[HTML][HTML] Fuels, hormones, and liver metabolism at term and during the early postnatal period in the rat

JR Girard, GS Cuendet, EB Marliss… - The Journal of …, 1973 - Am Soc Clin Investig
JR Girard, GS Cuendet, EB Marliss, A Kervran, M Rieutort, R Assan
The Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1973Am Soc Clin Investig
The metabolic response to the first fast experienced by all mammals has been studied in the
newborn rat. Levels of fuels and hormones have been compared in the fetal and maternal
circulations at term. Then, after cesarean section just before the normal time of birth,
sequential changes in the same parameters were quantified during the first 16 h of the
neonatal period. No caloric intake was permitted, and the newborns were maintained at 37°
C. Activities of three key hepatic enzymes involved in glucose production were estimated …
The metabolic response to the first fast experienced by all mammals has been studied in the newborn rat. Levels of fuels and hormones have been compared in the fetal and maternal circulations at term. Then, after cesarean section just before the normal time of birth, sequential changes in the same parameters were quantified during the first 16 h of the neonatal period. No caloric intake was permitted, and the newborns were maintained at 37°C. Activities of three key hepatic enzymes involved in glucose production were estimated.
Marked differences in maternal and fetal hormones and fuels were observed. Lower levels of glucose, free fatty acids, and glycerol but higher levels of lactate, α-amino nitrogen, alanine, and glutamine were present in the fetus. Pyruvate, glutamate, and ketone bodies were not significantly different. The combination of a strikingly higher fetal immunoreactive insulin and a slightly lower immunoreactive glucagon (pancreatic) resulted in a profound elevation in the insulin-to-glucagon ratio, a finding consistent with an organism in an anabolic state.
The rat at birth presents a body composition with respect to fuels available for mobilization and conversion which is dominated by carbohydrate and protein, since little fat is present. However, at birth a transient period of hypoglycemia occurred, associated with a rapid fall in insulin and rise in glucagon, causing reversal of the insulin-to-glucagon relationship toward ratios such as were observed in the mother. After a lag period, hepatic activities of phosphorylase, glucose-6-phosphatase, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase increased. Concurrent with these enzyme changes, the blood glucose returned to levels at or above those of the fetus. Interestingly, the fall observed in levels of the gluconeogenic precursors, lactate and amino acids, preceded the rise in enzyme activities and restoration of blood glucose. After 4 h, however, hypoglycemia recurred, during a period of decreasing hepatic glycogen content and blood lactate, pyruvate, and glycerol levels but of stable or increasing amino acid concentrations. Hepatic gluconeogenesis in this phase of depleted glycogen stores was insufficient to maintain euglycemia.
Substrates derived from fat showed early changes of smaller magnitude. The rise in free fatty acids which occurred was less than twofold the value at birth, though this rise persisted up to 6 h. Whereas glycerol rose transiently, acetoacetate did not change and β-hydroxybutyrate concentration fell. Both ketone bodies showed a marked rise at 16 h. at a time of diminished free fatty acid levels. Plasma growth hormone, though higher in the fetal than the maternal circulation, showed no consistent change during the period of observation.
The changes in levels of the endocrine pancreatic hormones at birth were appropriate in time, magnitude, and direction to be implicated as prime regulators of the metabolic response during the neonatal period in the rat.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation