Section of Endocrinology, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, 300 Cedar St., New Haven, CT, USA.
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2010 May;298(5):E971-7. doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.00749.2009. Epub 2010 Feb 9.
Local delivery of glucose into a critical glucose-sensing region within the brain, the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH), can suppress glucose counterregulatory responses to systemic hypoglycemia. Here, we investigated whether this suppression was accomplished through changes in GABA output in the VMH. Sprague-Dawley rats had catheters and guide cannulas implanted. Eight to ten days later, microdialysis-microinjection probes were inserted into the VMH, and they were dialyzed with varying concentrations of glucose from 0 to 100 mM. Two groups of rats were microdialyzed with 100 mM glucose and microinjected with either the K(ATP) channel opener diazoxide or a GABA(A) receptor antagonist. These animals were then subjected to a hyperinsulinemic-hypoglycemic glucose clamp. As expected, perfusion of glucose into the VMH suppressed the counterregulatory responses. Extracellular VMH GABA levels positively correlated with the concentration of glucose in the perfusate. In turn, extracellular GABA concentrations in the VMH were inversely related to the degree of counterregulatory hormone release. Of note, microinjection of either diazoxide or the GABA(A) receptor antagonist reversed the suppressive effects of VMH glucose delivery on counterregulatory responses. Some GABAergic neurons in the VMH respond to changes in local glucose concentration. Glucose in the VMH dose-dependently stimulates GABA release, and this in turn dose-dependently suppresses the glucagon and epinephrine responses to hypoglycemia. These data suggest that during hypoglycemia a decrease in glucose concentration within the VMH may provide an important signal that rapidly inactivates VMH GABAergic neurons, reducing inhibitory GABAergic tone, which in turn enhances the counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia.
局部向大脑内的一个关键葡萄糖感应区域——腹内侧下丘脑(VMH)内递送葡萄糖,可以抑制全身低血糖时的葡萄糖反向调节反应。在这里,我们研究了这种抑制是否是通过 VMH 中的 GABA 输出变化来实现的。Sprague-Dawley 大鼠植入了导管和导向套管。十到十天后,将微透析-微注射探针插入 VMH,并以 0 至 100mM 的不同浓度葡萄糖进行透析。两组大鼠用 100mM 葡萄糖进行微透析,并分别用 K(ATP)通道 opener 二氮嗪或 GABA(A)受体拮抗剂进行微注射。然后,这些动物接受了高胰岛素-低血糖葡萄糖钳夹。正如预期的那样,葡萄糖灌注到 VMH 中抑制了反向调节反应。VMH 细胞外 GABA 水平与灌流液中葡萄糖浓度呈正相关。反过来,VMH 中的细胞外 GABA 浓度与反向调节激素释放的程度呈负相关。值得注意的是,微注射二氮嗪或 GABA(A)受体拮抗剂逆转了 VMH 葡萄糖输送对反向调节反应的抑制作用。VMH 中的一些 GABA 能神经元对局部葡萄糖浓度的变化有反应。VMH 中的葡萄糖剂量依赖性地刺激 GABA 释放,而这反过来又剂量依赖性地抑制了胰高血糖素和肾上腺素对低血糖的反应。这些数据表明,在低血糖期间,VMH 内葡萄糖浓度的降低可能提供了一个重要信号,迅速使 VMH GABA 能神经元失活,降低抑制性 GABA 能张力,从而增强对低血糖的反向调节反应。