ISSN:
1432-5233
Keywords:
Key words Hyperglycemia
;
Hyperinsulinemia
;
Glucose tolerance test
;
Islets of Langerhans
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Medicine
Notes:
Abstract Excessive stimulation of insulin secretion may be one cause of the beta-cell dysfunction induced by hyperglycemia. We investigated a possible link between the prior endogenous hypersecretion of insulin and this dysfunction by performing a 7-day glucose infusion (50% wt/vol, 1.2 ml/h) on ventromedial hypothalamic VMH-lesioned hyperinsulinemic rats. Intravenous glucose tolerance tests (IVGTT 1.0 g/kg) revealed that a 3-day glucose infusion enhanced the insulin responses in both the sham- and VMH-lesioned rats compared with saline infusions. A similar 7-day glucose infusion enhanced the insulin response to glucose in sham-lesioned rats but not in VMH-lesioned rats. Batch-incubation of islets isolated from sham-lesioned rats showed an enhanced insulin response to glucose after 7 days of glucose treatment compared with the saline infusions. Conversely, the glucose infusion in VMH-lesioned rats markedly suppressed the in vitro insulin response. In sham- and VMH-lesioned rats, similar islet insulin contents were produced by saline and glucose treatments. Electron microscopy revealed that glucose infusions impaired the granule-releasing function of the beta-cells in VMH-lesioned rats, while insulin synthesis was accelerated in either group. These findings support the notion that excessive secretion is partly responsible for the beta-cell dysfunction induced by hyperglycemia without signs of exhaustion.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s005920050097
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