Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Insulin release was studied in vitro using pieces of pancreas from rabbits of between 24 days gestational age and 6 weeks postnatal age. When allowance was made for the fraction of pancreas which was endocrine, 16-5mM-glucose caused increasing stimulation of insulin release as development advanced and 3-3 mM-glucose caused a similar rate of secretion at all ages. Secretion was not significantly influenced by insulin destruction in the incubation medium. Glucagon (5 mug/ml) did not stimulate insulin secretion from 24-day foetal pancreas but did so postnatally. Theophylline (1 mmol/1) stimulated insulin release at all ages and was equipotent on 24-day foetal pancreas in 3-3 or 16-5 mM-glucose. The stimulation of insulin release from 24-day foetal pancreas by 1 mM-theophylline occurred in the absence of extracellular glucose, pyruvate, fumarate and glutamate and in the presence of mannoheptulose and 2-deoxyglucose (each 3 mg/ml). Adrenaline (1 mumol/1) and diazoxide (250 mug/ml) abolished or attenuated the stimulation of insulin release by glucose, leucine plus arginine or theophylline from 24-day foetal, 1 day and 6 weeks postnatal pancreas. The stimulation of insulin release from 6-week-old pancreas by 1mM-barium was blocked by adrenaline and diazoxide but the effect became less with increasing immaturity. The experimental results illustrate some of the ways in which insulin secretion by the rabbit beta cell changes as a function of development and draw attention to the importance of glucose and cyclic adenosine monophosphate in this process.
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PMID:Development of pathways of insulin secretion in the rabbit. 109 Jun 94

Glucagon and its second messenger, cAMP, are known to rapidly block expression of the L-type pyruvate kinase gene and to stimulate expression of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase gene in the liver in vivo. The respective roles, however, of hyperglucagonemia, insulinopenia, and carbohydrate deprivation in the inhibition of L-type pyruvate kinase gene expression during fasting are poorly understood. In addition, the long-term effects of physiological hyperglucagonemia on expression of the two genes are not known. In this study, we investigate the effects of long-term physiological hyperglucagonemia and insulinopenia induced by suckling (which provides a high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet) on expression of the two genes in the liver of normal newborn rats. We show that transcription of the L-type pyruvate kinase gene is inhibited at birth and remains low during the whole suckling period, whereas transcription of the PEP carboxykinase gene is maximal in the neonate, and then decreases despite very high levels of plasma glucagon during suckling. In contrast to the adult, however, in which L-type pyruvate kinase gene expression in the liver is blocked by cAMP and stimulated by carbohydrates, the regulation of L-type pyruvate kinase gene expression in the newborn undergoes a developmental maturation: the inhibitory effect of glucagon is never complete in developing rat liver and the stimulatory effect of glucose could not be detected during suckling, due to either hyperglucagonemia, immaturity of the gene regulatory system, or both.
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PMID:In vivo regulation of glycolytic and gluconeogenic enzyme gene expression in newborn rat liver. 283 19