Using cytofluorimetric and biochemical studies on serial supravital liver punctate biopsies, effects of chorionic gonadotropin (CG) on recovery of hepatocyte glycogen-forming function in the cirrhotically altered rat liver were analyzed. The biopsies were taken first from rats with experimental cirrhosis produced by their 6-month-long poisoning with the hepatotoxic poison CCl4, then from the same animals in 1, 3, and 6 month after cessation of their poisoning, either on treatment with CG or with no treatment. In smears of isolated hepatocytes, the contents of the total glycogen (TG) and of its labile and stable fractions (LF and SF, respectively) were measured. In liver homogenates, activities of glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase), glycogen phosphorylase, and glycogen synthetase were determined. It was found that the threefold increased TG content in hepatocytes of cirrhotic liver returned to the normal level in 3 months without treatment, while as soon as in 1 month in the case of the treatment with CG. The CG treatment for 3 months resulted in normalization of the glycogen fraction composition that had been changed in cirrhotic liver, whereas without treatment, the glycogen LF/SF ratio remained changed even after 6 months after cessation of the poisoning with CCl4. Activity of G6Pase was fourfold reduced in cirrhosis; in 3 months after the end of poisoning, under effect of CG, the activity increased to the normal level, but somewhat decreased subsequently. In the animals that were not treated with CG, the decrease in the G6Pase activity after the cessation of the CCl4 poisoning was even more marked than in the CG-treated rats. Activities of two other enzymes of glycogen metabolism did not differ statistically significantly from the norm throughout the entire experiment. The data obtained indicate that the use of CG for rehabilitation of the glycogen-forming function of the cirrhotically altered liver is more efficient than other ways of treatment studied previously, such as partial hepatectomy or a high-carbohydrate diet.

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