The turnover of L-type pyruvate kinase in cultured rat hepatocytes.
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ABSTRACT: Hepatocytes were isolated by collagenase perfusion of livers from rats that had been allowed access to a carbohydrate-rich diet or laboratory chow or had been deprived of food 48h before use. By incubation with l-[4,5-(3)H]leucine and precipitation with anti-(L-type pyruvate kinase) sera the rates of synthesis and degradation of L-type pyruvate kinase were measured in freshly prepared cells and hepatocytes maintained in monolayer culture for up to 5 days. Hepatocytes from carbohydrate-rich-diet-fed rats synthesized more L-type pyruvate kinase than did cells from chow-fed animals, which in turn synthesized more than cells from 48h-starved rats. Hepatocytes maintained in culture for up to 5 days synthesized L-type pyruvate kinase at similar rates to freshly prepared cells. The degradation of [(3)H]leucine-labelled L-type pyruvate kinase was shown to be biphasic. A phase with t((1/2)) (half-time) 4.9h and a duration of 8-10h was followed by a phase with t((1/2)) 79.2h. Cells from chow-fed and carbohydrate-rich-diet-fed rats showed similar patterns of degradation of L-type pyruvate kinase. The addition of 2mm-fructose and 0.1mum-insulin to the culture medium increased the t((1/2)) of the rapid phase to 12h in cells isolated from carbohydrate-rich-diet-fed rats, but not in cells from chow-fed rats. The secondary, slower, phase of degradation remained unaffected. The degradation of fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase and total cell protein followed first-order kinetics. The half-life of fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase was 41.0h in cells from chow-fed animals and 48.5h in cells from carbohydrate-rich-diet-fed donors. Fructose and insulin did not affect the rate of enzyme degradation. We propose that there is a role for protein catabolism in the short-term and long-term control of L-type pyruvate kinase concentration.
Project description:Hepatocytes were isolated from preweaned neonatal and adult rats and maintained in primary monolayer culture. Cells from preweaned newborns possessed no L-type pyruvate kinase, nor did they synthesize the enzyme. Incubation for 48-72 h in culture medium supplemented with 2 mM-fructose and 0.1 microM-insulin induced the synthesis of L-type pyruvate kinase, as judged by increased enzyme activity and the increased incorporation of [3H]leucine into immunoprecipitable L-type pyruvate kinase. Hepatocytes isolated from 48 h-starved adult rats incorporated less [3H]leucine into L-type pyruvate kinase than did cells isolated from high-carbohydrate-diet-fed rats. The rate of enzyme synthesis by cells from 48 h-starved rats was increased by the inclusion of fructose and insulin in the incubation medium, after a lag phase of 24-48 h. After 4 days in culture in the presence of fructose and insulin, hepatocytes from 48 h-starved rats synthesized L-type pyruvate kinase at similar rates to hepatocytes isolated from high-carbohydrate-diet-fed rats.
Project description:The activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) kinase and of PDH kinase activator protein (KAP) were increased 2-2.4-fold during 25 h of culture of hepatocytes from fed rats with glucagon plus n-octanoate. PDH kinase activity in hepatocytes from starved rats (initially 2.2 x fed control) fell during 25 h of culture in medium 199 (to 1.5 x fed control), but was maintained by glucagon plus octanoate. Dibutyryl or 8-bromo cyclic AMP increased PDH kinase activity 2-2.2-fold in hepatocytes from fed rats, but phenylephrine and isoproterenol (isoprenaline) were without effect. Insulin blocked the action of glucagon to increase PDH kinase activity and decreased the effect of octanoate and octanoate plus glucagon. It is suggested that the effects of starvation to increase activities of PDH kinase and of KAP in liver are mediated by alterations in circulating concentrations of glucagon, fatty acids and insulin and in hepatic cyclic AMP.
Project description:Mammalian hepatic cytochromes P450 (P450s) are endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-anchored hemoproteins engaged in the metabolism of numerous xeno- and endobiotics. P450s exhibit widely ranging half-lives, utilizing both autophagic-lysosomal (ALD) and ubiquitin-dependent 26S proteasomal (UPD) degradation pathways. Although suicidally inactivated hepatic CYPs 3A and "native" CYP3A4 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae are degraded via UPD, the turnover of native hepatic CYPs 3A in their physiological milieu has not been elucidated. Herein, we characterize the degradation of native, dexamethasone-inducible CYPs 3A in cultured primary rat hepatocytes, using proteasomal (MG-132 and MG-262) and ALD [NH4Cl and 3-methyladenine (3-MA)] inhibitors to examine their specific degradation route. Pulse-chase with immunoprecipitation analyses revealed a basal 52% 35S-CYP3A loss over 6 h, which was stabilized by both proteasomal inhibitors. By contrast, no corresponding CYP3A stabilization was detected with either ALD inhibitor NH4Cl or 3-MA. Furthermore, MG-262-induced CYP3A stabilization was associated with its polyubiquitylation, thereby verifying that native CYPs 3A were also degraded via UPD. To identify the specific participants in this process, cellular proteins were cross-linked in situ with paraformaldehyde (PFA) in cultured hepatocytes. Immunoblotting analyses of CYP3A immunoprecipitates after PFA-cross-linking revealed the presence of p97, a cytosolic AAA ATPase instrumental in the extraction and delivery of ubiquitylated ER proteins for proteasomal degradation. Such native CYP3A-p97 interactions were greatly magnified after CYP3A suicidal inactivation (which accelerates UPD), and/or proteasomal inhibition, and were confirmed by proteomic and confocal immunofluorescence microscopic analyses. These findings clearly reveal that native CYPs 3A undergo UPD and implicate a role for p97 in this process.
Project description:Analysis of proteins in biological samples opens up the possibility of discovering new markers of toxicity. The liver is one of the primary targets of drug-induced toxicity, and it also secretes many plasma proteins, which can be measured clinically. Most of the plasma proteins produced by the liver are secreted by hepatocytes, but there is little information regarding the protein profile secreted by these cells. The purpose of this study was to analyze the secreted proteome of primary rat hepatocytes in a collagen gel sandwich configuration by a gel-LC-MS/MS procedure. We identified over 600 peptides corresponding to more than 200 proteins. The protein profile included over 50 plasma proteins, suggesting that the cultured hepatocytes secrete many of the proteins that they produce in vivo. Our data also suggests that the hepatocytes are actively remodeling their environment, since we identified several structural extracellular matrix proteins as well as some proteins known to be secreted specifically during liver regeneration. We also identified two proteins, alpha1-antitrypsin and alpha2-macroglobulin, whose secretions appear to be down-regulated in cells exposed to aflatoxin B1. It was noted that a 15 nM dose of aflatoxin B1 led to substantially diminished levels of these proteins and that day 6 of incubation was the ideal time point for medium collection. These data suggest that proteins in the conditioned medium of hepatocyte sandwich culture might lead to the discovery of biomarkers for drug-induced chemical toxicity.
Project description:DNA microarray is a powerful tool in biomedical research. However, transcriptomic profiling using DNA microarray is subject to many variations including biological variability. To evaluate the different sources of variation in mRNA gene expression profiles, gene expression profiles were monitored using the Affymetrix RatTox U34 arrays in cultured primary hepatocytes derived from six rats over a 26 hour period at 6 time points (0 h, 2h, 5h, 8h, 14 h and 26 h) with two replicate arrays at each time point for each animal. In addition, the impact of sample size on the variability of differentially expressed gene lists and the consistency of biological responses were also investigated. Excellent intra-animal reproducibility was obtained at all time points with 0 out of 370 present probe sets across all time points showing significant difference between the 2 replicate arrays (3-way ANOVA, p <or= 0.0001). However, large inter-animal biological variation in mRNA expression profiles was observed with 337 out of 370 present probe sets showing significant differences among 6 animals (3-way ANOVA, p <or= 0.05). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) revealed that time effect (PC1) in this data set accounted for 47.4% of total variance indicating the dynamics of transcriptomics. The second and third largest effects came from animal difference, which accounted for 16.9% (PC2 and PC3) of the total variance. The reproducibility of gene lists and their functional classification was declined considerably when the sample size was decreased. Overall, our results strongly support that there is significant inter-animal variability in the time-course gene expression profiles, which is a confounding factor that must be carefully evaluated to correctly interpret microarray gene expression studies. The consistency of the gene lists and their biological functional classification are also sensitive to sample size with the reproducibility decreasing considerably under small sample size.
Project description:The activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase in extracts of mitochondria from rat hepatocytes cultured for 21 h in medium 199 was increased 2.5-fold by the presence of 55 nM-glucagon and 1 mM-sodium n-octanoate in the culture medium. The change was comparable with that induced in vivo by 48 h starvation. The potential contribution of branched-chain complex to estimates of PDH-complex activity in rat liver mitochondria has been defined.
Project description:In tissue culture of hepatocytes, insulin (0.1-1 munits/ml for 4 h) reversed completely the effects of starvation of rats to decrease the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex and to increase the activities of PDH kinase and PDH kinase activator protein. It had no effect in hepatocytes from fed rats. Significant effects of insulin were detected with 0.01 munit/ml after 4 h, and in 1-2 h with 1 munit/ml.
Project description:The increased activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) kinase induced in hearts of rats by starvation for 48 h was maintained following preparation of cardiac myocytes, and it was also maintained, though at a decreased level, after 25 h of culture in medium 199. This loss of PDH kinase activity was not prevented by n-octanoate, dibutyryl cyclic AMP or glucagon. The PDH kinase activity of myocytes from fed rats was increased to that of starved rats after 25 h of culture with n-octanoate, dibutyryl cyclic AMP or both agents together.
Project description:Glucose metabolism in nervous tissue has been proposed to occur in a compartmentalized manner with astrocytes contributing largely to glycolysis and neurons being the primary site of glucose oxidation. However, mammalian astrocytes and neurons both contain mitochondria, and it remains unclear why in culture neurons oxidize glucose, lactate, and pyruvate to a much larger extent than astrocytes. The objective of this study was to determine whether pyruvate metabolism is differentially regulated in cultured neurons versus astrocytes. Expression of all components of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC), the rate-limiting step for pyruvate entry into the Krebs cycle, was determined in cultured astrocytes and neurons. In addition, regulation of PDC enzymatic activity in the two cell types via protein phosphorylation was examined. We show that all components of the PDC are expressed in both cell types in culture, but that PDC activity is kept strongly inhibited in astrocytes through phosphorylation of the pyruvate dehydrogenase alpha subunit (PDH alpha). In contrast, neuronal PDC operates close to maximal levels with much lower levels of phosphorylated PDH alpha. Dephosphorylation of astrocytic PDH alpha restores PDC activity and lowers lactate production. Our findings suggest that the glucose metabolism of astrocytes and neurons may be far more flexible than previously believed.
Project description:The hormonal regulation of L-type pyruvate kinase in hepatocytes from phosphorylase b kinase-deficient (gsd/gsd) rats was investigated. Adrenaline (10 microM) and glucagon (10 nM) each led to an inactivation and phosphorylation of pyruvate kinase. Dose-response curves for adrenaline-mediated inactivation of pyruvate kinase, phosphorylation of pyruvate kinase and the stimulation of gluconeogenesis from 1.8 mM-lactate were similar for hepatocytes from control and gsd/gsd rats. Time-course studies indicated that adrenaline-mediated inactivation and phosphorylation of pyruvate kinase proceeded more slowly in phosphorylase kinase-deficient hepatocytes than in control hepatocytes. The age-dependent change in the adrenergic control of pyruvate kinase was similar between control and phosphorylase kinase-deficient hepatocytes. Adrenaline, glucagon and noradrenaline activated the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and inhibited pyruvate kinase in phosphorylase kinase-deficient hepatocytes. Vasopressin (0.2-2 nM), angiotensin (10nM) and A23187 (10 microM) had no effect on the activity ratio of the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase or pyruvate kinase in these cells. It is concluded that phosphorylase kinase plays no significant role in the hormonal control of pyruvate kinase and that phosphorylation and inactivation of this enzyme results predominantly from the action of the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.