Department of Medicine and Institute of Metabolic Science, University of Cambridge, Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge, UK.
Metabolism. 2011 Apr;60(4):550-6. doi: 10.1016/j.metabol.2010.05.009. Epub 2010 Jul 29.
The mechanisms underpinning impaired defensive counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia that develop in some people with diabetes who suffer recurrent episodes of hypoglycemia are unknown. Previous work examining whether this is a consequence of increased glucose delivery to the hypothalamus, postulated to be the major hypoglycemia-sensing region, has been inconclusive. Here, we hypothesized instead that increased hypothalamic glucose phosphorylation, the first committed intracellular step in glucose metabolism, might develop following exposure to hypoglycemia. We anticipated that this adaptation might tend to preserve glucose flux during hypoglycemia, thus reducing detection of a falling glucose. We first validated a model of recurrent hypoglycemia in chronically catheterized (right jugular vein) rats receiving daily injections of insulin. We confirmed that this model of recurrent insulin-induced hypoglycemia results in impaired counterregulation, with responses of the key counterregulatory hormone, epinephrine, being suppressed significantly and progressively from the first day to the fourth day of insulin-induced hypoglycemia. In another cohort, we investigated the changes in brain glucose phosphorylation activity over 4 days of recurrent insulin-induced hypoglycemia. In keeping with our hypothesis, we found that recurrent hypoglycemia markedly and significantly increased hypothalamic glucose phosphorylation activity in a day-dependent fashion, with day 4 values 2.8 ± 0.6-fold higher than day 1 (P < .05), whereas there was no change in glucose phosphorylation activity in brain stem and frontal cortex. These findings suggest that the hypothalamus may adapt to recurrent hypoglycemia by increasing glucose phosphorylation; and we speculate that this metabolic adaptation may contribute, at least partly, to hypoglycemia-induced counterregulatory failure.
导致一些反复发作低血糖的糖尿病患者对低血糖的防御性代偿反应受损的机制尚不清楚。先前研究检查了这是否是由于向假定为主要低血糖感知区域的下丘脑输送更多葡萄糖的结果,但尚无定论。在这里,我们转而假设,在暴露于低血糖后,可能会发生增加的下丘脑葡萄糖磷酸化,这是葡萄糖代谢的第一个关键的细胞内步骤。我们预计这种适应可能会倾向于在低血糖期间保持葡萄糖通量,从而减少对葡萄糖下降的检测。我们首先验证了在接受每日胰岛素注射的慢性导管化(右颈静脉)大鼠中反复出现低血糖的模型。我们证实,这种反复胰岛素诱导的低血糖模型导致代偿失调,主要的代偿性激素肾上腺素的反应从胰岛素诱导的低血糖的第一天到第四天明显且逐渐受到抑制。在另一队列中,我们研究了反复胰岛素诱导的低血糖 4 天期间大脑葡萄糖磷酸化活性的变化。与我们的假设一致,我们发现,反复低血糖以依赖于天数的方式明显且显著增加了下丘脑的葡萄糖磷酸化活性,第 4 天的值比第 1 天高 2.8±0.6 倍(P<0.05),而脑干和额叶皮质的葡萄糖磷酸化活性没有变化。这些发现表明,下丘脑可能通过增加葡萄糖磷酸化来适应反复的低血糖;我们推测,这种代谢适应至少部分地导致了低血糖诱导的代偿失败。