Abstract

During starvation and in streptozotocin-induced diabetes, the total activities of rat lung acetyl CoA carboxylase and fatty acid synthetase are reduced to one-third of the normal values. Refeeding of the starved animals or administration of insulin to diabetic animals restores the levels to the original values. The insulin effect is dose and time dependent. These data contrast with those in the liver, where a 30- to 50-fold depression of these enzymes is observed in the diabetic state and administration of insulin is actually followed by doubling of the activity over normal controls. Fat-free high-fructose diet (containing 60% fructose by weight) enhances the activities of liver enzymes 3- to 6-fold over the values of controls on laboratory diet but has no effect on the lung enzymes. Long-term feeding of fructose diet also increases the activities of liver enzymes from diabetic animals to twice the value of normal controls on laboratory diet. Insulin administration to fructose-fed diabetic animals restores the enzyme activities to those obtained with fructose-fed normal controls. However, the stimulation of lung enzymes of diabetic animals can be effected either by fructose or by insulin. Antigen-antibody titrations and measurements of the rate of protein synthesis show that the increased activity of the lung and liver fatty acid synthetase is due to enhanced content rather than increased specific activity. These data suggest that insulin or fructose effects on fatty acid-synthesizing enzymes are mediated through intermediate(s) whose concentration is affected in the experimental diabetes. Furthermore, all tissues may not have stringent insulin requirements since the lung enzymes can be stimulated by fructose alone.

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