Comar Jurandir Fernando, de Oliveira Denise Silva, Bracht Livia, Kemmelmeier Fumie Suzuki, Peralta Rosane Marina, Bracht Adelar
Laboratory of Liver Metabolism, University of Maringá, 87020900 Maringá, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2016 Aug 4;11(8):e0160067. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160067. eCollection 2016.
There are several claims about the beneficial effects of supplementing L-glutamine to both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The purpose of the present study was to provide detailed knowledge about the fate of this amino acid in the liver, the first organ that receives the compound when ingested orally. The study was done using the isolated perfused rat liver, an experimental system that preserves the microcirculation of the organ and that allows to measured several parameters during steady-state and pre steady-state conditions. L-Glutamine was infused in the portal vein (5 mM) and several parameters were monitored. Livers from type 1 diabetic rats showed an accelerated response to L-glutamine infusion. In consequence of this accelerated response livers from type 1 diabetic rats presented higher rates of ammonia, urea, glucose and lactate output during the first 25-30 minutes following L-glutamine infusion. As steady-state conditions approached, however, the difference between type 1 diabetes and control livers tended to disappear. Measurement of the glycogen content over a period of 100 minutes revealed that, excepting the initial phase of the L-glutamine infusion, the increased glucose output in livers from type 1 diabetic rats was mainly due to accelerated glycogenolysis. Livers from type 2 diabetic rats behaved similarly to control livers with no accelerated glucose output but with increased L-alanine production. L-Alanine is important for the pancreatic β-cells and from this point of view the oral intake of L-glutamine can be regarded as beneficial. Furthermore, the lack of increased glucose output in livers from type 2 diabetic rats is consistent with observations that even daily L-glutamine doses of 30 g do not increase the glycemic levels in well controlled type 2 diabetes patients.
关于补充L-谷氨酰胺对1型和2型糖尿病的有益作用有多种说法。本研究的目的是提供关于这种氨基酸在肝脏中代谢情况的详细知识,肝脏是口服该化合物后首先接收它的器官。该研究使用离体灌注大鼠肝脏进行,这是一种能保留器官微循环并允许在稳态和预稳态条件下测量多个参数的实验系统。将L-谷氨酰胺注入门静脉(5 mM)并监测多个参数。1型糖尿病大鼠的肝脏对L-谷氨酰胺注入表现出加速反应。由于这种加速反应,1型糖尿病大鼠的肝脏在注入L-谷氨酰胺后的最初25 - 30分钟内氨、尿素、葡萄糖和乳酸的输出率更高。然而,随着稳态条件的接近,1型糖尿病肝脏与对照肝脏之间的差异趋于消失。在100分钟内对糖原含量的测量表明,除了L-谷氨酰胺注入的初始阶段外,1型糖尿病大鼠肝脏中葡萄糖输出增加主要是由于糖原分解加速。2型糖尿病大鼠的肝脏表现与对照肝脏相似,葡萄糖输出没有加速,但L-丙氨酸生成增加。L-丙氨酸对胰腺β细胞很重要,从这个角度来看,口服L-谷氨酰胺可被视为有益的。此外,2型糖尿病大鼠肝脏中葡萄糖输出没有增加与以下观察结果一致,即即使每天给予30 g的L-谷氨酰胺剂量也不会增加血糖控制良好的2型糖尿病患者的血糖水平。