A Valentina Nisi, Myrtha Ml Arnold, Ginger D Blonde, Lindsey Anne Schier, Graciela Sanchez-Watts, Alan G Watts, Wolfgang Langhans, Alan Craig Spector
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
To help resolve the characteristics of orally stimulated endocrine responses to sugar, we developed a novel rat preparation with surgically implanted intraoral (IO) and intragastric (IG) cannulas for stimulus delivery, along with jugular vein catheters for blood sampling, and tested the effects of 1-min and 10-min IO vs. IG infusions (1 mL/min) of 1.0M glucose on plasma levels of insulin, glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP), and glucose. Oral glucose delivery (1-min and 10-min) caused a greater (p ≤ .05) early rise (1 min) in insulin levels than gastric glucose delivery, also reflected in the 3-min AUC. The 10-min, but not the 1-min, IO glucose infusion also caused a greater (p ≤ .05) increase in GIP levels than the IG infusions, as evidenced by the 3-min AUC. Oral delivery of 1.0M fructose produced marginally (but significantly) higher insulin and GIP levels than gastric fructose delivery, though the difference appeared much smaller than that observed for isomolar glucose, suggesting some degree of chemospecificity and the involvement of a T1R-independent mechanism. Our triple cannulation/catheterization rat preparation is well suited to assess endocrine responses to oral stimulation. By comparing the effects of stimulus infusion into the oral cavity (oral + post-oral stimulation) with the stimulus infusion directly into the stomach (only post-oral stimulation), we confirmed the primacy of glucose to orally trigger an increase in circulating insulin while controlling for changes in plasma glucose. This approach offers promise for reliably characterizing orally stimulated endocrine responses in rats and potentially in other animal models as well.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism publishes original, mechanistic studies on the physiology of endocrine and metabolic systems. Physiological, cellular, and molecular studies in whole animals or humans will be considered. Specific themes include, but are not limited to, mechanisms of hormone and growth factor action; hormonal and nutritional regulation of metabolism, inflammation, microbiome and energy balance; integrative organ cross talk; paracrine and autocrine control of endocrine cells; function and activation of hormone receptors; endocrine or metabolic control of channels, transporters, and membrane function; temporal analysis of hormone secretion and metabolism; and mathematical/kinetic modeling of metabolism. Novel molecular, immunological, or biophysical studies of hormone action are also welcome.