Abstract

The effect of ethanol (5--25 mM) on the galactose elimination kinetics in the intact liver was studied in the isolated perfused pig liver, using the steady-state infusion technique. Ethanol reduced galactose-Vmax on average to 0.07 mmol/min kg liver in six experiments from 0.43 mmol/min kg obtained in control experiments without ethanol. Also Km was significantly reduced from 0.23 mmol/l plasma water to 0.03 mmol/l. Ethanol increased UDP-galactose ten-fold simultaneous with a rise in hepatic outflow ratio of lactate to pyruvate to about 300 from 10; this indicates that ethanol inhibits epimerase. In experiments with increasing galactose elimination rates, the concentration of galactose-1-P increased much less than the concentration of galactose, and the phosphorylation of galactose therefore seems to be rate-limiting. In vitro galactokinase is inhibited by galactose-1-P. In the present study ethanol increased galactose-1-P five to ten times, and the reduction of Vmax and Km by ethanol could be explained by uncompetitive inhibition by galactose-1-P with Ki about 0.1 mmol/l. Ethanol decreased UDP-glucose to about 40% and UTP to less than 5%, probably due to trapping as UDP-galactose. This may depress the forward transferase reaction, and therefore the other co-substrate galactose-1-P rises--and inhibits galactokinase.

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