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Maintenance of glucokinase activity in primary hepatocyte cultures

โœ Scribed by Joseph T. Spence; Henry C. Pitot


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1980
Tongue
English
Weight
438 KB
Volume
103
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

When primary cultures of hepatocytes are maintained for 2 weeks from the time of perfusion, the activity of the enzyme glucokinase decreases rapidly, so that the activity can no longer be detected after the fourth day in culture. Concomitantly, there occurs an increase in the activity of hexokinases, the lowโ€K~M~ isozymes, which predominate in fetal liver. We have made several modifications of the culture medium in an attempt to prevent the decrease in glucokinase activity. When the medium was supplemented with a mixture of insulin, thyroxine, glucagon, dexamethasone, testosterone, and estradiol, the activity of the enzyme in the hepatocytes was present at approximately 15% of in vivo levels after 2 weeks in culture. When this hormone mixture was present during the first 4 hrs of culture and when the hepatocytes were allowed to attach to the collagen support and were maintained thereafter in medium supplemented with fetal bovine serum, insulin, and dexamethasone, the activity of glucokinase increased after an initial decrease for 3 days and was maintained thereafter at levels comparable to those observed in vivo. This effect of the hormone mixture was found to be the result of the presence of glucagon in the mixture, since the presence of glucagon with no other hormones added, except insulin, during the attachment period produced the same pattern of increased glucokinase activity. Immunoprecipitation of glucokinase from the hepatocytes, using monospecific antibody, indicated that the increase in enzyme activity was the result of increased glucokinase enzyme protein and not an increased synthesis of the other hexokinase isozymes. These studies demonstrate the specific hormonal requirements for the maintenance of glucokinase levels in primary hepatocyte culture at those seen in vivo and lends support to the hypothesis that fetal gene expression in primary hepatocyte cultures is selectively regulated rather than being a general effect with a common regulatory mechanism.


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