Hypothalamic ATP-sensitive K+ channels play a key role in sensing hypoglycemia and triggering counterregulatory epinephrine and glucagon responses

被引:122
作者
Evans, ML [1 ]
McCrimmon, RJ [1 ]
Flanagan, DE [1 ]
Keshavarz, T [1 ]
Fan, XN [1 ]
McNay, EC [1 ]
Jacob, RJ [1 ]
Sherwin, RS [1 ]
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Sch Med, Diabet Endocrine Res Ctr, New Haven, CT 06520 USA
关键词
D O I
10.2337/diabetes.53.10.2542
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
It has been postulated that specialized glucose-sensing neurons in the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) are able to detect falling blood glucose and trigger the release of counterregulatory hormones during hypoglycemia. The molecular mechanisms used by glucose-sensing neurons are uncertain but may involve cell surface ATP-sensitive K+ channels (K-ATP channels) analogous to those of the pancreatic beta-cell. We examined whether the delivery of sulfonylureas directly into the brain to close K-ATP channels would modulate counterregulatory hormone responses to either brain glucopenia (using intracerebroventricular 5-thioglucose) or systemic hypoglycemia in awake chronically catheterized rats. The closure of brain K-ATP channels by global intracerebroventricular perfusion of sulfonylurea (120 ng/min glibenclamide or 2.7 mug/min tolbutamide) suppressed counterregulatory (epinephrine and glucagon) responses to brain glucopenia and/or systemic hypoglycemia (2.8 mmol/l glucose clamp). Local VMH microinjection of a small dose of glibenclamide (0.1% of the intracerebroventricular dose) also suppressed hormonal responses to systemic hypoglycemia. We conclude that hypothalamic K-ATP channel activity plays an important role in modulating the hormonal counterregulatory responses triggered by decreases in blood glucose. Our data suggest that closing of K-ATP channels in the VMH (much like the beta-cell) impairs defense mechanisms against glucose deprivation and therefore could contribute to defects in glucose counterregulation.
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页码:2542 / 2551
页数:10
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