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1.
1. Five sheep were used to investigate the influences of alpha-adrenergic subtype receptor blockade on the secretion of both glucagon and insulin. 2. The glucagon secretion was stimulated through an alpha 2-adrenergic subtype mechanism. 3. The secretion of insulin was inhibited by an alpha 2-adrenergic subtype mechanism in conscious sheep.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
The control of insulin and glucagon secretion from isolated pancreatic islets of lean and genetically obese mice has been compared. The enlarged islets of obese mouse pancreas and islets of obese mouse pancreas and islets of obese mice maintained on a restricted diet manifested a greater response to glucose stimulation of insulin secretion than the lean mice islets. The glucagon content of the islets, the secretion of glucagon in a medium containing 150 mg% glucose and the stimulation of glucagon secretion by arginine did not differ significantly in the two groups. Adrenaline stimulated glucagon secretion in vitro from obese mice but not from lean mice. Antinsulin serum injections into obese mice increased the plasma glucagon levels about twofold and had no effect on glucagon levels in lean mice, although the level of hyperglycaemia was the same in both groups. It is suggested that the suppression of glucagon release by glucose requires a higher concentration of insulin in the obese mouse pancreas than in lean mice.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The glucagon-like immunoreactivity of the gastrointestinal tract is heterogeneous, probably including several different peptides. One of these peptides, glicentine, has recently been extracted and highly purified. Furthermore, by immunocytochemistry a glicentine-like peptide has been reported to occur in the glucagon cell of the pancreatic islets. In the present study we investigated the effects of pure glicentine on insulin release in vivo in mice. The effects were compared with effects of two other peptides, glucagon and GIP. It was found that glicentine had no influence on basal insulin secretion. This was in contrast to equimolar doses of glucagon and GIP, which both stimulated the secretion of insulin. Glucose-induced insulin release was partially inhibited by glicentine. D-glucose, in a dose selected to give a response of 25% of its maximal, raised the plasma insulin concentrations by 44.0 +/- 5.9 microU/ml. The corresponding rise for glicentine plus D-glucose was 22.3 +/- 3.7 microU/ml, i.e. glicentine inhibited glucose-induced insulin released by about 50% (p < 0.01). GIP, on the other hand, enhanced glucose-induced insulin release. This enhancement was diminished by glicentine, a reflection of the inhibition by glicentine of the glucose-induced insulin release. Neither glicentine nor GIP in the doses tested had any effect on insulin secretion induced by cholinergic stimulation. In conclusion, glicentine seems to have no effect on basal insulin release in the mouse, but it partially inhibits glucose-induced insulin secretion. Thus, if the recently demonstrated glicentine-like peptide in the glucagon cell is authentic glicentine, the glucagon cell of the pancreatic islets may contain peptides with stimulatory (glucagon) as well as inhibitory (glicentine) effects on insulin secretion induced by glucose.  相似文献   

7.
To investigate the role of the autonomic nervous system in controlling insulin secretion 13 normal subjects and 5 patients with heart failure underwent insulin secretion tests. Alpha-adrenergic stimulation and beta-receptor blockade significantly depressed the secretion of insulin in response to intravenous tolbutamide in normal subjects, while both alpha-blockade and beta-stimulation significantly increased the insulin secretion response in both normal subjects and patients in heart failure. Parasympathetic stimulation and blockade had no significant effect on the insulin secretion response. These findings suggest that drugs that block the alpha-adrenergic receptors or stimulate the beta-adrenergic receptors by their ability to counteract the insulin suppression resulting from increased sympathetic nervous activity may play a vital metabolic part in the deranged metabolism of the failing heart in addition to their direct haemodynamic benefits.  相似文献   

8.
Islet-activating protein (IAP) is a substance purified from the culture medium of Bordetella pertussis, and its main action is characterized by the enhancement of secretory response to glucose and other stimuli in pancreatic islet. In this experiment, the effect of IAP on epinephrine-induced secretion of immunoreactive insulin (IRI) and glucagon (IRG) was investigated in normal dogs. Epinephrine suppressed IRI secretion and it had a little increment to IRG secretion in control group, while IRI and IRG secretions were significantly increased by epinephrine in IAP pretreated group. Using beta-blocker (Propranolol) with epinephrine, these increments of IRI and IRG secretions in IAP pretreated group were abolished. However, using alpha-blocker (Phentolamine) with epinephrine, these secretions of IRI and IRG in IAP pretreated group were much more increased than epinephrine alone induced secretions. Blood glucose levels were lower in IAP pretreated group than in control group throughout the loading tests in all of the experiments. These findings suggest that (1) IAP decreases blood glucose level and (2) IAP enhances epinephrine-induced secretion of insulin and glucagon by acceleration of beta-adrenergic effect and by reduction of alpha-adrenergic suppression in dogs.  相似文献   

9.
To determine the response of gastric A-cells to adrenergic substances, immunoreactive glucagon was determined simultaneously in the jugular vein and in the left gastroepiploic vein of totally depancreatized dogs. Under basal conditions a significant gradient of glucagon concentrations between the jugular and gastric veins was observed, whereas plasma insulin values were almost undetectable. Intravenous administration of epinephrine elicits a prompt and significant increase in glucagon concentrations in the gastric vein which persist during the time of hormone infusion. To ensure adequate adrenergic blockade, blockers were infused before epinephrine administration. Accordingly, after phentolamine, the infusion of epinephrine failed to increase gastric glucagon concentrations, while after propranolol, epinephrine induced a significant release of gastric glucagon. These results indicate that epinephrine stimulates gastric glucagon secretion and that this effect is mediated through alpha-adrenergic receptors.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
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   

12.
A possible benefit of creating smaller and more rigid active analogs of somatostatin is the discovery of compounds which selectively inhibit the secretion of insulin, glucagon or growth hormone. A series of cyclic tetrapeptide analogs related to somatostatin was synthesized, and one member of this series was found to cause an unexpected stimulation of glucagon secretion while having little if any effect on either insulin or growth hormone secretion. A sustained increase in plasma glucose levels was also observed. Two possible modes of action are proposed.  相似文献   

13.
The rate of DNA synthesis, insulin secretion and cAMP content in isolated pancreatic islets were markedly inhibited by long-term exposure to the alpha 1-adrenoceptor agonist phenylephrine, the alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonist clonidine and the beta-adrenoceptor antagonist propranolol. Pertussis toxin or the stimulatory cAMP analog Sp-cAMPS increased DNA synthesis and insulin secretion in the absence of the adrenergic agents. Pertussis toxin blocked the inhibitory actions of these agents on DNA synthesis, insulin secretion and cAMP content, and a similar protection was imposed by Sp-cAMPS. Thus, long-term alpha-adrenergic stimulation interferes with signaling through pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein(s) and, by decreasing the islet cAMP content, inhibits beta-cell DNA synthesis and insulin secretion.  相似文献   

14.
GRP is a pancreatic neuropeptide and may be of importance for the neural control of insulin and glucagon secretion. In this study, we investigated the effects of GRP on basal and stimulated insulin and glucagon secretion in the mouse. Intravenous injections of GRP at dose levels exceeding 2.12 nmol/kg were found to rapidly increase basal plasma levels of both insulin and glucagon. Furthermore, at a low dose level without effect on basal plasma insulin levels, GRP was found to potentiate the insulin response to both glucose (by 40%; p less than 0.05) and to the cholinergic agonist carbachol (by 57%; p less than 0.01). Also, GRP was at this dose level found to potentiate the glucagon response to carbachol (p less than 0.01). Glucose abolished GRP-induced glucagon secretion. Moreover, methylatropine given at a dose level that totally abolishes carbachol-induced insulin secretion inhibited GRP-induced insulin secretion by 39% (p less than 0.05) and GRP-induced glucagon secretion by 25% (p less than 0.01). L-Propranolol at a dose level that totally abolishes beta-adrenergically-induced insulin secretion inhibited GRP-induced insulin secretion by 52% (p less than 0.01) and GRP-induced glucagon secretion by 15% (p less than 0.05). In summary, we have shown that GRP stimulates basal and potentiates stimulated insulin and glucagon secretion in mice, and that the stimulatory effects of GRP on insulin and glucagon secretion are partially inhibited by muscarinic blockade by methylatropine or by beta-adrenoceptor blockade by propranolol. We conclude that GRP activates potently both insulin and glucagon secretion in the mouse by mechanisms that are partially related to the muscarinic and the beta-adrenergic receptors.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The effects of adenosine on insulin and glucagon secretions were studied using the isolated perfused rat pancreas. The secretion of glucagon was stimulated by adenosine at concentrations ranging from 1.65 to 165 mumol/l, in the presence of glucose 0.5 g/l; the stimulation was immediate, but transient and was dose-dependent. Insulin secretion was not changed by adenosine in the presence of glucose 0.5 g/l; in the presence of glucose 1.5 g/l, adenosine at 1.65 and 16.5 mumol/l did not significantly modify insulin secretion. But at 165 mumol/l adenosine induced a progressive increase in time after the 5th minute. The A cell appears then to be much more sensitive to adenosine than the B cell.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The effects of 3-hydroxybutyrate (3-OHB) and hyperosmolarity on glucagon secretion were examined in the isolated perfused canine pancreas. When 3-OHB was infused for 15 min into the pancreas perfused with 2.8 mM glucose, 5 and 20 mM sodium 3-OHB inhibited it after a transient stimulation, whereas a similar transient stimulation was observed also by the infusion of 20 mM NaCl in a control experiment. The above inhibition was not observed under the perfusate condition of 5.5 mM glucose plus 10 mM arginine. When the isolated canine pancreas was perfused under the perfusate condition of acidosis (pH 7.1), ketoacidosis (pH 7.1 and 20 mM 3-OHB) or hyperosmolarity (+60 mOsm/kg with sucrose) throughout the experiment, the glucagon concentrations produced by 2.8 mM glucose under the ketoacidotic and hyperosmolar conditions, were less than half of those obtained under the standard condition. The insulin level was not influenced by the above perfusate conditions. These results suggest that 3-OHB inhibits glucagon secretion stimulated by glucopenia, but does not inhibit it stimulated by amino acids, and that hyperosmolarity inhibits glucagon secretion but does not inhibit insulin secretion. The pathophysiological significance of these results must be slight, considering the presence of hyperglucagonemia during prolonged starvation or diabetic ketoacidosis.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
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   

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