Literature DB >> 8454171

Biological activity of alligator, avian, and mammalian insulin in juvenile alligators: plasma glucose and amino acids.

V A Lance1, R M Elsey, R A Coulson.   

Abstract

The biological activity of alligator, turkey, and bovine insulin on plasma glucose and plasma amino acids was tested in fasted juvenile alligators. Preliminary experiments showed that the stress associated with taking the initial blood sample resulted in a hyperglycemic response lasting more than 24 hr. Despite repeated bleedings no additional hyperglycemic events occurred, and blood glucose declined slowly over the next 7 days. Under these conditions the smallest dose of insulin eliciting a hypoglycemic response was 40 micrograms/kg body wt. A dose of 400 micrograms/kg body wt of either alligator or bovine insulin caused a pronounced hypoglycemia by 12 hr postinjection. Maximum decline in plasma glucose occurred at 24 to 36 hr with a slow return to control levels by 120 hr. There were no significant differences in the hypoglycemic responses to any of the three insulins tested. The decline in plasma amino acids was much more rapid than the decline in plasma glucose in response to insulin. Even at the 40 micrograms/kg body wt dose a significant difference from saline-injected control was seen at 2 hr postinjection. Maximum decline in plasma amino acids occurred at 8 to 12 hr with a return to baseline by 36 hr. These results show that the relatively conservative changes in the sequence of alligator insulin (three amino acid substitutions in the B-chain compared with that of chicken) have little effect on biological activity and that alligator insulin receptors do not appear to discriminate among the three insulins.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8454171     DOI: 10.1006/gcen.1993.1032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gen Comp Endocrinol        ISSN: 0016-6480            Impact factor:   2.822


  2 in total

1.  An Evolutionary Remedy for an Abominable Physiological Mystery: Benign Hyperglycemia in Birds.

Authors:  Carlos Martinez Del Rio; Yocelyn T Gutiérrez-Guerrero
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2020-11-08       Impact factor: 2.395

2.  The metabolic cost of nesting: body condition and blood parameters of Caiman crocodilus and Melanosuchus niger in Central Amazonia.

Authors:  José António Lemos Barão-Nóbrega; Boris Marioni; Robinson Botero-Arias; António José Arsénia Nogueira; Emerson Silva Lima; William Ernest Magnusson; Ronis Da Silveira; Jaydione Luiz Marcon
Journal:  J Comp Physiol B       Date:  2017-06-19       Impact factor: 2.200

  2 in total

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