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Diabetes, Vol 40, Issue 4 499-508, Copyright © 1991 by American Diabetes Association
Effects of insulin and amino acids on leg protein turnover in IDDM patients
WM Bennet, AA Connacher, RT Jung, P Stehle and MJ Rennie
Department of Anatomy and Physiology, University of Dundee, Scotland, UK.
To determine whether the responses of muscle protein metabolism to insulin
and amino acids in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM)
were different from those in nondiabetic subjects, leg tissue kinetics of
[15N]phenylalanine and [1-13C]leucine and its metabolites were measured in
eight insulin-withdrawn IDDM patients and eight nondiabetic subjects during
basal insulinemia and during infusion of insulin (0.29 nmol.min-1.m-2). The
diabetic patients were studied in the absence of amino acids, and both
groups were studied during infusion of a mixed-amino acid solution (AA). In
the diabetic patients, insulin alone and combined with additional AA
reduced leg tissue phenylalanine release by 42 and 41%, respectively (both
P less than 0.05), but uptake was unchanged. Leg tissue leucine oxidation
was unchanged by insulin alone but was increased (P = 0.012) fourfold
during insulin infusion with additional AA. In the nondiabetic subjects,
insulin with AA infusion increased leg tissue phenylalanine uptake (45.7
+/- 7.5 to 73.1 +/- 7.3 nmol.min-1.100 g-1, P less than 0.01).
Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in the diabetic patients (1.60 +/- 0.28
mumol.min-1.100 g-1, P = 0.04). These results suggest that, in IDDM
patients, 1) infusion of insulin fails to stimulate muscle protein
synthesis even when combined with a substantially increased provision of
AA, and 2) compared with nondiabetic subjects, muscle protein synthesis as
well as glucose uptake exhibit blunted responses to insulin.

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Copyright © 1991 by the American Diabetes Association.
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