Abstract
We have optimized a cerium-diaminobenzidine-based method for histochemical analysis of glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) activity and have determined quantitative data on the zonal distribution pattern in the liver acinus of fasted male rats. In the cerium-diaminobenzidine technique, cerium instead of lead ions is used as capturing reagent for the enzymatically liberated phosphate. For light microscopy, the primary reaction product, cerium phosphate, is then visualized by conversion into cerium perhydroxide using hydrogen peroxide and subsequent oxidative polymerization of diaminobenzidine to diaminobenzidine brown as the final reaction product. Variation of the substrate (glucose-6-phosphate) concentration in the incubation medium yielded in periportal zones a KM value of 2.3 +/- 0.7 mM and a Vmax value of 0.96 +/- 0.18 (expressed as mean integrated absorbance). In perivenous zones a KM value of 1.1 +/- 0.4 mM and a Vmax value of 0.51 +/- 0.08 were calculated. The cytophotometric analysis performed in this study demonstrated for the first time that a functional difference of G6Pase, the key enzyme for gluconeogenesis, exists in the periportal and perivenous zones of the liver acinus. Periportal zones contain twice as many enzyme molecules (high Vmax) as perivenous zones, but the affinity for the substrate is twice as low. This may have important implications for the concept of metabolic zonation of the liver and also for glucose homeostasis in the blood.
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