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Multitissue 2H/13C flux analysis reveals reciprocal upregulation of renal gluconeogenesis in hepatic PEPCK-C–knockout mice
Mohsin Rahim, Clinton M. Hasenour, Tomasz K. Bednarski, Curtis C. Hughey, David H. Wasserman, Jamey D. Young
Mohsin Rahim, Clinton M. Hasenour, Tomasz K. Bednarski, Curtis C. Hughey, David H. Wasserman, Jamey D. Young
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Resource and Technical Advance Hepatology Metabolism

Multitissue 2H/13C flux analysis reveals reciprocal upregulation of renal gluconeogenesis in hepatic PEPCK-C–knockout mice

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Abstract

The liver is the major source of glucose production during fasting under normal physiological conditions. However, the kidney may also contribute to maintaining glucose homeostasis in certain circumstances. To test the ability of the kidney to compensate for impaired hepatic glucose production in vivo, we developed a stable isotope approach to simultaneously quantify gluconeogenic and oxidative metabolic fluxes in the liver and kidney. Hepatic gluconeogenesis from phosphoenolpyruvate was disrupted via liver-specific knockout of cytosolic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK-C; KO). 2H/13C isotopes were infused in fasted KO and WT littermate mice, and fluxes were estimated from isotopic measurements of tissue and plasma metabolites using a multicompartment metabolic model. Hepatic gluconeogenesis and glucose production were reduced in KO mice, yet whole-body glucose production and arterial glucose were unaffected. Glucose homeostasis was maintained by a compensatory rise in renal glucose production and gluconeogenesis. Renal oxidative metabolic fluxes of KO mice increased to sustain the energetic and metabolic demands of elevated gluconeogenesis. These results show the reciprocity of the liver and kidney in maintaining glucose homeostasis by coordinated regulation of gluconeogenic flux through PEPCK-C. Combining stable isotopes with mathematical modeling provides a versatile platform to assess multitissue metabolism in various genetic, pathophysiological, physiological, and pharmacological settings.

Authors

Mohsin Rahim, Clinton M. Hasenour, Tomasz K. Bednarski, Curtis C. Hughey, David H. Wasserman, Jamey D. Young

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Figure 2

Liver-kidney multicompartment model enables quantification of tissue-specific fluxes using 2H/13C metabolic flux analysis (MFA).

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Liver-kidney multicompartment model enables quantification of tissue-spe...
(A) Dual-organ metabolic network model developed for MFA. The top compartment shows the metabolic reactions in the liver, and the bottom represents those in the kidney. Measured metabolites are highlighted in green. (B) Overview of 2H/13C MFA workflow. Steady-state MFA typically has 2 experimental inputs: external uptake/excretion rates and metabolite enrichment measurements. These inputs are integrated into a metabolic model constructed using specialized software, such as INCA, which determines the best-fit flux solution by least-squares regression. Typical outputs from INCA include best-fit flux estimates for all metabolic reactions in the network, statistical analysis of the goodness of fit, and 95% CI for the estimated fluxes.

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