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Title: Nutritional and hormonal control of glucose and fructose utilization by lung. Author: Das DK, Neogi A, Steinberg H. Journal: Clin Physiol Biochem; 1985; 3(5):240-8. PubMed ID: 3902322. Abstract: Whereas glucose is a major substrate for pulmonary lipid synthesis, fructose has also been suggested as a potential substrate. In vivo pulmonary fatty acid synthesis is depressed in hormonally deprived conditions, such as diabetes, and this can be modified by fructose feeding, but not by glucose feeding. In this study the glucose and fructose utilizations were compared in normal, diabetic and fasting states using isolated perfused rat lungs. When (U-14C)- or (5-3H)-glucose was used as substrate, glucose utilization by lung was reduced by 50% in both the fasting and diabetic animals compared to the normal controls. Using (U-14C)-glucose as substrate, the incorporation of (14C)-label in various metabolites of glucose was significantly depressed. For example, this reduction was 50% in lactate, pyruvate and CO2, 15% in ethanol-insoluble fraction, 65% in neutral lipids, 75% in phospholipids, 80% in fatty acid moiety, 40% in deacylated fraction and 10% in the polysaccharide fractions. Refeeding the fasted animals or insulin treatment to the diabetic animals restored these depressed (14C)-recoveries to the normal levels. Fructose utilization was less than 10% of glucose utilization, but remained unaffected by fasting and diabetic states. In addition, pulmonary hexokinase enzyme activity was lowered significantly in fasting and diabetic animals, whereas fructokinase enzyme activity was not altered. Despite the low rate of fructose utilization, these results suggest that fructose may serve as an alternative substrate for pulmonary phospholipid synthesis when glucose utilization is significantly depressed.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]