Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study was undertaken to determine whether an acute physiological increase in plasma cortisol level had significant effects on alanine metabolism and gluconeogenesis within 3 hours in conscious, overnight-fasted dogs. Each experiment consisted of an 80-minute tracer and dye equilibration period, a 40-minute basal period, and a 3-hour experimental period. A primed, continuous infusion of [3-3H]glucose and continuous infusions of [U-14C]alanine and indocyanine green dye were initiated at the start of the equilibration period and continued throughout the experiment. Dogs were studied with (1) a hydrocortisone infusion ([CORT] 3.0 micrograms.kg-1.min-1, n = 5), (2) hydrocortisone infused as in CORT, but with pancreatic hormones clamped using
somatostatin
and basal intraportal replacement of insulin and glucagon (CLAMP+CORT, n = 5), or (3) saline infusion during a pancreatic clamp (
CLAMP
, n = 5). Glucose production and gluconeogenesis were determined using tracer and arteriovenous difference techniques. During
CLAMP
, all parameters were stable except for a modest 67% +/- 6% increase in gluconeogenic conversion of alanine to glucose and a 53% +/- 26% increase in gluconeogenic efficiency. When plasma cortisol levels were increased fourfold during CLAMP+CORT, there was no change in the concentration, production, or clearance of glucose. Gluconeogenic conversion of alanine to glucose increased 10% +/- 34% and gluconeogenic efficiency increased 65% +/- 43%, while net hepatic alanine uptake (NHAU) increased 60% +/- 19% and hepatic fractional extraction of alanine increased 38% +/- 12%. Cortisol did not cause an increase in the arterial glycerol level or net hepatic glycerol uptake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The effects of acute elevations in plasma cortisol levels on alanine metabolism in the conscious dog. 146 Nov 35
Glucose tolerance is determined by both insulin action and insulin-independent effects, or "glucose effectiveness," which includes glucose-mediated stimulation of glucose uptake (Rd) and suppression of hepatic glucose output (HGO). Despite its importance to tolerance, controversy surrounds accurate assessment of glucose effectiveness. Furthermore, the relative contributions of glucose's actions on Rd and HGO under steady state and dynamic conditions are unclear. We performed hyperglycemic clamps and intravenous glucose tolerance tests in eight normal dogs, and assessed glucose effectiveness by two independent methods. During clamps, glucose was raised to three successive 90-min hyperglycemic plateaus by variable labeled glucose infusion rate; glucose effectiveness (GE) was quantified as the slope of the dose-response relationship between steady state glucose and glucose infusion rate (GE[
CLAMP
(total)]), Rd (GE[
CLAMP
(uptake)]) or HGO (GE[
CLAMP
(HGO)]). During intravenous glucose tolerance tests, tritiated glucose (1.2 microCi/kg) was injected with cold glucose (0.3 g/kg); glucose and tracer dynamics were analyzed using a two-compartment model of glucose kinetics to obtain Rd and HGO components of glucose effectiveness. All experiments were performed during
somatostatin
inhibition of islet secretion, and basal insulin and glucagon replacement. During clamps, Rd rose from basal (2.54+/-0.20) to 3.95+/-0.54, 6.76+/-1.21, and 9.48+/-1.27 mg/min per kg during stepwise hyperglycemia; conversely, HGO declined to 2.06+/-0.17, 1.17+/-0.19, and 0.52+/-0.33 mg/min per kg. Clamp-based glucose effectiveness was 0.0451+/-0.0061, 0.0337+/-0.0060, and 0.0102+/-0.0009 dl/min per kg for GE[
CLAMP
(total)], GE[
CLAMP
(uptake)], and GE[
CLAMP
(HGO)], respectively. Glucose's action on Rd dominated overall glucose effectiveness (72.2+/-3.3% of total), a result virtually identical to that obtained during intravenous glucose tolerance tests (71.6+/-6.1% of total). Both methods yielded similar estimates of glucose effectiveness. These results provide strong support that glucose effectiveness can be reliably estimated, and that glucose-stimulated Rd is the dominant component during both steady state and dynamic conditions.
...
PMID:Glucose effectiveness assessed under dynamic and steady state conditions. Comparability of uptake versus production components. 907 26