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Diabetes, Vol 37, Issue 6 749-759, Copyright © 1988 by American Diabetes Association
Role of gluconeogenesis in sustaining glucose production during hypoglycemia caused by continuous insulin infusion in conscious dogs
RT Frizzell, GK Hendrick, DW Biggers, DB Lacy, DP Donahue, DR Green, RK Carr, PE Williams, RW Stevenson and AD Cherrington
Department of Molecular Physiology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, 37232.
The roles of glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis in sustaining glucose
production during insulin-induced hypoglycemia were assessed in
overnight-fasted conscious dogs. Insulin was infused intraportally for 3 h
at 5 mU.kg-1.min-1 in five animals, and glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis
were measured by using a combination of tracer [( 3-3H]glucose and
[U-14C]alanine) and hepatic arteriovenous difference techniques. In
response to the elevated insulin level (263 +/- 39 microU/ml), plasma
glucose level fell (41 +/- 3 mg/dl), and levels of the counterregulatory
hormones glucagon, epinephrine, norepinephrine, and cortisol increased (91
+/- 29 to 271 +/- 55 pg/ml, 83 +/- 26 to 2356 +/- 632 pg/ml, 128 +/- 31 to
596 +/- 81 pg/ml, and 1.5 +/- 0.4 to 11.1 +/- 1.0 micrograms/dl,
respectively; for all, P less than .05). Glucose production fell initially
and then doubled (3.1 +/- 0.3 to 6.1 +/- 0.5 mg.kg-1.min-1; P less than
.05) by 60 min. Net hepatic gluconeogenic precursor uptake increased
approximately eightfold by the end of the hypoglycemic period. By the same
time, the efficiency with which the liver converted the gluconeogenic
precursors to glucose rose twofold. Five control experiments in which
euglycemia was maintained by glucose infusion during insulin administration
(5.0 mU.kg-1.min-1) provided baseline data. Glycogenolysis accounted for
69-88% of glucose production during the 1st h of hypoglycemia, whereas
gluconeogenesis accounted for 48-88% of glucose production during the 3rd h
of hypoglycemia. These data suggest that gluconeogenesis is the key process
for the normal counterregulatory response to prolonged and marked
hypoglycemia.

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Copyright © 1988 by the American Diabetes Association.
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