Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, United States.
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2023 Feb 1;324(2):E199-E208. doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.00304.2022. Epub 2023 Jan 18.
It has been proposed that brain glucagon action inhibits glucagon-stimulated hepatic glucose production (HGP), which may explain, at least in part, why glucagon's effect on HGP is transient. However, the pharmacologic off-target effects of glucagon in the brain may have been responsible for previously observed effects. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine if central glucagon action plays a physiologic role in the regulation of HGP. Insulin was maintained at baseline while glucagon was either infused into the carotid and vertebral arteries or into a peripheral (leg) vein at rates designed to increase glucagon in the head in one group, while keeping glucagon at the liver matched between groups. The extraction rate of glucagon across the head was high (double that of the liver), and hypothalamic cAMP increased twofold, in proportion to the exposure of the brain to increased glucagon, but HGP was not reduced by the increase in brain glucagon signaling, as had been suggested previously (the areas under the curve for HGP were 840 ± 14 vs. 871 ± 36 mg/kg/240 min in head vs. peripheral infusion groups, respectively). Central nervous system glucagon action reduced circulating free fatty acids and glycerol, and this was associated with a modest reduction in net hepatic gluconeogenic flux. However, offsetting autoregulation by the liver (i.e., a reciprocal increase in net hepatic glycogenolysis) prevented a change in HGP. Thus, while physiologic engagement of the brain by glucagon can alter hepatic carbon flux, it does not appear to be responsible for the transient fall in HGP that occurs following the stimulation of HGP during a square wave rise in glucagon. Glucagon stimulates hepatic glucose production through its direct effects on the liver but may indirectly inhibit this process by acting on the brain. This was tested by delivering glucagon via the cerebral circulatory system. Central nervous system glucagon action reduced liver gluconeogenic flux, but glycogenolysis increased, resulting in no net change in hepatic glucose production. Surprisingly, brain glucagon also appeared to suppress lipolysis (plasma free fatty acid and glycerol levels were reduced).
有人提出,脑胰高血糖素作用抑制胰高血糖素刺激的肝葡萄糖生成(HGP),这至少可以部分解释为什么胰高血糖素对 HGP 的作用是短暂的。然而,胰高血糖素在大脑中的药理脱靶作用可能是先前观察到的作用的原因。因此,本研究的目的是确定中枢胰高血糖素作用是否在 HGP 的调节中发挥生理作用。胰岛素保持在基线水平,同时将胰高血糖素输注到颈动脉和椎动脉或外周(腿部)静脉中,以在一组中增加头部的胰高血糖素,同时使两组之间的肝胰高血糖素匹配。胰高血糖素穿过头部的提取率很高(是肝脏的两倍),并且下丘脑 cAMP 增加了两倍,与大脑暴露于增加的胰高血糖素成比例,但正如先前所建议的那样,HGP 并没有因脑胰高血糖素信号的增加而降低(HGP 的曲线下面积分别为 840±14 与 871±36 mg/kg/240 min,在头部与外周输注组之间)。中枢神经系统胰高血糖素作用降低循环游离脂肪酸和甘油,这与净肝糖异生通量的适度降低有关。然而,肝脏的自动调节(即净肝糖原分解的反向增加)抵消了 HGP 的变化。因此,虽然胰高血糖素对大脑的生理性参与可以改变肝碳通量,但它似乎不是导致在胰高血糖素的 Square wave 升高期间刺激 HGP 后 HGP 短暂下降的原因。胰高血糖素通过其对肝脏的直接作用刺激肝葡萄糖生成,但也可以通过作用于大脑间接抑制此过程。通过经脑循环系统输送胰高血糖素来测试这一点。中枢神经系统胰高血糖素作用降低了肝糖异生通量,但糖原分解增加,导致肝葡萄糖生成没有净变化。令人惊讶的是,脑胰高血糖素似乎也抑制脂肪分解(血浆游离脂肪酸和甘油水平降低)。