| Literature DB >> 20700401 |
Susana Sangiao-Alvarellos1, Fernando Cordido.
Abstract
Ghrelin is a 28-amino-acid peptide that displays a strong growth hormone- (GH-) releasing activity through the activation of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR). The first studies about role of ghrelin were focused on its orexigenic ability, but despite indisputable pharmacological data, the evidence for a physiological role for ghrelin in the control of appetite is much less clear. Mice with targeted deletion of either ghrelin or the GHSR exhibit an essentially normal metabolic phenotype when fed a regular chow diet, suggesting that ghrelin may have a redundant role in the regulation of food intake. RNAs for ghrelin as well as GHSR are expressed in the pancreas of rats and humans and several studies propose that ghrelin could have an important function in glucose homeostasis and insulin release, independent of GH secretion. Low plasma ghrelin levels are associated with elevated fasting insulin levels and insulin resistance, suggesting both physiological and pathophysiological roles for ghrelin. For this reason, at least theoretically, ghrelin and/or its signalling manipulation could be useful for the treatment or prevention of diseases of glucose homeostasis such as type 2 diabetes.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20700401 PMCID: PMC2911604 DOI: 10.1155/2010/234709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pept ISSN: 1687-9767
Acute effects of ghrelin administration on glucose-insulin homeostasis in different species and metabolic situations. IV: intravenous; O: oral.
| Species | Treatment | Dose | Food before experiment | Treatment duration | Plasma glucose or GIR | Plasma insulin | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health humans | 1 IV AG injection versus 1 IV placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | 3 hours | Enhanced | Decreased | [ |
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| Health humans | 1 IV AG injection versus 1 IV placebo injection | 3.3 | Fasting overnight | 3 hours | Enhanced | Decreased | [ |
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| Health humans | 1 IV AG injection versus 1 IV placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Enhanced | Decreased | [ |
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| Health humans | 1 IV AG injection + O-GTT versus O-GTT | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Not change | Not change |
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| 1 IV AG injection + FFA versus FFA | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Not change | Decreased | ||
| 1 IV AG injection + arginine versus arginine | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Enhanced | Decreased | ||
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| Health humans | 1 IV AG injection versus 1 IV placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Enhanced | Decreased |
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| 1 IV UAG injection versus 1 IV placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Not change | Not change | ||
| 1 IV AG injection + UAG versus 1 IV placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Not change | Not change | ||
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| Health humans | IV AG infusion versus IV placebo infusion | 5 pmol AG/kg/min | Fasting overnight | 3 hours | Enhanced | Enhanced | [ |
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| Health humans | IV AG infusion versus IV placebo infusion | 5 pmol AG/kg/min | Fasting overnight | 5 hours | During clamp GIR diminished with ghrelin | Not change | [ |
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| Hypopituitary humans | 1 IV AG or UAG injection versus 1 IV placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Enhanced | Not change |
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| 1 IV AG + UAG injection versus 1 IV placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Not change | Diminished | ||
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| Hypopituitary humans | IV AG infusion versus IV placebo infusion | 5 pmol AG/kg/min | Fasting overnight | 5 hours | Basal period enhanced, during clamp GIR diminished | Not change | [ |
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| Gastrectomized humans | IV AG infusion versus IV placebo infusion | 5 pmol AG/kg/min | Fasting overnight | 5 hours | Diminished GIR | Not change | [ |
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| IV AG infusion versus IV placebo infusion | 1 ng AG/kg/h + 13.3 mg glucose/kg/min | 24-hour fasting | 40 minutes | Not change | Not change | ||
| Normal rats | IP AG infusion versus IV placebo infusion | 1 ng AG/kg/h + 13.3 mg glucose/kg/min | 24-hour fasting | 40 minutes | Enhanced | Diminished |
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| IV AG infusion versus IP placebo infusion | 1 ng AG/kg/h + 13.3 mg glucose/kg/min | 24-hour fasting | 40 minutes | Not change | Not change | ||
| IP AG infusion versus IP placebo infusion | 1 ng AG/kg/h + 13.3 mg glucose/kg/min | 24-hour fasting | 40 minutes | Enhanced | Diminished | ||
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| Normal rats | 1 IV UAG injection + IV-GTT versus IV-GTT | 30 nmol UAG/kg + 1 g glucose/kg | Fasting overnight | 50 minutes | Not change | Enhanced |
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| 1 IV AG injection + IV-GTT versus IV-GTT | 30 nmol UAG/kg + 1 g glucose/kg | Fasting overnight | 50 minutes | Not change | Not change | ||
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| Rats with hepatic vagotomy | IP AG infusion versus IP placebo infusion | 1 ng AG/kg//h +13.3 mg glucose/kg/min | 24-hour fasting | 40 minutes | Not change | Not change | [ |
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| Mice ddY | 1 IP AG injection versus 1 IP placebo injection | 1 and 10 nmol AG/kg + 1 g glucose/kg | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Enhanced | Decreased |
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| 1 IP AG injection versus 1 IP placebo injection | 1 nmol/kg | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Enhanced | |||
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| C57BL/6J mice | 1 IV AG injection + IV-GTT versus IV-GTT | 50 nmol AG/kg + 1g/kg | 3-hour fasting | 50 minutes | Not change | Diminished | [ |
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| GH-deficient little mice | 1 IP AG injection versus 1 IP placebo injection | 1 nmol AG/kg | Fasting overnight | 30 minutes | Enhanced | [ | |
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| Obese humans | 1 IV AG injection versus IV placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | 2 hours | Not change | Not change | [ |
Chronic effects of ghrelin administration on glucose-insulin homeostasis in different species.
| Species | Treatment administration | Dose | Food during experiment | Duration treatment | Plasma glucose levels | Plasma insulin levels | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mice ddy | 1 IP AG injection/12-h | 3 nmoles AG/mouse/injection |
| 5-day | Not change | Enhanced | [ |
| Tundra vole | 1 IP AG injection/day | 10 |
| 4-day | Enhanced | [ | |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | 1 ICV AG injection/12-h | 1 |
| 3-day | Not change | Not change | [ |
| Wistar rats | 1 ICV ghrelin injection/day | 1 |
| 5-day | Not change | Enhanced | [ |
| ICV ghrelin infusion | 2.5 nmol AG/rat/day |
| 6-day | Not change | Not change | [ | |
| 1 SC AG injection/12-h | 0.2 ug AG/injection |
| 4-day | Enhanced | Not change | [ |
Results obtained with cellular cultures and pancreatic perfusion that contribute to data about ghrelin role on glucose and insulin metabolism.
| Cellular type/Perfusion | Treatment | Dose | Insulin release | Glucose output | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Islets from normal rats | AG + glucose versus glucose | 10−12M AG + 2.8 mM glucose | Not change |
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| AG + glucose versus glucose | 10−12M AG + 8.3 mM glucose | Enhanced | |||
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| Islets from normal rats | AG + glucose versus glucose | 10−8M AG + 2.8 mM glucose | Not change |
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| AG + glucose versus glucose | 10−8M AG + 8.3 mM glucose | Diminished | |||
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| Islets from normal rats | AG + glucose versus glucose | 10 nM AG + 20 mM glucose | Diminished |
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| UAG + glucose versus glucose | 1 | Not change | |||
| AG + glucose + YIL-781 versus glucose | 10 nM AG + 20 mM glucose + 1 | Not change | |||
| Glucose + YIL-781 versus glucose | 20 mM glucose + 1 | Not change | |||
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| Islets from normal rats | GHRP-6 versus placebo | 1 | Enhanced |
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| SPA versus placebo | 1 | Enhanced | |||
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| Ghrelin KO mouse islets | Glucose ghrelin KO versus glucose wildtype | 8.3 mM and 16.7 mM glucose | Enhanced | [ | |
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| Min 6 cells | AG + glucose versus glucose | 1–10 nM AG + 22.2 mM glucose | Diminished | [ | |
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| Hepatocytes from pigs | AG versus placebo | 100 nM AG | Enhanced |
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| UAG versus placebo | 100 nM UAG | Diminished | |||
| UAG + AG versus AG | 100 nM AG + 100 nM UAG | Diminished | |||
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| Pancreas of rat perfused in situ | Ghrelin + glucose versus glucose | 10 nM ghrelin + 5.5 mM glucose | Not change |
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| Ghrelin + glucose versus glucose | 10 nM ghrelin + 9 mM glucose | Diminished | |||
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| Pancreas of rat perfused in vitro | Ghrelin + glucose versus glucose | 10 nM ghrelin + 8,3 mM glucose | Diminished |
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| GHRP-6 + glucose versus glucose | 1 | Enhanced | |||
| UAG + glucose versus glucose | 10 nmol/l UAG + 8.3 mM glucose | Not change | |||
Effects of GHSR antagonists on glucose and insulin levels.
| Species | Treatment Administration | Dose | Feeding | Measurement blood samples | Plasma glucose levels | Plasma insulin levels | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mice ob/ob | 1 IP GHSR antagonist injection/12 hours versus 1 IP placebo injection | 200 nmol GHRP-6/mouse |
| Endpoint 6-day | Diminished | Diminished | [ |
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| Mice ddY | 1 IP GHSR antagonist injection versus 1 IP placebo injection | 10 | Fasting overnight | Time course 2 hours | Diminished | Enhanced | |
| 1 IP GHSR antagonist injection versus 1 IP placebo injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | Time course 2 hours | Diminished | Enhanced | [ | |
| 1 IP GHSR antagonist + ghrelin injection versus 1 IP ghrelin injection | 1 | Fasting overnight | End point 0.5 hours | Diminished | |||
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| Normal rats | 1 IP GHSR antagonist injection versus 1 IP placebo injection | 10 | Fasting overnight | End point 0.5 hours | Enhanced |
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| Gastrectomized rats | 1 IP GHSR antagonist injection versus 1 IP placebo injection | 10 | Fasting overnight | End point 0.5 hours | Enhanced | ||
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| Normal rats | Oral GHSR antagonist + IP-GTT versus IP-GTT | 10 mg YIL-781/kg +2 g glucose/kg | Fasting overnight | Time course 6 hours | Diminished | Enhanced |
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| Oral GHSR antagonist versus placebo | 30 mg YIL-781/kg | Fasting overnight | Time course 6 hours | Diminished | |||
| DIO rats | Oral GHSR antagonist +IP-GTT versus placebo + IP-GTT | 3 mg YIL-781/kg +2 g glucose/kg | Fasting overnight | Time course 6.5 hours | Diminished | ||
Glucose and insulin levels in GHSR-, ghrelin-, and double-knockout animals.
| Null mice | Treatment | Dose | Food before/during experiment | Measurement blood samples | Plasma glucose levels | Plasma insulin levels | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ghrelin | KO versus wildtype | SCD 4–20 weeks old | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | [ | |
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| Ghrelin | KO versus wildtype | SCD 4–10 weeks of age | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | [ | |
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| Ghrelin | IP-GTT, KO versus wildtype | 2 g glucose/kg | SCD, fasted | Time course-2 hours | Diminished | Enhanced |
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| KO versus wildtype | SCD, fed | Endpoint | Endpoint | Not change | |||
| KO HDF versus KO SCD | HFD 8–12 weeks old | Endpoint | Not change | Enhanced | |||
| IP-GTT, KO HFD versus KO SCD | 2 g glucose/kg | HFD 8–12 weeks old | Time course-2 hours | Not change | Enhanced | ||
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| Ghrelin | IP-GTT, KO versus wildtype | 2.5 g glucose/kg | SCD 8-week old | Time course-2 hours | Diminished | Enhanced | [ |
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| Ghrelin | KO versus wildtype | SCD, 6 hours fast | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | [ | |
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| AG versus saline | 2.5 g glucose/kg + 1 IP injection of 150 nmol AG/kg | SCD 8-week old, 18 h fast | Time course-2 hours | Enhanced | Diminished |
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| ITT, KO versus wildtype | 0.75 U/kg | SCD 8-week old, 8h fast | Time course-2.5 hours | Diminished | |||
| Ghrelin | Hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp, KO versus wildtype | SCD 8-week old | GIR enhanced during clamp | ||||
| KO versus wildtype | SCD 12-week old | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | |||
| KO.ob/ob versus wildtype.ob/ob | SCD 12-week old | Endpoint | Diminished | Enhanced | |||
| KO.ob/ob versus wildtype.ob/ob | SCD 12-week old, 24 hours fast | Endpoint | Diminished | Not change | |||
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| Ghrelin | IP-GTT, KO versus wildtype | 2 g glucose/kg | SCD, 6 hours fast | Time course-2 hours | Not change | Not change |
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| ITT, KO versus wildtype | 1 U/kg | SCD, 6 hours fast | Time course-2 hours | Not change | Not change | ||
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| Ghrelin | O-GTT, KO DIO versus wildtype DIO | 1 g glucose/kg | HFD 8–23 weeks old, 16 hours fast | Time course-2 hours | Not change | Diminished | [ |
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| Ghrelin | KO versus wildtype | 10-week SCD + 40 days on 50% caloric restriction with SCD | Time course every 2 days | 2–16 day diminished | [ | ||
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| KO DIO versus wildtype DIO | HFD 8–23 weeks old | Endpoint | diminished | Diminished | |||
| IPGTT, KO DIO versus wildtype DIO | 1 g glucose/kg | HFD 8–23 weeks old, 16 hours fasted | Time course-2 hours | Not change | Diminished |
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| Ghrelin | Hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp, KO DIO versus wildtype DIO | 10 mU insulin/kg + constant infused insulin 5 mU/kg/min + infused 20% glucose | HFD 8–23 weeks old, 16 hours fast | Time course-1.5 hours | GIR enhanced | ||
| Hyperglycemic clamp KO DIO versus wildtype DIO | 20% glucose at rates that stabilized blood glucose at 300 mg/dl | HFD 8–23 weeks old, 16 hours fasted | Time course-1.5 hours | Diminished | |||
| KO versus wildtype | 24-week SCD | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | |||
| KO versus wildtype | 24-week SCD/18 h-fasting | Endpoint | Diminished | Diminished | |||
| GHSR | KO versus wildtype | 10-week SCD + 40 days on 50% caloric restriction with SCD | Time course every two days | 2–28 day diminished | [ | ||
| KO versus wildtype | 14-week SCD +10-week HF + 18 h-fasting | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | |||
| KO versus wildtype | 14-week SCD +10-week HF | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | |||
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| IP-GTT KO versus wildtype | 2 g glucose/kg | SCD, 6 hours-fasting | Time course 2 hours | Not change | Not change |
[ | |
| GHSR | ITT KO versus wildtype | 1 U/kg | SCD, 6 hours-fasting | Time course 2 hours | Not change | Not change | |
| KO versus wildtype | SCD, 6 hours-fasting | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | |||
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| GHSR | KO versus wildtype | SCD 4–19 weeks old | Endpoint | Diminished | Diminished | [ | |
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| GHSR | KO versus wildtype | SCD 8-week old | Endpoint | Diminished | Diminished | [ | |
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| Ghrelin + GHSR | IP-GTT dKO versus wildtype | 2 g glucose/kg | SCD, 6 hours-fasting | Time course-2 hours | Not change | Not change |
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| dKO versus wildtype | SCD, 6 hours-fasting | Endpoint | Not change | Not change | |||
| ITT dKO versus wildtype | 1 U/kg | SCD, 6 hours-fasting | Time course-2 hours | Not change | Not change | ||
Relation between overexpression of ghrelin in different tissues or cellular types and glucose-insulin levels.
| Transgenic animals | Ghrelin levelstransgenic versus wildtype | Treatment | Food before/during experiment | Treatment duration | Plasma glucose levels transgenic versus wildtype | Plasma insulin levels transgenic versus wildtype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ghrelin is overexpressed inadipose tissue | AG: not change UAG: enhanced | Nothing |
| Endpoint | Enhanced |
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| IP-GTT | 16-h fast | 2.5 hours | Diminished | ||||
| IP-ITT | 16-h fast | 2.5 hours | Diminished | ||||
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| Ghrelin is overexpressed in stomach and hypothalamus | AG: enhanced UAG: enhanced | IP-GTT | 18-h fast | 2.5 hours | Enhanced | Diminished |
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| IP-ITT | 4-h fast | 2.5 hours | Not change | Not change | |||
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| Ghrelin is overexpressed in pancreas | AG: not change UAG: enhanced | Nothing | Overnight fast | Endpoint | Not change | Not change |
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| IP-GTT | Overnight fast | 2 hours | Not change | Diminished | |||
| IP-GTT | Overnight fast | 2 hours | Not change | Diminished | |||
| ITT | 4-h fast | 3 hours | Not change | Not change | |||
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| Ghrelin is overexpressed in hypothalamus, cortex and liver | AG: enhanced UAG: enhanced | IP-GTT | 20-h fast | 2 hours | Enhanced | Not change |
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| Ghrelin is overexpressed in hypothalamus, cortex and liver | AG: not change UAG: enhanced | IP-GTT | 20-h fast | 2 hours | Not change | Not change | |
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| Ghrelin is overexpressed in wide variety of tissues | AG: not change UAG: enhanced | Nothing |
| Endpoint | Not change | Not change | [ |
Figure 1Regulation of hepatic gluconeogenesis and glycogen synthesis by ghrelin. Insulin activates the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase (IR), which phosphorylates and recruits different substrate adaptors. AKT is a key protein kinase downstream of the insulin receptor and its activation plays a key role in suppressing hepatic gluconeogenesis, since GSK-3, which phosphorylate glycogen synthetase (GS) is inhibiting, is phosphorylated by AKT suppressing hepatic gluconeogenesis, resulting in enhanced glycogen deposition. Sustained ghrelin administration in rats reduced hepatic AKT-GSK activation and enhanced PGC-1a expression, suggesting upregulation of gluconeogenesis and downregulation of glyconeogenesis.
Figure 2β-cell mechanisms of insulin release and its regulation by ghrelin. When the plasma glucose concentration rises, β-cells oxidize it. Glucose oxidation establishes a protonmotive force (PMF) that drives ATP synthesis, increasing the ATP/ADP ratio. This causes closure of KATP-channels, depolarisation of the plasma membrane potential (Δψp) and Ca2+ flux into the cell, triggering insulin release. UCP2 activity dissipates the protonmotive force, lowering ATP/ADP. Ghrelin directly acts on the β-cell and via PTX–sensitive mechanisms attenuates glucose-induced [Ca2+]i signalling partly through enhancement of TEA-sensitive delayed outward K+ currents resulting in decrease plasma insulin levels. PTX catalyzes the ADP-ribosylation of the α subunits of the heterotrimeric G proteins Gi, Go, and Gt. This prevents the G proteins from interacting with G protein-coupled receptors on the cell membrane thus interfering with intracellular communication. Since the Gα subunits remain in their GDP-bound, inactive state, they are unable to inhibit adenylyl cyclase, thus keeping levels of adenylyl cyclase and cAMP elevated. PTX inhibited a number of insulin-stimulated cellular events, such as glucose transport and its metabolism. Antisense oligonucleotide specific for Gαi2-subunit of G proteins blocks the effects of ghrelin on [Ca2+]i and insulin release. Hence ghrelin presumably suppresses glucose-induced insulin release via Gαi2- and Kv channel–mediated attenuation of Ca2+ signalling in β-cells.
Figure 3Glucose uptake in adipose tissue and its regulation by ghrelin. Insulin activates the IR, which phosphorylates and recruits different substrate adaptors such as the IRS family of proteins. Tyrosine phosphorylated IRS then displays binding sites for numerous signaling partners. Among them, PI3K has a major role in insulin function, mainly via the activation of the AKT/PKB and the PKCz cascades. Activated AKT induces glycogen synthesis, through inhibition of GSK-3. Insulin stimulates glucose uptake in muscle and adipocytes via translocation of GLUT-4 vesicles to the plasma membrane. GLUT-4 translocation involves the PI3K/AKT pathway. Ghrelin treatment induced increases IRS-1 and AKT phosphorylation, but when the adipocytes were treated with wortmannin, a PI3K inhibitor, completely blocked this ghrelin induced increase in glucose transport and phospho-AKT expression, suggesting that PI3K/AKT activation may mediate the effect of ghrelin on glucose transport in these adipocytes.
Potential therapeutic uses of ghrelin agonists and antagonists on glucose-insulin homeostasis.
| Ghrelin agonists | Ghrelin antagonists |
|---|---|
| Insulinoma | Type 2 Diabetes mellitus |
| Anorexia nervosa | Metabolic syndrome |
| Cachexia of malignancy | Obesity |
Summary of putative ghrelin effect on glucose-insulin homeostasis and related physiological actions.
| Ghrelin effects on glucose-insulin homeostasis |
|---|
| Increase glycemia |
| Decrease insulinemia |
| Increase food intake |
| Increase body weight and adiposity percentage |
| Increase GH secretion |