Glucose as a lipolytic agent: studies on isolated rat adipocytes.

In order to elucidate the direct effect of glucose on lipolysis in isolated rat adipocytes, cells were incubated in a buffer with different concentrations of this sugar: 2, 8 or 16 mmol/l. The increase in glucose concentration from 2 mmol/l to 8 or 16 mmol/l enhanced basal lipolysis by 30% and 47%, respectively. Epinephrine-induced lipolysis (1 micromol/l) was also increased by 31% and 32%, when glucose concentration was increased from 2 mmol/l to 8 or 16 mmol/l, respectively. The rise in lipolysis caused by glucose was restricted by H-89 (an inhibitor of protein kinase A, 30 micromol/l), but insulin (1 nmol/l) had no inhibitory action. The augmentation of lipolysis by glucose did not require its metabolism (as demonstrated using 2-deoxyglucose) and was due to the action of this sugar on the final steps of the lipolytic cascade, particularly on protein kinase A. However, short-term exposure of adipocytes to higher glucose concentrations did not restrict the inhibitory action of insulin on lipolysis induced by epinephrine.