Early effects of excessive retinol intake on hepatic glycogen metabolism

Oral adminstration of 30,000 IU of retinol once daily for 2-days caused deposition of glycogen in the liver with a concurrent stimulation of hepatic glycogen synthesis, as evidenced by increased in vivo incorporation of d-[U- 14C]glucose into glycogen and increased net synthesis of the polysaccharid...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of biochemistry and biophysics 1976-03, Vol.173 (1), p.93-99
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Malathy, Singh, Vishwa Nath, Venkitasubramanian, T.A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Oral adminstration of 30,000 IU of retinol once daily for 2-days caused deposition of glycogen in the liver with a concurrent stimulation of hepatic glycogen synthesis, as evidenced by increased in vivo incorporation of d-[U- 14C]glucose into glycogen and increased net synthesis of the polysaccharide in response to feeding of glucose to 20-h fasted rats. Excessive intake of the vitamin increased markedly the activity of glycogen synthetase a and decreased that of phosphorylase. However, feeding of similar doses of retinol to bilaterally adrenalectomized rats failed to cause appreciable deposition of glycogen in the liver and the usual increase in the activity of glycogen synthetase a. Likewise, treatment of rats with actinomycin D blocked the deposition of glycogen in the liver and the increase in the activity of glycogen synthetase a. Adrenalectomy and actinomycin D, however, did not affect the accumulation of retinol in the liver. The adrenals appear to be, directly or indirectly, required for the manifestations of the effects of retinol on the hepatic glycogen metabolism.
ISSN:0003-9861
1096-0384
DOI:10.1016/0003-9861(76)90238-1