The phosphorylation of glucose was measured by the formation of [3H]H2O from [2‐3H]glucose in suspensions of freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. Fructose (0.2 mM) stimulated 2–4‐fold the rate of phosphorylation of 5 mM glucose although not of 40 mM glucose, thus increasing the apparent affinity of the glucose phosphorylating system. A half‐maximal stimulatory effect was observed at about 50 μM fructose. Stimulation was maximal 5 min after addition of the ketose and was stable for at least 40 min, during which period 60% of the fructose was consumed. The effect of fructose was reversible upon removal of the ketose. Sorbitol and tagatose were as potent as fructose in stimulating the phosphorylation of 5 mM glucose. D‐Glyceraldehyde also had a stimulatory effect but at tenfold higher concentrations. In contrast, dihydroxyacetone had no significant effect and glycerol inhibited the detritaiation of glucose. Oleate did not affect the phosphorylation of glucose, even in the presence of fructose, although it stimulated the formation of ketone bodies severalfold, indicating that it was converted to its acylCoA derivative. These results allow the conclusion that fructose stimulates glucokinase in the intact hepatocyte. They also suggest that this effect is mediated through the formation of fructose 1‐phosphate, which presumably interacts with a competitive inhibitor of glucokinase other than long‐chain acyl‐CoAs. Copyright © 1989, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved
CITATION STYLE
van SCHAFTINGEN, E., & VANDERCAMMEN, A. (1989). Stimulation of glucose phosphorylation by fructose in isolated rat hepatocytes. European Journal of Biochemistry, 179(1), 173–177. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1989.tb14537.x
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