Abstract

AMPK is an energy sensor that protects cellular energy state by attenuating anabolic and promoting catabolic processes. AMPK signaling is purported to regulate hepatic gluconeogenesis and substrate oxidation; coordination of these processes is vital during nutrient deprivation or pathogenic during overnutrition. Here we directly test hepatic AMPK function in regulating metabolic fluxes that converge to produce glucose and energy in vivo. Flux analysis was applied in mice with a liver-specific deletion of AMPK (L-KO) or floxed control littermates to assess rates of hepatic glucose producing and citric acid cycle (CAC) fluxes. Fluxes were assessed in short and long term fasted mice; the latter condition is a nutrient stressor that increases liver AMP/ATP. The flux circuit connecting anaplerosis with gluconeogenesis from the CAC was unaffected by hepatic AMPK deletion in short and long term fasting. Nevertheless, depletion of hepatic ATP was exacerbated in L-KO mice, corresponding to a relative elevation in citrate synthase flux and accumulation of branched-chain amino acid-related metabolites. L-KO mice also had a physiological reduction in flux from glycogen to G6P. These results demonstrate AMPK is unnecessary for maintaining gluconeogenic flux from the CAC yet is critical for stabilizing liver energy state during nutrient deprivation.

Highlights

  • Fasting [1] and exercise [2, 3] provoke a reciprocal rise and fall in hepatic AMP and ATP concentrations

  • The transition from a short to long term fast resulted in established changes in glucose metabolism in WT mice (Fig 3A and 3B)

  • The reduction in glycogenolytic glucose production between short and long term fasting corresponded to a large reduction in liver glycogen (27.8±3.2 to 6.6 ±0.8mg/gLiver)

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Summary

Introduction

Fasting [1] and exercise [2, 3] provoke a reciprocal rise and fall in hepatic AMP and ATP concentrations. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) monitors fluctuations in adenine nucleotide ratios (AMP/ATP and ADP/ATP) and directs signaling pathways that control nutrient flux [4]. Targets of AMPK regulation are involved in the acute and chronic control of numerous cell processes, including lipid [5,6,7,8,9], protein [10, 11], glucose [5, 12,13,14,15], and energy. AMPK Control of Hepatic Metabolism and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

Methods
Results
Conclusion

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