We have previously demonstrated that in isolated hepatocytes from fasted rats, AICAriboside (5-amino 4-imidazolecarboxamide
riboside), after its conversion into AICAribotide (AICAR or ZMP), exerts a dose-dependent inhibition on fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase
and hence on gluconeogenesis. To assess the effect of AICAriboside in vivo, we measured plasma glucose and liver metabolites
after intraperitoneal administration of AICAriboside in mice. In fasted animals, in which gluconeogenesis is activated, AICAriboside
(250 mg/kg body weight) induced a 50% decrease of plasma glucose within 15 min, which lasted about 3 h. In fed mice, glucose
decreased by 8% at 30 min, and normalized at 1 h. Under both conditions, ZMP accumulated to approximately 2 µmol/g of liver
at 1 h. It decreased progressively thereafter, although much more slowly in the fasted state. Inhibition of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase
was evidenced by time-wise linear accumulations of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, from 0.006 to 3.9 µmol/g of liver at 3 h in
fasted mice, and from 0.010 to 0.114 µmol/g of liver at 1 h in fed animals. AICAriboside did not significantly influence plasma
insulin or glucose utilization by muscle. We conclude that in vivo as in isolated hepatocytes, AICAriboside, owing to its
conversion into ZMP, inhibits fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and consequently gluconeogenesis.
Keywords AICAriboside - fructose-1 - 6-bisphosphatase - gluconeogenesis - Z-nucleotides