The Acute Biochemical Response of the Starved Rabbit Liver in Situ to Glucose Infusion
JF Williams, MG Irving, PF Blackmore, HL Regtop and MG Clark
Australian Journal of Biological Sciences
27(3) 249 - 258
Published: 1974
Abstract
Increasing the blood glucose levels from 88 to 400 mg/IOO ml in rabbit liver in situ during 5-min time intervals resulted in a decrease in the production of C02 from C-I of liver glucose together with a slight increase in the oxidation of C-6 of glucose; this was caused by a high glucose-induced decrease in the activity of the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway. Increasing the glucose concentrations also resulted in a threefold increase in the levels of palmitoyl- and stearoyl-CoA esters at a glucose load of 0·8 g; this is consistent with a specific feed-back inhibition of the production of NADPH by reactions of the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway by long-chain fatty acyl-CoAs. A decrease in plasma free fatty acids occurred when blood glucose levels were raised; this was associated with an increase in the concentration of free fatty acids in liver.https://doi.org/10.1071/BI9740249
© CSIRO 1974