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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI119185

The exchange between proglycogen and macroglycogen and the metabolic role of the protein-rich glycogen in rat skeletal muscle.

M Huang, C Lee, R Lin, and R Chen

Department of Biochemistry, Chang Gung College of Medicine and Technology, Kwei-san, Tao-yuan, Taiwan. mthuang@cguaplo.cgu.edu.tw

Find articles by Huang, M. in: PubMed | Google Scholar

Department of Biochemistry, Chang Gung College of Medicine and Technology, Kwei-san, Tao-yuan, Taiwan. mthuang@cguaplo.cgu.edu.tw

Find articles by Lee, C. in: PubMed | Google Scholar

Department of Biochemistry, Chang Gung College of Medicine and Technology, Kwei-san, Tao-yuan, Taiwan. mthuang@cguaplo.cgu.edu.tw

Find articles by Lin, R. in: PubMed | Google Scholar

Department of Biochemistry, Chang Gung College of Medicine and Technology, Kwei-san, Tao-yuan, Taiwan. mthuang@cguaplo.cgu.edu.tw

Find articles by Chen, R. in: PubMed | Google Scholar

Published February 1, 1997 - More info

Published in Volume 99, Issue 3 on February 1, 1997
J Clin Invest. 1997;99(3):501–505. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI119185.
© 1997 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published February 1, 1997 - Version history
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Abstract

The aim of this study is to determine if proglycogen and macroglycogen are kinetically related in rat skeletal muscle. Eight groups of anesthetized fasted rats (seven hepatic-occluded and one nonoccluded) were intravenously infused with [3-3H]glucose at a rate of 1.7 microCi x min(-1) for 20 min. At the end of infusion, hindlimb muscles were excised and rapidly frozen in liquid nitrogen. Proglycogen was extracted by precipitation in 10% TCA; and macroglycogen as a part of total glycogen by precipitation in 20% KOH-65% ethanol. Along with the tracer, the occluded rats were also infused with: saline (group 1); insulin at rates ranging from 5 to 50 mU x min(-1) (groups 2 to 5); and insulin at a rate of 10 mU x min(-1) plus glucose at rates of 10.2 and 20.4 micromol x min(-1), respectively (groups 6 and 7). The infusion regimens resulted in up to 30-fold difference in whole-body glucose utilization among the rats. In the rats infused with saline and insulin at a rate of 5 mU x min(-1), [3H]glucose was found to be exclusively incorporated into proglycogen. Incorporation into macroglycogen was found in the rats infused with insulin at rates > 10 mU x min(-1). Supplementary glucose infusion increased the synthesis of [3H]proglycogen (four- to sixfold), and equilibrated the two extractable forms of glycogen in the insulin-infused rats. In the saline-infused nonoccluded rats, only proglycogen was found to be labeled. In conclusion, our data indicate that in the intact and hepatic-occluded rats, proglycogen in the skeletal muscles may undergo synthesis and degradation of its own more readily than exchange between itself and depot macroglycogen.

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