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1.
Excessive secretion of glucagon is a major contributor to the development of diabetic hyperglycemia. Secretion of glucagon is regulated by various nutrients, with glucose being a primary determinant of the rate of alpha cell glucagon secretion. The intra-islet action of insulin is essential to exert the effect of glucose on the alpha cells since, in the absence of insulin, glucose is not able to suppress glucagon release in vivo. However, the precise mechanism by which insulin suppresses glucagon secretion from alpha cells is unknown. In this study, we show that insulin induces activation of GABAA receptors in the alpha cells by receptor translocation via an Akt kinase-dependent pathway. This leads to membrane hyperpolarization in the alpha cells and, ultimately, suppression of glucagon secretion. We propose that defects in this pathway(s) contribute to diabetic hyperglycemia.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of insulin and glucagon on cAMP accumulation, protein kinase activation, and glycogenolysis were investigated in isolated rat hepatocytes. Glucagon (0.01 nM to 10 micro M) increased the activation state of protein kinase and the rate of glucose accumulation. Addition of 1.0 nM insulin to cells preincubated with 0.1 nM glucagon attenuated the rate of glucose accumulation, but did not alter the protein kinase activity ratio. Addition of 0.1 nM glucagon to cells preincubated with 1.0 nM insulin caused a rapid activation of protein kinase; however, glycogenolysis was not immediately affected. These effects were enhanced with pharmacological concentrations of glucagon and insulin. These data indicate that the degree of protein kinase activation does not always correlate temporally or quantitatively with rates of glycogenolysis in liver cells exposed to insulin and glucagon.  相似文献   

3.
The in vivo effect of adenosine on the serum levels of glucose, insulin and glucagon in rats fasted for twenty four hours or after an oral glucose load were studied. Under fasting conditions adenosine produced an hyperglycaemia without change in the insulin or glucagon serum levels. After a glucose load adenosine induced a marked hyperglycaemia concomitant to a decrease in insulin serum levels and an increase in glucagon serum levels. Adenosine did not alter the relationship between insulin and glucagon. In vivo adenosine administration altered the secretion of hormones by the islets of Langerhans (increased the release of glucagon and decreased the secretion of insulin) but this was only clearly observable under stimulated conditions. Adenosine did not alter the regulatory mechanism(s) that modulate the relationship between insulin and glucagon.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The effects of administration of glucose orally and tolbutamide or arginine intravenously on insulin and glucagon secretion and blood glucose level were studied in normal and thiamine-deficient rats. In thiamine deficiency, insulin secretion and glucose tolerance were impaired during glucose ingestion. Tolbutamide decreased the blood glucose level in both control and thiamine-deficient rats but its stimulatory effect on insulin secretion was minimal in thiamine-deficient rats unlike the control animals. Arginine did not alter substantially the blood glucose or insulin in thiamine-deficient rats, whereas it increased the insulin level in control rats. The fasting plasma glucagon level was high in thiamine deficiency. Tolbutamide increased the plasma glucagon in control rats, but did so only marginally in thiamine-deficient rats. Arginine also increased the glucagon secretion throughout the period of study in control rats. In thiamine-deficient rats the glucagon secretion was pronounced only after 20 min of arginine administration. These results suggest that an unimpaired glucose metabolism is a prerequisite to induce proper insulin secretion. Only proper insulin secretion can check the glucagon secretion rather than the increased glucose level. Hypoglycemia can induce glucagon secretion independent of the insulin level.  相似文献   

6.
The ability of dispersed islet cells in a perifusion system to secret glucagon and insulin in response to physiologic stimuli was investigated. Normal hamster islets were isolated by collagenase digestion and the cells dispersed by sequential digestion with collagenase and trypsin. Following a 50-min period of equilibrium in buffer with high glucose concentrations (5.0 mg/ml), glucagon secretion was stimulated by glucopenia and subsequently, inhibited by increasing the concentration of glucose. The responsiveness to glucose inhibition was significantly less in dispersed islet cells than in intact islets. However, the dispersed islet cells showed significantly greater response to arginine. Glucagon secretion by dispersed islet cells was stimulated to tolbutamide and epinephrine but somatostatin had no effect. Dispersed islet cell preparations did not augment insulin secretion in response to glucose but did secrete more insulin in response to arginine. Intact islets secreted insulin in response to glucose but not arginine. We conclude that A cells in cell suspension do not need direct contact or an intact intra-islet environment in order to respond to glucose, arginine, epinephrine, or tolbutamide but the extent of response may be influenced by paracrine effects. However, paracrine relationships may be important in determining the response of B cells to secretagogues.  相似文献   

7.
Glucagon dysregulation is an essential component in the pathophysiology of type 2 diabetes. Studies in vitro and in animal models have shown that zinc co-secreted with insulin suppresses glucagon secretion. Zinc supplementation improves blood glucose control in patients with type 2 diabetes, although there is little information about how zinc supplementation may affect glucagon secretion. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of 1-year zinc supplementation on fasting plasma glucagon concentration and in response to intravenous glucose and insulin infusion in patients with type 2 diabetes. A cross-sectional study was performed after 1-year of intervention with 30 mg/day zinc supplementation or a placebo on 28 patients with type 2 diabetes. Demographic, anthropometric, and biochemical parameters were determined. Fasting plasma glucagon and in response to intravenous glucose and insulin infusion were evaluated. Patients of both placebo and supplemented groups presented a well control of diabetes, with mean values of fasting blood glucose and glycated hemoglobin within the therapeutic goals established by ADA. No significant differences were observed in plasma glucagon concentration, glucagon/glucose ratio or glucagon/insulin ratio fasting, after glucose or after insulin infusions between placebo and supplemented groups. No significant effects of glucose or insulin infusions were observed on plasma glucagon concentration. One-year zinc supplementation did not affect fasting plasma glucagon nor response to intravenous glucose or insulin infusion in well-controlled type 2 diabetes patients with an adequate zinc status.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of somatostatin (SRIF) on glucagon and insulin secretion was examined in fed and fasted sheep. This was related to changes in glucose production. Infusion of SRIF at 80 micrograms/h caused a marked reduction in plasma glucagon concentrations. However, the insulin response to SRIF infusion was not consistent; its concentrations decreased occasionally, but often did not change. The depression of glucagon was not associated with a significant reduction in blood glucose concentrations in either fed or fasted sheep, but was associated with a reduction in glucose production by 12--15%. The inhibitory effect of insulin on glucose production was not markedly increased by glucagon deficiency. Infusion of insulin at 1.17 U/h with SRIF decreased glucose production only an additional 10%. Thus, it appears that under basal conditions pancreatic hormonal influences on hepatic glucose production were relatively small in sheep. This implies that under normal conditions in sheep, substrate supply has a much greater impact on hepatic glucogenesis than do hormones.  相似文献   

9.
The concentration of plasma glucose in insulin deprived pancreatectomized dogs was decreased from the basal 385 +/- 44 to 65 +/- 12 mg/dL by the infusion of 7 mU X kg-1 X min-1 insulin. During the infusion, the plasma concentration of immunoreactive glucagon (IRG) did not change and hepatic glucose production was decreased. This is in contrast to earlier findings in alloxan diabetic dogs in which plasma IRG decreased in hypoglycaemia. The hypothesis is put forward that, in contrast to pancreatic alpha cells in which the effect of insulin prevails, neither insulin nor a decrease in the ambient concentration of glucose exerts any effect on the secretion of glucagon from extrapancreatic alpha cells.  相似文献   

10.
G F Bryce  J H Jacoby 《Life sciences》1978,22(24):2215-2223
Several commonly used serotonin receptor antagonists were studied for their ability to influence basal plasma insulin and glucagon (using 30K antibody) levels as well as the response of these hormones to a glucose or arginine challenge administered systematically to overnight fasted rats. Cyproheptadine, in contrast to other antagonists employed, induced large increases of insulin, glucagon and glucose, although this hyperinsulinemia was of a smaller magnitude when compared with hormone levels observed during an equivalent hyperglycemia resulting from glucose administration. The pancreatic response to a glucose load (increased insulin and decreased glucagon release) and an arginine load (increased insulin and glucagon release) were prevented by cyproheptadine pretreatment. Basal insulin levels were bot consistently altered by methysergide or cinanserin and were slightly elevated by metergoline. Basal glucagon levels were unaffected by these drugs. These three agents potentiated the insulinotropic effect of an arginine load whereas only metergoline exerted a similar effect on the response to glucose loading. Glucagon release in response to these stimuli was not significantly altered by drug pretreatment.  相似文献   

11.
Oxytocin (OT) infusion in normal dogs increases plasma insulin and glucagon levels and increases rates of glucose production and uptake. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the effects of OT on glucose metabolism were direct or indirect. The studies were carried out in normal, unanesthetized dogs in which OT infusion was superimposed on infusion of either somatostatin, which suppresses insulin and glucagon secretion, or clonidine, which suppresses insulin secretion only. Infusion of 0.2 microgram/kg/min of somatostatin suppressed basal levels of plasma insulin and glucagon and inhibited the OT-induced rise of these hormones by about 60-80% of that seen with OT alone. The rates of glucose production and uptake by tissues, measured with [6-3H] glucose, were significantly lower than those seen with OT alone, and the rise in glucose clearance was completely inhibited. Clonidine (30 micrograms/kg, sc), given along with an insulin infusion to replace basal levels of insulin, completely prevented the OT-induced rise in plasma insulin and markedly reduced the glucose uptake seen with OT alone, but did not reduce the usual increase in plasma glucose and glucagon levels or glucose production. To determine whether the OT-induced rise in plasma insulin was in response to the concomitant increase in plasma glucose, similar plasma glucose levels were established in normal dogs by a continuous infusion of glucose and an OT infusion was superimposed. OT did not raise plasma glucose levels further, but plasma insulin levels were increased, indicating that OT can stimulate insulin secretion independently of the plasma glucose changes. Studies by others have shown that the addition of OT to pancreatic islets or intact pancreas can stimulate insulin and glucagon secretion, indicating a direct effect. Our studies agree with that and suggest that in vivo, OT raises plasma insulin levels, at least in part, through a direct action on the pancreas. These studies also show that OT increases glucose production by increasing glucagon secretion and, in addition, a direct effect of OT on glucose production is likely. The OT-induced increase in glucose uptake is mediated largely by increased insulin secretion.  相似文献   

12.
The prevalent view is that the postabsorptive plasma glucose concentration is maintained within the physiological range by the interplay of the glucose-lowering action of insulin and the glucose-raising action of glucagon. It is supported by a body of evidence derived from studies of suppression of glucagon (and insulin, among other effects) with somatostatin in animals and humans, immunoneutralization of glucagon, defective glucagon synthesis, diverse mutations, and absent or reduced glucagon receptors in animals and glucagon antagonists in cells, animals, and humans. Many of these studies are open to alternative interpretations, and some lead to seemingly contradictory conclusions. For example, immunoneutralization of glucagon lowered plasma glucose concentrations in rabbits, but administration of a glucagon antagonist did not lower plasma glucose concentrations in healthy humans. Evidence that the glycemic threshold for glucagon secretion, unlike that for insulin secretion, lies below the physiological range, and the finding that selective suppression of insulin secretion without stimulation of glucagon secretion raises fasting plasma glucose concentrations in humans underscore the primacy of insulin in the regulation of the postabsorptive plasma glucose concentration and challenge the prevalent view. The alternative view is that the postabsorptive plasma glucose concentration is maintained within the physiological range by insulin alone, specifically regulated increments and decrements in insulin, and the resulting decrements and increments in endogenous glucose production, respectively, and glucagon becomes relevant only when glucose levels drift below the physiological range. Although the balance of evidence suggests that glucagon is involved in the maintenance of euglycemia, more definitive evidence is needed, particularly in humans.  相似文献   

13.
This study was conducted to characterize the mechanisms of hyperglycaemia in exercising sheep. Sheep were run on a treadmill for 45 min (5.5 km h-1, 8% incline) during adrenergic blockade (propranolol or phentolamine mesylate infusions) and during suppression of the rise in glucagon by infusion of somatostatin (SRIF). Propranolol did not alter the glucagon, insulin or glucose responses, except it tended to increase the metabolic clearance of glucose, presumably as a result of blocking the beta-adrenergic inhibition of glucose uptake. Phentolamine mesylate administration was associated with a suppression of the rise in glucagon concentrations, a reversal of alpha-adrenergic inhibition of insulin release and a reduction in glucose appearance during exercise. SRIF prevented the rise in glucagon and reduced insulin concentrations to below resting values. Propranolol and phentolamine mesylate did not alter the glucagon, insulin or glucose response to SRIF. However, SRIF prevented the insulin rise that occurred during phentolamine administration. The increment in glucose appearance produced in response to exercise was the same for SRIF, plus phentolamine mesylate and phentolamine mesylate in the first 25 min of exercise, but was significantly less than in the controls. During the last 20 min of exercise, glucose appearance was not significantly different from the control for any of the groups. The depression by SRIF and alpha-adrenergic blockade of the increment in glucose appearance due to exercise was associated with an impairment of the glucagon response. It appears, therefore, that glucagon may stimulate glucose production early in exercise in sheep directly, as well as by having a permissive effect.  相似文献   

14.
Glucose homeostasis is regulated primarily by the opposing actions of insulin and glucagon, hormones that are secreted by pancreatic islets from beta-cells and alpha-cells, respectively. Insulin secretion is increased in response to elevated blood glucose to maintain normoglycemia by stimulating glucose transport in muscle and adipocytes and reducing glucose production by inhibiting gluconeogenesis in the liver. Whereas glucagon secretion is suppressed by hyperglycemia, it is stimulated during hypoglycemia, promoting hepatic glucose production and ultimately raising blood glucose levels. Diabetic hyperglycemia occurs as the result of insufficient insulin secretion from the beta-cells and/or lack of insulin action due to peripheral insulin resistance. Remarkably, excessive secretion of glucagon from the alpha-cells is also a major contributor to the development of diabetic hyperglycemia. Insulin is a physiological suppressor of glucagon secretion; however, at the cellular and molecular levels, how intraislet insulin exerts its suppressive effect on the alpha-cells is not very clear. Although the inhibitory effect of insulin on glucagon gene expression is an important means to regulate glucagon secretion, recent studies suggest that the underlying mechanisms of the intraislet insulin on suppression of glucagon secretion involve the modulation of K(ATP) channel activity and the activation of the GABA-GABA(A) receptor system. Nevertheless, regulation of glucagon secretion is multifactorial and yet to be fully understood.  相似文献   

15.
Using perfused liver of the rat, the hepatic uptake of glycosylated insulin (GI) and glucagon (GG) and its effects on hepatic glucose output were investigated. Insulin and glucagon were glycosylated in ambient high glucose concentration, and GI80 or GG80 (insulin or glucagon incubated with 0.08% glucose), GI350 or GG350 (incubated with 0.35% glucose), and GI1000 or GG1000 (incubated with 1% glucose) were prepared. The liver was perfused with the medium containing 1000 microU/ml insulin and 200 pg/ml glucagon or 200 microU/ml insulin and 1000 pg/ml glucagon. The fractional uptake of insulin or glucagon by perfused liver was not significantly altered by the glycosylation. In the liver perfused with 1000 microU/ml insulin and 200 pg/ml glucagon, glucose output was not changed by the glycosylation of the hormones, while in the liver perfused with 200 microU/ml insulin and 1000 pg/ml glucagon, GI1000 reduced its biological activity, as reflected by insulin-mediated decrease in glucose output. These results suggest that in the liver insulin incubated with markedly high concentration of glucose reduces its biological activity at a physiological concentration in the presence of high concentration of glucagon.  相似文献   

16.
Newborn rats were injected immediately after delivery with glucose or glucose plus mannoheptulose, and the time-courses of liver glycogen, plasma glucose, insulin and glucagon concentration were studied. The administration of glucose prevented both liver glycogenolysis and the increase in plasma glucagon concentration which normally occurs immediately after delivery. In addition, the administration of glucose prevented the decrease of plasma glucose and insulin concentration which normally occurs during the first hour of extrauterine life. Supplementation of glucose with mannoheptulose prevented the increase of plasma insulin concentrations caused by the administration of glucose; liver glycogenolysis, however, was not stimulated in these circumstances. The increase in the rate of glycogenolysis caused by the administration of glucagon was prevented in newborn rats previously treated with glucose. These results suggest that glucose exerts an inhibitory effect on the stimulation of neonatal liver glycogenolysis by glucagon.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Cells derived from rat islet tumor and grown in culture (parent cells-RIN-m) and two clones obtained from them were used to study the effect of various secretagogues on insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin secretion. Parent cells secreted all three hormones in various quantities, while clone 5F secreted predominantly insulin and clone 14B secreted predominantly somatostatin. The secretory behavior of these cells were compared to each other and to that of normal islets. In general, as in the case of normal islets, insulin secretion was stimulated by calcium, potassium, tolbutamide, theophylline, and glucagon. It was inhibited by somatostatin. Glucagon secretion was stimulated by calcium, arginine, and theophylline. Somatostatin secretion was stimulated in clone 14B by arginine, tolbutamide, theophylline, and insulin. These cells differ from normal islets, in that they do not respond to glucose or arginine with increased insulin secretion. Also somatostatin failed to inhibit glucagon secretion. The similarity in insulin secretory responses of parent cells and clone 5F suggests that local or paracrine islet hormone secretion plays only a negligible role in the control of other hormone secretion in these cells.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of adenosine in insulin secretion and adenylate cyclase activity of rat islets of Langerhans was investigated. Adenosine inhibited insulin secretion stimulated by glucose, glucagon, prostaglandin E2, tolbutamine and theophylline. Adenosine decreased basal adenylate cyclase activity of the islets as well as that stimulated by glucagon prostaglandin E2 and GTP, although fluoride-stimulated activity was not affected. Neither insulin secretion nor adenylate cyclase activity of the islets was affected by adenine, AMP or ADP. The inhibitory effect of adenosine on adenylate cyclase activity was not altered by either phenoxybenzamine (alpha-adrenergic blocker) or propranolol (beta-adrenergic blocker), suggesting that the effect is not mediated through the adrenergic receptors of the islet cells. These results suggest that the intracellular concentration of adenosine in the beta-cell may play a role in regulating insulin secretion and that this effect may be mediated via alterations in the activity of adenylate cyclase in the beta-cell.  相似文献   

20.
The beta 3-adrenoceptor agonist, BRL 26830A, which is not inhibited by either beta 1 or beta 2-selective antagonists, has been shown to possess anti-obesity and anti-diabetic actions. However, the effects of this agent on insulin and glucagon release have not yet been substantiated. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that BRL 26830A promotes insulin and glucagon secretion via beta 3 receptors on pancreatic islet B and A cells. In ICR mice fasted for 48 h, BRL 26830A significantly stimulated insulin secretion from 5 min after administration, markedly decreased blood glucose levels from 30 min after administration, and significantly increased glucagon secretion from 30 min after administration. The administration of a non-selective beta-receptor antagonist, at a dose of 50 mg/kg, 30 min prior to BRL 26830A injection completely abolished the effects induced by BRL 26830A. However, the administration of a beta 1-selective antagonist at doses of 50 or 100 mg/kg did not produce any significant effects. On the action of BRL 26830A, whereas the administration of a beta 2-selective antagonist at 50 mg/kg, a near maximal effective dose, partially abolished the effects of BRL 26830A. BRL 26830A had no effect on insulin, glucagon, or glucose levels in streptozocin (STZ) diabetic mice fasted for 48 h. These results suggest that, in mice, BRL 26830A may promote insulin secretion mainly via beta 3 receptors and partially via beta 2 receptors on pancreatic-islet B cells, and that glucagon may be secreted as the result of hypoglycemia induced by this agent.  相似文献   

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