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1-adrenoreceptor
responsiveness
Department of Physiopathology and Human Molecular Genetics, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas, 28006 Madrid, Spain
The present work aimed to elucidate the
influence of thyroid functional status on the
1-adrenoreceptor-induced
activation of hepatic metabolic functions. The experiments were
performed in either a nonrecirculating liver perfusion system featuring continuous monitoring of portal pressure,
PO2, pCa, and pH, or isolated
hepatocytes from euthyroid, hyperthyroid, and hypothyroid rats.
Hypothyroidism decreased the
1-adrenergic stimulation of
respiration, glycogen breakdown, and gluconeogenesis. These effects
were accompanied by a decreased intracellular
Ca2+ mobilization corroborating
that those processes are regulated by the
Ca2+-dependent branch of the
1-adrenoreceptor signaling
pathway. Moreover, in hyperthyroid rats the
1-adrenergic-induced increase in cytosolic Ca2+ was enhanced,
and glucose synthesis or mobilization was not altered. The thyroid
status influenced neither the
1-adrenergic
stimulation of vascular smooth muscle contraction nor the
1-agonist-induced intracellular
alkalinization and protein kinase C (PKC) activation. Thus the distinct
impairment of the Ca2+-dependent
branch of the
1-adrenoreceptor
signaling pathway by thyroid status provides a useful tool to
investigate the role played by each signaling pathway,
Ca2+ or PKC, in controlling
hepatic functions.
hyperthyroidism; hypothyroidism;
1-adrenergic agonists; protein
kinase C; cytosolic Ca2+; intracellular pH
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