cultured fetal hepatocytes, the addition of
glucagon
or cyclic AMP reproduced the changes that occur spontaneously after birth. A 12 h exposure to
glucagon
or cyclic AMP was sufficient to inhibit lipogenesis totally and to cause a decrease in malonyl-CoA concentration, but a 24 h exposure was required to induce oleate oxidation. (4) The induction of oleate oxidation by
glucagon
or cyclic AMP is triggered by the fall in the malonyl-CoA sensitivity of CPT I. (5) In cultured hepatocytes from 24 h-old newborns, the addition of insulin inhibits no more than 30% of the high oleate oxidation, whereas it stimulates lipogenesis and increases malonyl-CoA concentration by 4-fold more than in fetal cells (no oleate oxidation). This poor effect of insulin on oleate oxidation seems to be due to the inability of the hormone to increase the sensitivity of CPT I sufficiently. Altogether, these results suggest that the malonyl-CoA sensitivity of CPT I is the major site of regulation during the induction of fatty acid oxidation in the fetal rabbit liver.
...
PMID:Evidence that the sensitivity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I to inhibition by malonyl-CoA is an important site of regulation of hepatic fatty acid oxidation in the fetal and newborn rabbit. Perinatal development and effects of pancreatic hormones in cultured rabbit hepatocytes. 216 69
The effects of pancreatic hormones and cyclic AMP on the induction of ketogenesis and long-chain fatty acid oxidation were studied in primary cultures of hepatocytes from fetal and newborn rabbits. Hepatocytes were cultivated during 4 days in the presence of
glucagon
(10(-6) M), forskolin (2 x 10(-5) M), dibutyryl cyclic AMP (10(-4) M), 8-bromo cyclic AMP (10(-4) M) or insulin (10(-7) M). Ketogenesis and fatty acid metabolism were measured using [1-14C]oleate (0.5 mM). In hepatocytes from fetuses at term, the rate of ketogenesis remained very low during the 4 days of culture. In hepatocytes from 24-h-old newborn, the rate of ketogenesis was high during the first 48 h of culture and then rapidly decreased to reach a low value similar to that measured in cultured hepatocytes from term fetuses. A 48 h exposure to
glucagon
, forskolin or cyclic AMP derivatives is necessary to induce ketone body production in cultured fetal hepatocytes at a rate similar to that found in cultured hepatocytes from newborn rabbits. In fetal liver cells, the induction of ketogenesis by
glucagon
or cyclic AMP results from changes in the partitioning of long-chain fatty acid from esterification towards oxidation. Indeed,
glucagon
, forskolin and cyclic AMP enhance oleate oxidation (basal, 12.7 +/- 1.6;
glucagon
, 50.0 +/- 5.5; forskolin, 70.6 +/- 5.4; cyclic AMP, 77.5 +/- 3.4% of oleate metabolized) at the expense of oleate esterification. In cultured fetal hepatocytes, the rate of fatty acid oxidation in the presence of cyclic AMP is similar to the rate of oleate oxidation present at the time of plating (85.1 +/- 2.6% of oleate metabolized) in newborn rabbit hepatocytes. In hepatocytes from term fetuses, the presence of insulin antagonizes in a dose-dependent fashion the
glucagon
-induced oleate oxidation. Neither
glucagon
nor cyclic AMP affect the activity of
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
(CPT I). The malonyl-CoA concentration inducing 50% inhibition of CPT I (IC50) is 14-fold higher in mitochondria isolated from cultured newborn hepatocytes (0.95 microM) compared with fetal hepatocytes (0.07 microM), indicating that the sensitivity of CPT I decreases markedly in the first 24 h after birth. The addition of
glucagon
or cyclic AMP into cultured fetal hepatocytes decreased by 80% and 90% respectively the sensitivity of CPT I to malonyl-CoA inhibition. In the presence of cyclic AMP, the sensitivity of CPT I to malonyl-CoA inhibition in cultured fetal hepatocytes is very similar to that measured in cultured hepatocytes from 24-h-old newborns.
...
PMID:Induction of ketogenesis and fatty acid oxidation by glucagon and cyclic AMP in cultured hepatocytes from rabbit fetuses. Evidence for a decreased sensitivity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I to malonyl-CoA inhibition after glucagon or cyclic AMP treatment. 255 35
Fatty acid metabolism was studied in periportal and perivenous hepatocytes isolated by the method of Chen & Katz [Biochem. J. (1988) 255, 99-104]. The rate of fatty acid synthesis and the activity of acetyl-CoA carboxylase were markedly enhanced in perivenous hepatocytes as compared with periportal cells. However, the response of these two parameters to short-term modulation by cellular effectors such as the hormones insulin and
glucagon
, the phorbol ester 4 beta-phorbol 12 beta-myristate 13 alpha-acetate and the xenobiotics ethanol and acetaldehyde was similar in the two zones of the liver. In addition, perivenous hepatocytes showed a higher capacity of esterification of exogenous fatty acids into both cellular and very-low-density-lipoprotein lipids. Nevertheless, no difference between the two cell sub-populations seemed to exist in relation to the secretion of very-low-density lipoproteins. On the other hand, the rate of fatty acid oxidation was increased in periportal cells. This could be accounted for by a higher activity of
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
and a lower sensitivity of this enzyme to inhibition by malonyl-CoA in the periportal zone. No differences were observed between periportal and perivenous hepatocytes in relation to the short-term response of fatty acid oxidation and
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
activity to the cellular modulators mentioned above. In conclusion, our results show that: (i) lipogenesis is achieved at higher rates in the perivenous zone of the liver, whereas the fatty-acid-oxidative process occurs with a certain preference in the periportal area of this organ; (ii) the short-term response of the different fatty-acid-metabolizing pathways to cellular effectors is quantitatively similar in the two zones of the liver.
...
PMID:Zonation of fatty acid metabolism in rat liver. 257 74
The effects of ethanol administration on activity and regulation of
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
(CPT-I) were studied in hepatocytes isolated from rats fed a liquid, high-fat diet containing 36% of total calories as ethanol or an isocaloric amount of sucrose. Cells were isolated at several time points in the course of a 5-week experimental period. Ethanol consumption markedly decreased CPT-I activity and increased enzyme sensitivity to inhibition by exogenously added malonyl-CoA. Changes in enzyme activity occurred sooner than those in enzyme sensitivity. Fatty acid oxidation to CO2 and ketone bodies was depressed in hepatocytes from ethanol-fed animals during the first part of the treatment. At the end of the 35-day period, there were no longer differences in the rate of ketogenesis between the two groups. At that time, however, the rate of CO2 formation was still impaired in the ethanol-fed animals. Furthermore, addition of ethanol or acetaldehyde to the incubation medium strongly depressed CPT-I activity and rates of fatty acid oxidation in hepatocytes from ethanol-treated rats, whereas these effects were much less pronounced in cells from control animals. The response of CPT-I activity to insulin,
glucagon
, vasopressin, and phorbol ester was blunted in cells derived from ethanol-fed rats. These changes in the regulation of CPT-I activity corresponded with those observed in the rate of fatty acid oxidation. It is concluded that CPT-I may play a role in the generation of the ethanol-induced fatty liver.
...
PMID:Effects of ethanol feeding on the activity and regulation of hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase I. 306 12
The metabolic consequences of a prolonged gestation (35 vs 32 days) have been studied in the rabbit fetus. Gestation was prolonged by daily subcutaneous injections of progesterone (1.5 mg.kg-1) from day 28 to 34. In control animals, progesterone was injected from day 25 or 28 to day 31 of gestation. When the capacities for gluconeogenesis and fatty acid oxidation, measured on isolated hepatocytes, are normally low in the term control fetus and increase only within the first 24 h after birth, these capacities appear high in the postmature fetus. The rate of glucose production from lactate is 4-fold higher in the postmature fetus than in the normal term fetus. The rate of ketone body production from oleate is also 5-fold higher in the postmature fetus, which results from a switch on of the partition of oleate into esterification and oxidation: 8% of [1-14C]oleate is oxidized in term fetus hepatocytes, but 34% in postmature fetus hepatocytes. As a similar rate of lipogenesis takes place in both stages, this metabolic change could be explained by a 5-fold lower sensitivity of
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
to the inhibition by malonyl-coenzyme A. Postmaturity decreases plasma insulin concentrations by 45% and increases plasma
glucagon
concentrations by 50% which, in turn, induces a 3-fold decrease in the plasma insulin:
glucagon
molar ratio. As previously shown in fasted or diabetic adult rat, this hormonal change might be a likely candidate for an enhancement of gluconeogenic and ketogenic capacity in the liver of the postterm rabbit fetus.
...
PMID:Premature appearance of gluconeogenesis and fatty acid oxidation in the liver of the postterm rabbit fetus. 328 Nov 21
The purpose of these studies was to quantify several mRNAs expressed specifically in pancreatic islet cells and known or postulated to be important for insulin release after acute well defined alterations in levels of plasma glucose. Glucose levels were maintained at 50, 120, or 180 mg/dl (2.8, 6.7, or 10 mM) for 3 h in conscious unrestrained rats. Hypoglycemia (for 3 h) caused significant decreases in pancreatic content of mRNAs for insulin 2 and GLUT-2 to 55 and 34% of control values, respectively. There were no significant changes in insulin 1, amylin, glucokinase, or
glucagon
mRNAs. Unprocessed insulin 1 and 2 mRNA precursors were decreased to 17 and 10% of levels in controls, consistent with effects of short-term hypoglycemia on new mRNA synthesis. Hyperglycemia (for 3 h) caused no increase in pancreatic content of any mRNA measured. To discriminate between effects of hypoglycemia and hyperinsulinemia in the hypoglycemic animals, rats were made hypoglycemic by infusion with etomoxir, a
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
inhibitor that lowers glucose in the fasted (glycogen-depleted) state by inhibiting hepatic gluconeogenesis. A single dose of this agent caused a decrease in glucose from 120 mg/dl (6.7 mM) to 80 mg/dl (4.4 mM) and significantly decreased insulin mRNA and pre-mRNA. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that glucose modulates islet cell gene transcription directly. They indicate that the range of glucose concentrations that modulate gene transcription differs from the levels of glucose that alter both insulin biosynthetic and secretion rates.
...
PMID:Hypoglycemia but not hyperglycemia induces rapid changes in pancreatic beta-cell gene transcription. 836 95
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