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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Amino acid transport was studied in primary cultures of parenchymal cells isolated from adult rat liver by a collagenase perfusion technique and maintained as a monolayer in a serum-free culture medium. These cells carried out gluconeogenesis from three carbon precursors (alanine, pyruvate, and lactate) in response to glucagon addition. Amino acid transport was assayed by measuring the uptake of the nonmetabolizable amino acid, alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB). Addition of insulin or glucagon to culture rat liver parenchymal cells resulted in an increased influx of AIB transport. The glucocorticoid, dexamethasone, when added alone to cultures did not affect AIB transport. However, prior or simultaneous addition of dexamethasone to glucagon-treated cells caused a strong potentiation of the glucagon induction of AIB transport. Kinetic analysis of the effects of insulin and glucagon demonstrated that insulin increased the Vmax for transport without changing the Km while glucagon primarily decreased the Km for AIB transport. The effect of dexamethasone was to increase the Vmax of the low Km system.
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PMID:Hormonal regulation of amino acid transport and gluconeogenesis in primary cultures of adult rat liver parenchymal cells. 18 35

Double isotope procedures (3H and 14C) were used in vivo to investigate a) slow long-term gluconeogenic actions of adrenal glucocorticoids, and b) rapid stimulation of gluconeogenesis by glucagon. [U-14C,6-3H]Glucose was administered to normal and adrenalectomized rats. No effect was observed on the [6-3H]glucose half-life suggesting the dicarboxylic acid shuttle is unaffected by adrenalectomy; the Cori cycle is also not influenced. Loads of [14C]aspartate, [14C]glutamate, or [14C]alanine were given to normal and adrenalectomized rats. Simultaneously, in vivo transaminase activity was studied by measuring the appearance of 3H2O in body water after administration of [2-3H]aspartate, [2-3H]glutamate, or [2-3H]alanine, Adrenalectomy has no influence on the incorporation of glutamate or aspartate into glucose or on their in vivo transaminases. Diminution of incorporation of [14C]alanine into glucose and alanine transaminase activities occurs only when rats are given unphysiological loads. These studies support the contention that glucocorticoid rate-limiting actions occur in extrahepatic tissues to produce an increased flow of glucose precursors to the liver. [U-14C,3-3H]Glucose was used to investigate the effect of glucagon on the hepatic fructose-6-phosphate (F-6-P) cycle. Glucagon administration resulted in a rapid drop in the 3H/14C ratio of circulating glucose, suggesting an increase in F-6-P recycling caused by activation of FDPase with little or no decrease in phosphofructokinase. Such a change would direct substrate flux toward gluconeogenesis.
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PMID:Use of 3H and 14C doubly labeled glucose and amino acids in the study of hormonal regulation of gluconeogenesis in rats. 19 46

Obese Zucker rats were either pair-fed to their lean litter-mates or fed ad lib, to determine the effect of hyperphagia on serum hormone levels and tissue metabolism as indicated by enzyme activities and in vitro metabolite flux. Hyperphagia was shown to be non-essential for the elevation in serum insulin and suppression in serum growth hormone and prolactin in the genetically obese rat. It was also shown that the increased liver cell lipogenic rate was not dependent on hyperphagia in the obese rat and that adipose cell lipogenesis was not significantly altered in the pair-fed obese rat. The utilization of alanine for glucose synthesis in vitro was similar for both lean and obese rats, but its utilization for fatty acid synthesis was higher in the obese rat. Data is presented which suggest that the inhibitory effect of glucagon on liver lipogenesis is blunted in the obese rat.
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PMID:Serum hormone levels and tissue metabolism in pair-fed lean and obese Zucker rats. 19 81

Radioimmunoassay of cyclic AMP (cAMP) in the islets of Langerhans from 48-64 h old Rats was performed after succinylation of the samples. cAMP was detected at 0.03 nM. The cAMP content of islets increases when L-arginine, L-lysine and L alanine are added together in the incubation medium at a concentration of 5-10 mM each. When phosphodiesterase is inhibited by theophylline the three amino acids considerably increase the cAMP content of islets. Thus an increase in cAMP content of the islets was observed with a concentration of amino acids which is efficient in stimulating the insulin and glucagon secretion.
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PMID:[Measurement of cyclic AMP in the islets of Langerhans of newborn rats. Effect of amino acids]. 19 68

The splanchnic-hepatic metabolism of glucose, lactate, pyruvate, alanine, glycerol, non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), ketone bodies and oxygen were investigated in five normal men and six juvenile diabetic subjects at rest and during exercise after an overnight fast. A linear relationship was found between load (arterial concentration multiplied by hepatic blood flow) and splanchnic-hepatic uptake of lactate, pyruvate, glycerol and NEFA. The uptake of alanine was highly sensitive to load, but was also regulated by the concentration of hepatic venous glucagon. The uptake of pyruvate was high in exercising diabetic subjects, who had a high lactate/pyruvate concentration ratio in hepatic venous blood. The rate of uptake of the total measured gluconeogenic precursors was significantly higher in the diabetic group at a given load. The rate of ketogenesis was linearly related to the NEFA load in both groups; however, the rate of ketogenesis was twofold at a given load in the diabetic group. The highest rates of ketogenesis were found coincident with the highest concentrations of glucagon in hepatic venous blood. The observed antiketogenic effect of exercise was due to a decreased load of NEFA, mainly caused by a decrease in the hepatic blood flow.
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PMID:Regulation of gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis during rest and exercise in diabetic subjects and normal men. 20 21

A case of glucagonoma syndrome with necrolytic migratory erythema, glossitis, anemia, hyperglucagonemia and a malignant, pancreatic A-cell tumour in a 68-year-old male is described. Gel filtration of the highly elevated circulating glucagon immunoreactivity (2200 pg/ml) demonstrated 60% pancreatic glucagon and 30% "proglucagon". Metabolic studies before operation demonstrated suppression of the total plasma glucagon concentration on oral glucose tolerance test, unchanged total plasma glucagon concentration during intravenous glucose tolerance test and insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Administration of arginine was followed by a rise in both the pancreatic glucagon and the "proglucagon", whereas alanine increased only the pancreatic glucagon. The plasma somatostatin level was immeasurable preoperatively. Somatostatin infusion completely suppressed the release of the pancreatic glucagon but did not significantly affect the "proglucagon". After removal of the tumour the skin lesions disappeared and the total plasma glucagon values fell to normal levels (120 pg/ml). Also, other abnormal laboratory findings returned to normal, including the preoperatively observed renal glucosuria.
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PMID:Metabolic studies and glucagon gel filtration pattern before and after surgery in a case of glucagonoma syndrome. 21 26

DL-alpha-Methyltryptophan (alphaMeTrp), a synthetic analogue of tryptophan, has been found to be a potent inducer of hepatic tyrosine aminotransferase activity in the adrenalectomized rat. alphaMeTrp is inactive in vitro. Unlike the action of other known inducers (tryptophan, hydrocortisone, adenosine cyclic 3:5-monophosphate, and glucagon), maximal stimulation of enzyme activity occurs only 16 to 30 hours after alphaMeTrp administration and the activity is still elevated at 96 hours. Only the L isomer of alphaMeTrp is active, and addition of a hydroxyl group to position 5 of the indole ring renders an inactive compound. The induction can be prevented by actinomycin D or cycloheximide but not galactosamine. Administration of alphaMeTrp together with hydrocortisone produced an additive stimulation of enzyme activity. alphaMeTrp given along with glucagon or adenosine cyclic 3:5-monophosphate caused a further but not additive increase in enzyme activity. Tryptophan given along with alphaMeTrp promoted no extra stimulation whatsoever. These data indicate that alphaMeTrp and tryptophan may act via a common pathway which in part requires RNA synthesis. Other enzymes, namely alanine and aspartate aminotransferase, ornithine aminotransferase, ornithine carbamoyltransferase, serine dehydratase, and histidine ammonialyase, were not affected by treatment of rats with alphaMeTrp.
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PMID:Stimulation of tyrosine aminotransferase activity by dl-alpha-methyltryptophan. 23 76

Two groups of five obese female subjects, having undergone a ten day therapeutic fast, were fed with either glucose 50 g/day or with L-alanine 50 g/day for three days. Plasma glucagon concentrations and urinary electrolyte excretion were compared in the two groups. Although 4.00pm plasma glucagon concentrations during refeeding were significantly greater in the alanine refeed group (P less than 0.05) the reduction in urinary sodium excretion in each of the two groups was identical. These observations do not support the hypothesis that glucose induced suppression of plasma glucagon concentrations is a mechanism whereby carbohydrate refeeding produces post-fast urinary sodium retention.
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PMID:The influence of glucagon on sodium retention after fasting. 27 1

The acute hormonal and amino acid responses to differing food substrates were examined in type 1 glycogen storage disease. Ingestion of a glucose load or a glucose-plus-beef meal caused an acute fall in the initially elevated plasma glucagon, alanine, proline, and lactate. Ingestion of beef alone caused a sharp rise in these parameters. Long term nocturnal intragastric therapy of a high carbohydrate and moderate amino acid content resulted in a similar fall in these parameters as well as a fall in the elevated plasma glutamate, uric acid, triglycerides, and RBC-reduced glutathione. A remarkable clinical improvement and growth spurt accompanied the improvement in these biochemical values. The possible relation between the disturbed plasma hormonal and amino acid findings and growth failure and hyperuricemia is discussed.
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PMID:Nocturnal intragastric therapy in type I glycogen storage disease: effect on hormonal and amino acid metabolism. 28 65

Amino acid deprivation and glucagon are both potent inducers of autography and proteolysis in liver. Because glucagon enhanced the metabolic utilization of some amino acids, the catabolic response to both of these stimuli could be achieved by a lowering of intracellular amino acid pools. Alternatively, glucagon could act independently of amino acids. To clarify the mode of hormonal action and also the relationship between the two cellular responses, livers from fed rats were perfused, with and without glucagon, with plasma amino acids over a concentration range of 0 to 10 times normal. Individual amino acids constancy at each level was ensured by perfusion in the single-pass mode. Amino acids alone strongly regulated autophagy and proteolysis in a coordinated fashion; maximal suppression was achieved at twice normal concentration; both effects increased rapidly to maximum at less than normal concentration. Corresponding effects of glucagon, however, could be elicited only at intermediate amino acid levels. None was noted at 4 and 10 times normal; at 0, hormonal stimulation was minimal. The amino acid inhibition was selective because it did not block cyclic AMP production or glycogenolysis. Intracellular pool measurements and systematic alteration of perfusate amino acid composition indicated that the autophagic and proteolytic effects of glucagon are mediated by a hormonally induced depletion of glycine, alanine, glutamate, and glutamine; of these, glutamine alone is the most effective. We conclude that the stimulation of intracellular protein degradation in liver is a manifestation of deprivation-induced autophagy which results from a decrease in certain intracellular glucogenic amino acids, notably glutamine.
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PMID:Glucagon-induced autophagy and proteolysis in rat liver: mediation by selective deprivation of intracellular amino acids. 29 Sep 94


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