Katz et al. [Katz, J.,Golden, S. & Wals, P. A. (1976) Proc. Not1 Acud. Sci. USA 73, 3433-34371 were the first to report that in hepatocytes isolated from fasted rats and incubated with either dihydroxyacetone, glucose or other sugars, glycogen synthesis was greatly accelerated by addition of amino acids. We have looked for possible mediators responsible for this effect and have tested the effect of alanine, proline, asparagine, glutamine or a combination of ammonia with either pyruvate or lactate in activating glycogen synthesis from dihydroxyacetone. The following observations were made.1. Stimulation of glycogen synthesis by alanine, proline or asparagine does not require production of glutamine since the effect also occurs in periportal hepatocytes which lack glutamine synthetase.2. Under various conditions, stimulation of glycogen synthesis by added amino acids directly correlated with increases in the intracellular content of amino acids, expressed in osmotic equivalents.3. 3-Mercaptopicolinic acid, the inhibitor of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, further enhances stimulation of glycogen synthesis by amino acids because it increases the intracellular accumulation of aspartate and glutamate.4 It is concluded that activation of glycogen synthesis by added amino acids is due to an increase in intracellular osmolarity following their uptake and the accumulation of intracellular catabolites. This results in an increase in hepatic volume which stimulates glycogen synthesis [Baquet, A., Hue, L., Meijer, A. J., van Woerkom, G. M. & Plomp, P. J. A. M. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 955-9591, In 1976 Katz et al. [l] showed that, in hepatocytes fromIn none of the studies mentioned above were intracellular fasted rats, addition of amino acids like glutamine, alanine or metabolites measured as a means of obtaining information on asparagine greatly accelerated glycogen synthesis from the mechanism by mcans of which amino acids stimulate physiological concentrations of glucose (and other precursors, glycogen synthesis. Such an analysis is described in this paper. such as fructose, sorbitol or dihydroxyacetone); only in the presence of amino acids were rates of glycogen synthesis comparable to those found in vivo after the fasted/refed transition. In order to obtain appreciable rates of glycogen synthesis in MATERIALS AND METHODS the absence of amino acids, either very high concentrations of glucose must be added [2] or N a + in the incubation medium must be replaced by K + [3].The mechanism underlying the stimulation of glycogen synthesis by amino acids is still not understood [4-81. Several compounds have been proposed as possible candidates involved in this stimulation, ranging from an unknown catabolite of glutamine, alanine or asparagine [l], added amino acids themselves [7], carbamoyl phosphate [6] to glutamine [8]. Chen and Lardy [5] found that leucine reinforced the stimulation of glycogen synthesis by glutamine. Since stimulation of glycogen synthesis by glutamine plus leucine was cycloheximide-sensitive, they ...
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