Abstract
Portions of liver were obtained by biopsy from rats infused with various concentrations of glucagon or epinephrine and analyzed for cyclic AMP, glycogen, phosphorylase activity, and glycogen synthetase I activity. The response of tissue cyclic AMP to glucagon or epinephrine was far less sensitive than other metabolic parameters; at certain lower doses of glucagon or epinephrine, glycogen decomposed without a simultaneous increase in the hepatic level of cyclic AMP. It is probable that hormonal activation of adenylate cyclase results in an increase of cyclic AMP only in its small “active” pool without detectable changes in its much larger inactive or bound pool. Though the active cyclic AMP is expected to be released into the circulation or to be labeled with [ 3H]adenine in preference to the inactive nucleotide, neither the increase of cyclic AMP in the vena cava in vivo nor the incorporation of [ 3H]adenine into tissue cyclic AMP in liver slices in vitro exhibited more sensitivity to glucagon than the hepatic level of cyclic AMP as a whole. Thus, it remains to be settled whether cyclic AMP is compartmentalized in the cell or plays no essential role in the stimulation of hepatic glycogenolysis induced by small doses of hormones.
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