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- Title
Insulin secretory defect in Zucker fa/fa rats is improved by ameliorating insulin resistance.
- Authors
De Souza, Christopher J.; Yu, Jen H.; Robinson, Deborah D.; Ulrich, Roger G.; Meglasson, Martin D.; de Souza, C J; Yu, J H; Robinson, D D; Ulrich, R G; Meglasson, M D
- Abstract
The role of insulin resistance in the impaired glucose-stimulated insulin release of Zucker fatty rats was investigated using the insulin-sensitizing thiazolidinedione drug pioglitazone. Fatty rats had fasting hyperinsulinemia yet a blunted secretory response to intravenous glucose compared with lean age-matched controls. Islets from fatty rats secreted less insulin (based on islet DNA) in response to high glucose than islets from lean rats but secreted normal amounts of insulin when tolbutamide or alpha-ketoisocaproic acid (alpha-KIC) was the stimulus. Administering pioglitazone for 9 days diminished basal hyperinsulinemia and increased the insulin response to high glucose by fatty rats but not by lean controls. Pioglitazone pretreatment augmented the secretory response by isolated islets to high glucose, alpha-KIC, and tolbutamide. Augmentation of islet insulin release was not associated with reduced plasma glucose concentration, suggesting that altered glycemia was not involved. Pancreas and islet insulin content was greater in fatty rats than in lean controls and was decreased by pioglitazone; hence, insulin stores and glucose-stimulated insulin release did not correlate. Pioglitazone treatment did not affect the rate of islet glucose usage or ATP/ADP in the presence of 2.75 or 16 mmol/l glucose. These data indicate that ameliorating insulin resistance reverses defective glucose-stimulated insulin release by Zucker fa/fa rats. After pioglitazone administration, insulin secretion may be augmented by increased generation of a metabolic coupling factor from glucose or at a later step in the secretory process that is common to both glucose and nonglucose secretagogues.
- Publication
Diabetes, 1995, Vol 44, Issue 8, p984
- ISSN
0012-1797
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.2337/diab.44.8.984