Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, University College London, Gower Street, London W.C.1, U.K.
Abstract
1. Changes in the content and concentration of glycogen and in the activity of a number of enzymes involved in glucose and glycogen metabolism were studied in the rat hemidiaphragm after unilateral denervation. 2. After nerve section the tissue hypertrophies; this hypertrophy is said to be confined to the smaller red fibres and not to the white. 3. The total hexokinase activity increases, whereas that of total glycogen phosphorylase decreases. The specific activity of phosphorylase a, determined after Halothane anaesthesia, remains fairly constant. 4. In fed animals the denervated tissue stores less glycogen, but in the early stages its glycogen content does not fall on starvation. 5. The effect of denervation on the specific activities of several other characteristically white-fibre enzymes are not consistent with the response of glycogen phosphorylase; the increase in content of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase and lactate dehydrogenase is thought to be related to proliferation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. 6. The ratio of lactate dehydrogenase M/H subunits increases at the height of the hypertrophy, but then declines as the mass of the tissue falls. 7. The chronology of these changes in enzyme activities suggests a multiplicity of distinct responses after nerve section not consistent with any one model, either specific fibre development or reversion to de-differentiated, foetal-type metabolism.
Cited by
39 articles.
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