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DOI: 10.1055/s-0028-1093579
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York
Factors Influencing Insulin and Glucagon Secretion in Lean and Genetically Obese Mice
Publication History
Publication Date:
23 December 2008 (online)
Abstract
The control of insulin and glucagon secretion from isolated pancreatic islets of lean and genetically obese mice has been compared. The enlarged islets of obese mouse pancreas and islets of obese mice maintained on a restricted diet manifested a greater response to glucose stimulation of insulin secretion than the lean mice islets. The glucagon content of the islets, the secretion of glucagon in a medium containing 150 mg% glucose and the stimulation of glucagon secretion by arginine did not differ significantly in the two groups. Adrenaline stimulated glucagon secretion in vitro from obese mice but not from lean mice. Antiinsulin serum injections into obese mice increased the plasma glucagon levels about twofold and had no effect on glucagon levels in lean mice, although the level of hyperglycaemia was the same in both groups. It is suggested that the suppression of glucagon release by glucose requires a higher concentration of insulin in the obese mouse pancreas than in lean mice.
Key words
Insulin - Glucagon Secretion - Obese Mice - Pancreatic Islets - Glucose - Adrenaline - Anti-Insulin Serum - Amino-acids