Hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” rats

The biphasic nature of the lipolytic dose-response curve of epinephrine in fat cells from “young” rats (40–45 days) was confirmed. The first phase (Lipolysis I) occurred at concentrations of from 10–7 m to 3 × 10–6 m. The second phase (Lipolysis II) occurred at concentrations of from 10–5 m to 3 × 1...

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Main Authors: Elizabeth A. Miller, Donald O. Allen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1973-05-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520368929
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spelling doaj-2b4ed0ceba8142a58ea218f57ceb6fcb2021-04-24T05:49:36ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751973-05-01143331336Hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” ratsElizabeth A. Miller0Donald O. Allen1Department of Pharmacology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202Department of Pharmacology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202The biphasic nature of the lipolytic dose-response curve of epinephrine in fat cells from “young” rats (40–45 days) was confirmed. The first phase (Lipolysis I) occurred at concentrations of from 10–7 m to 3 × 10–6 m. The second phase (Lipolysis II) occurred at concentrations of from 10–5 m to 3 × 10–4 m. Insulin (0.1 mU/ml) abolished Lipolysis I and slightly augmented Lipolysis II. Higher concentrations of insulin (1.0 mU/ml) augmented Lipolysis II even further. These results may help to explain some of the conflicting reports in the literature concerning the effects of insulin on lipolysis. The dose-response curve of epinephrine using fat cells from “old” rats (14–16 months) was monophasic. Based on results with propranolol, K+-free media, and insulin, it was concluded that the lipolytic response in tissue from older animals corresponds to Lipolysis II in tissue from younger rats. The lipolytic response to ACTH was greatly reduced in the cells from the older rats, but the response to theophylline was unaltered.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520368929epinephrineACTHtheophyllinepropranololinsulinaging
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth A. Miller
Donald O. Allen
spellingShingle Elizabeth A. Miller
Donald O. Allen
Hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” rats
Journal of Lipid Research
epinephrine
ACTH
theophylline
propranolol
insulin
aging
author_facet Elizabeth A. Miller
Donald O. Allen
author_sort Elizabeth A. Miller
title Hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” rats
title_short Hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” rats
title_full Hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” rats
title_fullStr Hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” rats
title_full_unstemmed Hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” rats
title_sort hormone-stimulated lipolysis in isolated fat cells from “young” and “old” rats
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1973-05-01
description The biphasic nature of the lipolytic dose-response curve of epinephrine in fat cells from “young” rats (40–45 days) was confirmed. The first phase (Lipolysis I) occurred at concentrations of from 10–7 m to 3 × 10–6 m. The second phase (Lipolysis II) occurred at concentrations of from 10–5 m to 3 × 10–4 m. Insulin (0.1 mU/ml) abolished Lipolysis I and slightly augmented Lipolysis II. Higher concentrations of insulin (1.0 mU/ml) augmented Lipolysis II even further. These results may help to explain some of the conflicting reports in the literature concerning the effects of insulin on lipolysis. The dose-response curve of epinephrine using fat cells from “old” rats (14–16 months) was monophasic. Based on results with propranolol, K+-free media, and insulin, it was concluded that the lipolytic response in tissue from older animals corresponds to Lipolysis II in tissue from younger rats. The lipolytic response to ACTH was greatly reduced in the cells from the older rats, but the response to theophylline was unaltered.
topic epinephrine
ACTH
theophylline
propranolol
insulin
aging
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520368929
work_keys_str_mv AT elizabethamiller hormonestimulatedlipolysisinisolatedfatcellsfromyoungandoldrats
AT donaldoallen hormonestimulatedlipolysisinisolatedfatcellsfromyoungandoldrats
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