Abstract

Abstract The activity of tyrosine aminotransferase (TAT) was measured in the livers of rats which were entrained to eat for the first 2 hours of a daily 12 hour dark period (‘2+22’ schedule) and were treated with the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone and with glucagon at several times of day. TAT activity in untreated animals varies diurnally with a maximum 4 to 6 hours after the beginning of feeding. In both fed and fasted rats there was a small diurnal variation in inducibility by dexamethasone: in fed rats induction was greatest near the beginning of the dark period, shortly after feeding; in fasted rats induction increased towards the end of the dark period. Glucagon induction showed a marked diurnal variation in fed rats with a decrease coincident with the decline in control TAT activity after its food-induced peak. This variation did not appear to be depemdent on food intake, however, since the decline in inducibility occurred in fasted rats at the same time as in fed rats. Co-treatment with dexamethasone did not affect the decrease in glucagon inducibility. The diurnal variation in TAT induction may reflect a diurnal rhythm in the components of the enzyme synthesizing system (e.g. in the availability of mRNA or in enzyme degradation).

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