Abstract

Liver RNA and protein breakdown rates were measured simultaneously in fed and in 24 h-fasted rats during a short-term cyclic perfusion, 1 h after an intraperitoneal injection of glucagon or of saline. RNA was labelled in vivo by an intraperitoneal injection of [6-14C]orotic acid, 60 h before the start of the perfusion. The accumulation of radioactive cytidine and valine in the perfusion medium for 15 min was used to determine RNA breakdown and proteolysis respectively. The portal glucagon/insulin ratio was significantly higher in the fasted glucagon-treated rats than in their fed counterparts. Although glucagon administration significantly increased RNA and protein degradation rates in the fasted and in the fed groups, the effect was greater after 24 h of starvation. The relationship between these biochemical changes and the alterations of the hepatocyte lysosomal system was investigated by determining the fractional cytoplasmic volume of lysosomal structures (autophagic vacuoles and dense bodies) by morphometry in the fasted glucagon-treated rats and in their controls. Hyperlucagonaemia significantly enhanced the relative volume of autophagic vacuoles without affecting that of dense bodies. The results showed that hyperglucagonaemia induced in vivo stimulated both liver RNA and protein breakdown and that this effect was modulated by the nutritional status of the rats.

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