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COMPARATIVE AND EVOLUTIONARY PHYSIOLOGY
1Ocean Sciences Centre, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland; and 2National Research Council Institute for Marine Biosciences, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Submitted 21 April 2008 ; accepted in final form 10 July 2008
| ABSTRACT |
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glycogen phosphorylase; glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; hexokinase; glucokinase
Glycogen level in liver is substantially higher than in all other tissues, and a temperature decrease from 8 to –1.2°C over a period of 12 days essentially depletes glycogen stores in liver of fed fish. The rate of depletion is even faster in food-deprived animals (5). In this study, we assessed the impact of temperature on the ability of isolated liver cells to mobilize glycogen with the associated production of glycerol. The control of glycogen utilization and how it relates to glucose release in fish liver cells has been well studied. The first step in glycogen breakdown is catalyzed by glycogen phosphorylase (GPase), which is to a large extent under catecholamine control. Adrenergic stimulation results in increased percent GPase a activity in association with elevated glucose release (16). Potentially relevant to understanding the processes in liver of rainbow smelt, as relates to freeze tolerance, are studies with amphibians. For instance, on the initiation of freezing, the wood frog (Rana sylvatica) produces glucose from large glycogen reserves in liver, a process that is under adrenergic control (27, 28). The situation is probably similar in the gray tree frog (Hyla versicolor), a species that produces glycerol as an antifreeze agent, since cold exposure results in increases in percent GPase a activity (26). In the present study we examined the impact of temperature and adrenergic stimulation on GPase activity in isolated hepatocytes of rainbow smelt. Although there is compelling evidence that liver of rainbow smelt produces glycerol, the possibility that glucose produced by liver is also cycled to other tissues to be converted to glycerol extrahepatically cannot be ruled out. In the experiments executed, we noted that rates of glycogen depletion exceeded rates of glycerol production. We therefore assessed the rates of glucose and glycerol production by isolated liver cells again as influenced by temperature and adrenergic stimulation.
Further aspects of this study relate to control of glycerol production at the level of glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) and the determination of whether other potential hormonal signals can enhance glycerol production. Glycerol is formed from glycogen, glucose, and amino acids via the conversion of dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) to glycerol-3-phosphate (catalyzed by GPDH) and subsequently to glycerol (4). Cytosolic GPDH activity and gene expression are increased during the active phase of glycerol accumulation in rainbow smelt following the natural thermal cycle (12, 13), GPDH activity increases in liver of fish subjected to acute decreases in water temperature (6), and GPDH mRNA decreases in fish subjected to acute temperature increase (8). GPDH activity is stimulated in rat hepatoma cell lines and transformed rat hepatocytes after 3 days of in vitro culture with glucocorticoids (14), and GPDH activity and mRNA level are stimulated by glucocorticoids in the rat brain (2). Also, in mouse liver, the GPDH gene has a functional peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) response element in its promoter that is a direct target of PPAR
(21). In this study we determined the activity of GPDH in isolated cells subjected to acute temperature decrease and the impact of glucocorticoid and PPAR
stimulation on glycerol production.
In addition to glycogen, glucose is an important substrate for glycerol production by liver of rainbow smelt, as evidenced by injected radioisotopes and stable isotopes of glucose appearing in labeled glycerol (22, 32) and the necessity for continuous food intake for survival and glycerol production at low temperature (5). In this study, we assessed the enzymatic capacity for glucose phosphorylation by measuring low-Km hexokinase (HK) and high-Km glucokinase (GK) activities. GK activity, GK gene expression, and HK activity are induced by dietary carbohydrate in liver of rainbow trout (Onchorynchus mykiss) (25), presumably in association with hormonal signaling. In this study, we assessed whether a low temperature-induced change in glucose trafficking might directly result in changes in enzyme activity patterns.
The most important findings are that low-temperature challenge alone is sufficient to activate the glycerol production mechanism (i.e., hormonal signals to liver are not a requirement) in isolated cells. Low-temperature activation of glycogenolysis is associated with an increase in total GPase activity, and there is a switch from glucose release at high temperature to a mix of glucose plus glycerol release at low temperature.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Rainbow smelt (O. mordax Mitchill) were collected by seine netting from Long Harbour, Newfoundland, in October between the years 2002 and 2007, transported to the Ocean Sciences Centre, Memorial University of Newfoundland, and held in 3,000- or 1,800-liter tanks with flow-through seawater. Fish were kept on a natural photoperiod with fluorescent lights set by an outdoor photocell and fed a diet of chopped herring twice a week. After 4 wk while water temperature was at 8–10°C, some of the fish were separated into two (500 liter) experimental tanks; one was maintained at 8°C (warm smelt), and the other tracked ambient temperature (cold smelt). Ambient water temperature at the time of experimentation ranged between 0.4 and –1.5°C (see Ref. 12 for a typical water temperature profile). Cold smelt were at these low temperatures for at least 2 wk before isolation of hepatocytes. All experiments were conducted between December and April, the period over which rainbow smelt normally have high levels of glycerol (12). Fish were not held past April in any given year, and a new group of animals was collected every October. Experiments were conducted over six separate years. Both male and female fish were utilized, and fish ranged in mass from 24 to 132 g. Animal protocols were approved by the Institutional Animal Care Committee, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
Hepatocyte Isolation
Rainbow smelt were randomly removed from both the warm and cold water tanks and then killed by a quick blow to the head, and the liver was immediately exposed. Hepatocytes were isolated by perfusing the liver with collagenase as described by Moon et al. (17) with minor modifications. Briefly, a retrograde perfusion was performed by cannulating the hepatic vein and nicking the venous input for drainage. Perfusion medium containing (in mM) 176 NaCl, 5.4 KCl, 0.81 MgSO4, 0.44 KH2PO4, 0.35 Na2HPO4, 5 NaHCO3, 10 HEPES, and 1 EGTA, adjusted to pH 7.63, was used to clear blood. This was the basic medium for all isolation and cell suspension protocols. The perfusion was carried out at room temperature at a flow rate of 1–1.5 ml/min. After 10 min, the liver was transferred to a watch glass and perfused with the above medium containing 0.3 mg/ml collagenase IV (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) and no EGTA. The liver was perfused with this recirculated collagenase medium for 25 min or until the tissue was soft. The liver was gently teased apart, and the isolated cells were filtered, washed three times in medium containing 2% BSA (fraction V, fatty acid free; ICN Biochemicals) and 1.5 mM CaCl2, and counted using a Neubauer hemocytometer. Cell viability was assessed at this time by Trypan blue exclusion and was usually >95%. Any preparations with viabilities <90% were rejected. Cells were resuspended at a concentration of 40 x 106 cells/ml. In some cases, hepatocytes from two individuals were pooled to obtain enough cells to complete one experiment. Initial (preincubation, or 0 h) hepatocyte samples were collected by adding 150 µl of the cell suspension or 6 x 106 cells (corresponding to 10–30 mg of cells) to two or three microcentrifuge tubes. These tubes were centrifuged at 1,000 g for 10 min, the supernatant was transferred to a cryovial, and both the cell pellet and supernatant were snap frozen in liquid nitrogen. Samples were stored at –80°C until glycerol, glucose, glycogen content, and/or enzyme activities were measured. The remaining cell suspension was divided into 20-ml glass scintillation vials (10–30 mg of cells per vial) containing 2 ml of medium with 2% BSA and 1.5 mM CaCl2 and incubated at either 0.4°C (cold incubation) or 8°C (warm incubation). Preliminary experiments comparing cells plated in six-well Primaria plates (Falcon) to cells plated in 20-ml scintillation vials indicated no difference in viability and glycerol production after 24, 48, and 72 h. By 72 h, hepatocytes established cell-to-cell connections and formed monolayers. Viabilities at 72 h were usually >90%, and any viabilities below this were rejected.
Experimental Protocols
Experiment 1: Linearity of glycerol production. Initial experiments were performed to determine whether glycerol was produced at a linear rate. Hepatocytes from warm or cold smelt were incubated at 0.4°C with 5 mM glucose or without substrate in the medium for 24, 48, and 72 h. At each time point, the hepatocyte suspension was transferred to separate centrifuge tubes and spun at 1,000 g for 10 min, the supernatant was collected, and both portions were frozen in liquid nitrogen for glycerol analysis.
Experiment 2: Impact of acclimation/incubation temperature and substrate availability on glycerol production. After confirming that glycerol was produced in a linear fashion by isolated cells in Experiment 1, we next determined whether supplementing the medium with potential substrates could enhance glycerol production and assessed the impact of acclimation/incubation temperatures on rates of glycerol production. Hepatocytes from warm fish were incubated at either 0.4 or 8°C in medium without substrate or in medium containing one of the following (in mM): 5 glucose, 5 L-alanine, 5 L-aspartate, or 1 pyruvate. Hepatocytes from cold fish were incubated at 0.4°C. Glycerol production and cell viability were determined after 72 h.
Experiment 3: Glycerol production, GPase, and potential adrenergic activation of glycogenolysis. Experiment 2 showed that even in the absence of substrate, hepatocytes from warm-acclimated fish produce glycerol when incubated at cold temperature. The next series of experiments examined whether glycogen was a potential source of glycerol and determined the state of GPase (EC 2.4.1.1 [EC] ). In addition, we assessed whether glycerol production and GPase activation state could be enhanced by adrenergic stimulation.
Samples were collected at preincubation and after 72 h of incubation with no exogenous substrate in the medium. Glycogen level was determined in cells isolated from warm-acclimated rainbow smelt and incubated at 0.4°C or, in two cases, at 8°C. Glycogen was not measured in fish held at cold temperature, since it is known to be minimal (5). Thereafter, experiments consisted of three acclimation/incubation groups: warm fish/8°C incubation, warm fish/0.4°C incubation, and cold fish/0.4°C incubation. Cells were incubated without additional components or with 1 or 10 µM isoproterenol (a nonspecific β-agonist; Sigma-Aldrich) in the medium. Hepatocytes were assayed for glycerol production and GPase activity (total and a). The level of isoproterenol used was based on the review of Fabbri et al. (9), who concluded, on the basis of many studies, that the general concentration of catecholamine required to stimulate maximal glucose production by isolated fish hepatocytes is in the 10 µM range, although much lower concentrations may be effective.
Experiment 4: glycerol and glucose production. Experiment 3 revealed that decreases in glycogen could not be accounted for by increases in glycerol alone. This led to studies that included glucose measurements. Samples were collected at preincubation and after 72 h of incubation with no exogenous substrate in the medium. Experiments consisted of three acclimation/incubation groups: warm fish/8°C incubation, warm fish/0.4°C incubation, and cold fish/0.4°C incubation. Cells were incubated without additional components or with 1 or 10 µM isoproterenol in the medium. Rates of glucose and glycerol production were determined.
Experiment 5: GPDH, HK, and GK activity. The aim of this experiment was to assess whether enhanced glycerol production was associated with increases in the activity levels of key enzymes. Cells were collected at preincubation and after 72 h of incubation with 5 mM glucose in the medium. Experiments involved fish acclimated to warm temperature with hepatocytes from the same population of fish incubated at 8 and 0.4°C. Glycerol production was assessed along with GPDH (EC 1.1.1.8 [EC] ), HK (EC 2.7.1.1 [EC] ), and GK (EC 2.7.1.2) activities. Six whole livers from other fish were also collected and frozen at this time.
Experiment 6: glucocorticoid and PPAR activation. We assessed whether the presence of glucocorticoids or a putative PPAR activator could enhance glycerol production. Cells were collected at preincubation and after 72 h of incubation with 5 mM glucose in the medium. Experiments consisted of cells prepared from warm fish and incubated at 0.4°C. Glycerol production was assessed without any further additions or with 100 or 1,000 ng/ml hydrocortisone (Sigma-Aldrich), 100 or 1,000 ng/ml dexamethasone (Sigma-Aldrich), or 50 µM WY-14643 (Sigma-Aldrich) in the medium. Three preparations were utilized, with isolated cells in every experiment being subject to all of the above conditions. The level of glucocorticoid activators was based on amounts shown to increase medium glucose and increase glycogen breakdown in tilapia and rainbow trout hepatocytes (15). WY-14643 is a PPAR ligand, and in mouse fibroblast cells a concentration of 10 µM was sufficient to activate a GPDH reporter construct (21).
Analysis
Glycerol, glycogen, and glucose. Both the medium and the cell pellet were analyzed for glycerol in duplicate. Glycerol was directly determined from the media samples using a free glycerol kit (F6428; Sigma-Aldrich). Cell pellets were dissolved in 9 volumes of 6% perchloric acid, the homogenate was neutralized with 20% KOH and spun at 10,000 g for 10 min, and the supernatant was assayed for glycerol. In experiments in which glucose was also measured, cell pellets were treated as above. Glycerol or glucose content in the medium and pellet were summed and expressed per gram of cell. The rate of glycerol or glucose production was calculated by subtracting postincubation from preincubation levels and dividing by time.
For glycogen analysis, 9 volumes of 30% KOH were added to each cell pellet and boiled for 10 min. Glycogen was precipitated by adding 0.15 ml of 2% aqueous Na2SO4 and 1.0 ml of absolute ethanol. After the mixture was centrifuged for 10 min at 1,500 g, the supernatant was decanted. The pellet was washed with 1 ml of 66% ethanol and dissolved in 0.5 ml of warm distilled water. An equal volume of 1.2 M HCl was then added, and the sample was heated in a boiling water bath for 2 h (31). Hydrolysates were frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at –80°C until analyzed for glucose content.
Assay conditions for glucose released during glycogen measurements and free glucose produced during hepatocyte incubation were based on a procedure modified from Bergmeyer et al. (1). Briefly, an assay medium was prepared containing (in mM) 250 imidazole, 5 MgSO4, 10 ATP, and 0.8 NADP+. A 25- or 50-µl aliquot of the sample was added to a 96-well plate and diluted 1:10 or 1:5 with the assay medium. Twenty-five microliters of 10 U/ml glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) were added to remove any endogenous glucose-6-phosphate (G6P). Absorbance was read at 340 nm on a DTX 880 plate reader (Beckman Coulter) after 10 min. Twenty-five microliters of 10 U/ml HK were then added, and the absorbance was read after 45 min.
Enzyme assays. For GPase, cell pellets were homogenized in 19 volumes of ice-cold extraction buffer containing (in mM) 50 imidazole, 5.0 EGTA, 2.0 EDTA, 30 mercaptoethanol, 100 NaF, and 0.1 PMSF, pH 7.4 at 4°C. Samples were incubated on ice for 30 min, and the upper phase was assayed for GPase a and total (a + b) activity. Assay conditions were based on a procedure modified from Joanisse and Storey (11). Total GPase was measured in 50 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) containing (in mM) 0.4 NAD+, 0.010 glucose-1,6-bisphosphate, 0.25 EDTA, 15 MgCl2, 1 U/ml G6PDH, 1 U/ml phosphoglucomutase, and 1.6 AMP. The reaction was initiated by adding 2 mg/ml glycogen (oyster muscle, dialyzed; Sigma-Aldrich). Control and reaction rates were determined separately. GPase a activity was measured in the absence of AMP. The percent GPase a activity was calculated by dividing GPase a by total GPase (a + b) activity.
For GPDH, HK, and GK activities, frozen cell pellets or pieces of liver were homogenized in 9 volumes of ice-cold extraction buffer containing (in mM) 50 triethanolamine, 1.0 DTT, and 5.0 EDTA, pH 7.6 at 4°C. The homogenate was spun at 1,000 g for 5 min, an aliquot of the supernatant was diluted 1:20 for GPDH determination, and the rest was used for HK and GK determination. GPDH assay conditions included (in mM) 20 imidazole, pH 7.2 at 20°C, 0.15 NADH, and 2.0 DHAP, which was used to initiate the reaction. HK and GK assay conditions included (in mM) 50 triethanolamine, pH 7.6 at 20°C, 0.2 NADP+, 8.0 MgCl2, 7.0 ATP, and 0.4 U/ml G6PDH. The reaction was initiated by 1 mM glucose for HK (low Km) determination and 100 mM glucose for total glucose phosphorylation activity. Control rates were determined before the addition of the substrate. In addition, glucose dehydrogenase (G1DH; EC 1.1.1.47 [EC] ), a microsomal enzyme in fish liver, was measured to correct GK activities in these frozen samples. G1DH can introduce significant bias into GK measurements in frozen tissues; thus GK activity was calculated as the total glucose phosphorylation activity minus low-Km HK activity minus one-third of G1DH activity (20). G1DH assay conditions were similar to total glucose phosphorylation activity conditions except that ATP and G6PDH were omitted. The above homogenates were also assayed for protein by using a Coomassie (Bradford) protein assay kit (23200; Pierce, Rockford IL).
Enzyme activities were determined at 340 nm on a Beckman DU640 spectrophotometer, and activity was calculated on the basis of a millimolar extinction coefficient of 6.22. All enzyme activities were determined at 20°C to facilitate analysis at higher activity levels, since we were primarily interested in relative, not absolute, activities during exposure of fish to decreased temperature. This was considered acceptable with the assumption that enzyme activity is proportional to enzyme content. Enzymes activities were expressed as micromoles per minute per either gram of cells or milligram of protein.
Data Analysis
Preincubation versus 72-h incubation values or treatment effects after 72 h of incubation were compared using Wilcoxon signed rank tests when paired samples from the same cell preparation were available. The Mann-Whitney U-test was utilized in situations where some, but not all, of the values were obtained from the same population of cells. The Kruskal-Wallis test was used to determine the statistical differences when three groups were compared. This was followed by the Mann-Whitney U-test to identify between-treatment differences. Student's t-test was used to compare GPDH, HK, and GK activity levels in whole liver with activity levels in freshly isolated hepatocytes from different fish. P
0.05 was considered to be statistically significant for all studies. A statistical software package (SPSS) was used for all statistical analysis.
| RESULTS |
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Total glycerol measured in preincubation cells isolated from warm smelt was 11.41 ± 1.28 µmol/g (n = 17; data from experiment 2 only). This level is similar to that found in whole livers from smelt before the antifreeze response (12) and in smelt maintained at 8°C (6). Glycerol level in preincubation hepatocytes from cold fish was 8.63 ± 0.97 µmol/g (n = 8), a value lower than expected compared with levels found in vivo at that acclimation temperature. Analysis of the postwash solution indicated that most of the glycerol in the hepatocytes was lost during washing and/or liver perfusion. Attempts to increase the osmolality of the perfusion and washing solutions (to equal the osmolality of the in vivo liver) resulted in unacceptable viability.
The production of glycerol, assessed as the sum of glycerol in the cells plus glycerol released into the incubation medium, was linear for at least 72 h (Fig. 1). In groups that showed elevated levels of glycerol,
90% of the total glycerol was found in the incubation medium. Subsequent experiments used 72-h incubations.
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Total glycerol concentrations at preincubation and after 72 h of incubation, either without substrate or with (in mM) 5 glucose, 5 alanine, 5 aspartate, or 1 pyruvate in the incubation media, are compared in Fig. 2. Fish held at warm temperatures and not yet engaged in enhanced glycerol production in vivo did not show an increase in glycerol levels when hepatocytes were isolated and incubated at 8°C (Fig. 2A). Incubation without substrate or with alanine in the medium resulted in a small but significant decrease in total glycerol levels. In contrast, when hepatocytes from warm fish were incubated at 0.4°C for 72 h, glycerol synthesis was activated (Fig. 2B). Significant increases in glycerol occurred when either glucose or pyruvate was added to the medium (104.8 and 76.8 µmol/g, respectively, compared with a preincubation level of 11.2 µmol/g). With incubation without substrate or with aspartate in the medium, there was a tendency for an increase in glycerol production with respect to preincubation levels (P values were 0.059 and 0.052, respectively). No significant changes in glycerol were seen when hepatocytes from cold fish were incubated at 0.4°C except when glucose was added to the medium (Fig. 2C). Under these conditions, glycerol levels increased from the preincubation values of 8.63 to 17.64 µmol/g.
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Initial glycogen levels were measured from hepatocytes prepared from warm-acclimated smelt. When these cells were incubated in the absence of substrate at 0.4°C for 72 h, there was a significant decrease in glycogen content (from 214.9 ± 79.8 to 17.4 ± 12.4 µmol glucosyl units/g; n = 7). Cells from two of these warm fish were also incubated at 8°C and showed a similar decrease in glycogen levels (to 21 and 42 µmol glucosyl units/g).
Hepatocytes from warm fish incubated at 0.4°C produced significant amounts of glycerol after 72 h compared with the preincubation level (180.3 ± 31.64 vs. 11.37 ± 1.69 µmol/g) (Fig. 3). The direction of change in glycerol level in this study was consistent with the previous experiment, although the magnitude of change was greater. Preparations of cold fish/0.4°C or warm fish/8°C cells did not produce glycerol in the absence of substrate. Instead, cells from warm fish incubated at 8°C showed significant glycerol decrease. When values were expressed as rates, glycerol production in warm fish/0.4°C cells was significantly higher than glycerol production in warm fish/8°C or cold fish/0.4°C cells (Table 2). If all of the glycogen in the cells from warm fish incubated at 0.4°C was converted to glycerol, this would result in a rate of [(215 – 17)/72]2 = 5.5 µmol·g–1·h–1, a value about twice as high as the observed rate of glycerol production.
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Low-Temperature Incubation Redirects Glycogen-Derived Glucose to Glycerol
In this series of experiments the hypothesis was tested that isolated hepatocytes produce glucose as well as glycerol. Figure 5 compares glucose and glycerol levels after 72 h of incubation with and without 1 µM isoproterenol in the incubation medium. In all three groups, in the absence of isoproterenol, glucose levels increased significantly after 72 h compared with preincubation levels. This increase was highest in the warm fish/8°C cells (26.7 ± 7.8 µmol/g preincubation vs. 203.5 ± 71.6 µmol/g after 72-h incubation) and lowest in the cold fish/0.4°C cells (1.06 ± 0.13 µmol/g preincubation vs. 8.81 ± 3.02 µmol/g after 72-h incubation). Glycerol concentration in the warm fish/8°C cells was significantly decreased after 72 h. As anticipated, cells collected from warm fish and incubated at 0.4°C produced glycerol. Levels of glycerol in cells from warm fish following incubation were higher compared with levels in cells collected from cold fish and incubated at the same temperature.
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Rates of glucose and glycerol production/consumption are presented in Fig. 6 to allow comparisons across experimental preparations. Although not statistically significant, the average rate of glucose production in cells from warm-acclimated fish was lower at 0.4°C than in cells incubated at 8°C with or without isoproterenol in the medium. Hepatocytes isolated from cold fish and incubated at 0.4°C had the lowest rates of glucose production. When isoproterenol was included in the medium, a slight increase in rate of glucose production in the warm acclimation/0.4°C incubation condition was enough to make this group significantly different from the cold acclimation/0.4°C incubation group. In addition, the inclusion of isoproterenol resulted in a significant increase in the rate of glucose production from 0.74 ± 0.36 to 0.95 ± 0.36 µmol·g–1·h–1 in cells from warm fish incubated at 0.4°C. As in all previous experiments, cells from warm fish consumed glycerol when incubated at 8°C but produced glycerol when incubated at 0.4°C. In cells from warm fish incubated at 0.4°C, the inclusion of 1 µM isoproterenol resulted in a significant decrease in the rate of glycerol production (from 0.77 ± 0.17 to 0.27 ± 0.09 µmol·g–1·h–1). These data show that there is a redirection from glucose to glycerol production in hepatocytes isolated from warm rainbow smelt and incubated at low temperature. Furthermore, isoproterenol decreases the rate of glycerol production and increases the rate of glucose production.
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This experiment involved only fish acclimated to warm temperature. The rate of glycerol production was four times higher in cells incubated at 0.4 than at 8°C (Table 3).
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HK and GK activities in whole liver were 0.13 ± 0.02 and 0.199 ± 0.04 µmol·min–1·g–1, respectively. There was no significant difference between HK or GK activities in fresh liver and in cells isolated from different fish at the preincubation stage. Incubation of cells at either 0.4 or 8°C for 72 h did not alter HK or GK activities with respect to preincubation levels, and there was no difference in enzyme activities between cells incubated at 0.4 and 8°C. The same conclusions were reached when activities were expressed on the basis of milligrams of protein (data not shown).
Glycerol Production is Not Additionally Activated by Glucocorticoid or PPAR
Agonists
In the next series of experiments we assessed whether additional potential candidates of GPDH stimulation could result in further increases in glycerol production than that due to low temperature alone. Cells isolated from warm-acclimated fish were incubated at 0.4°C for 72 h with 5 mM glucose in the incubation medium. As predicted, glycerol level was produced by cells with no additional agents (Fig. 7). Hydrocortisone (100 or 1,000 ng/ml), dexamethasone (100 or 1,000 ng/ml), or WY-14643 (50 µM) did not result in a further increase in glycerol accumulation.
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| DISCUSSION |
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The activation of glycerol production by cells prepared from warm fish and incubated at 0.4°C was observed in five separate experiments. The rate of glycerol production showed considerable range between studies but was typically
1 µmol·g–1·h–1. There may be a number of reasons for variability among preparations. Foremost, experiments were performed over six separate years and with six different populations of fish. Second, the time of year that fish were sampled, associated with the rapid increase, plateau, or decrease phase of glycerol production, may account for some variability in the glycerogenic potential of isolated liver cells. Furthermore, since sexually mature males and females were used in this study, variation in the glycerol production rates may be related to the reproductive cycle and lipid synthesis for gonad development. Regardless, there is absolute consistency within experiments in the activation of glycerol production by cells isolated from rainbow smelt at 8°C and incubated at 0.4°C. Additional extracellular signals related to adrenergic, glucocorticoid, or PPAR activation did not enhance glycerol production over that of low-temperature challenge alone. Thus the activation mechanisms for glycerol production are inherent to the hepatocytes.
In one experiment it was noted that when various substrates such as glucose, aspartate, and pyruvate were added to the hepatocyte medium, rates of glycerol production were greater than in the group with no substrate added. The enhanced production of glycerol when pyruvate or aspartate was available is in keeping with the concept that glycerol can be produced via the gluco- or glyceroneogenic pathway. Evidence for this includes 1) elevated levels of amino transferases (7), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) (12, 22), and PEPCK mRNA (13) in rainbow smelt liver either compared with other species or during the phase of rapid glycerol accumulation, and 2) the incorporation of injected radiolabeled and stable isotopes of pyruvate and amino acids into labeled glycerol (22, 23, 32).
Glycerol was produced by hepatocytes isolated from warm fish and incubated at 0.4°C even in the absence of exogenous substrate. Under these conditions, endogenous glycogen was utilized with most of the reserve being depleted after 72 h. This finding is consistent with whole animal studies in which glycogen levels in liver of rainbow smelt were decreased after several weeks of low-temperature exposure under a natural seasonal regime (29) and in days following an imposed decrease in temperature from 8 to –1.2°C (6). The glycogenolysis was associated with an increase in the total amount of measurable GPase activity and, more specifically, GPase a activity. The low-temperature challenge may have resulted in an increase in GPase gene expression; however, an alternative possibility exists. The activation of glycogen breakdown has been well studied in the wood frog, a species that produces glucose from massive glycogen stores as a primary cryoprotectant when exposed to ice crystallization. Cold exposure results in the conversion of an inactive, unmeasurable (by standard activity assays) b form into an active a form of GPase in the liver of this species (27). We cannot rule out the possibility that this occurs in liver of rainbow smelt as well. Glycogenolysis in the wood frog is under strong adrenergic control (27). This does not appear to be the case in rainbow smelt, at least with isolated liver cells. Exposure to isoproterenol (1 or 10 µM) in these experiments did not result in changes in GPase activity, led to only small increases in glucose production, and, most unexpectedly, decreases in glycerol production.
Glycogen utilization at 8°C did not result in glycerol production and, moreover, glycogen utilization in cells from warm fish incubated at 0.4°C exceeded that of glycerol accumulation. These findings motivated us to assess whether isolated liver cells were producing glucose, as occurs in many other species of fish (16). Hepatocytes from warm-acclimated fish produced glucose at 8°C incubation temperature but not glycerol; however, incubation at 0.4°C resulted in not only glycerol production but equimolar release of glucose. An increase in GPase a activity following incubation at 0.4°C was sufficient to allow similar molar rates of glucose (at 8°C) compared with glucose plus glycerol release (at 0.4°C ) despite the thermal difference. The switch from glucose production to a glucose plus glycerol production mode must involve control site(s) in addition to GPase. The finding that hepatocytes release glucose at low temperature also raises the possibility that glucose is being exported to other tissues for extrahepatic glycerol production as opposed to the liver being the sole site of glycerol production for the animal.
A likely contributor to enhanced glycerol production at low temperature in the isolated cells is the enzyme GPDH. Whole animal studies involving enzyme activity, metabolite levels, and gene expression levels have revealed that enhanced glycerol production is associated with increased flux through GPDH (6, 12, 13). In the current study, a fourfold increase in rate of glycerol production was associated with maximal in vitro GPDH activities that were
40% higher after 72 h of incubation at 0.4°C than at 8°C. GPDH activity in freshly isolated cells was higher than levels following incubation. We cannot account for this finding but suggest that there may be a transient increase in GPDH during the preparation of hepatocytes perhaps associated with a stress response. Regardless, various experiments have consistently shown that high activities of GPDH are associated with glycerol production. Given that the in vitro activity of GPDH is thousands of times higher than rates of glycerol production, it is unlikely that this is the only rate-controlling step in the metabolic pathway. As presented earlier, it may be that glycerol-3-phosphatase, which catalyzes the conversion of glycerol 3-phosphate to glycerol plus Pi, is a primary regulatory site (6). The maximal in vitro activity of glycerol-3-phosphatase at 20°C is 117 µmol·h–1·g–1 (7). Assuming a Q10 of 2, this would equate to an activity of
30 µmol·h–1·g–1, a value much closer to the highest rates of glycerol production observed here of 2.35 µmol·h–1·g–1 than the activities of GPDH.
HK and GK levels were similar in isolated cells and in directly homogenized liver preparations, lending credibility to the concept that there was a transient stress-induced elevation in GPDH. The low-Km HK and high-Km GK activities are similar in rainbow smelt liver cells. This is different from the situation in rainbow trout, where GK is typically 10 to 15 times higher than HK activity. In the common carp (Cyprinus carpio), which has a high capacity to utilize dietary carbohydrate, HK activity is usually higher than GK activity (20). The data suggest that rainbow smelt, despite having a natural high protein diet and being more closely related to rainbow trout than common carp, has a liver metabolism designed for the glucose utilization, perhaps to fuel essential glycerol production at low temperatures. The activities of HK and GK were not altered by incubation at either 0.4 or 8°C. HK kinetics have been studied in the glycerol-producing larvae of the goldenrod gall moth (Epiblema scudderiana). At low temperature the enzyme has a higher affinity for glucose and ATP and reduced product inhibition by G6P and ADP than at high temperature (18). If this were to occur in rainbow smelt liver as well, it could contribute to the utilization of extracellular glucose for glycerol production and might be one of the factors involved in higher rates of glycerol formation in cells incubated at 0.4°C than at 8°C, where glucose was available in the medium (e.g., Tables 1 and 3). The kinetic properties of HK also may be critical in the switch from glucose release at high temperature to a mixed glucose and glycerol release at low temperature if the enzyme serves to salvage glucose released from glycogenolysis and redirect glucose into the glycolytic pathway. Any downstream regulation between fructose-6-phosphate and glycerol could decrease the level of G6P and thus relieve any potential product inhibition on HK. This scenario remains speculative until detailed analysis of metabolite levels and the kinetic properties of HK are achieved.
One feature of the study that remains unresolved is an apparent inhibitory effect of isoproterenol on glycerol production as suggested in the experiment reported in Table 2 and reported as a significant reduction of 65% in Fig. 6. Isoproterenol inhibits pyruvate kinase (PK) in rainbow trout liver (33). It may be that a requirement for glycerol production is an ongoing glycolysis to provide cytosolic NADH for GPDH activity. An inhibition of glycolysis through PK activity would reduce flux though GPDH and in turn could impede glycerol production. In the whole animal context, it may be that adrenergic control is involved in the decrease in glycerol production as the season progresses and not the increase in glycerol accumulation in the fall.
Perspectives and Significance
Rainbow smelt accumulate high levels of glycerol throughout the body as an antifreeze mechanism. At the whole animal level, glycerol production is triggered by a decrease in water temperature to 3–5°C (6). In this study we have shown that a low-temperature signal alone is sufficient to activate the glycerol production mechanism in liver cells, since additional putative signals have no further stimulatory impact. Glycerol production in isolated hepatocytes may be fueled by a variety of substrates such as glucose and amino acids; however, cells make glycerol in the absence of substrate from glycogen stores. A decrease in temperature results in a shift from glucose release to a mix of glucose and glycerol release. Glycogenolysis is activated in part through an increase in the total activity of GPase, and high levels of a low-Km HK may serve to redirect glycogen-derived glucose to glycolysis as opposed to release from the cells. Increases in GPDH activity are associated with elevated levels of glycerol production, but strong metabolic control most likely exists at other sites as well. An understanding of glycerol production mechanisms has relevance beyond the current model system of rainbow smelt per se. The process of glyceroneogenesis leading to glycerol-3-phosphate in mammalian liver is an active area of research, because it is essential to the triglyceride/fatty acid cycle and is a target for treatment of type 2 diabetes (10, 24, 30). In addition, activity of a putative glycerol-3-phosphatase has been suggested in oxygen-limited rat heart and brain, although neither the protein nor the transcript have been identified (3, 19). The current work with rainbow smelt presents an ideal model system to study the control mechanisms of glyceroneogenesis and the final step in glycerol production. Also, along with earlier studies, we have shown that GPDH is an unanticipated modulated step in the process.
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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governs glycerol metabolism. J Clin Invest 114: 94–103, 2004.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
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