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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The insulin-producing cell line RINm5F, has been used in short-term experiments to evaluate insulin secretion. We sought to maintain the responsiveness of these cells to stimuli for up to 2 days. We examined the course of new insulin synthesis over this period by measuring at intervals immunoreactive insulin (IRI) in two parts: IRI in the medium (M) and IRI extracted from the cells (C). Control cells were incubated in RPMI 1640/2.8 mM glucose/10% fetal bovine serum/200 micrograms/ml bacitracin (to prevent insulin degradation). The addition of dibutyryl cAMP 10 mM to the experimental dishes significantly increased total (M + C) IRI at 48 hr to 37% above the insulin content of the control dishes (p less than 0.01).
Theophylline
10 mM increased total (M + C) IRI by 24% over control (p less than 0.05) after 24 hrs. Glucose, glyceraldehyde, leucine, arginine,
glucagon
and tolbutamide, other stimulants of insulin production, had no effect. Under the experimental conditions reported here, including the use of bacitracin, IRI synthesis can be studied for up to 48 hr.
...
PMID:Regulation of insulin synthesis in an insulin-producing cell line (RINm5F): long-term experiments. 264 70
Controversial results concerning the modulation of insulin release with pancreastatin prompted us to investigate the effect of this peptide upon the endocrine function of the pancreas using an in situ perfusion method in dogs. Administration of porcine pancreastatin into the pancreaticoduodenal artery in a dosage of 0.34 micrograms/kg of body weight during arginine infusion increased slightly plasma insulin and lowered minimally plasma
glucagon
in the pancreaticoduodenal vein. Pancreastatin infusion in a dosage of 500 ng/min did not modify glucose-induced insulin release and
glucagon
suppression by glucose.
Theophylline
infusion induced a slight increase in plasma insulin and
glucagon
in the pancreaticoduodenal vein. Pancreastatin infusion accelerated slightly these changes in plasma insulin and
glucagon
following theophylline infusion. From the present experiment it is concluded that porcine pancreastatin did not inhibit glucose-induced insulin release from the canine pancreas, inconsistent with the first report on insulin release from the rat pancreas. Alternatively, porcine pancreastatin rather stimulated insulin release during arginine infusion or following theophylline administration.
...
PMID:Effect of porcine pancreastatin on endocrine function of canine pancreas. 269 4
Regulation of insulin release and transmembrane Ca2+ fluxes was examined using pieces of 3 benign medullary-type insulinomas removed from the pancreas of female patients at surgery. Immunocytochemical staining confirmed the presence of insulin-containing cells with no demonstrable
glucagon
, somatostatin or pancreatic polypeptide. After 3 days of culture in RPMI-1640, tumour pieces released 11-158 mg insulin kg-1 dry wt during acute 60 min incubations with the concomitant uptake of 2-47 mmol 45Ca kg-1 into the intracellular lanthanum-nondisplaceable pool. At 2.56 mM Ca2+, glucose alone or in combination with glyceraldehyde, mannoheptulose or diazoxide did not modify insulin release or 45Ca uptake.
Theophylline
significantly increased insulin release from 2 tumours with a small stimulatory effect on the third. A depolarising concentration of K+ enhanced insulin release from one tumour but this was not associated with an increase of 45Ca uptake. Calcium antagonists, (verapamil, D-600 and trifluoroperazine) and calcium ionophores (A23187 and Br-X537A) failed to modify insulin release or 45Ca uptake by each of the two tumours tested. Evaluation of 45Ca efflux from one tumour confirmed the unresponsiveness to glucose, K+, verapamil and A23187. Prolonged culture of 2 tumours for up to 16 days was associated with the gradual decline of insulin release to a steady output of 2-15 ng 24 h-1. Addition of verapamil to the cultures inhibited insulin output from one tumour, but mannoheptulose or diazoxide were without effect. The results indicate that inappropriate insulin release from these 3 benign medullary-type insulinomas is associated with disturbances in the regulation of transmembrane Ca2+ fluxes.
...
PMID:Defective regulation of insulin release and transmembrane Ca2+ fluxes by human islet cell tumours. 282 49
The In-R1-G9 cell line is one of the clones derived from the In-111-R1 hamster insulinoma cell line and produces
glucagon
. The secretory responses of In-R1-G9 cells were further examined to characterize the nature of the cells. Vincristine had no effect on
glucagon
secretion and colchicine enhanced
glucagon
secretion slightly after a short incubation. Two calmodulin inhibitors, trifluoperazine and chlorpromazine, did not affect
glucagon
secretion. Monensin at 10(-8) M suppressed
glucagon
secretion by 50%. Secretion of
glucagon
was calcium-dependent. The addition of A23187 to the incubation medium resulted in a 180% increase over control for 1 h and calcium deprivation from the medium suppressed
glucagon
secretion markedly.
Theophylline,
a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, caused a 230% increase in
glucagon
secretion. An experiment using cycloheximide suggested that newly synthesized
glucagon
appears in the medium at 30 min. This cell line should be useful for various experiments in many fields of research.
...
PMID:Characterization of secretory responses of a glucagon-producing In-R1-G9 cell line. 283 60
Rat hepatocytes were incubated in monolayer culture for 8 h.
Glucagon
(10nM) increased the total phosphatidate phosphohydrolase activity by 1.7-fold. This effect was abolished by adding cycloheximide, actinomycin D or 500 pM-insulin to the incubations. The
glucagon
-induced increase was synergistic with that produced by an optimum concentration of 100 nM-dexamethasone.
Theophylline
(1mM) potentiated the effect of
glucagon
, but it did not affect the dexamethasone-induced increase in the phosphohydrolase activity. The relative proportion of the phosphohydrolase activity associated with membranes was decreased by
glucagon
when 0.15 mM-oleate was added 15 min before the end of the incubations to translocate the phosphohydrolase from the cytosol. This
glucagon
effect was not seen at 0.5 mM-oleate. Since
glucagon
also increased the total phosphohydrolase activity, the membrane-associated activity was maintained at 0.15 mM-oleate and was increased at 0.5 mM-oleate. This activity at both oleate concentrations was also increased in incubations that contained dexamethasone, particularly in the presence of
glucagon
. Insulin increased the relative proportion of phosphatidate phosphohydrolase that was associated with membranes at 0.15 mM-oleate, but not at 0.5 mM-oleate. It also decreased the absolute phosphohydrolase activity on the membranes at both oleate concentrations in incubations that also contained
glucagon
and dexamethasone. None of the hormonal combinations significantly altered the total glycerol phosphate acyltransferase activity. However,
glucagon
significantly increased the microsomal activities, and insulin had the opposite effect.
Glucagon
also decreased the mitochondrial acyltransferase activity. There was a highly significant correlation between the total phosphatidate phosphohydrolase activity and the synthesis of neutral lipids from glycerol phosphate and 0.5 mM-oleate in homogenates of cells from all of the hormonal combinations. Phosphatidate phosphohydrolase activity is increased in the long term by glucocorticoids and also by
glucagon
through cyclic AMP. In the short term,
glucagon
increases the concentration of fatty acid required to translocate the cytosolic reservoir of activity to the membranes on which phosphatidate is synthesized. Insulin opposes the combined actions of
glucagon
and glucocorticoids. The long-term events explain the large increases in the phosphohydrolase activity that occur in vivo in a variety of stress conditions. The expression of this activity depends on increases in the net availability of fatty acids and their CoA esters in the liver.
...
PMID:Interactions of insulin, glucagon and dexamethasone in controlling the activity of glycerol phosphate acyltransferase and the activity and subcellular distribution of phosphatidate phosphohydrolase in cultured rat hepatocytes. 299 4
The effects of a 5'-substituted analogue of adenosine, 5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine (NECA) have been studied on
glucagon
secretion in vitro, using the isolated pancreas of the rat perfused in the presence of glucose (2.8 mM). NECA provoked a peak of
glucagon
secretion, the kinetics of which were comparable to those previously obtained with adenosine. The effect was concentration-dependent and appeared at nanomolar concentrations. The EC50 was approximately 4 X 10(-8) M. A comparison of relative potency between adenosine and NECA showed that NECA was about 800 fold more potent than adenosine in inducing
glucagon
secretion.
Theophylline
(50 microM) considerably decreased the peak of
glucagon
secretion induced by 1.65 microM NECA and totally suppressed the effect of 16.5 nM NECA. These results indicate the involvement of an adenosine receptor. These and other previous results (low stereoselectivity of N6-phenylisopropyladenosine) provide evidence for an adenosine receptor of the A2-subtype being involved in
glucagon
secretion.
...
PMID:Evidence for an A2-subtype adenosine receptor on pancreatic glucagon secreting cells. 299 22
1. Concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate were studied in islets of Langerhans isolated from rat pancreas and incubated in the presence of various agents that induce insulin release. 2. In response to rising concentrations of extracellular glucose (2-10mm) there is a linear increase in the intracellular concentration of glucose 6-phosphate, though this is not the case for 6-phosphogluconate, the intracellular concentration of which only increases when the external glucose concentration exceeds 5mm. 3. Tolbutamide, octanoate and citrate, all of which promote insulin secretion from isolated islets, increase the intracellular concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate. The results obtained in the presence of octanoate and citrate are compatible with an inhibitory effect of citrate on islet-cell phosphofructokinase. 4.
Theophylline
and
glucagon
when incubated with islets in vitro promote insulin release and cause a rise in 6-phosphogluconate concentration and not in that of glucose 6-phosphate. 5. It is suggested that the further metabolism of glucose 6-phosphate through a pathway other than glycolysis is essential for insulin release. One such pathway involves its oxidation to 6-phosphogluconate, which seems to be a necessary accompaniment of insulin secretion due to glucose. The possibility that agents other than glucose promote insulin release by enhancing the oxidation of glucose 6-phosphate through this pathway is discussed.
...
PMID:Islet-cell metabolism during insulin release. Effects of glucose, citrate, octanoate, tolbutamide, glucagon and theophylline. 424 86
A possible role for adenylcyclase in insulin secretion was investigated. Isoproterenol, a predominantly beta-adrenergic agent, when mixed with an alpha-adrenergic blocking agent (phenoxybenzamine), stimulated insulin secretion from pieces of the rat's pancreas in vitro.
Theophylline,
caffeine, 3'5'-cyclic AMP,
glucagon
, adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), and thyrotropin (TSH), all of which are thought to act through the adenylcyclase systems in the liver and adipose tissue, also stimulated insulin secretion in vitro; oxytocin and vasopressin, which do not stimulate lipolysis in adipose tissue, were inactive. In all cases, stimulation of insulin secretion could not be detected when glucose was absent or present in only low concentrations (less than 100 mg/100 ml) and was maximal at high levels of glucose (300 mg/100 ml). When pancreatic tissue was obtained from normoglycemic rats and contained no detectable glycogen in the Islets, the stimulant effects of glucose and of theophylline were reduced or abolished by mannoheptulose and 2-deoxyglucose. When tissue was derived from rats infused for 8-10 hr with glucose and contained glycogen, theophylline, even in the absence of glucose, stimulated secretion and this effect was reduced by 2-deoxyglucose but not by mannoheptulose. It is suggested that the beta-cell contains an adenylcyclase system through which phosphorylase and possibly phosphofructokinase could be activated; and that insulin secretion could depend upon and be regulated by hormones and other substances which influence the rate at which glycolysis proceeds within the beta-cell.
...
PMID:A possible role for the adenylcyclase system in insulin secretion. 429 54
Hereditary insulin-deficient diabetes mellitus occurs in certain sublines of nonobese Chinese hamsters. Several characteristics of this syndrome are similar to those seen in insulin-deficient human diabetics. Therefore, to characterize pancreatic islet function, dynamic insulin and
glucagon
release from normal and nonketotic diabetic hamster pancreases in response to glucose (300 mg/100 ml) and theophylline (10 mM), infused singly and together, was studied in vitro.20-min glucose infusions of normal hamster pancreases caused biphasic insulin release, consisting of a rapid first peak and a gradually rising second phase, similar to that reported for man in vivo. Both phases were significantly reduced in the diabetic pancreases.
Theophylline
alone stimulated similar nonphasic insulin release in both the normal and the diabetic pancreases. Glucose and theophylline together caused greater insulin release than either stimulant alone in both normals and diabetics; however, the diabetic response was still subnormal. Glucose suppressed
glucagon
release from normal pancreases; suppression was significantly impaired in diabetics.
Theophylline
stimulated nonphasic
glucagon
release in both the normals and diabetics. Glucose partially suppressed the theophylline-stimulated release in both groups.Insulin/
glucagon
molar ratios of the diabetics were consistently subnormal, although individual hormone levels often overlapped into the normal range. IN SUMMARY, THE PANCREASES OF GENETICALLY DIABETIC CHINESE HAMSTERS PERFUSED IN VITRO SHOWED: (a) decreased first and second phase insulin release in response to glucose-containing stimuli-only partially ameliorated by theophylline-, and (b) impaired suppression of
glucagon
in response to glucose, resulting in (c) a decreased insulin/
glucagon
molar ratio. These data support the suggestion that both alpha and beta cells of diabetic pancreases may be insensitive to glucose.
...
PMID:Abnormal secretion of insulin and glucagon by the in vitro perfused pancreas of the genetically diabetic Chinese hamster. 483 Feb 28
The effects of adenosine, adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and structural analogues have been studied on
glucagon
secretion from the isolated perfused pancreas of the rat in the presence of glucose (2.8 mM). Adenosine induced a transient increase of
glucagon
secretion. This effect was concentration-dependent in the range of 0.165 to 165 microM. ATP also induced an increase, but the effect was no greater at 165 microM than at 16.5 microM. 2-Chloroadenosine, an analogue more resistant to metabolism or uptake systems than adenosine, was more effective. Among the three structural analogues of ATP or ADP studied, beta, gamma-methylene ATP which can be hydrolyzed into AMP and adenosine had an effect similar to adenosine or ATP at the same concentrations (1.65 and 16.5 microM); in contrast alpha, beta-methylene ATP and alpha, beta-methylene ADP (resistant to hydrolysis into AMP and adenosine) were ineffective.
Theophylline
(50 microM) a specific blocker of the adenosine receptor, suppressed the
glucagon
peak induced by adenosine, 2-chloroadenosine, ATP and beta, gamma-methylene ATP (1.65 microM). An inhibitor of 5' nucleotidase, alpha, beta-methylene ADP (16.5 microM), reduced the
glucagon
increase induced by ATP and did not affect the response to adenosine (1.65 microM). These results support the hypothesis of adenosine receptors (P1-purinoceptors) on the pancreatic
glucagon
secretory cells and indicate that ATP acts after hydrolysis to adenosine.
...
PMID:Effects of adenosine, adenosine triphosphate and structural analogues on glucagon secretion from the perfused pancreas of rat in vitro. 609 28
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