INSULIN ACTION IN PREVIOUSLY DIABETIC RATS RECEIVING GRADED NUMBERS OF ISLETS OF LANGERHANS

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Abstract

We characterized insulin sensitivity in islet transplanted rats receiving from 500 to 3000 islets. Male Wistar Furth rats made previously diabetic with streptozotocin (55 mg/kg) were infused intraportally with islets of Langerhans (500 islets: n=8; 1000: n=6; 2000: n=6; 3000: n=5) from syngeneic donors and compared with sham-operated controls (n=7). At four weeks after islet transplantation, fasting blood glucose was not significantly different between groups (500: 5.1±0.3; 1000: 4.8±0.3; 2000: 5.1±0.3; 3000: 4.6±0.1; control: 4.7±0.2 mM; P=0.6146), and fasting plasma insulin was also not different (P=0.28). The acute insulin response to glucose (0.3 g/kg i.v.) was correlated with islet equivalent mass (r=0.63,P=0.004; transplant rats only); islet transplant animals presented a range of acute insulin secretion from 3 to 90% of control values. Insulin action was measured in vivo in fasted, conscious animals during a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic glucose clamp with insulin infused at 29 and 72 nmol/kg/min. Despite a wide range of islet mass and insulin secretory capacity, there was no significant difference in the glucose infusion rate between islet groups at either insulin level (P=0.8211, P=0.8021). There was also no difference in the glucose infusion rate normalized to the prevailing insulin level (P=0.1638, P=0.2302). Thus, our results demonstrate that the islet transplanted rat is consistent with other animal studies and human studies illustrating that a diminished insulin secretion does not necessarily precipitate insulin resistance.

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