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Spatial heterogeneity of blood flow in the dog heart. I. Glucose uptake, free adenosine and oxidative/glycolytic enzyme activity
- Source :
- Pflugers Archiv : European journal of physiology. 432(3)
- Publication Year :
- 1996
-
Abstract
- The spatial heterogeneity of myocardial perfusion and metabolism was studied in 11 anaesthetized dogs under resting conditions. In each heart local myocardial blood flow was assessed using the tracer microsphere technique in 256 samples (mean mass: 83.1 mg) taken from the left anterior ventricular wall. In the same samples, the following biochemical parameters were determined: accumulation of [3H]-deoxyglucose (a measure of glucose uptake), free cytosolic adenosine (S-adenosylhomocysteine accumulation technique, a measure of tissue oxygenation and a possible mediator of blood flow regulation), and the specific activities of oxidative (citrate synthase, cytochrome-c-oxidase) and glycolytic (hexokinase, phosphoglycerate kinase) enzymes. Capillary density and mitochondrial and myofibril volume densities were determined by morphometry. Myocardial perfusion in each sample (average 0.77 ml min−1 g−1) varied between 0.1 and 2.5 times the mean (coefficient of variation 0.30±0.02). [3H]-deoxyglucose was deposited locally in proportion to perfusion. Samples showing low flow (< 0.2 ml min−1 g−1) did not exhibit increased levels of cytosolic adenosine. The specific activities of the oxidative and glycolytic enzymes, however, were uniformly distributed between low and high flow areas. Furthermore, capillary density and mitochondrial and myofibril densities were similar in high and low flow regions. The results show firstly that local glucose metabolism in the heart occurs in proportion to local blood flow, suggesting that high flow regions have a higher than average metabolic rate. Secondly, regions of low flow are not compromized by critical oxygenation and most likely have a lower than average oxygen demand and finally, the homogeneous distribution of oxidative and glycolytic enzymes, as well as the homogeneous myocardial ultrastructure, suggest that areas with high and low blood flow under resting conditions may increase their metabolic rate to similar levels when required.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Adenosine
Physiology
Glucose uptake
Clinical Biochemistry
Oxidative phosphorylation
Citrate (si)-Synthase
Carbohydrate metabolism
Mitochondria, Heart
Electron Transport Complex IV
Dogs
Physiology (medical)
Internal medicine
Coronary Circulation
Hexokinase
medicine
Citrate synthase
Animals
biology
Microcirculation
Myocardium
Metabolism
Blood flow
Phosphoglycerate Kinase
Endocrinology
Glucose
biology.protein
Female
Perfusion
Glycolysis
Oxidation-Reduction
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00316768
- Volume :
- 432
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Pflugers Archiv : European journal of physiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f7fa88ed5dfa29a46e88d9e66f7f7392