Lima F B, Bao S, Garvey W T
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Diabetes. 1994 Jan;43(1):53-62. doi: 10.2337/diab.43.1.53.
We have shown previously that prolonged exposure to insulin and glucose impairs the insulin-responsive glucose transport system in primary cultured adipocytes. To assess the ability of insulin and glucose to regulate other cellular insulin actions, epididymal rat adipocytes were cultured in media containing 0-15 mM D-glucose and with or without insulin (50 ng/ml). After 24 h, cells were washed and basal and maximally insulin-stimulated rates of 2-deoxy-D-glucose uptake, L-leucine incorporation into protein, glucose oxidation to CO2, glucose incorporation into lipids, and glycogen synthase activity were measured. The results confirmed that glucose potentiates insulin's chronic ability to decrease basal and maximal glucose transport rates by approximately 50% at 5 mM glucose and by approximately 70% at 15 mM glucose compared with control cells. However, neither glucose nor insulin, alone or in combination, affected rates of leucine incorporation into protein. In addition, basal and maximal rates of glucose oxidation and of glucose incorporation into lipids were not regulated by glucose, and maximal responses declined approximately 50% over 24 h only when insulin was not present during preincubation (i.e., chronic insulin exposure was necessary to maintain full maximal responses). Glycogen synthase activity was measured in a cell-free system (0.5 mM UDP-glucose, with 10 or 0.01 mM glucose-6-phosphate) after exposing intact cells to glucose and insulin. Both short-term (1 h) and long-term (24 h) exposure to glucose alone led a dose-dependent increase in I-form and D-form glycogen synthase activity. Chronic exposure to insulin also increased total glycogen synthase activity (I- plus D-form) but did not affect absolute rates of maximally stimulated I-form activity. Glucose (but not insulin) increased the cellular content of immunoreactive glycogen synthase by 70% after 1 h. These results show that 1) chronic exposure to glucose and insulin impairs insulin responsiveness of the glucose transport system but does not affect rates of amino acid incorporation into protein; 2) the chronic presence of insulin is necessary for the maintenance of normal maximally stimulated rates of glucose oxidation and of glucose incorporation into lipids in cultured cells; and 3) glucose increases both D-form and I-form glycogen synthase activity, in part by increasing the amount of synthase protein, whereas chronic insulin exposure increases total glycogen synthase activity without altering maximal absolute rates of I-form activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
我们之前已经表明,长时间暴露于胰岛素和葡萄糖会损害原代培养脂肪细胞中胰岛素应答性葡萄糖转运系统。为了评估胰岛素和葡萄糖调节其他细胞胰岛素作用的能力,将附睾大鼠脂肪细胞培养于含有0 - 15 mM D - 葡萄糖且添加或不添加胰岛素(50 ng/ml)的培养基中。24小时后,洗涤细胞并测量基础及最大胰岛素刺激下的2 - 脱氧 - D - 葡萄糖摄取率、L - 亮氨酸掺入蛋白质的速率、葡萄糖氧化为二氧化碳的速率、葡萄糖掺入脂质的速率以及糖原合酶活性。结果证实,与对照细胞相比,葡萄糖增强了胰岛素在5 mM葡萄糖时使基础和最大葡萄糖转运速率降低约50%以及在15 mM葡萄糖时降低约70%的长期作用。然而,单独或联合使用葡萄糖和胰岛素均不影响亮氨酸掺入蛋白质的速率。此外,葡萄糖氧化和葡萄糖掺入脂质的基础及最大速率不受葡萄糖调节,并且仅在预孵育期间不存在胰岛素时(即长期胰岛素暴露是维持完全最大反应所必需的),最大反应在24小时内下降约50%。在将完整细胞暴露于葡萄糖和胰岛素后,在无细胞系统(0.5 mM UDP - 葡萄糖,含10或0.01 mM葡萄糖 - 6 - 磷酸)中测量糖原合酶活性。单独短期(1小时)和长期(24小时)暴露于葡萄糖均导致I型和D型糖原合酶活性呈剂量依赖性增加。长期暴露于胰岛素也增加了总糖原合酶活性(I型加D型),但不影响最大刺激的I型活性的绝对速率。1小时后,葡萄糖(而非胰岛素)使免疫反应性糖原合酶的细胞含量增加70%。这些结果表明:1)长期暴露于葡萄糖和胰岛素会损害葡萄糖转运系统的胰岛素应答性,但不影响氨基酸掺入蛋白质的速率;2)胰岛素的长期存在对于维持培养细胞中正常的最大刺激葡萄糖氧化速率和葡萄糖掺入脂质的速率是必需的;3)葡萄糖增加D型和I型糖原合酶活性,部分是通过增加合酶蛋白的量实现的,而长期胰岛素暴露增加总糖原合酶活性,同时不改变I型活性的最大绝对速率。(摘要截短至400字)