首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Insulin-induced increases in blood flow are hypothesized to enhance overall glucose uptake by skeletal muscle. Whether the insulin-mediated changes in blood flow are associated with altered blood flow distribution and increased capillary recruitment in skeletal muscle is not known. In the present study, the effects of insulin on hemodynamic parameters in rat skeletal muscle in vivo were investigated. Mean arterial blood pressure, heart rate, femoral blood flow, hind leg vascular resistance, and glucose uptake were measured in control and euglycemic insulin-clamped (10 mU x min(-1) x kg[-1]) anesthetized rats. Blood flow distribution within the hind leg muscles was assessed by measuring the metabolism of 1-methylxanthine (1-MX), an exogenously added substrate for capillary xanthine oxidase. Insulin treatment had no effect on heart rate but significantly increased arterial blood pressure (12 mmHg) and femoral blood flow (80%) and decreased hind leg vascular resistance (31%). Changes were similar in magnitude and in time of onset to those reported in humans. Insulin treatment increased hind leg glucose uptake approximately fourfold and also increased hind leg 1-MX metabolism by 50%, suggesting increased exposure to endothelial xanthine oxidase. To ascertain whether the increased 1-MX metabolism was simply due to increased bulk femoral blood flow, epinephrine was infused at a dose (0.125 microg x min(-) x kg[-1]) chosen to match the insulin-induced increase in femoral blood flow. This dose of epinephrine had no significant effects on arterial blood pressure or heart rate but increased femoral blood flow and lowered hind leg vascular resistance to a similar extent as insulin. Epinephrine did not significantly alter 1-MX metabolism as compared with control animals. These results demonstrate that insulin increases total hind leg blood flow and metabolism of 1-MX, suggesting a recruitment of capillary blood flow in rat hind leg not mimicked by epinephrine.  相似文献   

2.
In this study we measured simultaneously and sequentially the lumbar sympathetic nerve activity (LSNA) or renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and heart rate (HR) in response to insulin with co-existing hypoglycemia or with glucose replacement in normal rats. Sinoaortic denervation (SAD) was used to evaluate the influence of the baroreflex. LSNA, RSNA, MAP and HR were determined using an acquisition processor and computer software. Bolus insulin infusion where the blood glucose was allowed to decrease resulted in an immediate decrease in MAP. The HR decreased for approximately 15 min and subsequently increased. The LSNA increased immediately after insulin infusion peaking at 25 minutes and then recovered toward baseline. Insulin infusion with glucose replacement resulted in a decrease in MAP and HR. The LSNA progressively increased and was maintained throughout the experimental period. Insulin infusion with hypoglycemia increased RSNA and when hypoglycemia was prevented the RSNA decreased. SAD attenuated the decrease in MAP and LSNA response to insulin. Thus, insulin acts to decrease MAP while simultaneously increasing HR, LSNA and RSNA when hypoglycemia is allowed to occur. However, insulin acts to decrease HR and RSNA when euglycemia is maintained. The insulin-induced increase in LSNA is modulated by the baroreflex mechanism. We conclude that insulin has independent direct and indirect effects on LSNA, RSNA, MAP and HR that are modulated by glycemia and the baroreflex.  相似文献   

3.
Myocardial glucose use is regulated by competing substrates and hormonal influences. However, the interactions of these effectors on the metabolism of exogenous glucose and glucose derived from endogenous glycogen are not completely understood. In order to determine changes in exogenous glucose uptake, glucose oxidation, and glycogen enrichment, hearts were perfused with glucose (5 mM) either alone, or glucose plus insulin (40 microU/ml), glucose plus acetoacetate (5 mM), or glucose plus insulin and acetoacetate, using a three tracer (3H, 14C, and 13C) technique. Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and lactate production in the absence of acetoacetate, while acetoacetate inhibited the uptake of glucose and the oxidation of both exogenous glucose and endogenous carbohydrate. Depending on the metabolic conditions, the contribution of glycogen to carbohydrate metabolism varied from 20-60%. The addition of acetoacetate or insulin increased the incorporation of exogenous glucose into glycogen twofold, and the combination of the two had additive effects on the incorporation of glucose into glycogen. In contrast, the glycogen content was similar for the three groups. The increased incorporation of glucose in glycogen without a significant change in the glycogen content in hearts perfused with glucose, acetoacetate, and insulin suggests increased glycogen turnover. We conclude that insulin and acetoacetate regulate the incorporation of glucose into glycogen as well as the relative contributions of exogenous glucose and endogenous carbohydrate to myocardial energy metabolism by different mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
Insulin resistance of diaphragms of ob/ob mice has been repeatedly demonstrated previously both in vitro and in vivo. In the present study, transport and metabolism of glucose with and without insulin stimulation were compared in a skeletal muscle more likely than diaphragm or heart to be representative of the overall striated muscle mass, i.e. isolated soleus muscle. Compared with soleus muscle from lean controls, unstimulated lactate release in the presence of exogenous glucose was depressed from 16.2 to 12.3 nmol/60 min per mg wet wt in soleus from ob/ob mutants; glycolysis was decreased from 6.6 to 3.7 and [14C]glucose oxidation to 14CO2 from 0.90 to 0.33 nmol glucose/60 min per mg wet wt. Uptake of 2-deoxyglucose (2-DOG), both with and without insulin, was very much less for soleus from ob/ob than from lean mice, at 2-DOG concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 10 mM, and in mice of 6-15 wk. When 2-DOG concentration was 1 mM, its basal uptake was 0.53 nmol/30 min per mg wet wt for soleus of ob/ob as against 0.96 for soleus of lean mice. The absolute increment due to 1 mU/ml insulin was 0.49 in muscle of ob/ob as against 1.21 in that of lean mice. When the resistance to insulin action was decreased by pretreatment in vivo by either streptozotocin injection or fasting, the decreased basal 2-DOG uptake of subsequently isolated soleus muscle was not improved. Inhibition of endogenous oxidation of fatty acids by 2-bromostearate, while greatly increasing 14CO2 production from [14C]glucose, did not affect basal [5-3H]glucose metabolism or 2-DOG uptake. It is suggested that transport and/or phosphorylation of glucose under basal, unstimulated conditions are depressed in soleus muscle of ob/ob mice, whether or not resistance to insulin and hyperinsulinemia are also present. Although the origin of the decreased basal glucose uptake remains unknown it might be related to a similar decrease in basal glucose uptake by ventromedial hypothalamic cells, an event presumably resulting in a tendency to hyperphagia. Decreased basal glucose uptake by soleus muscle of ob/ob mice might explain the hyperglycemia, and hence partly the hyperinsulinemia and excessive fat deposition of those animals.  相似文献   

5.
6.
To elucidate cellular mechanisms of insulin resistance induced by excess dietary fat, we studied conscious chronically high-fat-fed (HFF) and control chow diet-fed rats during euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic (560 pmol/l plasma insulin) clamps. Compared with chow diet feeding, fat feeding significantly impaired insulin action (reduced whole body glucose disposal rate, reduced skeletal muscle glucose metabolism, and decreased insulin suppressibility of hepatic glucose production [HGP]). In HFF rats, hyperinsulinemia significantly suppressed circulating free fatty acids but not the intracellular availability of fatty acid in skeletal muscle (long chain fatty acyl-CoA esters remained at 230% above control levels). In HFF animals, acute blockade of beta-oxidation using etomoxir increased insulin-stimulated muscle glucose uptake, via a selective increase in the component directed to glycolysis, but did not reverse the defect in net glycogen synthesis or glycogen synthase. In clamp HFF animals, etomoxir did not significantly alter the reduced ability of insulin to suppress HGP, but induced substantial depletion of hepatic glycogen content. This implied that gluconeogenesis was reduced by inhibition of hepatic fatty acid oxidation and that an alternative mechanism was involved in the elevated HGP in HFF rats. Evidence was then obtained suggesting that this involves a reduction in hepatic glucokinase (GK) activity and an inability of insulin to acutely lower glucose-6-phosphatase (G-6-Pase) activity. Overall, a 76% increase in the activity ratio G-6-Pase/GK was observed, which would favor net hepatic glucose release and elevated HGP in HFF rats. Thus in the insulin-resistant HFF rat 1) acute hyperinsulinemia fails to quench elevated muscle and liver lipid availability, 2) elevated lipid oxidation opposes insulin stimulation of muscle glucose oxidation (perhaps via the glucose-fatty acid cycle) and suppression of hepatic gluconeogenesis, and 3) mechanisms of impaired insulin-stimulated glucose storage and HGP suppressibility are not dependent on concomitant lipid oxidation; in the case of HGP we provide evidence for pivotal involvement of G-6-Pase and GK in the regulation of HGP by insulin, independent of the glucose source.  相似文献   

7.
Insulin resistance is a characteristic feature in recipients of a pancreas transplant, but the relative contribution of the liver and peripheral tissues to this abnormality within a spanning range of insulin concentrations is unknown. To assess the impact of insulin action on glucose metabolism after pancreas transplantation, a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp with sequential insulin infusions (5, 40, and 200 mU.m-2.min-1 for 120 min each), combined with isotopic determinations of the rates of hepatic glucose production and extrahepatic glucose uptake, indirect calorimetry, and measurements of glycogen synthase and hexokinase activities in vastus lateralis muscle, were performed in six pancreas-kidney transplant recipients (Px group) and compared with those performed in six nondiabetic kidney transplant recipients with similar immunosuppression (Kx group) and six nondiabetic control subjects. The overall effects of insulin on whole-body glucose metabolism, determined as the glucose infusion rates versus the corresponding steady-state serum insulin concentrations, demonstrated a rightward shift in the dose-response curves of the transplanted groups compared with those of normal subjects. The dose-response curve for glucose disposal rates (Rd) was shifted to the right in the Px and Kx groups, and the maximal glucose disposal rate was reduced by 40% in the Px group (11.7 +/- 1.1 mg.kg-1 fat-free mass.min-1) and 30% in the Kx group (13.9 +/- 1.2 mg.kg-1 fat-free mass.min-1) compared with that in control subjects (19.1 +/- 2.2 mg.kg-1 fat-free mass.min-1) (P < 0.05). The dose-response curve for suppression of hepatic glucose output rates was similar at increasing hepatic sinusoidal insulin concentrations. Glucose oxidation rates were similar in all groups, whereas nonoxidative glucose rates were reduced by 50% in the Px group and by 30% in the Kx group compared with those in the control group (P < 0.05). In the Px group, an impaired activation of the fractional velocity and absent decrease in the half-maximal stimulation of muscle glycogen synthase occurred during the insulin infusion. However, this finding could only explain in part the degree of impairment in nonoxidative glucose metabolism. No differences were found in total hexokinase activity in muscle between normal subjects and the transplant groups at basal insulinemia or after insulin stimulation. During hyperinsulinemia, glucagon and nonesterified fatty acids were not suppressed as much in the transplanted groups as they were in normal control subjects (P < 0.05). In conclusion, pancreas transplantation causes impaired peripheral action of insulin as compared with that in normal subjects and kidney transplant recipients. The main course of insulin resistance in the two transplant groups is explained by the immunosuppressive treatment, but the augmented insulin resistance in pancreas transplant recipients could partly be explained by the chronic peripheral hyperinsulinemia. The principal site of insulin resistance was a reduced insulin-stimulated nonoxidative glucose metabolism of peripheral tissues, which resulted in decreased capacity to store glucose as glycogen. The impaired peripheral insulin action could only partly be explained by a reduced activation of the glycogen synthase enzyme in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

8.
To examine the mechanism by which free fatty acids (FFA) induce insulin resistance in human skeletal muscle, glycogen, glucose-6-phosphate, and intracellular glucose concentrations were measured using carbon-13 and phosphorous-31 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in seven healthy subjects before and after a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp following a five-hour infusion of either lipid/heparin or glycerol/heparin. IRS-1-associated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) activity was also measured in muscle biopsy samples obtained from seven additional subjects before and after an identical protocol. Rates of insulin stimulated whole-body glucose uptake. Glucose oxidation and muscle glycogen synthesis were 50%-60% lower following the lipid infusion compared with the glycerol infusion and were associated with a approximately 90% decrease in the increment in intramuscular glucose-6-phosphate concentration, implying diminished glucose transport or phosphorylation activity. To distinguish between these two possibilities, intracellular glucose concentration was measured and found to be significantly lower in the lipid infusion studies, implying that glucose transport is the rate-controlling step. Insulin stimulation, during the glycerol infusion, resulted in a fourfold increase in PI 3-kinase activity over basal that was abolished during the lipid infusion. Taken together, these data suggest that increased concentrations of plasma FFA induce insulin resistance in humans through inhibition of glucose transport activity; this may be a consequence of decreased IRS-1-associated PI 3-kinase activity.  相似文献   

9.
We tested the hypothesis that endothelium-dependent vasodilatation is a determinant of insulin resistance of skeletal muscle glucose uptake in human obesity. Eight obese (age 26+/-1 yr, body mass index 37+/-1 kg/m2) and seven nonobese males (25+/-2 yr, 23+/-1 kg/m2) received an infusion of bradykinin into the femoral artery of one leg under intravenously maintained normoglycemic hyperinsulinemic conditions. Blood flow was measured simultaneously in the bradykinin and insulin- and the insulin-infused leg before and during hyperinsulinemia using [15O]-labeled water ([15O]H2O) and positron emission tomography (PET). Glucose uptake was quantitated immediately thereafter in both legs using [18F]- fluoro-deoxy-glucose ([18F]FDG) and PET. Whole body insulin-stimulated glucose uptake was lower in the obese (507+/-47 mumol/m2 . min) than the nonobese (1205+/-97 micromol/m2 . min, P < 0.001) subjects. Muscle glucose uptake in the insulin-infused leg was 66% lower in the obese (19+/-4 micromol/kg muscle . min) than in the nonobese (56+/-9 micromol/kg muscle . min, P < 0.005) subjects. Bradykinin increased blood flow during hyperinsulinemia in the obese subjects by 75% from 16+/-1 to 28+/-4 ml/kg muscle . min (P < 0.05), and in the normal subjects by 65% from 23+/-3 to 38+/-9 ml/kg muscle . min (P < 0.05). However, this flow increase required twice as much bradykinin in the obese (51+/-3 microg over 100 min) than in the normal (25+/-1 mug, P < 0.001) subjects. In the obese subjects, blood flow in the bradykinin and insulin-infused leg (28+/-4 ml/kg muscle . min) was comparable to that in the insulin-infused leg in the normal subjects during hyperinsulinemia (24+/-5 ml/kg muscle . min). Despite this, insulin-stimulated glucose uptake remained unchanged in the bradykinin and insulin-infused leg (18+/-4 mumol/kg . min) compared with the insulin-infused leg (19+/-4 micromol/kg muscle . min) in the obese subjects. Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake also was unaffected by bradykinin in the normal subjects (58+/-10 vs. 56+/-9 micromol/kg . min, bradykinin and insulin versus insulin leg). These data demonstrate that obesity is characterized by two distinct defects in skeletal muscle: insulin resistance of cellular glucose extraction and impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilatation. Since a 75% increase in blood flow does not alter glucose uptake, insulin resistance in obesity cannot be overcome by normalizing muscle blood flow.  相似文献   

10.
There is evidence that sympathetic nerve activity leads to endothelium-derived nitric oxide release, which in turn attenuates neurogenic vasoconstriction. Here we tested in vivo (1) whether the magnitude of the vasoconstriction induced by N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester given systemically is altered when ongoing sympathetic activity is abolished by sectioning the lumbar sympathetic trunk, and (2) whether hindlimb sympathetic vasoconstriction elicited by electrical stimulation of the lumbar sympathetic trunk is enhanced after inhibition of nitric oxide synthesis. Blood flow in the microvascular beds of hairless skin and skeletal muscle of the rat hindlimb was measured with laser Doppler flowmetry. Sectioning the lumbar sympathetic trunk resulted in an increase of blood flow in both tissues, indicating that tonic neurogenic vasoconstriction was abolished. Inhibition of nitric oxide synthesis resulted in vasoconstriction in both vascular beds. This vasoconstriction was more pronounced after abolition of sympathetic activity than with intact sympathetic supply in skin but was smaller in skeletal muscle. The vasoconstriction elicited by graded electrical stimulation of the centrally sectioned lumbar sympathetic trunk with frequencies less than 5 Hz was significantly enhanced after blockade of nitric oxide in skeletal muscle but not in skin microvasculature. These findings suggest that under physiological conditions, sympathetic nerve impulses directly promote the release of nitric oxide in skeletal muscle but not in cutaneous blood vessels. Therefore, basal nitric oxide release is probably in part dependent on sympathetic activity in skeletal muscle, whereas it appears to be mainly due to flow-dependent shear stress in hairless skin microvasculature.  相似文献   

11.
The past several years have witnessed a major surge of interest in the cardiovascular actions of insulin. This interest has stemmed on the one hand from epidemiological studies that demonstrated an association between obesity, insulin resistance, and hypertension, leading to the so-called insulin hypothesis of hypertension. On the other hand, this interest has been stimulated by experimental evidence suggesting that the vascular actions of insulin may play a role in its main action, namely the promotion of glucose uptake in skeletal muscle tissue. Two tenets have emerged about how insulin may exert its cardiovascular actions. First, it is now firmly established that acute insulin administration stimulates sympathetic nerve activity in both animals and humans. Second, there is increasing evidence that insulin stimulates muscle blood flow, an effect that appears to be mediated at least in part by an endothelium-dependent mechanism. This review summarizes the current understanding and gaps in knowledge on cardiovascular actions of insulin in humans and pathophysiological consequences of derangements of such actions.  相似文献   

12.
We assessed the combined role of epinephrine and glucagon in regulating gluconeogenic precursor metabolism during insulin-induced hypoglycemia in the overnight-fasted, adrenalectomized, conscious dog. In paired studies (n = 5), insulin was infused intraportally at 5 mU.kg-1.min-1 for 3 h. Epinephrine was infused at a basal rate (B-EPI) or variable rate to simulate the normal epinephrine response to hypoglycemia (H-EPI), whereas in both groups the hypoglycemia-induced rise in cortisol was simulated by cortisol infusion. Plasma glucose fell to approximately 42 mg/dl in both groups. Glucagon failed to rise in B-EPI, but increased normally in H-EPI. Hepatic glucose release fell in B-EPI but increased in H-EPI. In B-EPI, the normal rise in lactate levels and net hepatic lactate uptake was prevented. Alanine and glycerol metabolism were similar in both groups. Since glucagon plays little role in regulating gluconeogenic precursor metabolism during 3 h of insulin-induced hypoglycemia, epinephrine must be responsible for increasing lactate release from muscle, but is minimally involved in the lipolytic response. In conclusion, a normal rise in epinephrine appears to be required to elicit an increase in glucagon during insulin-induced hypoglycemia in the dog. During insulin-induced hypoglycemia, epinephrine plays a major role in maintaining an elevated rate of glucose production, probably via muscle lactate release and hepatic lactate uptake.  相似文献   

13.
Our previous studies suggested a possible role for the glucose-free fatty acid (FFA) cycle, ie, preferential utilization of FFA by muscle at the expense of glucose, in dexamethasone (DEX)-induced insulin resistance. To determine whether this resistance could be reversed by inhibiting FFA utilization, we used etomoxir, a potent inhibitor of mitochondrial FFA oxidation. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were injected subcutaneously with 1 mg/kg DEX or the vehicle every other day for 10 days, and half of each group was administered 10 mg/kg etomoxir by gavage once per day and 1 hour before the experiment. As expected, etomoxir treatment increased serum FFA levels and inhibited FFA oxidation by diaphragm in vitro. Administration of etomoxir decreased serum glucose and insulin concentrations under basal conditions in both control and DEX-treated animals, implying enhanced insulin sensitivity. DEX treatment significantly increased endogenous glucose production and decreased whole-body glucose disposal, as well as 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) uptake by skeletal muscle during euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamps. Administration of etomoxir led to small but significant increases in glucose disposal rates of both control (14%) and DEX (23%) groups, but had no effect on residual endogenous glucose production. Thus, DEX-induced insulin resistance was marginally ameliorated but not completely reversed by etomoxir. Depressed 2-DG uptake by individual muscle tissues observed in the present study in conjunction with the absence of free intracellular glucose in muscle tissue following glucose-insulin infusion strongly suggests that the primary defect in glucose metabolism is at the level of transport. Neither overall abundance of the insulin-sensitive glucose transporter (GLUT-4) in skeletal muscle nor its distribution between intracellular stores and plasma membrane were modified by DEX treatment, either, under basal conditions or in response to acute insulin stimulus. These results suggest a defect(s) in the inherent activity of plasma membrane-bound GLUT-4 as the likely mechanism for DEX-induced insulin resistance.  相似文献   

14.
A number of coronary heart disease risk factors have been identified that often cluster together to increase the risk of macrovascular disease. This cluster is referred to as the insulin resistance syndrome, and the risk factors commonly include dyslipidemia, elevated blood pressure, an android pattern of body fat distribution, and glucose intolerance. Whether hyperinsulinemia or insulin resistance per se provides a common pathway for these metabolic abnormalities is unclear. The authors studied 50 nondiabetic persons who had completed a euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp protocol in addition to a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test and other measures of the coronary risk profile. Using principal-component analysis, we reduced nine coronary risk factors to two uncorrelated factors that explained 54.5% of the variance. Factor 1 consisted of positive loadings for uric acid, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, triglyceride concentration, and waist girth and negative loadings for HDL cholesterol and the rate of insulin-mediated glucose disposal (M, in milligrams per kilogram of body weight per minute). M also loaded on factor 2, along with fasting insulin and glucose concentrations, diastolic blood pressure, and waist girth. The observation that M loaded on both factors suggests that a resistance to insulin action may provide the mechanism uniting the features of the insulin resistance syndrome. Hyperinsulinemia with concomitant insulin resistance may be necessary to produce this metabolic derangement, as well as the increased risk of macrovascular complications.  相似文献   

15.
Patients with coronary artery disease or heart failure have been shown to be insulin resistant. Whether in these patients heart muscle participates in the insulin resistance, and whether reduced blood flow is a mechanism for such resistance is not known. We measured heart and skeletal muscle blood flow and glucose uptake during euglycemic hyperinsulinemia (insulin clamp) in 15 male patients with angiographically proven coronary artery disease and chronic regional wall motion abnormalities. Six age- and weight-matched healthy subjects served as controls. Regional glucose uptake was measured by positron emission tomography using [18F]2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG), blood flow was measured by the H2(15)O method. Myocardial glucose utilization was measured in regions with normal perfusion and wall motion as assessed by radionuclide ventriculography. Whole-body glucose uptake was 37+/-4 micromol x min(-1) x kg(-1) in controls and 14+/-2 mciromol x min(-1) x kg(-1) in patients (P = 0.001). Myocardial blood flow (1.09+/-0.06 vs. 0.97+/-0.04 ml x min(-1) x g(-1), controls vs. patients) and skeletal muscle (arm) blood flow (0.046+/-0.012 vs. 0.043+/-0.006 ml x min(-1) x g(-1)) were similar in the two groups (P = NS for both). In contrast, in patients both myocardial (0.38+/-0.03 vs. 0.70+/-0.03 micromol x min(-1) x g(-1), P = 0.0005) and muscle glucose uptake (0.026+/-0.004 vs. 0.056+/-0.006 micromol x min(-1) x g(-1), P = 0.005) were markedly reduced in comparison with controls. In the whole dataset, a direct relationship existed between insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in heart and skeletal muscle. Patients with a history of myocardial infarction and a low ejection fraction are insulin resistant. This insulin resistance affects both the myocardium and skeletal muscle and is independent of blood flow.  相似文献   

16.
A decreased ratio of fat to carbohydrate oxidation rate (an elevated respiratory quotient) predicts the development of obesity. Skeletal muscle accounts for a major fraction of total body lipid oxidation and is the principle site for reduced glucose storage in insulin-resistant subjects. The potentially important role that muscle has in promoting obesity or insulin resistance may be based on metabolic control intrinsic to skeletal muscle. Cultured skeletal muscle provides a system to examine the importance of inherent metabolic traits in muscle biopsies from obese and insulin-resistant subjects. Glycogen synthase fractional activity (GSFA) was measured in cultured myoblasts from 21 Pima Indians characterized in vivo using indirect calorimetry and a euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp. Basal GSFA in cultured muscle cells is inversely correlated with postabsorptive respiratory quotient of the muscle donors (r = -0.66, P = 0.001) and with in vivo high dose insulin-stimulated glucose storage rates (r = 0.47, P = 0.04). These results indicate that the postabsorptive respiratory quotients and insulin-mediated glucose storage rates in vivo share a common regulatory mechanism with GSFA in cultured myoblasts. Abnormal regulation of glycogen synthase phosphorylation state may be an intrinsic defect in skeletal muscle associated with obesity and insulin resistance.  相似文献   

17.
In nine sedentary subjects (16.5 +/- 0.4 years, mean +/- SEM) we measured blood pressure (Finapres device), heart rate (electrocardiogram), and postganglionic muscle sympathetic nerve activity (microneurography from the peroneal nerve) at rest and during intravenous infusion of phenylephrine and nitroprusside. These measurements were performed before and after 10 weeks of endurance training (2 h/d, 5 d/wk) that increased maximum oxygen consumption from 34.8 +/- 2.1 to 40.4 +/- 1.8 mL/kg per minute (P < .02). Basal mean blood pressure and muscle sympathetic nerve activity were lower after than before endurance training (86.5 +/- 2.6 versus 97.5 +/- 1.8 mm Hg, P < .05, and 14.0 +/- 1.8 versus 21.2 +/- 2.3 bursts per minute, P < .02), and the changes in these variables were closely related (r = .95, P < .01). Similar mean blood pressure increases induced by phenylephrine caused greater reductions in heart rate and muscle sympathetic nerve activity after than before endurance training (-8.6 +/- 0.8 versus -6.1 +/- 1.1 beats per minute, P = NS, and -78.0 +/- 4.6% versus -53.6 +/- 4.8%, P < .05). Likewise, similar mean blood pressure reductions induced by nitroprusside caused greater increases in heart rate and muscle sympathetic nerve activity after than before endurance training (18.6 +/- 3.0 versus 12.4 +/- 2.4 beats per minute, P < .05, and 128.1 +/- 26% versus 63.2 +/- 11%, P < .02). No alteration in hemodynamics, oxygen consumption, muscle sympathetic nerve activity, and baroreceptor reflex sensitivity occurred in four other age-matched sedentary subjects studied before and after a 10-week observation period without endurance training.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Although hypophosphatemia is commonly present in diabetics, little is known about its isolated effects on glucose and insulin metabolism. We therefore investigated glucose metabolism in six nondiabetic subjects with chronic hypophosphatemia. When glucose was infused to maintain a constant hyperglycemic level (125 mg per deciliter [6.9 mmol per liter] above basal levels), the glucose infusion rate was 36 per cent less in the hypophosphatemic group than in controls (4.90 +/- 0.34 mg per kilogram of body weight per minute vs. 7.64 +/- 0.37, P < 0.001), although responses to endogenous insulin were similar. When exogenous insulin was infused at a constant rate to maintain an insulin level about 100 microU per milliliter (718 pmol per liter) above basal levels and glucose was infused as necessary to maintain fasting glucose levels, the infusion rate of glucose was 43 per cent lower in the hypophosphatemic group than in controls (3.80 +/- 0.58 mg per kilogram per minute vs. 6.70 +/- 0.33, P < 0.001), although the clearance rate of insulin was similar in both groups. These results indicate that hypophosphatemia is associated with impaired glucose metabolism in both the hyperglycemic and euglycemic states, and that this associated primarily reflects decreased tissue sensitivity to insulin. (N Engl J Med. 1980; 303; 1259-63.).  相似文献   

19.
Acute ethanol administration stimulates sympathetic nervous system activity. The present study was designed to determine whether this sympathetic activation affects glycogenolysis and total hepatic glucose production (HGP) during ethanol-induced inhibition of gluconeogenesis. Nineteen volunteers participated in four protocols. Two protocols aimed to study--using combined infusion of [6,6-2H2]glucose and [U-13C]glucose, VCO2 and 13CO2 measurements--the effects of ethanol infusion alone (n = 10) or with propranolol (n = 6) or phentolamine infusion (n = 4) on HGP, glucose disposal (Rd), glucose oxidation [13C]Glcox and non-oxidative glucose disposal (NOGD = Rd - [13C]Glcox). The fourth protocol assessed the effects of saline infusion alone on HGP. Using ethanol, HGP decreased by 23%, Rd by 20% and glycaemia by 9% (all P < 0.001); heart rate increased by 10%, whereas blood pressure remained unchanged. The effects were not observed with saline, except a slight (10%) decrease in HGP (P < 0.01 vs. ethanol). Ethanol did not affect [13C]Glcox but decreased NOGD by 73% (P < 0.001). Propranolol or phentolamine did not alter any of the effects of ethanol on glucose metabolism, but decreased mean arterial pressure. Propranolol prevented the ethanol-induced increase in heart rate. In conclusion, ethanol decreased blood glucose by decreasing HGP, presumably by inhibiting gluconeogenesis. Sympathetic activation prevented the decrease in blood pressure produced by ethanol but did not stimulate glycogenolysis.  相似文献   

20.
To determine the relationship between circulating metabolic fuels and their local concentrations in peripheral tissues we measured glycerol, glucose, and amino acids by microdialysis in muscle and adipose interstitium of 10 fasted, nonobese human subjects during (a) baseline, (b) euglycemic hyperinsulinemia (3 mU/kg per min for 3 h) and, (c) local norepinephrine reuptake blockade (NOR). At baseline, interstitial glycerol was strikingly higher (P < 0.0001) in muscle (3710 microM) and adipose tissue (2760 microM) compared with plasma (87 microM), whereas interstitial glucose (muscle 3.3, fat 3.6 mM) was lower (P < 0.01) than plasma levels (4.8 mM). Taurine, glutamine, and alanine levels were higher in muscle than in adipose or plasma (P < 0.05). Euglycemic hyperinsulinemia did not affect interstitial glucose, but induced a fall in plasma glycerol and amino acids paralleled by similar changes in the interstitium of both tissues. Local NOR provoked a fivefold increase in glycerol (P < 0.001) and twofold increase in norepinephrine (P < 0.01) in both muscle and adipose tissues. To conclude, interstitial substrate levels in human skeletal muscle and adipose tissue differ substantially from those in the circulation and this disparity is most pronounced for glycerol which is raised in muscle as well as adipose tissue. In muscle, insulin suppressed and NOR increased interstitial glycerol concentrations. Our data suggest unexpectedly high rates of intramuscular lipolysis in humans that may play an important role in fuel metabolism.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号