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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The role of glucose metabolism in sperm cell motility was examined in purified human spermatozoa from the perspective of elucidating its possible significance in spontaneous and experimental diabetes. After a 4-h incubation in the absence of D-glucose, the mean progressive velocity of human spermatozoa was 40% lower than that of control cells kept in the presence of D-glucose. The decline was rapidly overcome by the addition of D-glucose or D-fructose, the amplitude of this stimulatory effect being independent of the ambient
hexose
concentration. Between 1.4 and 16.7 mM glucose, spermatozoal glucose oxidation also proceeded independently of the extracellular glucose levels, whereas both insulin (100nM) and
glucagon
(100nM) failed to significantly affect the rate of glucose metabolism or cellular motility. It is speculated from these results that an alteration in seminal
hexose
concentrations or pancreatic hormone levels may be an unlikely cause for the reduced sperm motility that is characteristically observed in diabetic patients. Human spermatozoa rapidly incorporated D-glucose and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose but excluded the glucose-analogue alloxan, which may explain their resistance against the toxic effects of this diabetogenic drug, in spite of their intrinsic sensitivity to organic peroxides such as tert-butyl hydroperoxide.
...
PMID:Glucose metabolism in human spermatozoa: lack of insulin effects and dissociation from alloxan handling. 351 12
The antiprotozoal drug pentamidine can be toxic to islet cells in vivo and in vitro. Rat islets were exposed to pentamidine (mesylate and isethionate salts) and six other structurally related diamidines. The beta-cell response to arginine + theophylline was suppressed by pentamidine (10(-2) mmol/l) while the
glucagon
and somatostatin secretions persisted. All diamidines tested suppressed the beta-cell function, with a log-dose-response proportionality, the mesylate compound being more potent than pentamidine isethionate, and the lipophilic analogs more than the hydrosoluble diamidines. Electron microscopy revealed distinct morphological alterations in islets exposed to pentamidine, the intensity of these changes being dose-and time-dependent, and the beta cells more severely damaged than the non-beta cells. 51Cr-labelled islet cells and RIN 5 F cells consistently appeared more sensitive to pentamidine cytotoxicity than rat fibroblasts, myeloma cells and hepatocytes. The pentamidine-induced suppression of beta-cell function was not, in conditions tested, affected by the presence of nicotinamide and the
hexose
concentration in the medium. The kinetics of islet damage were slower than those of streptozotocin and alloxan-induced islet damage. The present study confirms that pentamidine is selectively toxic to islet beta cells, with some features distinct from the alloxan and streptozotocin toxicities to these cells. The mechanism of this process and its precipitating factors in vivo need clarification.
...
PMID:Functional and morphological modifications induced in rat islets by pentamidine and other diamidines in vitro. 389 20
Arterial (A) and renal venous (RV) concentrations and net splanchnic exchange of glucose, fructose, lactate, pyruvate, glycerol, and alanine were studied in the basal state and during a 135-min intravenous infusion of fructose at 2 mmol/min in healthy subjects after a 60-h fast. After 45 min of the fructose infusion, somatostatin (9 microgram/min) was infused for 60 min to induce hypoglucagonemia. Fructose infusion resulted in a net uptake of this
hexose
by the kidney as well as the splanchnic bed. Estimated renal uptake of fructose could account for the disposal of 20% of the administered fructose load while splanchnic uptake accounted for 38%. The fructose infusion resulted in a rise in blood glucose of 0.9 mmol/L, a 35% increase in net glucose output from the splanchnic bed, and a consistent net output of glucose from the kidney (A-RV = -0.17 +/- 0.05 mmol/L as compared with 0 +/- 0.03 in the basal state, P less than 0.02). Net glucose release from the kidney could account for 55% of the net renal uptake of fructose. The fructose infusion also resulted in a marked change in renal lactate balance from a net uptake in the basal state (A - RV = 0.05 +/- 0.01 mmol/L) to a net output during fructose administration (A - RV = -0.10 +/- 0.04). Administration of somatostatin resulted in a fall in arterial
glucagon
levels and a 35% decrease in splanchnic glucose output but failed to alter the arterial-renal venous difference for glucose observed during the fructose infusion. We conclude that in 60-h fasted man: (a) intravenous infusion of fructose results in a net uptake of this
hexose
by the kidney as well as the liver, (b) this uptake is accompanied by stimulation of renal as well as hepatic glucose production and renal production of lactate, and (c) hypoglucagonemia inhibits splanchnic but not renal glucose output during fructose infusion. These data indicate that the kidney is an important site of fructose disposal and that glucose and lactate are end products of renal fructose metabolism.
...
PMID:Role of the kidney in the metabolism of fructose in 60-hour fasted humans. 613 22
Glucose exerts opposite effects upon
glucagon
and insulin release from the endocrine pancreas. Glucose uptake and oxidation were therefore compared in purified A- and B-cells. In purified B-cells, the intracellular concentration of glucose or 3-O-methyl-D-glucose equilibrates within 2 min with the extracellular levels, and, like in intact islets, the rate of glucose oxidation displays a sigmoidal dose-response curve for glucose. In contrast, even after 5 min of incubation, the apparent distribution space of D-glucose or 3-O-methyl-D-glucose in A-cells remains much lower than the intracellular volume. In A-cells, both the rate of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake and glucose oxidation proceed proportional to the
hexose
concentration up to 10 mM and reach saturation at higher concentrations. Addition of insulin failed to affect 3-O-methyl-D-glucose or D-glucose uptake and glucose oxidation by purified A-cells. Glucose releases 30-fold more insulin from islets than from single B-cells, but this marked difference is not associated with differences in glucose handling. The rate of glucose oxidation is virtually identical in single and reaggregated B-cells and is not altered after addition of
glucagon
or somatostatin. It is concluded that the dependency of glucose-induced insulin release upon the functional coordination between islet cells is not mediated through changes in glucose metabolism.
...
PMID:Differences in glucose handling by pancreatic A- and B-cells. 614 Nov 62
1. The specificity of the effect of glucose on the induction of glucokinase activity that occurs when hepatocytes freshly isolated from 13-day-old rats are incubated in Medium 199 together with insulin [Wakelam & Walker (1980) FEBS Lett. 111, 115-119] was examined. A pattern that is different from other known effects of glucose is found, and metabolism of this compound is not necessarily to account for this particular effect. 2. The effects of a raised glucose concentration and of insulin on the induction can be separated. The
hexose
initiates the process in the absence of insulin in a manner that is sensitive to actinomycin D but not to cycloheximide. The subsequent effect of insulin is dependent on the prior effect of glucose or other positive analogue, does not require the presence of glucose and is inhibited by cycloheximide but not by actinomycin D. 3. Induction of glucokinase in vitro in hepatocytes from neonatal animals is inhibited by adrenaline,
glucagon
and dibutyryl cyclic AMP, but not by vasopressin or angiotensin II. The inhibition by cyclic AMP is on the stage requiring insulin and is comparatively specific, because total protein synthesis is not apparently diminished. 4. The implications of these results are discussed with reference to possible mechanisms of induction and to the situation in vivo.
...
PMID:The separate roles of glucose and insulin in the induction of glucokinase in hepatocytes isolated from neonatal rats. 627 13
Diabetes mellitus not infrequently coexists with hypo- and hyperthyroidism. Hyperthyroidism aggravates glucose intolerance. A review of this phenomenon reveals multiple mechanisms, which include increased
hexose
intestinal absorption, decreased responsiveness to insulin, and increased glucose production. Conflicting results are obtained when circulating insulin level is measured in thyrotoxicosis. The role of
glucagon
and alpha-cell sensitivity is unclear. Diabetes mellitus influences the assessment of thyrotoxicosis by falsely decreasing the blood levels of thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) during severely uncontrolled hyperglycemia. Hypothyroidism is found in about 3% of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). Moreover, 13-20% of IDDM patients have elevated blood thyrotropin levels and anti-thyroid antibodies. Hypothyroidism per se seems to ameliorate hyperglycemia. A subtype of IDDM shares similar immunogenetic features with familial autoimmune thyroiditis. Studies of IDDM probands who show a high prevalence of circulating thyroid antibodies reveal the presence of such antibodies in their first-degree relatives. Circulating islet-cell antibodies, detected in a majority of IDDM patients at the onset of their disease, tend to persist only in those patients with coexistent polyendocrine autoimmune disease, including thyroiditis. Similar human leukocyte antigen (HLA) locus types are associated with thyroiditis and IDDM, namely HLA-Dr3 and -Dr4.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus and thyroid disease. 640 Jul 13
Vasopressin, phenylephrine, and A23187 cause an accumulation of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate in hepatocytes from fed rats, but not in Ca2+-depleted hepatocytes from fed rats or in phosphorylase kinase-deficient hepatocytes from (gsd/gsd) rats. The effect of vasopressin and phenylephrine is not found in hepatocytes from overnight-starved rats. Thus, the accumulation of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate by these agents may depend on the stimulation of glycogenolysis and on the resulting accumulation of
hexose
6-phosphate. In support of this hypothesis, conditions are described for the enzymatic synthesis of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate from fructose 6-phosphate and Mg-ATP in liver extracts. Half-maximal activity (0.8 nmol/min.g) is obtained with about 60 microM fructose 6-phosphate, and the activity can be separated fom phosphofructokinase by ammonium sulfate fractionation. Treatment of rats or isolated hepatocytes with
glucagon
results in a 4-5-fold decrease in the maximal activity of this enzyme.
...
PMID:Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate. Hormonal regulation and mechanism of its formation in liver. 679 May 47
We examined the uptake of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose, a nonmetabolizable
hexose
, by isolated rat hepatocytes. The uptake of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose was linear for 1 min at 22 degrees, and Lineweaver-Burk analysis demonstrated an apparent Km of approximately 6 mM. Cytochalasin B (40 microM) and phloridzin (2 mM) inhibited 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake by 88% and 63%, respectively. D-Glucose (20 mM) inhibited the initial rate of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake by 55% (p less than 0.001), whereas L-glucose was without any significant effect. The uptake of 3-O-methyl-D-glucose remained unchanged in the presence of Na+ (0-150 mM) in the incubation medium. After 30 min dexamethasone inhibited glucose uptake (the maximal effect being achieved in a time- and concentration-dependent manner) at 2 microM and 0.5 microM concentrations by 50% and 25%, respectively. Dexamethasone produced a decrease in the Vmax but did not change the Km. Insulin,
glucagon
, gastric inhibitory polypeptides, and pancreozymin had no effect on 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake in isolated hepatocytes. These findings are consistent with the conclusion that 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake in isolated rat hepatocytes occurs via a stereospecific, carrier-mediated, facilitated diffusion process. Dexamethasone decreases this process of facilitated diffusion in the isolated hepatocyte.
...
PMID:3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake in isolated rat hepatocytes. Effects of dexamethasone. 686 98
A case of liver glycogen storage disease with amylo 1,6-glucosidase deficiency is reported. Enlarged liver was found at birth, and it is now accompanied by splenomegaly, low fasting blood glucose with ketonuria, elevation of transaminase values and glycogen accumulation with connective periportal tissue in liver histological study. In this glucogenosis results of functional tests on carbohidrate metabolism and glycogen enzymatic assay showed a direct relationship between functional and biochemical behaviour of liver cells. Amylo 1,6-glucosidase deficiency is accompanied by absence of glucogenolysis when
glucagon
is administrated after a long fast, and an increase of blood glucose when
glucagon
is administrated after food ingestion. Glycolisis tests show blood lactate elevation when some
hexose
or alanine are administrated; glyconeogenesis tests show blood glucose elevation when
hexose
, alanine or glycerol are administrated.
...
PMID:[Glycogen storage disease by amylo 1,6-glucosidase deficiency (author's transl)]. 693 53
The effects of starvation for 1, 2 or 3 d and the administration of
glucagon
to fed rats on the kinetics of active glucose and galactose absorption across the distal ileum have been determined in vivo. Fasting caused reductions in 'apparent Kt' for glucose and galactose transport together with a decrease in Jmax for glucose but not galactose absorption. Treatment with
glucagon
produced decreases in Kt for the absorption of both hexoses and an increase in Jmax for glucose absorption. The Jmax for galactose uptake, however, was unaltered by
glucagon
administration. Villus size was unaltered by starvation of up to 3 d duration, but significantly decreased by
glucagon
treatment. The results suggest that chronically elevated plasma
glucagon
levels may be a factor in the change in kinetics of
hexose
absorption in the distal ileum evoked by fasting.
...
PMID:Effects of fasting and glucagon on the kinetics of active hexose absorption across the rat distal ileum in vivo. 715 15
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