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Diabetes, Vol 36, Issue 5 592-596, Copyright © 1987 by American Diabetes Association


ARTICLES

Pancreatic somatostatin is a mediator of glucagon inhibition by hyperglycemia

LJ Klaff and GJ Taborsky

We have previously shown that a nonimmunoreactive analogue of somatostatin, (D-Ala5, D-Trp8)-somatostatin, differentially inhibits pancreatic somatostatin secretion without inhibiting insulin or glucagon secretion. During normoglycemia, suppression of pancreatic somatostatin with this analogue increases glucagon and insulin secretion, suggesting that pancreatic somatostatin tonically inhibits glucagon and insulin secretion by a paracrine mechanism. In our study, we used this analogue to determine whether endogenous pancreatic somatostatin has a role in the inhibition of glucagon secretion by hyperglycemia. The experiments were performed in pentobarbital-anesthetized, laparotomized dogs. To measure the pancreatic output of somatostatin directly, pancreatic venous blood was sampled from the right lobe of the dog pancreas, and the pancreatic blood flow was measured. In the first set of experiments, glucagon secretion was suppressed by a glucose infusion (200 mg/kg bolus and 20 mg X kg-1 X min-1 i.v.) for 3 h. Plasma glucose rose from 102 +/- 6 to 365 +/- 34 mg/dl. Pancreatic insulin output increased 10-fold, pancreatic somatostatin output increased from 1.2 +/- 0.3 to 3.0 +/- 0.8 ng/min, and pancreatic glucagon output was suppressed from 1.4 +/- 0.7 to 0.5 +/- 0.1 ng/min. After 2 h of glucose infusion, an infusion of the analogue (5.5 micrograms/min i.v.) reversed both the stimulation of somatostatin and the suppression of glucagon without significantly changing either the plasma glucose level or the pancreatic insulin output. In a second set of experiments, basal somatostatin output was suppressed by the analogue (5.5 micrograms/min i.v.) for 15 min before the administration of glucose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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