
pmid: 7436412
Abstract The relative rates of synthesis and degradation for liver pyruvate kinase have been determined in rats fed standard lab chow, fasted, and refed a high-carbohydrate-low-protein diet. Relative rates of synthesis and apparent rates of degradation were determined by pulse-labeling the enzyme in vivo with l -[4,5- 3 H]leucine and by measuring the incorporation of radioactivity into liver pyruvate kinase after quantitative precipitation of the enzyme with anti-liver pyruvate kinase immunoglobulin. The relative rate of synthesis decreased approximately 75% upon fasting and then increased 20- to 30-fold upon refeeding the high-carbohydrate diet. The apparent half-lives for liver pyruvate kinase in fasted, control, and refed animals are very similar (55, 59, and 47 h, respectively). Thus, the nutritional alterations in the levels of liver pyruvate kinase seem to result primarily from alterations in the rate of enzyme synthesis.
Male, Pyruvate Kinase, Proteins, Fasting, Rats, Liver, Dietary Carbohydrates, Animals, Chemical Precipitation, Dietary Proteins
Male, Pyruvate Kinase, Proteins, Fasting, Rats, Liver, Dietary Carbohydrates, Animals, Chemical Precipitation, Dietary Proteins
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