Abstract

Isolated rat renal tubules from glucose from pyruvate, malate, glycerol and α-ketoglutarate. The rate of glucose formation from all but glycerol is enhanced by an increase in Ca 2+ concentration. Because changes in inorganic phosphate concentrations influence the uptake and retention of calcium by isolated cells, the effect of changes in phosphate concentration upon renal gluconeogenesis was examined. It was found that changing phosphate concentration altered the metabolism of isolated rat renal tubules in three ways which dependend upon the Ca 2+ concentration. In the absence of Ca 2+, increasing phosphate concentration from 0.07 to 1.2 mM led to a stimulation of the decarboxylation of [U- 14C]malate, [1-14C]pyruvate, [2- 14C]-pyruvate, α-keto[5- 14C]glutarate and [1,3- 14C 2]glycerol, and to an increase in ATP concentration but had no effect upon the rate of glucose formation from malate, pyruvate, α-ketoglutarate but a slight stimulation of glucose production from glycerol. A further increase in phosphate above 1.2 mM had no effect on any of these parameters. In the presence of either low (0.2 mM) or high (2.0 mM) Ca 2+, changing phosphate concentration had no effect upon the decarboxylation of any of these substrates except glycerol whose decarboxylation was stimulated by increasing medium phosphate concentration. In the presence of calcium, increasing phosphate concentration led to an inhibition of glucose formation from malate, pyruvate and α-ketoglutarate but not from glycerol. Also in the presence of calcium both parathyroid hormone and cyclic AMP stimulated glucose formation, and under these conditions increasing phosphate concentration led to an inhibition of glucose formation. In tubules treated with parathyroid hormone an increase in phosphate concentration from 0.07 to 6.0 mM led to a significant increase in cyclic AMP concentration even though the rate of glucose formation decreased. Analysis of metabolite concentrations and rates of substrates decarboxylations, under a variety of conditions, revealed that P i altered renal gluconeogenesis at a site different from those controlled by changes in Ca 2+ concentration. The P i-control site was tentatively identified as the glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase-glycerate kinase reaction sequence. However, the effect of changing P i concentration upon parathyroid hormone-induced alterations in cyclic AMP concentration could not be explained by this action of P i, and was probably due to an effect of P i upon cellular calcium distribution. Thus, changes in P i concentration appear to have two cellular effects, only one of which is related to a change in cellular calcium metabolism.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call