| Literature DB >> 2645190 |
G C Weir1, S Mojsov, G K Hendrick, J F Habener.
Abstract
Glucagonlike peptide I (7-37) [GLP-I-(7-37)], encoded with glucagon and glucagonlike peptide II and intervening peptide II in the rat and human glucagon gene, is processed from proglucagon in both pancreas and intestine and is a potent stimulator of insulin secretion. Unequivocal insulin release from the isolated perfused rat pancreas is elicited by a 10(-11) M concentration of this peptide, and a weak response is found at 10(-12) M. We found that GLP-I-(7-37) is approximately 100 times more potent than glucagon in the stimulation of insulin secretion. Insulin release in response to GLP-I-(7-37) is highly dependent on the ambient glucose concentration; no response is detectable at a glucose concentration of 2.8 mM, and at 6.6 and 16.7 mM, insulin release is augmented by 4.7 and 22.8 ng/ml, respectively. The pattern of insulin secretion stimulated by GLP-I-(7-37) is biphasic, with an initial spike followed by a plateau of sustained release. The effects on insulin release of GLP-I-(7-36) amide, a GLP-I analogue, and GLP-I-(7-37) at concentrations of 10(-11) M were indistinguishable. We also found that GLP-I-(7-37) at 10(-9) M does not influence glucagon secretion and that glucagonlike peptide II and the intervening peptide II, two other peptides encoded by the glucagon gene, have no detectable effects on insulin secretion.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2645190 DOI: 10.2337/diab.38.3.338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461