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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A trial has been performed of a new sweetening agent saccharol, glycosides complex, on energy metabolism in rats with experimental alloxan
diabetes
. Elevated glucose level observed in rats with insulin insufficiency was associated with hexokinase activity inhibition and changes in the activity of the enzymes involved in
glucose-6-phosphate
transformation: enhanced activity of glucose-6-phosphatase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase against inhibition of phosphoglucomutase activity. Introduction of saccharose aggravated the above shifts in the rat liver, whereas saccharol possesses a protective action on hexokinase hepatic reaction and enzymes of
glucose-6-phosphate
conversion, reduced blood glucose. Positive changes induced by saccharol on energy metabolism in animals with insulin insufficiency can be attributed to the effect of saccharol glycosides.
...
PMID:[Effect of saccharol glycosides on energy metabolism in animals with abnormal carbohydrate tolerance]. 797 8
Glucokinase is a key enzyme of glucose metabolism that phosphorylates glucose to
glucose-6-phosphate
(G-6-P). This is the first step of glucose metabolism after the uptake of glucose by glucose transporter 2 (GLUT 2). Glucokinase is one of the hexo-kinases and is expressed only in pancreatic beta cells and hepatocytes. Recently it was reported that glucokinase gene is associated with some families with MODY (maturity-onset
diabetes
of the young). As MODY is a subtype of
diabetes
which is inherited autosomal dominantly, the correlation of
diabetes
with glucokinase gene was vigorously studied in many laboratories. The first mutation in exon 7 of the glucokinase gene was reported in 1992. Since the first report of the glucokinase gene mutation in exon 7, a number of mutations and a deletion were reported to be associated with MODY or late-onset NIDDM. But investigations by many groups revealed that glucokinase gene abnormalities are responsible for less than one per cent of NIDDM which is relatively small compared with
diabetes
with mitochondrial gene alterations.
...
PMID:[Glucokinase gene abnormalities in maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and late-onset NIDDM]. 798 82
Insulin stimulates glucose uptake and non-oxidative glucose metabolism (predominantly glycogen synthesis) in skeletal muscle. Among other things, insulin resistance is characterized by a subnormal insulin-stimulated glucose disposal, and it appears to be associated with an increased risk for development of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM). The aim of the present investigation has been to elucidate the mechanism of action of insulin on non-oxidative glucose metabolism both during conditions of insulin resistance and during physiological modification of glucose metabolism. To do so, the effect of insulin was investigated both with respect to its initial activation of the insulin receptor kinase and the terminal step of the signal pathway, namely stimulation of the glycogen synthase. From needle biopsies of human skeletal muscle (vastus lateralis) cellular membranes were solubilized and the insulin receptors were partially purified by affinity chromatography using wheat germ agglutinin. Subsequently insulin binding and the insulin-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity were characterized. The insulin receptor kinase activity did not change during physiological modification of the glucose metabolism (exercise training, acute exercise, growth hormone exposure or experimental hyperglycemia). No specific abnormalities of the insulin receptor kinase activity were revealed in insulin-dependent
diabetes
(IDDM) or in common NIDDM. In addition, insulin receptor kinase activity did not change during dietary or sulphonylurea treatment of NIDDM. Glucose deposition as glycogen in muscle is regulated by glycogen synthase (GS), which during insulin stimulation undergoes dephosphorylation and becomes more active at physiological concentrations of
glucose-6-phosphate
. Recently, insulin was shown to stimulate a cascade of phosphorylation-dependent kinases which ultimately activate a glycogen-bound subunit of a phosphatase (G-subunit of phosphatase-1) which promotes dephosphorylation GS by the catalytic subunit. The quantity of the GS enzyme (GStot) in muscle may be reduced in the
diabetes
disease. However, it may increase during physical training of insulin-dependent diabetic patients. GStot is not altered during acute exposure to insulin, hyperglycemia or muscle contraction. The insulin stimulation of GS is reduced in insulin resistant NIDDM patients. However, once the hyperglycemia and the insulin resistance is ameliorated during treatment with diet or sulphonylurea drugs the activation of GS improves. Growth hormone-induced transient insulin resistance in non-diabetic subjects, is accompanied by a reduced insulin stimulation of GS. Experimentally induced hyperglycemia in normal subjects has no influence on GS activation by insulin. After an acute exercise bout the GS in muscle becomes activated. The mechanism of this post-exercise GS activation is still unknown.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Insulin receptor function and glycogen synthase activity in human skeletal muscle. Physiology and pathophysiology. 803 33
It is widely accepted that hyperglycemia per se incites and perpetuates the diabetic state by adverse effects on beta cell insulin secretion and peripheral insulin action. Examination of the latter locus has revealed glucose-related abnormalities in facilitated glucose transport. Beyond the plasma membrane, however, there is scant data examining whether hyperglycemia influences important intracellular metabolic events. We recently described a sizable reduction in post-transport, in situ metabolism in permeabilized fat cells from streptozocin-induced diabetic rats. Of importance, the
diabetes
-related deficit was entirely ameliorated by insulin therapy. In this study we examined whether hyperglycemia per se contributes to this altered intracellular metabolic effect. By infusing phlorizin, near euglycemia was achieved for at least four days in streptozocin-induced diabetic rats. The phlorizin-treated diabetic rats had improved (intact cell) rates of insulin-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose uptake. Despite this, permeabilized fat cell studies revealed no improvement or deterioration in diabetic intracellular metabolism as measured by both the oxidation of [6-14C]
glucose-6-phosphate
via the citric acid cycle or its incorporation into triglyceride. We conclude that hypoinsulinemia, and not hyperglycemia, mediates the disturbance in porous diabetic adipocyte cellular metabolism.
...
PMID:Persistence of disturbed adipocyte metabolism in streptozocin-induced diabetic rats despite near-euglycemia with phlorizin. 805 63
We evaluated skeletal muscle counterregulation during hypoglycemia in nine subjects with non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) (HbA1c 9.4 +/- 0.5%, nl < 6.2%) compared with six normal controls, matched for age (51 +/- 3 and 49 +/- 5 yr, respectively) and body mass index (27.3 +/- 1.2 and 27.0 +/- 2.1 kg/m2). After 60 min of euglycemia (plasma insulin approximately 140 microU/ml), plasma glucose was lowered to 62 +/- 2 mg/dl by 120 min. Hypoglycemia induced a 2.2-fold greater increase in plasma epinephrine in NIDDM (P < 0.001), while the plasma glucagon response was blunted (P < 0.01). Hepatic glucose output ([3H-3]glucose) suppressed similarly during euglycemia, but during hypoglycemia was greater in NIDDM (P < 0.005). Conversely, glucose uptake during euglycemia was 150% greater in controls (P < 0.01) and remained persistently higher than in NIDDM during hypoglycemia. In NIDDM, plasma FFA concentrations were approximately fivefold greater (P < 0.001), and plasma lactate levels were approximately 40% higher than in controls during hypoglycemia (P < 0.01); the rates of glycolysis from plasma glucose were similar in the two groups despite a 49% lower rate of glucose uptake in NIDDM (3.4 +/- 0.9 vs. 6.9 +/- 1.3 mg/kg per minute, P < 0.001). Muscle glycogen synthase activity fell by 42% with hypoglycemia (P < 0.01) in NIDDM but not in controls. In addition, glycogen phosphorylase was activated by 56% during hypoglycemia in NIDDM only (P < 0.01). Muscle
glucose-6-phosphate
concentrations rose during hypoglycemia by a twofold greater increment in NIDDM (P < 0.01). Thus, skeletal muscle participates in hypoglycemia counterregulation in NIDDM, directly by decreased removal of plasma glucose and, indirectly, by providing lactate for hepatic gluconeogenesis. Consequently, in addition to inherent insulin resistance in NIDDM, the enhanced plasma epinephrine response during hypoglycemia may partially offset impaired glucagon secretion and counteract the effects of hyperinsulinemia on liver, fat, and skeletal muscle.
...
PMID:Increased epinephrine and skeletal muscle responses to hypoglycemia in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 820 Sep 93
In sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD), a number of metabolic alterations to the brain have been observed soon after the onset of the initial clinical symptoms. In particular, impairments of glucose utilization and related metabolic pathways are prominent and well-established findings in incipient AD, resembling metabolic abnormalities such as have been found in noninsulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
. To mimic these abnormalities, we administered an intracerebroventricular (icv) injection of streptozotocin (STZ) to rats and studied the effects of glucose and glycogen metabolism in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus compared with controls. The enzymatic activities studied dropped significantly by 10-30% in brain cortex (cort.) and hippocampus (hc) 3 and 6 weeks after icv STZ injection: hexokinase (15% 3 weeks cort.; 14% 6 weeks cort.; 12% 3 weeks hc; 28% 6 weeks hc), phosphofructokinase (15%; 15%; 24%; 15%), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (10%; 12%; 30%; 19%), pyruvate kinase (22%; 13%; 22%; 28%), glucose-6-phosphatase (10%; 23%; 14%; 19%) and phosphorylase a (22%; 11%; 30%; 15%). The content of glycogen was significantly higher in STZ-treated rats than in control animals (7% 3 weeks and 15% 6 weeks in cortex). In contrast to the reduced enzymatic activities, we observed no changes in the concentrations of the glycolytic intermediates glucose,
glucose-6-phosphate
, fructose-6-phosphate, fructose-1,6-diphosphate, pyruvate, lactate and glucose-1-phosphate. These data clearly indicate reduced glycolytic enzyme activity after icv administration of STZ and suggest gluconeogenesis consequent on abnormalities in glucose breakdown. This model may thus be assumed to be a useful tool to investigate pathogenetic factors involved in sporadic dementia of Alzheimer type.
...
PMID:Action of the diabetogenic drug streptozotocin on glycolytic and glycogenolytic metabolism in adult rat brain cortex and hippocampus. 823 64
We have shown previously that prolonged exposure to insulin and glucose impairs the insulin-responsive glucose transport system in primary cultured adipocytes. To assess the ability of insulin and glucose to regulate other cellular insulin actions, epididymal rat adipocytes were cultured in media containing 0-15 mM D-glucose and with or without insulin (50 ng/ml). After 24 h, cells were washed and basal and maximally insulin-stimulated rates of 2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake, L-leucine incorporation into protein, glucose oxidation to CO2, glucose incorporation into lipids, and glycogen synthase activity were measured. The results confirmed that glucose potentiates insulin's chronic ability to decrease basal and maximal glucose transport rates by approximately 50% at 5 mM glucose and by approximately 70% at 15 mM glucose compared with control cells. However, neither glucose nor insulin, alone or in combination, affected rates of leucine incorporation into protein. In addition, basal and maximal rates of glucose oxidation and of glucose incorporation into lipids were not regulated by glucose, and maximal responses declined approximately 50% over 24 h only when insulin was not present during preincubation (i.e., chronic insulin exposure was necessary to maintain full maximal responses). Glycogen synthase activity was measured in a cell-free system (0.5 mM UDP-glucose, with 10 or 0.01 mM
glucose-6-phosphate
) after exposing intact cells to glucose and insulin. Both short-term (1 h) and long-term (24 h) exposure to glucose alone led a dose-dependent increase in I-form and D-form glycogen synthase activity. Chronic exposure to insulin also increased total glycogen synthase activity (I- plus D-form) but did not affect absolute rates of maximally stimulated I-form activity. Glucose (but not insulin) increased the cellular content of immunoreactive glycogen synthase by 70% after 1 h. These results show that 1) chronic exposure to glucose and insulin impairs insulin responsiveness of the glucose transport system but does not affect rates of amino acid incorporation into protein; 2) the chronic presence of insulin is necessary for the maintenance of normal maximally stimulated rates of glucose oxidation and of glucose incorporation into lipids in cultured cells; and 3) glucose increases both D-form and I-form glycogen synthase activity, in part by increasing the amount of synthase protein, whereas chronic insulin exposure increases total glycogen synthase activity without altering maximal absolute rates of I-form activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Diabetes
1994 Jan
PMID:Biological actions of insulin are differentially regulated by glucose and insulin in primary cultured adipocytes. Chronic ability to increase glycogen synthase activity. 826 17
Sugar-3-phosphates are related to aspects of
diabetes
which depend on protein glycosylation events. Sorbitol-3-phosphate and fructose-3-phosphate occur in normal and diabetic individuals, and glucose-3-phosphate is a potential intermediate in their biosynthesis. Almost nothing is known about enzyme pathways for their metabolic turnover. We have found that part of the phosphohydrolytic activity on glucose-3-phosphate in rat liver supernatants corresponds to a specific, Mg(2+)-dependent, glucose-3-phosphatase much less or not active on other phosphate esters, including glucose-1-phosphate,
glucose-6-phosphate
, fructose-1-phosphate, fructose-6-phosphate and p-nitrophenyl-phosphate. This finding opens a route to a better understanding of the metabolism and role of sugar-3-phosphates.
...
PMID:Detection of specific glucose-3-phosphatase activity in rat liver. 831 79
The glycogen storage disorders (GSD)-I, -III, -VI and -VIII are associated with hypertriglyceridaemia or mixed hyperlipidaemia which poses the question whether these patients have an increased risk for atherosclerosis. The atherogenicity of triglycerides has remained controversial, while increased plasma cholesterol levels are generally accepted as a significant risk factor for coronary heart disease. However, clinical data show that one has to differentiate between metabolic conditions where triglycerides are atherogenic and those which are not significantly related to early onset of atherosclerosis but may cause other disorders such as pancreatitis. Among the disorders of carbohydrate metabolism patients with
diabetes mellitus
frequently have enhanced plasma triglycerides associated with a higher risk for coronary heart disease, while patients with certain types of glycogen storage disease have high triglyceride levels but do not seem to have an enhanced risk for atherosclerosis. Here we have compared the biochemical abnormalities and the atherogenic risk of three different disorders of glucose metabolism including GSD-I (glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency), favism (glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency), and
diabetes mellitus
which are related to either hyper- or hypolipidaemia. The available data indicate that
glucose-6-phosphate
(Glc-6-P) is a central molecule in cellular glucose metabolism which critically influences pentose phosphate cycle activity and, via NADPH2-generation, regulates glutathione peroxidase activity for radical detoxification and also cholesterol and triglyceride synthesis. Radical detoxification is a major protective factor for cell membrane integrity and together with an appropriate renewal of membrane lipids may protect against the development of atherosclerosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Glucose-6-phosphate: a key compound in glycogenosis I and favism leading to hyper- or hypolipidaemia. 831 30
Actin is a neuronal protein involved in axonal transport and nerve regeneration, both of which are known to be impaired in experimental
diabetes
. To determine if actin is subject to glycation, we rendered rats diabetic by injection of streptozotocin. Two or 6 weeks later brains were removed and a preparation of cytoskeletal proteins was analyzed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Brains from diabetic animals contained an extra polypeptide that migrated close to actin and reacted with monoclonal antibody C4 against actin. It was also found in a preparation of soluble synaptic proteins from diabetic rat brain, indicating that it was at least partly neuronal in origin. This polypeptide could be produced by incubation of cytoskeletal proteins from brains of nondiabetic rats with
glucose-6-phosphate
in vitro. The appearance of this glycated actin in diabetic animals was prevented by administration of insulin for a period of 6 weeks. We could not detect any effect of glycation in vitro on the ability of muscle G-actin to form F-actin filaments and its significance for the function of actin remains to be determined. The finding that glycation of platelet-derived actin from diabetic patients was significantly increased implies that the abnormality may also occur in clinical
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Glycation of brain actin in experimental diabetes. 833 32
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