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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Diabetologia 19 (1980), S. 211-215 
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Insulin ; receptor ; liver ; diabetic ; glucagon ; plasma membranes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Injection IP of insulin at a dosage of 1 μg/g body weight into normal rats produced a rapid rise in serum insulin levels from 〈 1 to 298 ng/ml, and a rapid decrease in specific 125I-insulin binding to its receptors in purified liver plasma membranes. A fall in binding was seen as early as 10 minutes after injection and binding remained decreased for up to 60 min. At 10 min, 125I-insulin binding had fallen to 59% of controls; in contrast, 125I-glucagon binding remained unchanged. Extraction of these plasma membranes followed by radioimmunoassay for insulin did not reveal appreciable amounts of exogenous insulin. The 125I-insulin dissociation rate from plasma membranes of control and insulin treated rats was the same, also indicating a lack of exogenous insulin. Scatchard analyses indicated that the decreased binding seen after insulin injection was due primarily to a change in the number of insulin receptors and not their affinity. These studies suggest, therefore, that high doses of insulin in vivo can rapidly regulate the number of plasma membrane insulin receptors in liver.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: GLUT 1 ; GLUT 2 ; glucokinase ; glucose sensitivity ; insulin release ; HIT cells
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary HIT is a hamster-derived beta-cell line which in contrast to normal beta cells that only express the high Km GLUT-2 glucose transporter, also expresses the low Km glucose transporter GLUT 1. In HIT cells the abnormal glucose transport mechanism is associated with a marked shift to the left of the glucose-induced insulin release dose-response curve. We have used this cell model to investigate whether changes in glucose transport affect the glucose-induced insulin release. HIT cells were first incubated with a concentration of cytochalasin B (0.4 μmol/l) that selectively inhibits the GLUT-1 but not the GLUT-2 transporter. The consequences of blocking glucose phosphorylation and insulin release were studied. Exposure to 0.4 μmol/l cytochalasin B for 1 h caused a selective loss of the low Km transport: the calculated Vmax of GLUT 1 was reduced from 1726±98 to 184±14 pmol · mg protein−1 5 min−1 (mean±SEM, n=6, p〈0.005), while no major difference in the high Km (GLUT-2) transport was observed. In cytochalasin B exposed HIT cells the glucose phosphorylating activity (due to hexokinase and glucokinase) was unaffected. In these cells, however, the dose-response curve of glucose-induced insulin release was significantly shifted to the right: the 50% of maximal response (increment over baseline) was reached at an average glucose concentration of 2.9±0.2 mmol/l (vs 0.6±0.01 mmol/l in control HIT cells mean±SE, n=5, p〈0.05) and the maximal effect was reached at 11.0 mmol/l glucose (vs 2.8 mmol/l in control HIT cells p〈0.005). These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the affinity of the glucose transport system may contribute to determination of the glucose threshold concentration that triggers insulin secretion.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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