TY - JOUR
T1 - Osmotic alterations of the lysosomal system during rat liver perfusion
T2 - Reversible suppression by insulin and amino acids
AU - Neely, Alice N.
AU - Nelson, Paul B.
AU - Mortimore, Gleen E.
N1 - Funding Information:
This investigation was supported by grants AM-11960 and AM-16356 from the National Institute of Arthritis, Metabolic and Digestive Diseases. During this investigation, Alice N. Neely was a Predoctoral Fellow of the National Science Foundation. We thank Dr W.W. Bromer of the Lilly Research Laboratories for the gifts of insulin and glucagon and Ms Joanne Cox and Helene Boyle for their able technical assistance.
PY - 1974/2/28
Y1 - 1974/2/28
N2 - Livers from nonfasted rats were perfused in situ under conditions known from previous studies in this laboratory to increase or decrease overall endogenous proteolysis. At the termination of the experiments, lysosomal alterations were evaluated by the increase in free acid phosphatase or N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase that occurred when tissue homogenates were subjected to osmotic shock in hypotonic sucrose. In control perfusions, osmotic sensitivity increased spontaneously over unperfused values, reaching maximum by 60 min or earlier. Additions of insulin, amino acid mixtures, or cycloheximide in amounts known to suppress proteolysis prevented this spontaneous perfusion effect or, when added at 60 min, rapidly reversed it. Glucagon alone during perfusion did not increase osmotic sensitivity further; however, stimulation with glucagon was observed when the perfusion effect was suppressed by insulin or cycloheximide. Anoxia, induced by gassing with nitrogen instead of oxygen, markedly reduced the perfusion effect and also doubled the amount of free acid phosphatase in the initial isotonic homogenates. Total acid phosphatase activities in the perfusion experiments were not significantly different from unperfused values and, with the exception of the anoxia perfusions, the amounts of free enzyme present in the initial isotonic sucrose homogenates did not change.
AB - Livers from nonfasted rats were perfused in situ under conditions known from previous studies in this laboratory to increase or decrease overall endogenous proteolysis. At the termination of the experiments, lysosomal alterations were evaluated by the increase in free acid phosphatase or N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase that occurred when tissue homogenates were subjected to osmotic shock in hypotonic sucrose. In control perfusions, osmotic sensitivity increased spontaneously over unperfused values, reaching maximum by 60 min or earlier. Additions of insulin, amino acid mixtures, or cycloheximide in amounts known to suppress proteolysis prevented this spontaneous perfusion effect or, when added at 60 min, rapidly reversed it. Glucagon alone during perfusion did not increase osmotic sensitivity further; however, stimulation with glucagon was observed when the perfusion effect was suppressed by insulin or cycloheximide. Anoxia, induced by gassing with nitrogen instead of oxygen, markedly reduced the perfusion effect and also doubled the amount of free acid phosphatase in the initial isotonic homogenates. Total acid phosphatase activities in the perfusion experiments were not significantly different from unperfused values and, with the exception of the anoxia perfusions, the amounts of free enzyme present in the initial isotonic sucrose homogenates did not change.
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U2 - 10.1016/0304-4165(74)90307-9
DO - 10.1016/0304-4165(74)90307-9
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0015949585
SN - 0304-4165
VL - 338
SP - 458
EP - 472
JO - BBA - General Subjects
JF - BBA - General Subjects
IS - 2
ER -