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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mouse ob gene encodes leptin, an adipocyte hormone that regulates body weight and energy expenditure. Leptin has potent metabolic effects on fat and glucose metabolism. A mutation of the ob gene results in mice with severe hereditary obesity and diabetes that can be corrected by treatment with the hormone. In lean mice, leptin acutely increases glucose metabolism in an insulin-independent manner, which could account, at least in part, for some of the antidiabetic effect of the hormone. To investigate further the acute effect of leptin on glucose metabolism in insulin-resistant obese diabetic mice, leptin (40 ng x g(-1) x h(-1)) was administered intravenously for 6 h in C57Bl/6J ob/ob mice. Leptin increased glucose turnover and stimulated glucose uptake in brown adipose tissue (BAT), brain, and heart with no increase in heart rate. A slight increase in all splanchnic tissues was also noticed. Conversely, no increase in skeletal muscle or white adipose tissue (WAT) glucose uptake was observed. Plasma insulin concentration increased moderately but neither glucose,
glucagon
, thyroid hormones, growth hormone, nor IGF-1 levels were different from phosphate-buffered saline-infused C57Bl/6J ob/ob mice. In addition, leptin stimulated hepatic glucose production, which was associated with increased
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity. Conversely, PEPCK activity was rather diminished. Interestingly, hepatic insulin receptor substrate (IRS)1-associated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity was slightly elevated, but neither the content of glucose transporter GLUT2 nor the phosphorylation state of the insulin receptor and IRS-1 were changed by acute leptin treatment. Hepatic lipid metabolism was not stimulated during the acute leptin infusion, since the content of triglycerides, glycerol, and citrate was unchanged. These findings suggest that in ob/ob mice, the antidiabetic antiobesity effect of leptin could be the result of a profound alteration of glucose metabolism in liver, BAT, heart, and consequently, glucose turnover. Insulin resistance of skeletal muscle and WAT, while not affected by acute leptin treatment, could also be corrected in the long term and account for some of leptin's antidiabetic effects.
...
PMID:Acute intravenous leptin infusion increases glucose turnover but not skeletal muscle glucose uptake in ob/ob mice. 1034 14
The mechanisms responsible for the glycemic changes associated with endotoxic shock are not fully understood, but are known to involve the ability of the liver to produce glucose. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether endotoxin (LPS) influences the expression and activity of
glucose-6-phosphatase
(Glu-6-Pase) during the early hyperglycemic phase and the later hypoglycemic phase. Rats were injected with a relatively large dose of LPS (20 mg/kg) or saline (control), and sacrificed at 1 or 5 h post-injection. Both the plasma glucose concentration and glucose production were elevated 1 h post-LPS (2-fold) and both decreased at 5 h postinjection (50%). Compared to time-matched control values, hepatic glucose-6-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate levels were significantly decreased at both 1 and 5 h. Hepatic Glu-6-Pase activity and mRNA levels were moderately increased, 1 h after injection of LPS. At 5 h, an 88% decrease in mRNA abundance for Glu-6-Pase was associated with a 30% decrease in activity of this enzyme. Plasma insulin concentrations were not different 1 h after LPS and were elevated 2-fold from control values at 5 h. Circulating levels of
glucagon
and corticosterone were elevated at both time points following LPS. Our data indicate that the LPS-induced hypoglycemia and reduction in hepatic glucose production were accompanied by a depression in Glu-6-Pase activity and gene expression.
...
PMID:Endotoxin-induced alterations in hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase activity and gene expression. 1044 5
Metformin is regarded as an antihyperglycaemic agent because it lowers blood glucose concentrations in type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes without causing overt hypoglycaemia. Its clinical efficacy requires the presence of insulin and involves several therapeutic effects. Of these effects, some are mediated via increased insulin action, and some are not directly insulin dependent. Metformin acts on the liver to suppress gluconeogenesis mainly by potentiating the effect of insulin, reducing hepatic extraction of certain substrates (e.g. lactate) and opposing the effects of
glucagon
. In addition, metformin can reduce the overall rate of glycogenolysis and decrease the activity of hepatic
glucose-6-phosphatase
. Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake into skeletal muscle is enhanced by metformin. This has been attributed in part to increased movement of insulin-sensitive glucose transporters into the cell membrane. Metformin also appears to increase the functional properties of insulin- and glucose-sensitive transporters. The increased cellular uptake of glucose is associated with increased glycogen synthase activity and glycogen storage. Other effects involved in the blood glucose-lowering effect of metformin include an insulin-independent suppression of fatty acid oxidation and a reduction in hypertriglyceridaemia. These effects reduce the energy supply for gluconeogenesis and serve to balance the glucose-fatty acid (Randle) cycle. Increased glucose turnover, particularly in the splanchnic bed, may also contribute to the blood glucose-lowering capability of metformin. Metformin improves insulin sensitivity by increasing insulin-mediated insulin receptor tyrosine kinase activity, which activates post-receptor insulin signalling pathways. Some other effects of metformin may result from changes in membrane fluidity in hyperglycaemic states. Metformin therefore improves hepatic and peripheral sensitivity to insulin, with both direct and indirect effects on liver and muscle. It also exerts effects that are independent of insulin but cannot substitute for this hormone. These effects collectively reduce insulin resistance and glucotoxicity in type 2 diabetes.
...
PMID:The antihyperglycaemic effect of metformin: therapeutic and cellular mechanisms. 1057 23
We investigated the impact of GLUT2 gene inactivation on the regulation of hepatic glucose metabolism during the fed to fast transition. In control and GLUT2-null mice, fasting was accompanied by a approximately 10-fold increase in plasma
glucagon
to insulin ratio, a similar activation of liver glycogen phosphorylase and inhibition of glycogen synthase and the same elevation in phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and
glucose-6-phosphatase
mRNAs. In GLUT2-null mice, mobilization of glycogen stores was, however, strongly impaired. This was correlated with glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) levels, which remained at the fed values, indicating an important allosteric stimulation of glycogen synthase by G6P. These G6P levels were also accompanied by a paradoxical elevation of the mRNAs for L-pyruvate kinase. Re-expression of GLUT2 in liver corrected the abnormal regulation of glycogen and L-pyruvate kinase gene expression. Interestingly, GLUT2-null livers were hyperplasic, as revealed by a 40% increase in liver mass and 30% increase in liver DNA content. Together, these data indicate that in the absence of GLUT2, the G6P levels cannot decrease during a fasting period. This may be due to neosynthesized glucose entering the cytosol, being unable to diffuse into the extracellular space, and being phosphorylated back to G6P. Because hepatic glucose production is nevertheless quantitatively normal, glucose produced in the endoplasmic reticulum may also be exported out of the cell through an alternative, membrane traffic-based pathway, as previously reported (Guillam, M.-T., Burcelin, R., and Thorens, B. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 12317-12321). Therefore, in fasting, GLUT2 is not required for quantitative normal glucose output but is necessary to equilibrate cytosolic glucose with the extracellular space. In the absence of this equilibration, the control of hepatic glucose metabolism by G6P is dominant over that by plasma hormone concentrations.
...
PMID:Liver hyperplasia and paradoxical regulation of glycogen metabolism and glucose-sensitive gene expression in GLUT2-null hepatocytes. Further evidence for the existence of a membrane-based glucose release pathway. 1075 92
Glucagon
affects liver glucose metabolism mainly by activating glycogen breakdown and by inhibiting pyruvate kinase, whereas a possible effect on
glucose-6-phosphatase
has also been suggested. Although such a target is of physiological importance for liver glucose production it was never proven. By using a model of liver cells, perifused with dihydroxyacetone, we show here that the acute stimulation of gluconeogenesis by
glucagon
(10(-7) m) was not related to the significant inhibition of pyruvate kinase but to a dramatic activation of the hydrolysis of glucose 6-phosphate. We failed to find an acute change in
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity by
glucagon
, but the increase in glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis was abolished at 21 degrees C; conversely the effect on pyruvate kinase was not affected by temperature. The activation of glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis by
glucagon
was confirmed in vivo, in postabsorptive rats receiving a constant infusion of
glucagon
, by the combination of a 2-fold increase in hepatic glucose production and a 60% decrease in liver glucose 6-phosphate concentration. Besides the description of a novel effect of
glucagon
on glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis by a temperature-sensitive mechanism, this finding could represent an important breakthrough in the understanding of type II diabetes, because glucose 6-phosphate is proposed to be a key molecule in the transcriptional effect of glucose.
...
PMID:Glucose 6-phosphate hydrolysis is activated by glucagon in a low temperature-sensitive manner. 1137 50
A high-sucrose diet (SU) decreases insulin action in the liver (Pagliassotti MJ, Shahrokhi KA, and Moscarello M. Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol 266: R1637-R1644, 1994). The present study was conducted to characterize the effect of SU on
glucagon
action in isolated periportal (PP) and perivenous (PV) hepatocytes by measuring
glucagon
-stimulated glycogenolysis and glucose release. Male rats were fed a SU (68% sucrose) or starch diet (ST, 68% starch) for 1 wk, and hepatocytes were isolated from PP or PV regions (n = 4/diet/cell population). Hepatocytes were incubated for 1 h in the presence of varying concentrations of
glucagon
(0-100 nM). In PP and PV cells,
glucagon
stimulation of glucose release and glycogenolysis (sum of glucose release and lactate accumulation) was not significantly different between SU and ST cells. However, in the SU PP cells, glucose release was increased compared with ST PP cells, both in the absence of
glucagon
(76.1 +/- 4 vs. 54.8 +/- 3 nmol x h(-1) x mg cell wet x wt(-1)) and at all
glucagon
concentrations. In SU-fed PV cells, glucose release was increased compared with ST PV cells in the absence of
glucagon
(79.3 +/- 5 vs. 56.4 +/- 5 nmol x h(-1) x mg cell wet x wt(-1)) and at low
glucagon
concentrations. Maximal
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity (in nmol x min(-1) x mg protein(-1)) was elevated in SU compared with ST cells (61.4 +/- 3 vs. 37.5 +/- 4 in PP and 37.5 +/- 4 vs. 29.5 +/- 3 in PV cells). In contrast, maximal glucokinase activity (in nmol x min(-1) x mg protein(-1)) was elevated in ST compared with SU cells (15.9 +/- 2 vs. 12.1 +/- 1 in PP and 19.4 +/- 2 vs. 14.2 +/- 1 in PV cells). These data demonstrate that SU increases the capacity for glucose release in both PP and PV hepatocytes, in part because of reciprocal changes in
glucose-6-phosphatase
and glucokinase.
...
PMID:Sucrose diets increase glucose-6-phosphatase and glucose release and decrease glucokinase in hepatocytes. 1164 42
High-throughput screening of microbial extracts using rat hepatic microsomal
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G6Pase
) led us to find thielavin B as a
G6Pase
inhibitor with inhibition of glucose output from
glucagon
-stimulated hepatocytes. Further searching for more potent analogs identified 11 new thielavins F-P in addition to the known thielavins A and B from a fungus Chaetomium carinthiacum ATCC 46463. Thielavin G showed the strongest activity as a
G6Pase
inhibitor (IC50=0.33 microM), while the IC50 of thielavin B was 5.5 microM. According to the structure-activity relationship, including authentic thielavins C, D and 3 partial hydrolysates from thielavins A and B, 3 benzoic acid-units and carboxylic acid functions are essential for
G6Pase
inhibition.
...
PMID:Thielavins as glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) inhibitors: producing strain, fermentation, isolation, structural elucidation and biological activities. 1254 15
The regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis is an important process in the adjustment of the blood glucose level, and pathological changes in the glucose production of the liver are a central characteristic in type 2 diabetes. The pharmacological intervention in signaling events that regulate the expression of the key gluconeogenic enzymes phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) and the catalytic subunit
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G-6-Pase
) is regarded as a potential strategy for the treatment of metabolic aberrations associated with this disease. However, such intervention requires a detailed understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of this process.
Glucagon
and glucocorticoids are known to increase hepatic gluconeogenesis by inducing the expression of PEPCK and
G-6-Pase
. The coactivator protein PGC-1 has been identified as an important mediator of this regulation. In contrast, insulin is known to suppress both PEPCK and
G-6-Pase
gene expression by the activation of PI 3-kinase. However, PI 3-kinase-independent pathways can also lead to the inhibition of gluconeogenic enzymes. This review focuses on signaling mechanisms and nuclear events that transduce the regulation of gluconeogenic enzymes.
...
PMID:Novel concepts in insulin regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis. 1295 35
Tolbutamide and carbutamide given orally to fasted rats cause a rise in the liver glycogen content 1(1/2) to 3(1/2) hr. after administration of the drugs. Glycogen accumulates preferentially in the right lobe. Subcutaneously injected tolbutamide has the same effect. Both sulphonylureas cause inhibition of
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity of rat liver homogenates in vitro, but at drug concentrations comparable with those found in plasma of treated patients the degree of inhibition is less than 10%. Livers from treated rats show normal
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity. The glucose uptake of the isolated rat diaphragm is unaffected by the sulphonylureas added in vitro. Diaphragms from treated rats show normal glucose uptake in the presence or absence of insulin. The inferences to be drawn from these results are discussed in the light of previous work. It is concluded that the sulphonylureas exert hypoglycaemic action by inhibiting glycogenolysis and it is suggested that they might do so by inhibiting release of
glucagon
from the pancreas.
...
PMID:The action of hypoglycaemic sulphonylureas on carbohydrate metabolism in the fasted rat. 1346 Feb 43
We recently compared the regulation of
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G-6-Pase
) catalytic subunit and glucose 6-phosphate (G-6-P) transporter gene expression by insulin in conscious dogs in vivo (Hornbuckle LA, Edgerton DS, Ayala JE, Svitek CA, Neal DW, Cardin S, Cherrington AD, and O'Brien RM. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 281: E713-E725, 2001). In pancreatic-clamped, euglycemic conscious dogs, a 5-h period of hypoinsulinemia led to a marked increase in hepatic
G-6-Pase
catalytic subunit mRNA; however, G-6-P transporter mRNA was unchanged. Here, we demonstrate, again using pancreatic-clamped, conscious dogs, that
glucagon
is a candidate for the factor responsible for this selective induction. Thus
glucagon
stimulated
G-6-Pase
catalytic subunit but not G-6-P transporter gene expression in vivo. Furthermore, cAMP stimulated endogenous
G-6-Pase
catalytic subunit gene expression in HepG2 cells but had no effect on G-6-P transporter gene expression. The cAMP response element (CRE) that mediates this induction was identified through transient transfection of HepG2 cells with
G-6-Pase
catalytic subunit-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase fusion genes. Gel retardation assays demonstrate that this CRE binds several transcription factors including CRE-binding protein and CCAAT enhancer-binding protein.
...
PMID:Selective stimulation of G-6-Pase catalytic subunit but not G-6-P transporter gene expression by glucagon in vivo and cAMP in situ. 1472 27
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