Failure of adrenaline to induce hyperglycaemia after fructose injection in young mice

1975 
In control animals a 2-fold increase in liver phosphorylase activity 10min after adrenaline treatment was associated with a 55% increase in plasma glucose (P less than 0.001); at 20 min plasma glucose was 247% of the control value (P less than 0.001). Liver phosphorylase activity was decreased by 74%, 20 min after fructose injection (P less than 0.001), and, although phosphorylase activity increased 5-fold within 5 min of adrenaline injection, no increases in plasma glucose concentration over that found in fructose-injected animals which did not receive adrenaline occurred at either 5, 10 or 20 min. The data confirm inactivation of liver phosphorylase after fructose injection and suggest inhibition of the adrenaline-activated enzyme by the decrease in Pi and elevation of fructose 1-phosphate concentrations produced by the injection of fructose. These findings may be causally related to the hypoglycaemia and the lack of response to glucagon seen in patients with hereditary fructose intolerance after fructose ingestion.
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