Abstract
We investigated the effects of acute food deprivation on the rates of glucose metabolism and lactate production by epididymal fat cells isolated from 2- and 8-mo-old Wistar rats in one of three nutritional states: fed ad libitum, restricted to 50% of ad libitum, or fasted for 48 h. Food restriction did not affect total rates of basal glucose metabolism but significantly altered its pattern. In small fat cells from 2-mo-old rats, donor's food restriction led to decreased basal and insulin-stimulated glucose oxidation and fatty acid synthesis but led to increased lactate production, which increased from 4% of total glucose metabolized by cells from fed rats to 62% by cells from fasted rats. In large fat cells from 8-mo-old rats, donor's food restriction produced minimal changes in basal glucose metabolism and lactate production (already elevated at 37% of total) but caused insulin-stimulated lactate production to increase. These findings indicate that adipose tissue can produce significant amounts of lactate (with adipocyte enlargement and/or food deprivation) and may play an important role in extrahepatic generation of triose intermediates and in the Cori cycle.
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More From: American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism
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