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Departament de Bioquímica i Biologia Molecular, Universitat de Barcelona, 08028 Barcelona, Spain
In
glycogen-containing muscle, glycogenesis appears to be controlled by
glucose 6-phosphate
(6-P) provision, but
after glycogen depletion, an autoinhibitory control of glycogen could
be a determinant. We analyzed in cultured human muscle the contribution
of glycogen depletion versus glucose
6-P in the control of glycogen
recovery. Acute deglycogenation was achieved by engineering cells to
overexpress glycogen phosphorylase (GP). Cells treated with AdCMV-MGP
adenovirus to express 10 times higher active GP showed unaltered
glycogen relative to controls at 25 mM glucose, but responded to 6-h
glucose deprivation with more extensive glycogen depletion. Glycogen
synthase (GS) activity ratio was double in glucose-deprived AdCMV-MGP
cells compared with controls, despite identical glucose
6-P. The GS activation peak (30 min)
induced by glucose reincubation dose dependently correlated with
glucose 6-P concentration, which
reached similar steady-state levels in both cell types. GS activation was significantly blunted in AdCMV-MGP cells, whereas it strongly correlated, with an inverse relationship, with glycogen content. An
initial (0-1 h) rapid insulin-independent glycogen resynthesis was
observed only in AdCMV-MGP cells, which progressed up to glycogen levels ~150 µg glucose/mg protein; control cells, which did not deplete glycogen below this concentration, showed a 1-h lag time for
recovery. In summary, acute deglycogenation, as achieved by GP
overexpression, caused the activation of GS, which inversely correlated
with glycogen replenishment independent of glucose 6-P. During glycogen recovery, the
activation promoted by acute deglycogenation rendered GS effective for
controlling glycogenesis, whereas the transient activation of GS
induced by the glucose 6-P rise had no
impact on the resynthesis rate. We conclude that the early
insulin-independent glycogen resynthesis is dependent on the activation
of GS due to GP-mediated exhaustion of glycogen rather than glucose
6-P provision.
glycogen synthesis; glycogen phosphorylase; glycogen synthase; glucose 6-phosphate
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