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    Acute and chronic ethanol treatment in vivo increases malate-aspartate shuttle capacity in perfused rat liver.

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    The effects of acute and chronic treatment with ethanol on transport of reducing equivalents into mitochondria via the malate-aspartate shuttle were studied in perfused rat liver. The shuttle capacity was estimated from the decrease in rates of glucose production from the reduced substrate sorbitol caused by an increase in the NADH/NAD+ ratio in the cytosol due to metabolism of ethanol. The greater the capacity of the malate-aspartate shuttle, the smaller the inhibition of glucose synthesis by ethanol. Glucose synthesis was decreased about 2-fold less in livers from fasted rats treated acutely 2.5 h earlier with ethanol than in untreated controls. Chronic treatment with ethanol for 3-5 weeks prevented completely the decrease in glucose synthesis from sorbitol due to ethanol oxidation. Rates of ethanol uptake were elevated significantly from 69 +/- 7 mumols/g/h in livers from control rats up to 92 +/- 7 mumols/g/h in livers from SIAM rats. Similarly, rates of ethanol uptake were stimulated by chronic ethanol treatment from 71 +/- 6 to 222 +/- 15 mumols/g/h; this increase was largely sensitive to aminooxyacetate. Taken together, these data indicate that flux of reducing equivalents over the malate-aspartate shuttle is increased by both acute and chronic treatment with ethanol and that movement of reducing equivalents from the cytosol into the mitochondria via the malate-aspartate shuttle is an important rate determinant in hepatic ethanol oxidation

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