Time-dependent effects of insulin on lipid synthesis in cultured fetal rat hepatocytes
A comparison between lipogenesis and glycogenesis
مقال من تأليف: M'zali, H. ; Guichard, C. ; Lavau, M. ; Plas, C. ;
ملخص: The lipogenic effect of insulin was studied in 18-day-old fetal rat hepatocytes after 2 to 3 days of culture in the presence of glucocorticoids when an acute stimulatory effect of insulin on glycogenesis was present. The rate of [1-14C]-acetate incorporation into lipids measured for 4 hours was much higher than with [U-14C]-glucose (30 v 3.8 nmol/h/mg protein). The stimulatory effect of insulin on lipid labeling remained weak (1.2-fold) and contrasted with its striking stimulatory effect on [U-14C]-glucose incorporation into glycogen (fourfold). When lipid labeling was assessed in longer experiments, increasing acetate concentrations in the medium stimulated the incorporation rate of [1-14C]-acetate into lipids (3.5-fold from 1 to 5 mmol/L after 36 hours) and decreased that of [U-14C]-glucose (by twofold). The stimulatory effect of insulin on the rate of lipid labeling developed with both precursors from 12 to 36 hours after insulin exposure (by ~twofold) independently of acetate concentration and was not glucocorticoid-dependent, contrary to the glycogenic response. Addition of a glucose load simultaneously with insulin increased the stimulation of lipogenesis when measured with [U-14C]-glucose (twofold to 3.7-fold). Besides contributing to an accumulation of larger and numerous lipid droplets in the cells, insulin increased fatty acid synthase activity by 26%, whereas malic enzyme was not affected. Thus, insulin-dependent lipogenesis in cultured fetal hepatocytes appears to be mostly regulated by a long-term mechanism, contrary to the glycogenic effect of insulin.
لغة:
إنجليزية