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

In previous studies, patients consuming a protein-sparing modified fast (PSMF) did not develop the expected increase in nitrogen excretion following incidental infectious illness. To assess the catabolic response with a controlled infection in such patients, 17-D yellow fever vaccine was administered to four young obese adults after 3 weeks of this hypocaloric regimen (PSMF), essentially carbohydrate-free and providing 1.5 g protein/kg ideal body weight. Average daily nitrogen excretion from the third week of the PSMF was compared to values from the week following immunization. Contrary to the experience with malnourished children being nutritionally rehabilitated or young adults fed an adequate calorie, low (0.1 g/kg body weight) protein diet, neither urinary nitrogen excretion nor nitrogen balance was significantly affected in the study group. In three of the four subjects in the group, average nitrogen balance was positive in the week pre-and post-yellow fever immunization. In individuals fully adapted to a PSMF the metabolic consequences of mild infection on nitrogen metabolism were reduced. This may be because the usual catabolic hormones, glucocorticoid and glucagon, which are elicited by infection fail to increase nitrogen excretion in fasting or whenever dietary carbohydrate is excluded.
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PMID:Failure of yellow fever immunization to produce a catabolic response in individuals fully adapted to a protein-sparing modified fast. 90 64

Nine subjects with obstructive airway disease took part in this double-blind study of the effect of glucagon in relieving bronchoconstriction compared with isoproterenol or isotonic saline. Drugs were administered via an in-line intermittent positive-pressure breathing unit. FEV1, MEF, PEF, and nitrogen washout data were evaluated. Ten minutes after administration of saline, mean FEV1 and MEF values were significantly reduced from baseline levels (P less than 0.05). Compared to saline, isoproterenol was followed by significantly increased FEV1 and MEF values (P less than 0.05) at both 10 and 30 minutes after medication, indicating reduction in bronchoconstriction. Although the 1-mg dose of glucagon was followed by a mean decrease in these parameters, this decrease was less than that seen after saline alone.
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PMID:The effect of glucagon on airway resistance. 110 67

To determine if pancreatic glucoregulatory hormones can be implicated in the glucose fall of pregnancy, we have measured plasma immunoreactive insulin and glucagon (IRI and IRG) in rats. Fed rats in midgestation show a rise in IRI without a corresponding increase in IRG. In late gestation, IRG rises significantly, but only enough to keep pace with a further rise in IRI. On a molar basis, IRI remains the predominant hormone despite a marked fall in blood glucose. After a 48-h fast IRI falls to comparably low levels in pregnant and virgin rats. A small rise in IRG is seen in virgin but not in pregnant rats despite frank hypoglycemia in the latter. Thus, IRG secretion in pregnancy is diminished relative to IRI in the fed state and fails to increase in the fasted state despite the stimulus of a lower glucose in both instances. To evaluate IRG secretory reserve, the IRG response to i.v. alanine was assessed in late gestation. In fed rats a greater IRG increase is seen in pregnancy; after fasting no difference is seen between pregnant and virgin rats. These results preclude an absolute deficiency in glucagon secretion. Pancreas hormone stores were alos measured in an effort to explain the altered secretory state. We find reciprocal changes in IRI and IRG content favoring IRG in midgestation and IRI in late gestation. Thus, pancreas hormone storage is altered in pregnancy but does not account for the changes in hormone secretion. Rather, pregnancy exerts an effect on the islet secretory process itself. Release of IRI is enhanced relative to IRG regardless of the blood sugar level. These observations suggest that in the pregnant rat circulating levels of insulin and glucagon may act to limit hepatic glucose output. Available evidence from the literature supports the concept of restrained glucose production. It is proposed that a lower blood glucose production. It is proposed that a lower blood glucose in rat pregnancy may be a lesser liability teleologically than would be the obligate nitrogen wasting which accompanies gluconeogenesis.
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PMID:Plasma glucagon and insulin in rat pregnancy. Roles in glucose homeostasis. 110 77

To evaluate the role of hyperketonemia in the hypoalaninemia and decreased protein catabolism of prolonged starvation, Na dl-beta-hydroxybutyrate was administered as a primed continuous 3-6-h infusion in nonobese subjects and in obese subjects in the postabsorptive state and after 3 days and 3-5 1/2 wk of starvation. An additional obese group received 12-h ketone infusions on 2 consecutive days after 5-10 wk of fasting. The ketone infusion in nonobese and obese subjects studied in the postabsorptive state resulted in total blood ketone acid levels of 1.1-1.2 mM, a 5-15 mg/100 ml decrease in plasma glucose, and unchanged levels of insulin, glucagon, lactate, and pyruvate. Plasma alanine fell by 21% (P smaller than 0.001) in 3 h. In contrast, other amino acids were stable or varied by less than 10%. Infusions lasting 6 h reduced plasma alanine by 37%, reaching levels comparable to those observed in prolonged starvation. Equimolar infusions of NaC1 and/or administration of NaHCO3 failed to alter plasma alanine levels. During prolonged fasting, plasma alanine, which had fallen by 40% below prefast levels, fell an additional 30% in response to the ketone infusion. In association with repeated prolonged (12 h) infusions in subjects fasted 5-10 wk, urinary nitrogen excretion fell by 30%, returning to base line after cessation of theinfusions and paralleling the changes in plasma alanine. Ketone infusins resulted in two- to fourfold greater increments in blood ketone acids in fasted as compared to postabsorptive subjects. It is concluded that increased blood ketone acid levels induced by infusions of Na DL-beta-hydroxybutyrate result in hypoalaninemia and in nitrogen conservation in starvation. These data suggest that hyperketonemia may be a contributory factor in the decreased availability or circulating alanine and reduction in protein catabolism characteristic of prolonged fastings9
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PMID:Effect of ketone infusions on amino acid and nitrogen metabolism in man. 113 79

Healthy volunteers of ideal weight (12 men and 12 women) were fasted for 6 days, and obese but otherwise healthy subjects (20 men, 28 women) for 6--28 days. In all groups studied a significant increase in urinary nitrogen loss from day 1 to day 3 of fasting was followed by a steady decrease. The early rise in urinary nitrogen excretion coincided with a rise in plasma glucagon levels, suggesting a relation of the latter to increased gluconeogenesis from amino acids. At equal weight greater nitrogen losses were found in men than in women, in both normal and obese subjects. In spite of much higher weight and larger energy expenditure and nitrogen loss in obese subjects however was not higher than in normal ones. Mean daily nitrogen losses varied from 14.5 g (normal and obese men early in starvation) to 3.0 g (obese women after a 4-weeks fast). Calculating the amount of calories derived from body protien (urinary nitrogen X 6.25 X 4.1)and taking total energy expenditure from tabular metabolic values, the contribution of protein to total calorie output was found to vary from 15% (normal men 6 day fast) to 5(obese women, 4th week of fasting). The clinical significance of nitrogen loss during therapeutic fasting is discussed.
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PMID:Nitrogen loss in normal and obese subjects during total fast. 117 5

The effect of contraceptive steroids on aminogenic glucagon secretion was studied in six insulin-dependent diabetic women. After 2 wk treatment with combined mestranol (80 mug) plus norethindrone (1 mg) daily, the mean peak plasma glucagon response to arginine infusion was suppressed to one-fourth of control levels. This was associated with a small but significant decrease in mean basal plasma cholesterol concentrations. There were no changes in basal plasma triglyceride, free fatty acid, glucose, insulin, or alpha-amino nitrogen concentrations or in daily insulin requirements during mestranol plus norethindrone treatment. These results confirm previous reports of no consistent changes in the insulin requirements of insulin-dependent diabetic women using contraceptive steroids and suggest that these women may not experience dramatic changes in their lipid metabolism during contraceptive therapy.
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PMID:Effect of contraceptive steroids on arginine- stimulated glucagon and insulin secretion in women. II. Carbohydrate and lipid physiology in insulin-dependent diabetics. 124 6

Fifty-four intravenous glucose tolerance tests were performed in 12 normal individuals and 21 thermally injured patients. In the 17 hypermetabolic burn patients studied between the 6th and 16th days postinjury, fasting blood glucose was elevated (111 +/- 7 mg/100 ml, mean +/- SE compared to 85 +/- 3 in controls, P less than 0.001), but the instantaneous proportionality constant for glucose disappearance (k) was similar to that obtained in normal individuals (5.27 +/- 0.51, 100/min vs 4.01 +/- 0.58 in normals, NS). Fasting serum insulin concentrations were comparable in the 12 normals and 17 hypermetabolic burn patients (22 +/- 3muU/ml in normals vs 22 +/- 2), as was fasting insulin corrected for fasting glucose (24 +/- 3 in normals vs 21 +/- 3, NS), initial insulin response (0-10 min delta insulin, 58 +/- 13 in normals vs 67 +/- 10, NS) or total insulin response corrected per unit glycemic stimulus (insulinogenic index, 0.48 +/- 0.10 in normals vs 0.52 +/- 0.07, NS). With time following injury, the proportionality constant for glucose disappearance and insulin response decreased, and these alterations were related to the posttraumatic weight loss. In the 5 convalescent patients studied between the 37th and 90th days postinjury, glucose and insulin dynamics appeared similar to those observed in starved man. In these burn patients, hypermetabolism and negative nitrogen balance occurred in association with a normal insulin response to glucose. Increased hepatic gluconeogenesis appears to be characteristic of the catabolic response to this stress, directed by increased glucagon and catecholamines, not a decrease in fasting insulin or dampened insulin response.
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PMID:Insulin response to glucose in hypermetabolic burn patients. 125 88

The combined effect of continuous blockade of glucagon and cortisol by somatostatin and etomidate and thoracic epidural analgesia on hepatic conversion of amino nitrogen was studied in eight patients who underwent elective cholecystectomy on day 1 after operation and was compared with 16 patients who underwent operation without blockade. Surgery increased the plasma clearance of total alpha-amino nitrogen from 5.2 +/- 0.3 to 6.6 +/- 0.3 ml/sec (mean +/- sem; p less than 0.05). This increase was due to increased elimination by the liver, because the hepatic effectiveness for amino nitrogen conversion measured by the functional hepatic nitrogen clearance increased from 9 +/- 2 to 16 +/- 4 ml/sec (p less than 0.05). In contrast, during the combined neural and hormonal blockade, surgery decreased the plasma clearance of amino nitrogen from 5.3 +/- 0.3 to 3.9 +/- 0.3 ml/sec (p less than 0.05), and the blockade prevented the postoperative increase in functional hepatic nitrogen clearance. The results suggest that glucagon, cortisol, and afferent neural reflexes are mediators of the hepatic contribution to catabolism after operation.
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PMID:Hormonal and neural blockade prevents the postoperative increase in amino acid clearance and urea synthesis. 135 Aug 68

Test meals with 25 g protein in the form of cottage cheese or egg white were given with or without 50 g glucose to male subjects with mild to moderately severe, untreated, type II diabetes. Water was given as a control meal. The glucose, insulin, C-peptide, alpha amino nitrogen (AAN), glucagon, plasma urea nitrogen (PUN), nonesterified fatty acid (NEFA), and triglyceride area responses were determined using the water meal as a baseline. The glucose area responses following ingestion of cottage cheese or egg white were very small compared with those of the glucose meal, and were not significantly different from one another. The serum insulin area response was 3.6-fold greater following ingestion of cottage cheese compared with egg white (309 v 86 pmol/L.h). The simultaneous ingestion of glucose with cottage cheese or egg white protein decreased the glucose area response to glucose by 11% and 20%, respectively. When either protein was ingested with glucose, the insulin area response was greater than the sum of the individual responses, indicating a synergistic effect (glucose alone, 732 pmol/L.h; glucose with cottage cheese, 1,637 pmol/L.h; glucose with egg white, 1,213 pmol/L.h). The C-peptide area response was similar to the insulin area response. The AAN area response was approximately twofold greater following ingestion of cottage cheese compared with egg white. Following ingestion of glucose, it was negative. When protein was ingested with glucose, the AAN area responses were additive. The glucagon area response was similar following ingestion of cottage cheese or egg white protein. Following glucose ingestion, the glucagon area response was negative.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Metabolic response to cottage cheese or egg white protein, with or without glucose, in type II diabetic subjects. 140 1

Lithuania's environment is heavily polluted as a result of domestic and transboundary contamination. The main ecological problems are related to atmospheric pollution; water contamination; soil, water, and forest acidification; nitrogen-compounds overload of soil, water, and food; and contamination with agricultural chemicals and heavy metals. The increased environmental distress is a menace to public health in Lithuania. Experimental studies need to be designed and used to ascertain the effects of environmental distress on the gastrointestinal tract epithelial barrier. Our electronmicroscopic and immunohistochemical study of human gastrointestinal endocrine cells revealed changes in the amount of secretory material and intracytoplasmic vacuolization after exposure to the environmental chemicals such as hexavalent chromium and the herbicide Saprol. The most affected were the EC (serotonin, motilin, substance P), D (somatostatin), A (glucagon), B (insulin), and mast (histamine, serotonin, heparin) cells. These results provide ultrastructural evidence of digestive tract epithelial barrier reaction as an expression of environmental distress signals of the organism.
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PMID:Environmental monitoring in Lithuania. Environmental distress signals: gastrointestinal epithelial barrier after exposure to chemical agents. 146 10


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