Sensing by intrahepatic muscarinic nerves of a portal‐arterial glucose concentration gradient as a signal for insulin‐dependent glucose uptake in the perfused rat liver

F Stümpel, K Jungermann - FEBS letters, 1997 - Wiley Online Library
F Stümpel, K Jungermann
FEBS letters, 1997Wiley Online Library
In vivo, insulin increases net hepatic glucose uptake efficiently only in the presence of a
portal‐arterial glucose gradient. In isolated perfused rat livers supplied with a glucose
gradient (portal 10 mM/arterial 5 mM) insulin‐induced glucose uptake was blocked by
atropine; in livers not supplied with the gradient (portal= arterial 5 mM) insulin‐dependent
glucose uptake was elicited by acetylcholine. Apparently, the gradient was sensed and
transformed into a metabolic signal by intrahepatic nerves, releasing acetylcholine to …
In vivo, insulin increases net hepatic glucose uptake efficiently only in the presence of a portal‐arterial glucose gradient. In isolated perfused rat livers supplied with a glucose gradient (portal 10 mM/arterial 5 mM) insulin‐induced glucose uptake was blocked by atropine; in livers not supplied with the gradient (portal=arterial 5 mM) insulin‐dependent glucose uptake was elicited by acetylcholine. Apparently, the gradient was sensed and transformed into a metabolic signal by intrahepatic nerves, releasing acetylcholine to muscarinic receptors.
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