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1.
In order to observe the effect of the adrenergic system on pancreatic glucagon secretion in the isolated perfused rat pancreas, phenylephrine, an alpha-adrenergic agonist, and isoproterenol, a beta-adrenergic agonist, were added to the perfused solution. 1.2 microM phenylephrine suppressed glucagon secretion at 2.8 mM glucose, and it also decreased insulin secretion at 11.1 mM glucose. 240 nM isoproterenol enhanced glucagon secretion not only at 2.8 mM glucose, but also at 11.1 mM glucose, as well as insulin secretion at 11.1 mM. In order to study the role of intra-islet noradrenalin, phentolamine, an alpha-adrenergic antagonist, and propranolol, a beta-adrenergic antagonist, were infused with the perfused solution. 10 and 100 microM phentolamine caused an increase in insulin secretion, and 25 microM propranolol decreased insulin secretion, while they did not cause any change in glucagon secretion. From these results, it can be concluded that alpha-stimulation suppresses not only insulin but also glucagon secretion, while beta-stimulation stimulates glucagon secretion, as well as insulin secretion. Intra-islet catecholamine may have some effect on the B cell, whereas it seems to have no influence on the A cell.  相似文献   

2.
Obestatin is a 23-amino acid peptide derived from preproghrelin, purified from stomach extracts and detected in peripheral plasma. In contrast to ghrelin, obestatin has been reported to inhibit appetite and gastric motility. However, these effects have not been confirmed by some groups. Obestatin was originally proposed to be the ligand for GPR39, a receptor related to the ghrelin receptor subfamily, but this remains controversial. Obestatin and GPR39 are expressed in several tissues, including pancreas. We have investigated the effect of obestatin on islet cell secretion in the perfused rat pancreas. Obestatin, at 10 nM, inhibited glucose-induced insulin secretion, while at 1 nM, it potentiated the insulin response to glucose, arginine and tolbutamide. The potentiated effect of obestatin on glucose-induced insulin output was not observed in the presence of diazoxide, an agent that activates ATP-dependent K(+) channels, thus suggesting that these channels might be sensitive to this peptide. Obestatin failed to significantly modify the glucagon and somatostatin responses to arginine, indicating that its stimulation of insulin output is not mediated by an alpha- or delta-cell paracrine effect. Our results allow us to speculate about a role of obestatin in the control of beta-cell secretion. Furthermore, as an insulinotropic agent, its potential antidiabetic effect may be worthy of investigation.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of physical training on insulin and glucagon release in perfused rat pancreas was examined in the spontaneously exercised group running in a wheel cage an average of 1.4 km/day for 3 weeks and in the sedentary control group kept in the cage whose rotatory wheel was fixed on purpose. Pancreatic immunoreactive insulin (IRI) responses to glucose and arginine were reduced by 28% and 47.8% respectively in trained rats compared with untrained rats, while IRI content of the pancreas was similar in these two groups. The demonstrated decrease in insulin secretion of the beta-cell of the trained rats, in response to the glucose and arginine stimulations, may be functional in nature. On the other hand, neither pancreatic glucagon immunoreactivity (GI) response to glucose and arginine nor GI content of the pancreas was modified by exercise training. These results demonstrate that exercise training reduces IRI responses to glucose as well as to arginine stimulations, but does not modify any secretory response of pancreatic GI.  相似文献   

4.
In rats, administration of a single dose of cysteamine (300 mg/kg, intragastrically) induces a depletion of pancreatic somatostatin content (approximately 60%) without modifying pancreatic insulin or glucagon content. In perfused pancreases from cysteamine-treated rats, there was a lack of somatostatin response to glucose, arginine or tolbutamide. In the absence of stimulated somatostatin release, the secretory responses of insulin and glucagon to glucose, to arginine, and to tolbutamide were not significantly different from those observed in pancreases from control rats. Our data do not support the concept that pancreatic somatostatin plays a major role in the control of insulin and glucagon release.  相似文献   

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6.
In order to elucidate the effect of glucagon antiserum on the endocrine pancreas, the release of somatostatin, glucagon, and insulin from the isolated perfused rat pancreas was studied following the infusion of arginine both with and without pretreatment by glucagon antiserum. Various concentrations of arginine in the presence of 5.5 mM glucose stimulated both somatostatin and glucagon secretion. However, the responses of somatostatin and glucagon were different at different doses of arginine. The infusion of glucagon antiserum strongly stimulated basal secretion in the perfusate total glucagon (free + antibody bound glucagon) and also enhanced its response to arginine, but free glucagon was undetectable in the perfusate during the infusion. On the other hand, the glucagon antiserum had no significant effect on either insulin or somatostatin secretion. Moreover, electron microscopic study revealed degrannulation and vacuolization in the cytoplasm of the A cells after exposure to glucagon antiserum, suggesting a hypersecretion of glucagon, but no significant change was found in the B cells or the D cells. We conclude that in a single pass perfusion system glucagon antiserum does not affect somatostatin or insulin secretion, although it enhances glucagon secretion.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of sodium salicylate, a prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor, on glucose-induced secretion of insulin and glucagon by the isolated perfused rat pancreas have been studied. Sodium salicylate inhibited both basal (2.8 mM glucose) and stimulated (16.7 mM glucose) insulin release in a dose dependent manner (1, 5 and 10 mM). This inhibition is not interpretable in terms of a simple inhibition of cyclooxygenase by sodium salicylate. Basal glucagon release was not changed by 1 mM sodium salicylate but the latter partially blocked its inhibition by 16.7 mM glucose. Higher doses of sodium salicylate (5 and 10 mM) inhibited basal glucagon secretion without affecting its response to 16.7 mM glucose. These findings suggest a predominant stimulatory action of endogenous prostaglandins on glucagon release.  相似文献   

8.
Xenin is a 25-amino acid peptide of the neurotensin/xenopsin family identified in gastric mucosa as well as in a number of tissues, including the pancreas of various mammals. In healthy subjects, plasma xenin immunoreactivity increases after meals. Infusion of the synthetic peptide in dogs evokes a rise in plasma insulin and glucagon levels and stimulates exocrine pancreatic secretion. The latter effect has also been demonstrated for xenin-8, the C-terminal octapeptide of xenin. We have investigated the effect of xenin-8 on insulin, glucagon and somatostatin secretion in the perfused rat pancreas. Xenin-8 stimulated basal insulin secretion and potentiated the insulin response to glucose in a dose-dependent manner (EC(50)=0.16 nM; R(2)=0.9955). Arginine-induced insulin release was also augmented by xenin-8 (by 40%; p<0.05). Xenin-8 potentiated the glucagon responses to both arginine (by 60%; p<0.05) and carbachol (by 50%; p<0.05) and counteracted the inhibition of glucagon release induced by increasing the glucose concentration. No effect of xenin-8 on somatostatin output was observed. Our observations indicate that the reported increases in plasma insulin and glucagon levels induced by xenin represent a direct influence of this peptide on the pancreatic B and A cells.  相似文献   

9.
Pancreastatin is a novel peptide, isolated from porcine pancreatic extracts, which has been shown to inhibit glucose-induced insulin release "in vitro". To achieve further insight into the influence of pancreastatin on pancreatic hormone secretion, we have studied the effects of this peptide on unstimulated insulin, glucagon and somatostatin output, as well as on the responses of these hormones to glucose and to tolbutamide in the perfused rat pancreas. Pancreastatin strongly inhibited unstimulated insulin release as well as the insulin responses to glucose and to tolbutamide. It did not significantly affect glucagon or somatostatin output under any of the above-mentioned conditions. These findings suggest that pancreastatin inhibits B-cell secretory activity directly, and not through an A-cell or D-cell paracrine effect.  相似文献   

10.
The secretion of both glucagon and insulin by the isolated perfused rat pancreas was significantly stimulated by 10(-7) M PGH2. Experiments to show that the stimulated secretion was mediated by conversion of PGH2 to TXA2 or TXB2 revealed no correlation between the amount of secretion and the amount of thromboxane formed. Conversion of PGH2 with a crude platelet thromboxane synthase preparation caused a progressive loss of ability to secret insulin, whereas the capacity to stimulate release of glucagon remained at about one-half the maximal level. This relatively stable and selective secretagogue action on the alpha-cells appeared to be due to the formation of PGD2 by the platelet preparation. Direct administration of PGD2 confirmed this interpretation and showed clearly that this prostaglandin is a potent secretagogue for glucagon with little activity in stimulating the release of insulin. Our results have shown high and relatively equal stimulation of secretion by alpha- and beta-cells with exogenous PGE2, PGF2 alpha, and PGH2, little or no secretion by either cell type with TXA2, TXB2, or PGI2, and a unique selective stimulatory action of PGD2 upon the alpha-cell.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The effect of neuromedin B (NMB) on insulin and glucagon release was studied in isolated perfused rat pancreas. Infusion of NMB (10 nM, 100 nM and 1 microM) did not affect the insulin release under the perusate conditions of 5.5 mM glucose plus 10 mM arginine and 11 mM glucose plus 10 mM arginine, although 10 nM NMB tended to slightly suppress it under the perfusate condition of 5.5 mM glucose alone. The degree of stimulation of insulin release provoked by the addition of 5.5 mM glucose to the perfusate was not affected by the presence of 10 nM NMB. The glucagon release was slightly stimulated by the infusion of 100 nM and 1 microM NMB but not by 10 nM NMB under the perfusate condition of 5.5 mM glucose plus 10 mM arginine. The effect of C-terminal decapeptide of gastrin releasing peptide (GRP-10) was also examined and similar results were obtained; 10 nM and 100 nM GRP-10 did not affect insulin release and 100 nM GRP-10 stimulated glucagon release under the perfusate condition of 5.5 mM glucose plus 10 mM arginine. The present results concerning glucagon release are consistent with the previous results obtained with isolated perfused canine and porcine pancreas. However, the results regarding insulin release are not. Species differences in insulin release are also evident with other neuropeptides such as substance P and the mechanism of such differences remains for be clarified.  相似文献   

13.
Insulin secretion induced by glucose (1.5 g/l) is changed by nicotine infusion; the recorded changes depend on the nicotine concentration uses. 1) At a low concentration (0.05 mM) nicotine provokes an immediate, progressively increasing and lasting stimulation of insulin secretion. This stimulation is inhibited by hexamethonium (0.1 mM) and atropine (0.3 micrometer). 2) At a high concentration (1 mM) nicotine has a triphasic effect on insulin secretion : brief decrease, peak of stimulation and prolonged decrease. Hexamethonium decreases the stimulation and suppresses the prolonged inhibition.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The identification of pancreastatin in pancreatic extracts prompted the investigation of its effects on islet cell function. However, in most of the investigations to date, pig pancreastatin was tested in heterologous species. Since there is great interspecies variability in the amino acid sequence of pancreastatin, we have investigated the influence of rat pancreastatin on insulin, glucagon and somatostatin secretion in a homologous animal model, namely the perfused rat pancreas. During 5.5 mM glucose infusion, pancreastatin (40 nM) inhibited insulin secretion (ca. 40%, P less than 0.025) as well as the insulin responses to 10 mM arginine (ca. 50%, P less than 0.025) and to 1 nM vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (ca. 50%; P less than 0.05). Pancreastatin failed to significantly modify glucagon or somatostatin release under any of the above experimental conditions. In addition, a lower pancreastatin concentration (15.7 nM) markedly suppressed the insulin release evoked by 11 mM glucose (ca. 85%, P less than 0.05). Our present observations reinforce the concept that pancreastatin is an effective inhibitor of insulin secretion, influencing the B-cell function directly and not through an A-cell or D-cell paracrine effect.  相似文献   

16.
Parathormone (0.15 U/ml) failed to affect the rate of glucagon and insulin release by the perfused rat pancreas exposed to glucose in either low (3.3 mM) or high (8.3 mM) concentration. Parathormone also failed to interfere with the suppressive effect of glucose (16.6mM) upon glucagon release and its stimulatory action upon insulin secretion. Likewise, the biphasic release of both glucagon and insulin evoked by arginine (10.0 mM) in the presence of glucose (8.3 mM) was unaffected by parathormone. These findings suggest that the endocrine pancreas may not be a target organ for any direct and immediate action of parathormone.  相似文献   

17.
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19.
Ghrelin, an endogenous ligand for the growth hormone secretagogue receptor, was originally purified from the rat stomach. Although ghrelin has been recognized as an important regulator of energy metabolism, the regulation of the ghrelin secretion is largely unknown. Here, we examined the direct effects of insulin, leptin, and glucagon on the release of ghrelin from the isolated rat stomach. The isolated pancreas-spleen-duodenum deprived preparation of rat stomach was used. After a baseline control infusion into the left gastric artery, insulin, leptin, or glucagon were infused for 15 min at concentrations of 0.1, 1, and 10 nM. The levels of immunoreactive ghrelin in the venous effluents were measured with a radioimmunoassay. Insulin and leptin inhibited ghrelin secretion dose-dependently (total amount of ghrelin release: insulin at 1 nM, 73.5+/-7.3% of the control infusion; leptin at 1 nM, 81.8+/-2.5% of the control infusion; n=5, P<0.05), while glucagon increased it dose-dependently (total amount of ghrelin released at 10 nM was 143.9+/-19.3% of the control infusion; n=5, P<0.01). These results indicate that the ghrelin responses observed in vivo could be due to direct effects of multiple hormonal signals on the stomach.  相似文献   

20.
Marked stimulation of glucagon release and modest stimulation of insulin release were observed during in situ perfusion of the rat pancreas with AVP or OT. Glucagon release in response to AVP or OT (200 pg/ml) gradually increased over a 45 min perfusion period reaching maxima of 500% and 300% of the pre-stimulatory levels, respectively. Insulin release transiently increased by 100%. In each case release rates returned to control values immediately after withdrawal of the peptides. Total glucagon release was concentration dependent and linear from 20 pg to 20 ng AVP or OT/ml (r greater than .97). Pancreatic response to DDAVP perfused at 20 ng/ml was virtually indistinguishable from that induced by AVP at 200 pg/ml. This demonstration of a glucagonotrophic action of the neurohypophysial hormones in the in situ perfused rat pancreas confirms earlier studies using isolated islets and bolus IV injection.  相似文献   

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