The total activities (sum of active and inactive forms) of branched-chain 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complex in tissues of normal rats fed on a standard diet were (unit/g wet wt.): liver, 0.82; kidney, 0.77; heart, 0.57; hindlimb skeletal muscles, 0.034. Total activity was decreased in liver by 9%- or 0%-casein diets and by 48 h starvation, but not by alloxan-diabetes. Total activities were unchanged in kidney and heart. The amount of active form of the complex (in unit/g wet wt. and as % of total) in tissues of normal rats fed on standard diet was: liver, 0.45, 55%; kidney, 0.55, 71%; heart, 0.03, 5%; skeletal muscle less than 0.007, less than 20% (below lower limit of assay). The concentration of the active form of the complex was decreased in liver and kidney, but not in heart, by low-protein diets, 48 h starvation and alloxan-diabetes. In heart muscle alloxan-diabetes increased the concentration of active complex. The concentration of activator protein (which activates phosphorylated complex without dephosphorylation) in liver and kidney was decreased by 70-90% by low-protein diets and 48 h starvation. Alloxan-diabetes decreased activator protein in liver, but not in kidney. Evidence is given that in tissues of rats fed on a normal diet approx. 70% of whole-body active branched chain complex is in the liver and that the major change in activity occasioned by low-protein diets is also in the liver.
Heterogeneity of metabolic activity along the nephron points to a very varied relationship between glucose metabolism and ion transport. Glycolysis is linked closely to free-water clearance and possibly to sodium, potassium, and hydrogen ion transport. Glucose oxidation, while not the major source of renal energy, is crucial in sodium, potassium, and phosphate reabsorption. Gluconeogenesis recovers carbon compounds generated during the process of renal ammoniagenesis. Glucose synthesis and active sodium transport appear to compete for renal ATP, although no regulatory function for this competition has been identified. Glucose formed in the proximal tubule may support free-water clearance in adjacent distal tubule, but is not thought to contribute to any medullary function. The complex network of biosynthetic and catabolic pathways of glucose metabolism may have evolved in the kidney to protect the organism against wide variations in glucose demand which would otherwise be unavoidable during the course of rapidly fluctuating renal electrolyte loads.
The effect of insulin concentrations on the rates of glycolysis and glycogen synthesis in four different in vitro rat muscle preparations (intact soleus, stripped soleus, epitrochlearis, and hemi-diaphragm) were investigated: the concentrations of insulin that produced half-maximal stimulation of the rates of these two processes in the four muscle preparations were similar - about 100 muunits/ml. This is at least 10-fold greater than the concentration that produced half-maximal inhibition of lipolysis in isolated adipocytes. Since 100 muunits/ml insulin is outside the normal physiological range in the rat, it is suggested that, in vivo, insulin influences glucose utilization in muscle mainly indirectly, via changes in the plasma fatty acid levels and the 'glucose/fatty acid cycle'. Consequently the view that insulin stimulates glucose utilization in muscle mainly by a direct effect on membrane transport must be treated with caution.
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