Carbohydrate metabolism in normal and altitude-exposed mice following arsenite poisoning
- 1 July 1959
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content
- Vol. 197 (1) , 37-40
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajplegacy.1959.197.1.37
Abstract
The metabolic basis for the greater susceptibility of high altitude-exposed mice to arsenite poisoning was investigated. There was, initially, in altitude-exposed mice less muscle glycogen and blood sugar and these became depleted, along with liver glycogen and total body carbohydrate, more rapidly following intraperitoneal injections of arsenite than in control mice. At a dosage level when altitude-exposed mice were dying in convulsions, normal mice survived with what appeared to be enough carbohydrate to protect them. Livers of altitude-exposed mice retained a significantly larger percentage of isotopically labeled arsenite 1 and 3 hours postintraperitoneal injection than livers of normal mice. The differential effect of arsenite was not accompanied by an unequal accumulation of metabolic intermediates in livers nor by a difference in rate of loss of liver glycogen under in vitro conditions. Impaired synthesis may be more significant than increased loss in explaining these results.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Susceptibility to Infection as Influenced by Acclimatization to Altitude and Krebs Cycle Inhibitors and IntermediatesThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1956
- A colorimetric micro-method for the determination of glycogen in tissuesBiochemical Journal, 1954
- A colorimetric micro-method for the determination of glucoseBiochemical Journal, 1954
- Acclimatization to Low Oxygen TensionPhysiological Reviews, 1953
- A Simplified Photometric Method for the Determination of Citric Acid in Biological FluidsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1952
- Microdetermination of pyruvic and α-ketoglutaric acidsArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1952
- The Use of Ranks in a Test of Significance for Comparing Two TreatmentsBiometrics, 1952
- BLOCKADE OF EPINEPHRINE-INDUCED HYPERGLYCEMIA1952
- An analysis of the inhibition of pyruvate oxidation by arsenicals in relation to the enzyme theory of vesicationBiochemical Journal, 1945
- SOME EFFECTS OF LOW ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE ON RATS 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1944