The overall objective of this study is to clarify the mechanisms involved in the deposition of hepatic glycogen during the intravenous and oral administration of carbohydrate in several metabolic states. We propose to use a combined in vivo/in vitro approach: the in vivo studies, to be carried out in conscious dogs using the venous occlusion technique for sampling of mixed hepatic venous blood, are designed to delineate the relative importance of specific signals and substrates (glucose itself, insulin, glucagon, gluconeogenic precursors, putative gut factors) to the amount of glycogen deposited during carbohydrate administration. Studies in vitro, to be carried out in perfused rat liver, are designed to delineate the intracellular mechanisms by which the various factors interact to determine glycogen deposition rates when carbohydrate (and non-carbohydrate glucose precursors) are plentiful. The interpretation of the perfused liver studies will be performed using the minimal model approach: A mathematical model of glycogen metabolism is developed which allows us to estimate mass flux rates through the glycogen metabolic pathway from the time course of metabolic intermediates measured in the perfused liver system during substrate administration and hormonal stimulation. Estimating flux rates using the model is an approach to the study of intracellular mechanisms of control which does not require the assumption that enzyme activities measured in vitro, in broken cells are representative of activities in the perfused tissue. The integrated portrait of control mechanisms of glycogen metabolism obtained in these studies will be compared with control of glycogen deposition in the liver of the diabetic animal, and the animal with genetic insulin resistance.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Arthritis, Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIADDK)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AM027619-05
Application #
3151768
Study Section
Metabolism Study Section (MET)
Project Start
1980-02-01
Project End
1986-07-31
Budget Start
1984-12-01
Budget End
1986-07-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
1985
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Southern California
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
041544081
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90033
Bergman, Richard N (2005) Minimal model: perspective from 2005. Horm Res 64 Suppl 3:8-15
Cohen, D M; Bergman, R N (1997) Improved estimation of anaplerosis in heart using 13C NMR. Am J Physiol 273:E1228-42
Cohen, D M; Bergman, R N (1995) Estimation of TCA cycle flux, aminotransferase flux, and anaplerosis in heart: validation with syntactic model. Am J Physiol 268:E397-409
Cohen, D M; Bergman, R N (1994) SYNTAX: a rule-based stochastic simulation of the time-varying concentrations of positional isotopomers of metabolic intermediates. Comput Biomed Res 27:130-47
Cohen, D M; Bergman, R N (1994) Prediction of positional isotopomers of the citric acid cycle: the syntactic approach. Am J Physiol 266:E341-50
Youn, J H; Ader, M; Bergman, R N (1989) Glucose phosphorylation is not rate limiting for accumulation of glycogen from glucose in perfused livers from fasted rats. J Biol Chem 264:168-72
Finegood, D T; Thomaseth, K; Pacini, G et al. (1988) OPSEG: a general routine for smoothing and interpolating discrete biological data. Comput Methods Programs Biomed 26:289-99
Antwi, D; Youn, J H; Shargill, N S et al. (1988) Regulation of glycogen synthase in muscle and adipose tissue during fasting and refeeding. Am J Physiol 254:E720-5
Youn, J H; Bergman, R N (1987) Patterns of glycogen turnover in liver characterized by computer modeling. Am J Physiol 253:E360-9
Volund, A; Polonsky, K S; Bergman, R N (1987) Calculated pattern of intraportal insulin appearance without independent assessment of C-peptide kinetics. Diabetes 36:1195-202

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