Abstract

The activity ratio of phosphofructokinase in perfused rat heart and its activation by epinephrine was examined in non-obese, fat-fed obese, and genetically obese rats. For non-obese colony rats there was an age-dependent increase in the activity ratio of phosphofructokinase from 0.2 at 40 days to 0.4 at mature age (> 200 days). Epinephrine (10 μM) treatment of the heart for 5 min increased the ratio at all ages but the proportional increase diminished with age. For mature-age lean Zucker rats carrying the genetic determinant for obesity the results were similar to those obtained for comparable non-obese colony rats. For fat-fed obese rats the activity ratio of phosphofructokinase at 200 days of age was 0.2 and was increased to 0.6 by epinephrine treatment. For mature-age obese Zucker rats the activity ratio was 0.2 and no significant response to epinephrine occurred. The activity ratio of glycogen phosphorylase and its response to epinephrine (β-adrenergic receptor mediated) in heart was unaffected by age, diet or the gene for obesity. The present findings indicate a specific defect in the adrenergic regulatory mechanism for phosphofructokinase in genetically obese rats.

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