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Response of liver glycogen synthase and phosphorylase to in vivo glucose and glucose analogues
17
Citations
27
References
1983
Year
Vivo GlucoseBiosynthesisLiver Glycogen SynthaseGlucose AnaloguesMetabolic StateGlycosylationHealth SciencesGlycogen SynthaseBiochemistryLiver PhysiologyRapid IncreaseLiver Camp ConcentrationEnergy MetabolismPhysiologyDiabetesCatabolismMetabolic RegulationMetabolismMedicine
Glucose causes a rapid increase in the proportion (%) of glycogen synthase in the active (I) form and a rapid decrease in the proportion of phosphorylase in the active (a) form in both fed and fasted rats. The changes in synthase I and phosphorylase a are more rapid in fasted animals. With graded doses of glucose, the maximal decrease in phosphorylase a occurred at a dose that was considerably smaller than that required to maximally stimulate an increase in % synthase I. Thus, in the intact animal a dissociation between the effects of glucose on the synthase and phosphorylase systems was observed. Sorbitol, mannose, galactose, and arabinose all stimulated an increase in synthase I but did not significantly affect the proportion of phosphorylase in the a form. The % synthase I was not significantly affected by a number of other glucose homologues, pentoses, or three-carbon gluconeogenic substrates. The ketoses fructose and mannoheptulose both caused a striking increase in % phosphorylase a and a decrease in % synthase I, i.e., results opposite to those of glucose. The mechanism by which fructose induces these changes is not known, but the mannoheptulose effects may be accounted for by a rise in liver cAMP concentration.
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