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  • Title: Very low protein diets induce a rapid decrease in hepatic cAMP-dependent protein kinase followed by a lower increase in adenylyl cyclase activity in rats.
    Author: Stephen LL, Nagy LE.
    Journal: J Nutr; 1996 Jul; 126(7):1799-807. PubMed ID: 8683341.
    Abstract:
    Recent evidence indicates that cAMP-mediated responses are desensitized in liver during malnutrition. While receptor-stimulated production of cAMP is increased in hepatocytes from rats fed very low protein diets for 14 d, activity of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) is decreased in liver cytosol. The present study investigated the time course for this desensitization. Weanling rats were fed either a 0.5 (malnourished) or 15% protein (control) diet for 1, 3, 7 or 14 d. Total PKA activity decreased after only 3 d of feeding the low protein diet. This decrease was confined to the cytosolic compartment and was associated with a lower quantity of immunoreactive RI regulatory subunit of PKA, with no difference in the quantity of immunoreactive RII regulatory subunit. In contrast, basal-, MnCl2- and guanine nucleotide regulatory protein-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activities were not greater in liver membranes of malnourished rats than in those of the control rats until the 2nd wk of feeding. Greater activity was paralleled by an increase in the quantity of the stimulatory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein at d 14. The inhibitory guanine nucleotide regulatory protein quantity did not differ between dietary groups. Greater cAMP production was not mediated by changes in PKA phosphorylation of adenylyl cyclase because preincubation of membranes with purified PKA catalytic subunit decreased MnCl2-stimulated cAMP production equally in liver membranes of both control and malnourished rats. Similarly, treatment with alkaline phosphatase decreased adenylyl cyclase activity but did not eliminate the difference in adenylyl cyclase activity between control and malnourished rats. These data demonstrate that loss of PKA activity is an early response to a low protein diet and that, subsequently, a number of molecular adaptations occur which increase cAMP production. These changes may be adaptive responses to malnutrition that maintain essential cAMP-dependent functions.
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