Literature DB >> 3536920

Activation of glucose transport in muscle by prolonged exposure to insulin. Effects of glucose and insulin concentrations.

D A Young, J J Uhl, G D Cartee, J O Holloszy.   

Abstract

Glucose transport activity was found to increase over 5 h in rat epitrochlearis muscle in response to a moderate concentration (50-100 microunits/ml) of insulin. This process was examined using 3-methylglucose. The increase in permeability to 3-methylglucose was 2- to 4-fold greater after 5 h than after 1 h in muscles incubated with 50 microunits/ml of insulin and 1 or 8 mM glucose. The increase in permeability to 3-methylglucose during the period between 1 and 5 h of exposure to 50 microunits/ml of insulin and 1 mM glucose was due to an increase in the apparent Vmax of sugar transport. There were two components to this activation of glucose transport. One, which was not influenced by inhibition of protein synthesis, resulted in activation of sugar transport to the same extent by 50 microunits/ml as by 20,000 microunits/ml of insulin; however, this activation took approximately 20 times longer with 50 microunits/ml insulin. The other, which was blocked by cycloheximide, resulted in a further activation of sugar transport to a level higher than that attained in response to 20,000 microunits/ml of insulin. Glucose had no effect on activation of sugar transport during the first hour, but a high concentration (20-36 mM) of glucose prevented the further activation of glucose transport during prolonged treatment with 50 microunits/ml of insulin. It appears from these results that prolonged exposure to a moderate concentration of insulin has previously unrecognized effects that include: a progressive activation of glucose transport over a long time that eventually results in as great a response as a "supramaximal" insulin concentration, and in the presence of low glucose concentration, further activation of glucose transport by an additional, protein synthesis-dependent mechanism. The results also show that a high concentration of glucose can, under some conditions, inhibit stimulation of its own transport.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3536920

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  28 in total

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3.  Maternal Obesity and Western-Style Diet Impair Fetal and Juvenile Offspring Skeletal Muscle Insulin-Stimulated Glucose Transport in Nonhuman Primates.

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4.  Hexose specificity for downregulation of HepG2/brain-type glucose transporter gene expression in L6 myocytes.

Authors:  F Maher; L C Harrison
Journal:  Diabetologia       Date:  1990-11       Impact factor: 10.122

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6.  Is "fat-induced" muscle insulin resistance rapidly reversible?

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7.  Glucose transporter levels in spontaneously obese (db/db) insulin-resistant mice.

Authors:  L Koranyi; D James; M Mueckler; M A Permutt
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8.  Altered estrogen receptor expression in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue of female rats fed a high-fat diet.

Authors:  Brittany K Gorres; Gregory L Bomhoff; Anisha A Gupte; Paige C Geiger
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2011-01-13

9.  Heat shock protein 72 regulates hepatic lipid accumulation.

Authors:  Ashley E Archer; Robert S Rogers; Alex T Von Schulze; Joshua L Wheatley; E Matthew Morris; Colin S McCoin; John P Thyfault; Paige C Geiger
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10.  Divergent skeletal muscle respiratory capacities in rats artificially selected for high and low running ability: a role for Nor1?

Authors:  Erin J Stephenson; Nigel K Stepto; Lauren G Koch; Steven L Britton; John A Hawley
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2012-08-30
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