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Title: The actions of dichloroacetic acid on blood glucose, liver glycogen and fatty acid synthesis in obese-hyperglycaemic (ob/ob) and lean mice. Author: Enser M, Whittington FM. Journal: Horm Metab Res; 1983 May; 15(5):225-9. PubMed ID: 6347856. Abstract: Obese-hyperglycaemic mice and lean mice were injected with dichloroacetate to determine the significance of gluconeogenesis in maintaining the hyperglycaemia of obese mice and to investigate the effects of a fall in blood glucose on fatty acid synthesis. One hour after the second of two, hourly, injections of dichloroacetate the blood glucose concentrations in fed and starved lean mice were decreased, whereas in obese mice they were sharply increased. In obese and lean mice, both fed and starved, dichloroacetate decreased plasma lactate but insulin was unchanged. The quantity of liver glycogen was decreased in all dichloroacetate treated mice, with the largest falls in fed and starved obese mice, which had much larger glycogen stores than lean mice. Dichloroacetate treatment decreased the concentration of plasma non-esterified fatty acids in fed and starved obese mice and fed lean mice but not in starved lean mice. Fatty acid synthesis in white (inguinal, subcutaneous) adipose tissue was stimulated by dichloroacetate in fed obese mice and inhibited in fed lean mice. Fatty acid synthesis in brown adipose tissue (scapular) was faster than in white adipose tissue and was less affected by dichloroacetate although the changes were in the same direction as in white adipose tissue. We attribute the increased hyperglycaemia of obese mice treated with dichloroacetate to increased glycogenolysis coupled with a failure to secrete additional insulin in response to the raised blood glucose. This high blood glucose concentration in dichloroacetate treated obese mice may in turn explain the increased fatty acid synthesis in their white adipose tissue.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]