Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

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.
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PMID:Modulation of A and B cell functions by tolbutamide and arginine in the pancreas of thiamine-deficient rats. 269 88

We addressed the role of thiamin, a cofactor for several enzymes involved in glucose metabolism, in the glucose metabolic response to endotoxin. Characterized by hyperglycemia, increased hepatic glucose production exceeding elevated rates of whole-body glucose utilization, this response is mediated by hormones and cytokines and is dependent on the immune and nutritional status of the host. We hypothesized that a thiamin-deficient state would impair the metabolic response to endotoxin. Rats were fed a thiamin-deficient or control diet for 6 wk before in vivo assessment of glucose kinetics. In control rats, Escherichia coli endotoxin increased the rate of glucose appearance (+76%), disappearance (+70%), and metabolic clearance (+50%). Thiamin deficiency resulted in increased plasma glucose (18%) and lactate (3- to 4-fold) as well as in a 30% decrease in insulin and an increase in glucagon (2.6-fold) and corticosterone (3.6-fold). Thiamin deficiency inhibited the endotoxin-induced hyperglycemia and the rise in hepatic glucose production, glucose utilization, and metabolic clearance rate.
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PMID:Thiamin deficiency impairs endotoxin-induced increases in hepatic glucose output. 817 89