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1.
《Regulatory peptides》1987,17(5):269-276
The 27-amino acid peptide gastrin releasing peptide (GRP-(1–27)) was infused at 4 dose levels (0.01, 0.1, 1.0, and 10 nM) into the arterial line of the isolated perfused porcine pancreas. Infusions were performed at 3 different perfusate glucose levels (3.5, 5.0, and 8.0 mM) and at two levels of amino acids (5 and 15 mM). GRP-(1–27) stimulated insulin and pancreatic polypeptide secretion and inhibited somatostatin secretion in a dose-dependent manner. Glucagon secretion was unaffected by infusion of GRP under all circumstances. The effect of GRP-(1–27) on insulin secretion was enhanced with increasing perfusate glucose levels, whereas the effects upon somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide secretion were independent of perfusate glucose levels. The responses to GRP were unaffected by elevation of the concentration of amino acids in the perfusate. The effects of GRP were unaffected by atropine at 10−6 M. The localization of GRP within the porcine pancreas, its release during electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve, and its potent effects upon pancreatic endocrine secretion make it conceiveable that the peptide participates in parasympathetic regulation of pancreatic endocrine secretion.  相似文献   

2.
FMRF-NH2-like immunoreactivity was localized in the pancreatic polypeptide containing cells of the rat islet. FMRF-NH2 was investigated with regard to its effect on insulin, somatostatin and glucagon secretion from the isolated perfused rat pancreas. FMRF-NH2 (1 microM) significantly inhibited glucose stimulated (300 mg/dl) insulin release (p less than 0.005) and somatostatin release (p less than 0.01) from the isolated perfused pancreas. FMRF-NH2 (1 and 10 microM) was without effect on glucagon secretion, either in low glucose (50 mg/dl), high glucose (300 mg/dl), or during arginine stimulation (5 mM). These findings indicate that these FMRF-NH2 antisera recognize a substance in the pancreatic polypeptide cells of the islet which may be capable of modulating islet beta and D cell activity.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of galanin on pancreatic hormone release was studied using isolated perifused rat pancreatic islets. In the presence of 100 mg/dl glucose, 10(-8) mol/L galanin significantly inhibited the basal somatostatin release compared with the perifusion without galanin, whereas there was no significant change in the basal insulin and glucagon release. However, under stimulation of 20 mmol/L arginine, 10(-8) mol/L galanin significantly enhanced glucagon release and suppressed insulin and somatostatin release. These effects disappeared immediately after cessation of galanin infusion. Additionally, 10(-8) mol/L galanin significantly enhanced the first and second phase of glucagon release stimulated by arginine, whereas arginine-stimulated insulin and somatostatin releases were significantly inhibited in both phases. In the cysteamine-treated rat islets, neither enhancement of glucagon release nor suppression of insulin release by galanin was reproducible. These findings indicate two possible explanations. First, it is suggested that the effects of galanin on insulin and glucagon release may be direct and reversed by non-specific effect of cycteamine. Secondly, it seems likely that galanin-enhanced glucagon release may be indirect and in part due to the concomitant somatostatin suppression. Galanin may have an important regulatory function on endocrine pancreas.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The effects of naloxone, an opiate antagonist, on basal and vagus nerve-induced secretions of GRP, gastrin, and somatostatin were examined using the isolated perfused rat stomach prepared with vagal innervation. Naloxone (10(-6) M) significantly inhibited basal somatostatin secretion in the presence and absence of atropine and of hexamethonium, whereas basal GRP and gastrin secretion was not affected by naloxone. Electrical stimulation (10 Hz, lms duration, 10V) of the distal end of the subdiaphragmatic vagal trunks elicited a significant increase in both GRP and gastrin but a decrease in somatostatin. Naloxone (10(-6) M) failed to affect these responses in the presence or absence of atropine. On the other hand, when hexamethonium was infused, naloxone significantly inhibited both the GRP and gastrin responses to electrical vagal stimulation. Somatostatin secretion was unchanged by vagal stimulation during the infusion of hexamethonium with or without naloxone. These findings suggest that basal somatostatin secretion is under the control of an opiate neuron and that opioid peptides might be involved in vagal regulation of GRP and gastrin secretion.  相似文献   

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 glucose and GIP on glucagon secretion were studied in perifused microdissected murine pancreatic islets. Glucagon levels were determined in effluent samples collected at 1-min intervals by radioimmunoassay using the glucagon-specific antibody, 30 K. There was no significant difference in the total amount (7740 +/- 212 pg vs 8630 +/- 36 pg, n = 10) of glucagon secreted over a 20 min period when the glucose concentration was alternately shifted between 5.5 mM and 11.1 mM, respectively. However, 22.2 mM glucose profoundly suppressed glucagon secretion. The suppressive effect of high glucose on glucagon release was partially, yet significantly, reversed by the presence of GIP, as glucagon secretion increased from a non-detectable level at 22.2 mM glucose alone to 10,175 +/- 145 pg, n = 10 (P less than 0.01). The glucagonotropic effect of GIP was dose-dependent in the range of 2 x 10(-9) - 2 x 10(-7) M, at 11.1 mM glucose. Our data show that GIP is able to substantially reverse the suppressive effect of a high glucose load on glucagon secretion.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of glucose alone, combinations of glucose with arginine or tolbutamide and either arginine or tolbutamide alone, on somatostatin, insulin, and glucagon secretion were investigated using the isolated perfused rat pancreas. When glucose alone was raised in graded increments at 15-min intervals from an initial concentration of 0 mM to a maximum of 16.7 mM, somatostatin as well as insulin in the perfusate increased with the glucose, while glucagon decreased. The similarity of the glucose stimulated somatostatin and insulin release was especially evident when the perfusate glucose was increased from an initial dose of 4.4 mM rather than 0 mM to 8.8 mM or 16.7 mM. In addition, glucose at concentrations varying from 4.4 mM to 11 mM dose-dependently enhanced arginine-induced somatostatin and insulin release and suppressed glucagon release dose-dependently as before. Arginine in the absence of glucose was not capable of stimulating somatostatin secretion whereas tolbutamide, in contrast, was capable of stimulating somatostatin secretion even in the absence of glucose.  相似文献   

9.
Perfusion of isolated dog pancreases with arginine (20 mM) was associated with a prompt and sustained increase in immunoreactive somatostatin (IRS) in the venous effluent while insulin and glucagon rose promptly but soon receded from their peak levels. These results are compatible with a postulated feedback relationship between somatostatin-, glucagon-, and perhaps insulin-secreting cells of the islets in which somatostatin, stimulated by local glucagon, restrains glucagon secretion and perhaps glucagon-mediated insulin release as well.The demonstration that D-cells of the pancreatic islets contain immunoreactive somatostatin (1, 2, 3) which is probably biologically active (4), and are situated topographically between the A-cells and B-cells in the heterocellular region of the islet (5) has suggested a functional role for these components of the islet of Langerhans (6). In view of the inhibitory action of somatostatin upon both insulin and glucagon secretion (7, 8, 9), it was postulated that the D-cell might serve to restrain glucagon and/or insulin secretion (6). We have since reported that the release of IRS from the isolated dog pancreas increases promptly during the perfusion of high concentrations of glucagon whereas high concentrations of insulin do not appear to stimulate IRS release (10). In this study we examine the effect of perfusion with arginine, a potent stimulus of both glucagon and insulin secretion, upon pancreatic IRS release.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of secretin on glucagon and insulin release and its interaction with glucose has been studied in cultured mouse pancreatic islets by column perifusion. Glucose alone showed the well-known stimulation of insulin release and inhibition of glucagon release. Addition of 10 mM secretin increased glucagon secretion at 3 mM D-glucose by 300% while no change in insulin release could be seen at this low glucose concentration. At maximal stimulation of insulin release by 20 mM D-glucose addition of 10 nM secretin increased insulin release by 30%. Despite this insulin concentration and the high glucose concentration an increase in glucagon secretion of 1800% was found. These effects of secretin were dose-dependent at 10 mM D-glucose with 1 nM secretin being the lowest effective dose.  相似文献   

11.
S Pek  T Y Tai  A Elster 《Prostaglandins》1975,10(3):493-502
To ascertain whether prostaglandins (PG) may play a role in the secretion of glucagon and in an attempt to elucidate the conflicting observations on the effects of PG on insulin release, the isolated intact rat pancreas was perfused with solutions containing 1.1 x 10(-9) to 1.8 x 10(-5)m PGE2. In the presence of 5.6 mM glucose significant increments in portal venous effluent levels of glucagon and insulin were observed in response to minimal concentrations of 2.8 X 10(-8) and 1.4 X 10(-7) PGE2, respectively; a dose-response relationship was evident for both hormones at higher concentrations of PGE2. When administered over 60 seconds, 1.4 X 10(-6)M PGE2 resulted in a significant increase in glucagon levels within 24 seconds and in insulin within 48 seconds. Ten-minute perfusions of 1.4 X 10(-6)M PGE2 elicited biphasic release of both islet hormones; Phase I glucagon release preceded that of insulin. Both phases of the biphasic glucagon and insulin release which occurred in response to 15-minute perfusions of 10 mM arginine were augmented by PGE2. These observations indicate that PGE2 can evoke glucagon and insulin release at concentrations close to those observed by others in the extracts of rat pancreas. We conclude that PG may be involved in the regulation of secretion of glucagon and insulin and may mediate and/or modify the pancreatic islet hormone response to other secretagogues.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Porcine diazepam-binding inhibitor (pDBI) is a novel peptide that has been isolated from the small bowel of the pig, and that occurs also in the islet D-cells. We have studied its effects on hormone release in vitro from the endocrine pancreas of the rat. In isolated islets, pDBI (10(-9)-10(-6)M) did not affect basal insulin release at 3.3 mM glucose, whereas stimulated release at 8.3 mM glucose was dose-dependently suppressed by 32-69% (P less than 0.01). Furthermore, insulin secretion stimulated by either 16.7 mM glucose or 1 mM IBMX (3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine) or 1 micrograms/ml glibenclamide was suppressed by pDBI at 10(-8) M (by 28-30%, P less than 0.05) and 10(-7) M (by 43-47%, P less than 0.01). In contrast, islet insulin secretion induced by 20 mM arginine was unaffected by these concentrations of pDBI. In the perfused rat pancreas, pDBI (10(-8) M) enhanced by 30% (P less than 0.05) the first phase (0-5 min) of arginine-stimulated insulin release, whereas the second phase (5-20 min) was unchanged. Moreover, pDBI suppressed by 28% (P less than 0.05) the second phase of arginine-induced glucagon release. Arginine-induced somatostatin release was not significantly affected by the peptide. Since pDBI immunoreactivity has been localized also to islet D-cells, the present results suggest that pDBI may act as a local modulator of islet hormone release.  相似文献   

14.
Available data on the effect of neuropeptide Y (NPY) on insulin release are conflicting and little data exist regarding the effect of NPY on glucagon secretion. The purpose of the present study, therefore, was to characterize the direct effect of NPY on the release of these pancreatic hormones and to examine the role of glucose on these interactions. Using a perifused mouse islet system, we found that NPY suppressed both basal and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Thus, basal insulin release assessed as mean integrated area under the curve/20 min (AUC/20 min) decreased from 1446 +/- 143 pg to 651 +/- 112 pg (P less than 0.05) with the addition of 2 x 10(-8) M NPY and the AUC/20 min for glucose stimulated insulin output decreased from 1973 +/- 248 pg to 1426 +/- 199 pg (P less than 0.05). In both cases, this inhibitory effect was followed after removing NPY by a stimulation of insulin secretion which was typical of a 'rebound off-response'. In contrast, NPY exerted a stimulatory effect on basal glucagon release and significantly reversed the suppressive effect of high glucose on glucagon output. The basal glucagon AUC/20 min increased from 212 +/- 103 pg to 579 +/- 316 pg (P less than 0.05), while glucagon secretion in the presence of 27.7 mM glucose increased from 75 +/- 26 pg to 255 +/- 28 pg (P less than 0.01). In conclusion, we have shown that the direct effect of NPY on the endocrine pancreas is to suppress insulin but stimulate glucagon secretion. These data are compatible with a role for NPY in the regulation of pancreatic hormone output.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of synthetic rat amylin (10,100,1000 pmol/l) on glucose (10 mmol/) and arginine (10 mmol/l) -stimulated islet hormone release from the isolated perfused rat pancreas and on amylase release from isolated pancreatic acini was investigated. Amylin stimulated the insulin release during the first (+76%) and the second secretion period (+42%) at 1 nmol/l. The first phase of the glucagon release was inhibited concentration dependently by amylin and completely suppressed during the second phase. Amylin diminished the somatostatin release in a concentration dependent manner. This effect was more pronounced at the first than the second secretion period (1 nmol amylin: 1 phase: -60%, 2.phase: -22%). Amylin was without any effect on basal and CCK stimulated amylase release from isolated rat pancreatic acini. Our data suggest amylin, a secretory product of pancreatic B-cells, as a peptide with approximately strong paracrine effects within the Langerhans islet. Therefore, amylin might be involved in the regulation of glucose homeostasis.  相似文献   

16.
The interrelationship between arginine and calcium in glucagon release was studied using the in vitro perfused rat pancreas. In the presence of a normal 2 mM calcium concentration, 10 mM arginine provoked biphasic glucagon release, the amplitude of such a response being inversely related to the glucose concentration of the perfusate. At the lowest 3.3 mM glucose concentration, and after prolonged (40 min) as well as short (10 min) periods of calcium deprivation, arginine-induced glucagon release was inhibited. These results clearly indicate that calcium is necessary for either the recognition or effectiveness of arginine as a stimulus to the alpha-cell. Taking into account this, as well as other data presently available in the literature, it is suggested that calcium plays a versatile role - permissive, inhibitory and stimulatory - in glucagon secretion. The intimate mechanisms by which calcium exerts such versatile actions in the alpha-cell remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

17.
Livers from normal fed male rats were perfused in a recycling system in vitro. Glucagon was infused in varying quantities to give final concentration in the cell-free perfusate of 4.9 . 10(-10)-4.9 . 10(-7) M after 3 h of perfusion, assuming no degradation of the hormone. Where indicated, cyclic somatostatin was infused simultaneously to give a final concentration of 3.0 . 10(-6) M. In the absence of somatostatin, glucagon at a concentration as low as 4.9 . 10(-10) M increased the release of glucose and increased ketogenesis, but impaired the synthesis and release of perfusate triacylglycerol and very low density lipoprotein lipids. Somatostatin did not affect these actions of glucagon. Somatostatin alone, however, did reduce the output of very low density lipoprotein. It is suggested that the alteration of fatty acid metabolism by somatostatin in vivo results from modulation of pancreatic glucagon secretion, not from interference by somatostatin of the action of glucagon on the liver.  相似文献   

18.
Recent studies of isolated human islets have shown that glucose induces hormone release with repetitive pulses of insulin and somatostatin in antisynchrony with those of glucagon. Since the mouse is the most important animal model we studied the temporal relation between hormones released from mouse islets. Batches of 5-10 islets were perifused and the hormones measured with radioimmunoassay in 30s fractions. At 3mM glucose, hormone secretion was stable with no detectable pulses of glucagon, insulin or somatostatin. Increase of glucose to 20mM resulted in an early secretory phase with a glucagon peak followed by peaks of insulin and somatostatin. Subsequent hormone secretion was pulsatile with a periodicity of 5min. Cross-correlation analyses showed that the glucagon pulses were antisynchronous to those of insulin and somatostatin. In contrast to the marked stimulation of insulin and somatostatin secretion, the pulsatility resulted in inhibition of overall glucagon release. The cytoarchitecture of mouse islets differs from that of human islets, which may affect the interactions between the hormone-producing cells. Although indicating that paracrine regulation is important for the characteristic patterns of pulsatile hormone secretion, the mouse data mimic those of human islets with more than 20-fold variations of the insulin/glucagon ratio. The data indicate that the mouse serves as an appropriate animal model for studying the temporal relation between the islet hormones controlling glucose production in the liver.  相似文献   

19.
In order to understand the physiological role of endogenous insulin or glucagon in somatostatin release, isolated rat pancreatic islets were treated with antiinsulin or antiglucagon antiserum in the presence of physiological amounts of glucose. The release of somatostatin was unchanged by treatment with antiinsulin antiserum which neutralized insulin released by 3.3, 8.3 and 16.7 mM of glucose. However, somatostatin release after treatment with antiglucagon antiserum was much reduced at all concentrations of glucose when compared with the release from control serum. Exogenous rat insulin (0.11, 1.11 micrograms/ml) had no effect, but exogenous glucagon (1, 5 micrograms/ml) resulted in a significant increase. Somatostatin release was stimulated by glucose, but the effect was insignificant. These results clearly indicate the physiological role of endogenous glucagon in the modulation of somatostatin release from the islets of Langerhans. Furthermore, the physiological relationship between A, B and D cells may be mediated through the paracrine mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated the effect of rat leptin as well as the 22-56 fragment of this molecule on pancreatic hormone secretion in the perfused rat pancreas. In pancreases from fed rats, leptin failed to alter the insulin secretion elicited by glucose, arginine or tolbutamide, but inhibited the insulin response to both CCK-8 and carbachol, secretagogues known to act on the B-cell by increasing phospholipid turnover. This insulinostatic effect was also observed with the 22-56 leptin fragment. In pancreases obtained from 24-hour fasted rats, no effect of leptin on carbachol-induced insulin output was found, perhaps as a consequence of depressed B-cell phospholipid metabolism. Leptin did not influence glucagon or somatostatin release. Our results do not support the concept of leptin as a major regulator of B-cell function. Leptin inhibition of carbachol-induced insulin output might reflect a restraining effect of this peptide on the cholinergic stimulation of insulin release.  相似文献   

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