358-OR: The Effect of Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor Blockade on Glucagon-Induced Stimulation of Insulin Secretion

Data from transgenic rodent models suggest that glucagon acts as an insulin secretagogue by signalling through the Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor (GLP1R) present on β-cells. This occurs at high concentrations as are present within the islet. However, its net contribution to physiologic insulin sec...

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Published inDiabetes (New York, N.Y.) Vol. 71; no. Supplement_1
Main Authors FARAHANI, RAHELE A., EGAN, AOIFE M., WELCH, ANDREW A., LAURENTI, MARCELLO C., COBELLI, CLAUDIO, DALLA MAN, CHIARA, VELLA, ADRIAN
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York American Diabetes Association 01.06.2022
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Summary:Data from transgenic rodent models suggest that glucagon acts as an insulin secretagogue by signalling through the Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor (GLP1R) present on β-cells. This occurs at high concentrations as are present within the islet. However, its net contribution to physiologic insulin secretion is unknown. To address this question, we studied 12 non-diabetic, weight-stable individuals (26±1 years,25±1 kg/m2) on 2 occasions. During a hyperglycemic clamp (∼8.9mmol/l) where glucose was labeled with [3-3H] glucose, glucagon was infused at 0.4ng/kg/min, for 1 hour, increasing by 0.2ng/kg/min every hour for a total of 5 hours. Subjects were studied on two occasions in random order. On one occasion Exendin-9,39 (300pmol/kg/min) was infused to block the GLP1R, while on the control day saline was infused. The insulin secretion rate (ISR) was calculated by nonparametric deconvolution from plasma concentrations of C-peptide. Endogenous glucose production (EGP) and glucose disappearance (Rd) were measured using the tracer-dilution technique. Glucagon concentrations rose from baseline (6.6±2.1 vs. 5.4±1.5 pmol/l, saline vs. exendin-9,39 respectively, p=0.22) to values that, by design, did not differ between study days (17.8±1.8 vs. 17.1±1.1 pmol/l, p>0.1) . This was accompanied by a rise in C-peptide from fasting concentrations. Integrated C-peptide concentrations were slightly, but significantly, decreased during exendin-9,39 infusion (721±65 vs. 648±55 nmol per 5hr, p=0.02) . In addition, integrated insulin secretion rate was lower during exendin-9,39 infusion (213±26 vs. 191±22 nmol per 5 hr, saline vs. exendin-9,39 respectively, p = 0.03) . Both EGP and Rd did not differ significantly on either experimental day. These data show that in non-diabetic humans, during hyperglycemia as seen in the postprandial period, glucagon partially stimulates the β-cell through GLP1R. It remains to be ascertained if this also applies to individuals with type 2 diabetes. Disclosure R.A. Farahani: None. A.A. Welch: None. M.C. Laurenti: None. C. Cobelli: None. C. Dalla Man: Research Support; Becton, Dickinson and Company, Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH. A. Vella: Advisory Panel; Crinetics Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Rezolute, Inc., vTv Therapeutics, Zealand Pharma A/S. Other Relationship; Novo Nordisk. Funding National Institutes of Health (DK126206)
ISSN:0012-1797
1939-327X
DOI:10.2337/db22-358-OR