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

1. A factor, which amplifies the inductions of several liver enzymes by glucocorticoid, was partially purified from Proteus mirabilis from rat intestine. The factor (amplifier) was completely inactivated by alpha-glucosidase, but not by other glycoside hydrolases, proteases, nucleases or phosphatases tested; it was also hydrolysed by HCl with liberation of reducing sugars. Thus the oligosaccharide in this factor seems to be essential for the amplification. 2. In adrenalectomized rats the amplifier increased the inductions of several liver enzymes, such as tyrosine aminotransferase and leucine aminotransferase, by glucocorticoid. But it did not amplify the induction of tyrosine aminotransferase by glucagon or insulin or the activities of enzymes that are not induced by glucocorticoid. The amplifier by itself did not have any glucocorticoid-like action in adrenalectomized rat. These results show that the amplifier specifically increases the inductions of liver enzymes by glucocorticoid. 3. Since similar amplification was also observed in isolated perfused liver and cultured hepatoma cells in vitro, the amplifier seems to act directly on the target organ or cells.
...
PMID:A new factor from enteric bacteria of rats amplifying induction of liver enzyme by glucocorticoid. 1. Purification, properties and biological action. 2 Oct 83

Streptozotocin treatment (125 mg/kg) in the Chinese hamster induced hyperglycaemia, hypoinsulinaemia, hyperglucagonaemia and changes in body, liver, pancreas, stomach, kidney and adipose tissue weights. The pancreatic reserves of insulin and glucagon in the diabetic animals were low, but stomach glucagon high. These animals showed high levels of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and low levels of glucokinase, hexokinase, isocitrate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme, but normal levels of pyruvate kinase in the liver. Increases in lactate dehydrogenase subunit B and isozymes 2, 3 and 4 were also observed in the liver, but not in the epididymal fat pad, of the diabetic animals. N-Acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase was elevated in plasma, liver and heart, but not in the kidney of the treated animals. Renal alpha-galactosidase and beta-glucosidase were depressed, whereas beta-galactosidase and alpha-glucosidase remained essentially normal. These features indicated that there were considerable differences between the biochemical disorders associated with streptozotocin-diabetes in the Chinese hamster and the published observations in the rat.
...
PMID:Streptozotocin-induced diabetes in the Chinese hamster. Biochemical and endocrine disorders. 59 Jun 51

Each of 12 types of glycogen storage disease (GSD O-XI) is delineated by clinical, biochemical and histologic features that allow its identification in future patients. GSD II occurs in 2 forms that are not both encountered in the same family. GSD IIa is the infantile fatal form with cardiomegaly, increased cardiac glycogen concentration and cardiac failure; GSD IIb is the adult form with clinically normal heart and normal cardiac glycogen concentration. Nonetheless, the heart muscle of both forms is equally deficient in acid alpha-glucosidase activity, and this raises questions as to the latter's role in the pathophysiology of GSD II. The appearance of hepatocytes in GSD IIa becomes normal after the administration of alpha-glucosidase. Using electron microscopy of uncultured amniotic fluid cells, the prenatal diagnosis of GSD IIa is feasible within one day after the amniocentesis. GSD VI and IX are instances of benign hepatomegaly except when GSD IX and III occur in the same child; one such patient died suddenly at home. There are 2 modes of inheritance in GSD IX: one (GSD IXa) is autosomal recessive, the other one (GSD IXb) is X-linked recessive. In either form the Km of the remaining liver phosphorylase kinase is normal. Both forms of GSD IX have the normal blood sugar response to glucagon, whereas GSD VI does not. Equally, the glucagon tolerance curve is flat in GSD XI although in vitro activity of glycolytic enzymes is normal. The in vivo administration of glucagon in GSD XI is followed by the normal increase of both urinary 3'5'-AMP and hepatic phosphorylase activity. GSD V may have increased activity of muscle phosphorylase kinase. Deficiencies of debrancher, liver phosphorylase and liver phosphorylase kinase can occur singly or in combination. Before any novel treatment of GSD is initiated, one should obtain tissue for the biochemical determination of the exact type of GSD. This is so because the clinical signs may not indicate the type with the necessary precision, and because some types are compatible with normal life and thus may not require therapy, especially if the latter is unproved and potentially dangerous.
...
PMID:Glycogen storage diseases. 78 7

Administration in vivo of the alpha-glucosidase inhibitors 1-deoxynojirimycin and its derivatives BAY m 1099 (miglitol) and BAY o 1248 resulted in a dose- and time-dependent decrease in the rate of hepatic glycogenolysis induced by glucagon. This represents a direct effect on the liver, since it could be reproduced on isolated hepatocytes. The amount of glucose produced by hepatocytes over a period of 10-20 min after addition of glucagon was decreased by about 70, 60 and 45% in the presence of maximally effective concentrations of BAY o 1248, deoxynojirimycin, and BAY m 1099, respectively. Half-maximal effects were observed at inhibitor concentrations between 20 and 100 microM. The concentrations of phosphorylase a and glycogen synthase a were not affected by inclusion of the alpha-glucosidase inhibitors in the hepatocyte suspensions. Thus, the antiglycogenolytic action of these compounds is not mediated by an altered activation state of the rate-limiting enzymes of glycogenolysis and of glycogen synthesis.
...
PMID:1-Deoxynojirimycin and related compounds inhibit glycogenolysis in the liver without affecting the concentration of phosphorylase a. 296 35

Postprandial hyperglycemia in diabetic patients can be modified by delaying the digestion and/or absorption of dietary carbohydrates. We have studied an orally active alpha-glucosidase inhibitor, Bay 1099, in normal volunteers to determine whether these inhibitors can decrease postprandial rises in serum glucose without causing gastrointestinal symptoms or significant fecal caloric wastage. Six subjects were given 25, 50, or 100 mg of Bay 1099 or placebo before meals for 1 week, each with a 1-week washout period. Fasting and postprandial concentrations of glucose, insulin, glucagon, enteroglucagon, and gastrointestinal inhibitory peptide (GIP) were measured after the first and last dose of Bay 1099, and the fecal excretions of protein, fat, fiber, and total calories were measured on the last three days of each diet. The passage of unabsorbed carbohydrate into the colon was determined by breath hydrogen analysis three times during each study week. Increasing doses of Bay 1099 were found to decrease the postprandial rise in serum glucose concentration, delay the time to peak insulin concentration, and decrease the output of GIP after the meal. No adaptation was apparent after 1 week of therapy. A dose of inhibitor (50 mg tid), which greatly improves postprandial glucose and hormone output in diabetes, was associated with minimal symptoms and no excess fecal caloric losses. Thus, glucosidase inhibitors such as Bay 1099 may be useful in the management of patients with carbohydrate intolerance.
...
PMID:Intestinal and metabolic responses to an alpha-glucosidase inhibitor in normal volunteers. 305 29

To examine the function of islet lysosomal enzymes in islet hormone secretory mechanisms, we investigated the effects of the lysosomotropic drug chloroquine on islet lysosomal enzyme activities and basal as well as stimulated insulin and glucagon secretion. Chloroquine, added to islet homogenates, did not affect the activities of the lysosomal enzymes acid amyloglucosidase, acid alpha-glucosidase, or N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase. The activity of acid phosphatase, however, was inhibited at a high concentration of chloroquine (10(-3) M). When injected together with glucose, chloroquine (2 or 10 mumol/kg) inhibited the peak plasma insulin response. Similarly, at 24 hrs after chloroquine injection (100 mumol/kg), the plasma insulin response to glucose was reduced. In contrast, islets isolated from mice pretreated 24 hrs before with chloroquine, displayed glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in vitro that was not different from controls. Such islets showed, furthermore, enhanced activities of the enzymes acid phosphatase and neutral alpha-glucosidase but not of acid amyloglucosidase, acid alpha-glucosidase or N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase. Arginine-stimulated insulin response in vivo displayed a complex pattern; it was increased when arginine was injected together with chloroquine but decreased at 24 hrs after chloroquine administration. Arginine-stimulated glucagon secretion was not affected by chloroquine. We conclude that chloroquine pretreatment 24 hrs prior to glucose injection decreases glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in vivo by mechanisms that are not correlated to an inhibitory action on islet activities of glycogenolytic lysosomal enzymes.
...
PMID:Islet hormone secretion and islet lysosomal enzyme activities in the mouse: effects of chloroquine. 307 44

Mechanisms of glycogenolysis have been investigated in a comparative study with Wistar rats and gsd rats, which maintain a high glycogen concentration in the liver as a result of a genetic deficiency of phosphorylase kinase. In Wistar hepatocytes the rate of glycogenolysis, as modulated by glucagon and by glucose, was proportional to the concentration of phosphorylase a. In suspensions of gsd hepatocytes the rate of glycogenolysis was far too high as compared with the low level of phosphorylase a; in addition, only a minor fraction of the glycogen lost was recovered as glucose and lactate, owing to the accumulation of oligosaccharides. When the gsd hepatocytes were incubated in the presence of an inhibitor of alpha-amylase (BAY e 4609) glycogenolysis and the formation of oligosaccharides virtually ceased; the production of glucose plus lactate, already modest in the absence of BAY e 4609, was further decreased by 40%, owing to the suppression of a pathway for glucose production by the successive actions of alpha-amylase and alpha-glucosidase. Evidence was obtained that gsd hepatocytes are more fragile, and that amylolysis of glycogen occurred in damaged cells and/or in the extracellular medium. This may even occur in vivo, since quick-frozen liver samples from anesthetized gsd rats contained severalfold higher concentrations of oligosaccharides than did similar samples from Wistar rats. However, administration of a hepatotoxic agent (CCl4) caused hepatic glycogen depletion in Wistar rats, but not in gsd rats. The administration of phloridzin and of vinblastine, which have been proposed to induce glycogenolysis in the lysosomal system, did not decrease the hepatic glycogen level in gsd rats. Taken together, the data indicate that only the phosphorolytic degradation of glycogen is metabolically important, and that alpha-amylolysis is an indication of an increased fragility of gsd hepatocytes, which becomes prominent when these cells are incubated in vitro.
...
PMID:An assessment of the importance of intralysosomal and of alpha-amylolytic glycogenolysis in the liver of normal rats and of rats with a glycogen-storage disease. 387 83

Although the purified porcine enteroglucagons glicentin and oxyntomodulin inhibit pentagastrin-stimulated gastrin acid secretion when given parenterally to rats, it is not known whether the postprandial rise in endogenous enteroglucagons is capable of exerting a similar effect. We have used the alpha-glucosidase inhibitor acarbose in combination with a sucrose- and starch-rich semisynthetic diet over 8 days to bring about a mean increase of 89 pmol/l in the fasting plasma enteroglucagon concentration in rats, without significantly affecting plasma gastrin concentrations. There was no significant suppression of pentagastrin-stimulated gastric acid secretion in the acarbose-treated rats, suggesting that endogenous enteroglucagons do not act as physiological inhibitors of gastric acid secretion.
...
PMID:Pentagastrin-stimulated gastric acid output and plasma enteroglucagon in acarbose-treated rats. 389 16

Acarbose, an alpha-glucosidase inhibitor, lowers the glycemic excursion following the ingestion of carbohydrates, in particular, sucrose. This was confirmed with increasing doses of acarbose (0, 50, and 100 mg) and the causes investigated. The absorption of the glucose moiety of sucrose was determined from plasma tracer concentrations when overnight-fasted normal subjects received a 100-g oral sucrose load labeled with sucrose [(1-14C]glucose and a simultaneous intravenous infusion of [3-3H]glucose. As the dose of acarbose given with the sucrose load was increased from 0 to 100 mg, the percentage of the load appearing in the peripheral circulation decreased from 90% to 62%. Malabsorption was confirmed by the appearance of breath hydrogen. Simultaneously, absorption time increased from 243 to 411 min. Maximal glycemic excursions were therefore lowered from 64 to 31 mg/dl. The plasma concentrations of gastric inhibitory polypeptide and insulin decreased with the acarbose dose so that the fractional disappearance rate of glucose also decreased. However, the concentrations of glucagon-like immunoreactivity (GLI) rose, confirming the ileal appearance of malabsorbed sucrose.
...
PMID:The effects of an alpha-glucoside hydrolase inhibitor on glycemia and the absorption of sucrose in man determined using a tracer method. 636 57

The present paper addresses the question how alpha-glucosidase inhibitors affect glucose homeostasis. To facilitate this already established data on the effects of induced malabsorption on gut hormones such as gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) in connection with preliminary findings which deal with the new incretin hormone glucagon-like peptide 1 (7-36) amide (GLP-1) are discussed. To emphasize the possibly important impact of a regulated GLP-1 release in response to glucosidase inhibitor treatment we evaluate the recently introduced concept of 'glucose competence' of pancreatic beta-cells. The slowing of nutrient (i.e. glucose) absorption by therapeutic means (for example, acarbose) could supplement a new approach in the treatment of type 2 diabetics which would utilize the well-preserved insulinotropic activity of GLP-1 in these patients, its glucagon-lowering effect, and its possible inhibition of gastric emptying rates, the latter helping to reduce the requirement for rapid insulin secretory responses as is intended while using alpha-glucosidase inhibitor treatment.
...
PMID:Intestinal effects of alpha-glucosidase inhibitors: absorption of nutrients and enterohormonal changes. 800 23


1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>