Abstract

Addition of glucose to cultured chick embryo hepatocytes caused a concentration-dependent impairment of phenobarbital-mediated induction of delta-aminolevulinate (ALA) synthase resembling the "glucose effect" observed in rodents in vivo. This glucose effect occurred in the complete absence of extrahepatic factors such as serum and hormones. Fructose, glycerol, and lactate mimicked the inhibitory glucose effect on ALA synthase induction, whereas 2-deoxyglucose and 3-O-methylglucose augmented the induction evoked by phenobarbital. 2-Deoxyglucose reversed the effect of glucose, glycerol, and lactate on ALA synthase induction suggesting that the glucose effect is mediated by free glucose or glucose 6-phosphate or a nonglycolytic metabolite of glucose 6-phosphate. The phenobarbital-mediated induction of cytochrome P-450 hemoprotein(s) and its monooxygenase function were concomitantly diminished by glucose. However, this inhibitory effect or glucose was reversible by the addition of exogenous heme or ALA suggesting that the primary target of the glucose effect is ALA synthase induction and not synthesis of apocytochrome P-450. Glucagon and dibutyryl cAMP enhanced the induction of ALA synthase and cytochrome P-450 by phenobarbital and partially counteracted the glucose effect on both enzymes suggesting that the glucose effect may be mediated by changes in cAMP levels. Although insulin did not alter induction of ALA synthase, it impaired induction of cytochrome P-450 even in the presence of glucagon and cAMP. These data may be relevant for the treatment with glucose and heme of patients with "inducible" hepatic porphyria.

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