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Modulation of the glucagon‐dependent activation of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase gene by oxygen in rat hepatocyte cultures Evidence for a heme protein as oxygen sensor

53

Citations

36

References

1992

Year

Abstract

The glucagon-dependent activation of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK) gene is modulated by oxygen. It was proposed that heme proteins might function as O2 sensors; their actions are impaired after replacement of the central Fe2+ ion by Co2+ and inhibition of heme synthesis by succinylacetone (SA). Therefore, the effects of CoCl2 and SA, alone and in combination, on the glucagon-dependent induction of PCK activity and PCK mRNA were investigated at different physiological oxygen tensions in primary rat hepatocyte cultures. The cells were exposed to 50 microM CoCl2 and/or 2 mM SA from 4-24 h. After addition of fresh media without CoCl2 or SA, PCK was induced with 1 nM glucagon. PCK activity and PCK mRNA were elevated to 100% at 16% O2 and to about 65% at 8% O2. CoCl2 reduced these increases to about 45% at 16% O2 and to about 35% at 8% O2. SA lowered the inductions to about 50% and 40% each at 16% and 8% O2. CoCl2 plus SA diminished the elevations to about 5% at both oxygen tensions. In the presence of CoCl2 and/or SA, ornithine decarboxylase induction by insulin was not impaired; lactate dehydrogenase did not leak from the cells, which in electron microscopical inspections had normal cell structures. These findings support the hypothesis that a heme protein is involved in the activation of the PCK gene and that it acts as an O2 sensor.

References

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