Abstract

In the Langendorff heart, lipolysis is arrested when glycogenolysis is inhibited by the addition of 5-gluconolactone. Glucose partially overcomes the inhibition as well as uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation by dinitrophenol. In isolated fat cells hormone-sensitive lipolysis is also inhibited by glycogenolysis inhibition and in these cells also, glucose addition overcomes the inhibition. In fat cells, uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation does not stimulate lipolysis, probably because of the relatively low concentration of mitochondria in white adipose tissue. The data are interpreted that both in heart and adipose tissue cells, the removal of fatty acids produced by the endogenous lipase is the main stimulus for lipolysis. Attempts to generate in fat cells glycerol-3-phosphate by glycerogenesis from pyruvate or lactate led to the observation that not only these latter anions, but also propionate and acetate strongly stimulate lipolysis. It suggests that long-chain fatty acid removal from fat cells may be stimulated by anion exchange.

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