Abstract
The effects of 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2DG), oligomycin and theophylline on the in vitro
production and metabolism of glycerol and its response to insulin and epinephrine
were studied in epididymal fat pads from fed rats. 2-DG failed to affect basal or
epinephrine stimulated glycerol production but it decreased the uptake of 1-14 C-glycerol by the tissue and its conversion to glyceride-glycerol. Oligomycin also
failed to affect the basal production of glycerol but it inhibited the effect of epinephrine
on this parameter as well as the uptake and utilization of 1-14 -C-glycerol. Theophylline enhanced the production of glycerol by the tissue and this
effect was not further augmented by epinephrine. Theophylline also inhibited the uptake
and utilization of 1-14 C-glycerol; the most pronounced effect of theophylline was observed in the formation
of 14 C-fatty acids from 1-14 C-glycerol in the presence of glucose. Insulin, but not epinephrine, decreased the
inhibitory effect of theophylline on glycerol utilization. It is concluded that these
compounds affect more intensely the ability of adipose tissue to metabolize glycerol
than to release it through lipolysis. The pathway for glycerol utilization in adipose
tissue appears to be more sensitive to changes in the availability of ATP than the
mechanisms responsible for the release of glycerol from the tissue.
Key words
Adipose Tissue - Glycerol Utilization - Metabolic Inhibitors - Lipolysis
1 Supported in part by the Fundación Eugenio Rodríguez Pascual and by a grant from
the Presidencia del Gobierno (Comisión Asesora de Investigatión Científica y Técnica),
Spain.