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Current Diabetes Reviews

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1573-3998
ISSN (Online): 1875-6417

Role of Insulin in Glucose-Stimulated Insulin Secretion in Beta Cells

Author(s): H. J. Goren

Volume 1, Issue 3, 2005

Page: [309 - 330] Pages: 22

DOI: 10.2174/157339905774574301

Price: $65

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Abstract

Diabetes is on the increase worldwide and greater than 90% are type 2. There are two features to type 2 diabetes: muscle, fat and liver tissues are insulin resistant and β cells lose the ability to secrete insulin. Prior to developing diabetes, however, insulin resistant individuals lose the first-phase insulin secretion response. Transgenic mice lacking insulin receptors in their β cells have no first-phase response. Primary cultures of mouse islets pre-exposed to anti-insulin do not exhibit a first-phase insulin secretion response. That is, β cells, like muscle, fat, and liver, are an insulin sensitive tissue and in the presence of insulin resistance (type 2 diabetes), in the absence of insulin receptors (transgenic mice lacking β cell insulin receptors), or in the absence of constitutively secreted insulin (anti-insulin treatment), β cells are unable to respond properly to post-prandial glucose. The purpose of this report is to review our understanding of the glucose-stimulus response and of insulin signaling, and to suggest why the latter may be necessary for the former to proceed.

Keywords: insulin signaling, islet glucose oxidation, pyruvate dehydrogenase, glucokinase, anti-insulin inhibition of insulin secretion, b cell communication, constitutively secreted insulin


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