Ventromedial Hypothalamic Glucokinase Is an Important Mediator of the Counterregulatory Response to Insulin-Induced Hypoglycemia
- 1Neurology Service, Department of Veterans Affairs New Jersey Health Care System, East Orange, New Jersey
- 2Department of Neurology and Neurosciences, New Jersey Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey
- 3Department of Internal Medicine, The Sarah W. Stedman Nutrition and Metabolism Center, and Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Nutrition, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina
- 4Tsukuba Research Institute, Banyu Pharmaceutical, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan
- 5Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, New Jersey
- Corresponding author: Barry E. Levin, MD, Neurology Service (127C), VA Medical Center, E. Orange, NJ 07018-1095. E-mail: levin{at}umdnj.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—The counterregulatory response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia is mediated by the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH), which contains specialized glucosensing neurons, many of which use glucokinase (GK) as the rate-limiting step in glucose's regulation of neuronal activity. Since conditions associated with increased VMH GK expression are associated with a blunted counterregulatory response, we tested the hypothesis that increasing VMH GK activity would similarly attenuate, while decreasing GK activity would enhance the counterregulatory response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—The counterregulatory response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia was evaluated in Sprague-Dawley rats after bilateral VMH injections of 1) a GK activator drug (compound A) to increase VMH GK activity, 2) low-dose alloxan (4 μg) to acutely inhibit GK activity, 3) high-dose alloxan (24 μg), or 4) an adenovirus expressing GK short hairpin RNA (shRNA) to chronically reduce GK expression and activity.
RESULTS—Compound A increased VMH GK activity sixfold in vitro and reduced the epinephrine, norepinephrine, and glucagon responses to insulin-induced hypoglycemia by 40–62% when injected into the VMH in vivo. On the other hand, acute and chronic reductions of VMH GK mRNA or activity had a lesser and more selective effect on increasing primarily the epinephrine response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia by 23–50%.
CONCLUSIONS—These studies suggest that VMH GK activity is an important regulator of the counterregulatory response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia and that a drug that specifically inhibited the rise in hypothalamic GK activity after insulin-induced hypoglycemia might improve the dampened counterregulatory response seen in tightly controlled diabetic subjects.
- ARC, arcuate hypothalamic nucleus
- AUC, area under the curve
- GK, glucokinase
- shRNA, short hairpin RNA
- VMH, ventromedial hypothalamus
- VMN, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus
Footnotes
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Published ahead of print at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org on 21 February 2008. DOI: 10.2337/db07-1755.
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B.E.L., J.E., and B.B.Z. hold stock in Merck.
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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- Accepted February 14, 2008.
- Received January 24, 2007.
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