Author:
Geddes R,Otter D E,Scott G K,Taylor J A
Abstract
The size-distribution of liver glycogen was shown to be distinctly affected by the anti-inflammatory drugs salicylate and indomethacin. By measurement of the incorporation of radioactive glucose into glycogen, salicylate was shown to have a depressing effect on overall liver glycogen metabolism. These effects appear to arise from the stabilizing of the lysosome by the drugs. The incorporation, via liposomes, of purified anti-1,4-alpha-glucosidase activity and in the content of high-molecular-weight glycogen. These changes are increased by prolonged liposomal antibody treatment and suggest that a possible feedback control mechanism operates in the incorporation of glycogen into lysosomes. These experiments may be useful as a model of glycogen turnover and its failure in glycogenosis type II (Pompe's disease).
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
17 articles.
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