scholarly journals Ketone body and fatty acid metabolism in sheep tissues. 3-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, a cytoplasmic enzyme in sheep liver and kidney

1970 ◽  
Vol 119 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia P. Koundakjian ◽  
A. M. Snoswell

1. 3-Hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.30) activities in sheep kidney cortex, rumen epithelium, skeletal muscle, brain, heart and liver were 177, 41, 38, 33, 27 and 17μmol/h per g of tissue respectively, and in rat liver and kidney cortex the values were 1150 and 170 respectively. 2. In sheep liver and kidney cortex the 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase was located predominantly in the cytosol fractions. In contrast, the enzyme was found in the mitochondria in rat liver and kidney cortex. 3. Laurate, myristate, palmitate and stearate were not oxidized by sheep liver mitochondria, whereas the l-carnitine esters were oxidized at appreciable rates. The free acids were readily oxidized by rat liver mitochondria. 4. During oxidation of palmitoyl-l-carnitine by sheep liver mitochondria, acetoacetate production accounted for 63% of the oxygen uptake. No 3-hydroxybutyrate was formed, even after 10min anaerobic incubation, except when sheep liver cytosol was added. With rat liver mitochondria, half of the preformed acetoacetate was converted into 3-hydroxybutyrate after anaerobic incubation. 5. Measurement of ketone bodies by using specific enzymic methods (Williamson, Mellanby & Krebs, 1962) showed that blood of normal sheep and cattle has a high [3-hydroxybutyrate]/[acetoacetate] ratio, in contrast with that of non-ruminants (rats and pigeons). This ratio in the blood of lambs was similar to that of non-ruminants. The ratio in sheep blood decreased on starvation and rose again on re-feeding. 6. The physiological implications of the low activity of 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase in sheep liver and the fact that it is found in the cytoplasm in sheep liver and kidney cortex are discussed.

1971 ◽  
Vol 124 (5) ◽  
pp. 867-876 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Smith ◽  
W. S. Osborne-White

1. Utilization of propionate by sheep liver mitochondria was stimulated equally by pyruvate or α-oxoglutarate, with formation predominantly of malate. Pyruvate increased conversion of propionate carbon into citrate, whereas α-oxoglutarate increased formation of phosphoenolpyruvate. The fraction of metabolized propionate converted into phosphoenolpyruvate was about 17% in the presence or absence of α-oxoglutarate and about 7% in the presence of pyruvate. Pyruvate consumption was inhibited by 80% by 5mm-propionate. 2. Compared with rat liver, sheep liver was characterized by very high activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and moderately high activities of aconitase in the mitochondria and by low activities of ‘malic’ enzyme, pyruvate kinase and lactate dehydrogenase in the cytosol. Activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxy-kinase were similar in liver cytosol from rats and sheep. Activities of malate dehydrogenase and NADP-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase in sheep liver were about half those in rat liver. 3. The phosphate–dicarboxylate antiport was active in sheep liver mitochondria, but compared with rat liver mitochondria the citrate–malate antiport showed only low activity and mitochondrial aconitase was relatively inaccessible to external citrate. The rate of swelling of mitochondria induced by phosphate in solutions of ammonium malate was inversely related to the concentration of malate. 4. The results are discussed in relation to gluconeogenesis from propionate in sheep liver. It is proposed that propionate is converted into malate by the mitochondria and the malate is converted into phosphoenolpyruvate by enzymes in the cytosol. In this way sufficient NADH would be generated in the cytosol to convert the phosphoenolpyruvate into glucose.


1968 ◽  
Vol 108 (4) ◽  
pp. 619-624 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. Bhargava ◽  
A. Sreenivasan

1. Butan-1-ol solubilizes that portion of rat liver mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1) that cannot be solubilized by ultrasonics and other treatments. 2. A difference in electrophoretic mobilities, chromatographic behaviour and solubility characteristics between the enzymes solubilized by ultrasonic treatment and by butan-1-ol was observed, suggesting the occurrence of two forms of this enzyme in rat liver mitochondria. 3. Half the aspartate aminotransferase activity of rat kidney homogenate was present in a high-speed supernatant fraction, the remainder being in the mitochondria. 4. A considerable increase in aspartate aminotransferase activity was observed when kidney mitochondrial suspensions were treated with ultrasonics or detergents. 5. All the activity after maximum activation was recoverable in the supernatant after centrifugation at 105000g for 1hr. 6. The electrophoretic mobility of the kidney mitochondrial enzyme was cathodic and that of the supernatant enzyme anodic. 7. Cortisone administration increased the activities of both mitochondrial and supernatant aspartate aminotransferases of liver, but only that of the supernatant enzyme of kidney.


1985 ◽  
Vol 225 (1) ◽  
pp. 233-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
J C W Reid ◽  
D R Husbands

Mitochondria isolated from the livers of sheep and rats were shown to oxidize palmitate, oleate and linoleate in a tightly coupled manner, by monitoring the oxygen consumption associated with the degradation of these acids in the presence of 2mM-L-malate. Rat liver mitochondria oxidized linoleate and oleate at a rate 1.2-1.8 times that of palmitate. Sheep liver mitochondria had a specific activity for the oxidation of palmitate that was 50-80% of that of rats and a specific activity for the oxidation of oleate and linoleate that was 30-40% that of rats. This would indicate that sheep conserved linoleate by limiting its oxidation. Carnitine acyltransferase I (CAT I) actively esterified palmitoyl-CoA and linoleate to carnitine in both rat and sheep liver mitochondria, and in both cases the rate for linoleate was faster than for palmitate. The CAT I reaction in both rat and sheep liver was inhibited by micromolar amounts of malonyl-CoA. With 90 microM-palmitoyl-CoA as substrate, CAT I was inhibited by 50% with 2.5 microM-malonyl-CoA in rats, and in sheep, 50% inhibition was found with all malonyl-CoA concentrations tested (1-5 microM). With 90 microM-linoleate as substrate for CAT I, a much larger difference in response to malonyl-CoA was seen, the rat enzyme being 50% inhibited at 22 microM-malonyl-CoA, whereas sheep liver CAT I was 91% and 98% inhibited at 1 microM- and 5 microM-malonyl-CoA respectively. We propose that malonyl-CoA may act as an important regulator of beta-oxidation in sheep, discriminating against the use of linoleate as an energy-yielding substrate.


1970 ◽  
Vol 119 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Snoswell ◽  
G. D. Henderson

1. Carnitine acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.7) activity in sheep liver mitochondria was 76nmol/min per mg of protein, in contrast with 1.7 for rat liver mitochondria. The activity in bovine liver mitochondria was comparable with that of sheep liver mitochondria. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity was the same in both sheep and rat liver mitochondria. 2. The [free carnitine]/[acetylcarnitine] ratio in sheep liver ranged from 6:1 for animals fed ad libitum on lucerne to approx. 1:1 for animals grazed on open pastures. This change in ratio appeared to reflect the ratio of propionic acid to acetic acid produced in the rumen of the sheep under the two dietary conditions. 3. In sheep starved for 7 days the [free carnitine]/[acetylcarnitine] ratio in the liver was 0.46:1. The increase in acetylcarnitine on starvation was not at the expense of free carnitine, as the amounts of free carnitine and total acid-soluble carnitine rose approximately fivefold on starvation. An even more dramatic increase in total acid-soluble carnitine of the liver was seen in an alloxan-diabetic sheep. 4. The [free CoA]/[acetyl-CoA] ratio in the liver ranged from 1:1 in the sheep fed on lucerne to 0.34:1 for animals starved for 7 days. 5. The importance of carnitine acetyltransferase in sheep liver and its role in relieving `acetyl pressure' on the CoA system is discussed.


1985 ◽  
Vol 225 (2) ◽  
pp. 509-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Espinal ◽  
P A Patston ◽  
H R Fatania ◽  
K S Lau ◽  
P J Randle

The protein activator of phosphorylated branched-chain 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complex was purified greater than 1000-fold from extracts of rat liver mitochondria; the specific activity was greater than 1000 units/mg of protein (1 unit gives half-maximum re-activation of 10 munits of phosphorylated complex). Sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis gave two bands (Mr 47700 and 35300) indistinguishable from the alpha- and beta-subunits of the branched-chain dehydrogenase component of the complex. On gel filtration (Sephacryl S-300), apparent Mr was 190000. This and other evidence suggests that activator protein is free branched-chain dehydrogenase; this conclusion is provisional until identical amino acid composition of the subunits has been demonstrated. Activator protein (i.e. free branched-chain dehydrogenase) was inhibited (up to 30%) by NaF, whereas branched-chain complex was not inhibited. There was no convincing evidence for interconvertible active and inactive forms of activator protein in rat liver mitochondria. Activator protein was detected in mitochondria from liver (ox, rabbit and rat) and kidney (ox and rat), but not in rat heart or skeletal-muscle mitochondria. In rat liver mitochondrial extracts, branched-chain complex sedimented with the mitochondrial membranes, whereas activator protein remained in the supernatant. Activator protein re-activated phosphorylated (inactive) particulate complex from rat liver mitochondria, but it did not activate dephosphorylated complex. Liver and kidney, but not muscle, mitochondria apparently contain surplus free branched-chain dehydrogenase, which is bound by the complex with lower affinity than is the branched-chain dehydrogenase intrinsic to the complex. It is suggested that this functions as a buffering mechanism to maintain branched-chain complex activity in liver and kidney mitochondria.


1973 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 284-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. John Chapman ◽  
Leonard R. Miller ◽  
Joseph A. Ontko

The localization of the enzymes of ketogenesis in isolated rat liver mitochondria has been investigated. Mitochondrial subfractions were isolated after disruption of this subcellular organelle by (a) hypotonic lysis in water, which permitted the ultracentrifugal separation of the soluble and membranous compartments of the mitochondrion, or by (b) a procedure involving swelling, contraction, and ultrasonic treatment, which permitted the isolation from discontinuous sucrose gradients of subfractions rich in intermembrane space protein, outer membrane, and inner membrane-matrix particles. Two membrane subfractions were invariably present as distinct bands at the lower interface of the discontinuous gradient. The upper of these two bands was found to be a highly purified preparation of outer mitochondrial membrane. Subfractions rich in matrix and in inner membrane were isolated from inner membrane-matrix particles after hypotonic treatment. The content of the various mitochondrial compartments in all subfractions was assessed from their enzymic and electron microscopic characteristics. The ketogenic activity of each subfraction was determined by measuring its capacity to form ketone bodies from acetyl CoA. The activity of this process was markedly enhanced by dithiothreitol. These measurements of ketone body formation, together with assays of individual enzymes of the ketogenic pathway, show that thiolase, HMGCoA synthase, and HMGCoA cleavage enzyme are localized in the matrix of the inner membrane-matrix particles. The rates of ketone body formation indicate that the HMGCoA synthase is the rate-limiting enzyme of the pathway in subfractions of high matrix content. Studies with sodium chloride indicate that a large portion of the HMGCoA synthase, which remains present in membrane subfractions derived from water-treated mitochondria, is bound by ionic interaction to component(s) of the membrane.


Author(s):  
E. A. Elfont ◽  
R. B. Tobin ◽  
D. G. Colton ◽  
M. A. Mehlman

Summary5,-5'-diphenyl-2-thiohydantoin (DPTH) is an effective inhibitor of thyroxine (T4) stimulation of α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase in rat liver mitochondria. Because this finding indicated a possible tool for future study of the mode of action of thyroxine, the ultrastructural and biochemical effects of DPTH and/or thyroxine on rat liver mere investigated.Rats were fed either standard or DPTH (0.06%) diet for 30 days before T4 (250 ug/kg/day) was injected. Injection of T4 occurred daily for 10 days prior to sacrifice. After removal of the liver and kidneys, part of the tissue was frozen at -50°C for later biocheailcal analyses, while the rest was prefixed in buffered 3.5X glutaraldehyde (390 mOs) and post-fixed in buffered 1Z OsO4 (376 mOs). Tissues were embedded in Araldlte 502 and the sections examined in a Zeiss EM 9S.Hepatocytes from hyperthyroid rats (Fig. 2) demonstrated enlarged and more numerous mitochondria than those of controls (Fig. 1). Glycogen was almost totally absent from the cytoplasm of the T4-treated rats.


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