Effects of maternal diabetes on the development of carbohydrate metabolizing enzymes in fetal rat liver

Effects of streptozotocin-induced maternal diabetes on fetal hepatic carbohydrate-metabolizing enzyme development and hormonal status has been explored in the rat. Hepatic glycogen synthase a activity of the normal fetus rose to a maximum at 20 days of gestation, then fell prior to parturition. In f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of biochemistry and biophysics 1981-07, Vol.209 (2), p.655-667
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Malathy, Feigelson, Muriel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Effects of streptozotocin-induced maternal diabetes on fetal hepatic carbohydrate-metabolizing enzyme development and hormonal status has been explored in the rat. Hepatic glycogen synthase a activity of the normal fetus rose to a maximum at 20 days of gestation, then fell prior to parturition. In fetuses of diabetic mothers, this prepartum decline was curtailed, resulting in enhanced synthase a activity and increased glycogen content in fetal livers at term. Elevation in hepatic synthase a in fetuses of diabetic mothers was due, not to altered interconversion between existing synthase a and b, but to equivalent increases in both forms of the enzyme. Both hepatic and free plasma corticosterone levels were elevated in fetuses of diabetic mothers and may be responsible for the enhanced development of total glycogen synthase observed in these fetuses. In normal fetuses hepatic phosphofructokinase and pyruvate kinase activities also rose to maxima at 20 days, then declined prior to term. In fetuses of diabetic mothers pyruvate kinase activity attained higher than normal maximal levels and phosphofructokinase activity fell more gradually, thus resulting in elevations in both enzyme activities at term. Augmentations in these glycolytic enzymes are compatible with hyperinsulinemia observed in fetuses of diabetic mothers. The following conclusions may be drawn from these findings. During late fetal life developmental patterns of rate-limiting hepatic glycogen-synthesizing and glycolytic enzymes are adapted to glucose utilization. In the normal fetus these patterns reverse at term, thereby promoting glucose mobilization, which prepares the fetus for abrupt deprivation of maternal glucose at birth. Maternal diabetes results in retardation of these reversal processes, presumably due to elevations in fetal glucocorticoid and insulin levels. Glycogenolytic and glucogenic capacities are thereby impaired in these fetuses.
ISSN:0003-9861
1096-0384
DOI:10.1016/0003-9861(81)90326-X