4.7 Article

Adrenergic Metabolic and Hemodynamic Effects of Octopamine in the Liver

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages 21858-21872

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms141121858

Keywords

liver; octopamine; glycogenolysis; gluconeogenesis; oxygen uptake

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)
  2. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Level Personnel (CAPES)

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The fruit extracts of Citrus aurantium (bitter orange) are traditionally used as weight-loss products and as appetite suppressants. A component of these extracts is octopamine, which is an adrenergic agent. Weight-loss and adrenergic actions are always related to metabolic changes and this work was designed to investigate a possible action of octopamine on liver metabolism. The isolated perfused rat liver was used to measure catabolic and anabolic pathways and hemodynamics. Octopamine increased glycogenolysis, glycolysis, oxygen uptake, gluconeogenesis and the portal perfusion pressure. Octopamine also accelerated the oxidation of exogenous fatty acids (octanoate and oleate), as revealed by the increase in (CO2)-C-14 production derived from C-14 labeled precursors. The changes in glycogenolysis, oxygen uptake and perfusion pressure were almost completely abolished by (1)-adrenergic antagonists. The same changes were partly sensitive to the -adrenergic antagonist propranolol. It can be concluded that octopamine accelerates both catabolic and anabolic processes in the liver via adrenergic stimulation. Acceleration of oxygen uptake under substrate-free perfusion conditions also means acceleration of the oxidation of endogenous fatty acids, which are derived from lipolysis. All these effects are compatible with an overall stimulating effect of octopamine on metabolism, which is compatible with its reported weight-loss effects in experimental animals.

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