Abstract
The effects of insulin in vitro on perfused liver from streptozotocin-diabetic rats and their untreated littermates during gluconeogenesis from either [3-13C]alanine + ethanol or [2-13C]pyruvate + NH4Cl + ethanol were studied by 13C NMR. A 13C NMR determination of the rate of pyruvate kinase flux under steady-state conditions of active gluconeogenesis was developed; this assay includes a check on the reuse of recycled pyruvate. The preparations studied provided gradations of pyruvate kinase flux within the confines of the assay''s requirement of active gluconeogenesis. By this determination, the rate of pyruvate kinase flux was 0.74 .+-. 0.04 of the gluconeogenic rate in liver from 24-h-fasted controls; in liver from 12-h-fasted controls, relative pyruvate kinase flux increased to 1.0 .+-. 0.2. In diabetic liver, this flux was undetectable by our NMR method. Insulin''s hepatic influence in vitro was greatest in the streptozotocin model of type 1 diabetes: upon treatment of diabetic liver with 7 nM insulin in vitro, a partial reversal of many of the differences noted between diabetic and control liver was demonstrated by 13C NMR. A major effect of insulin in vitro upon diabetic liver was the induction of a large increase in the rate of pyruvate kinase flux, bringing relative and absolute fluxes up to the levels measured in 24-h-fasted controls. By way of comparison, the effects of ischemia on diabetic liver were studied by 13C NMR to test whether changes in allosteric effectors under these conditions could also increase pyruvate kinase flux. A large increase in this activity was demonstrated in ischemic diabetic liver.

This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit: