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Title: Chronic physiologic hyperglycemia impairs insulin-mediated suppression of plasma glucagon concentration in healthy humans. Author: Chen X, Merovci A, DeFronzo RA, Tripathy D. Journal: Metabolism; 2023 May; 142():155512. PubMed ID: 36746320. Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Hyperglucagonemia is a characteristic feature of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). We examined the effect of chronic (48-72 h) physiologic increase (+50 mg/dl) in plasma glucose concentration on suppression of plasma glucagon concentration by insulin and by hyperglycemia in normal glucose tolerance (NGT) individuals. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Study One: 16 NGT subjects received OGTT and 3-step hyperinsulinemic (10, 20, 40 mU/m2·min) euglycemic clamp before and after 48 hour glucose infusion to increase plasma glucose by ~50 mg/dl. Study Two: 20 NGT subjects received OGTT and 2-step hyperglycemic (+125 and + 300 mg/dl) clamp before and after 72 hour glucose infusion. Plasma insulin, C-peptide and glucagon concentrations were measured during OGTT, euglycemic hyperinsulinemic and hyperglycemic clamps. Ratio of plasma glucagon/insulin was used as an index of insulin-mediated suppression of glucagon secretion. RESULTS: During all 3 insulin clamp steps (Study 1), plasma glucagon concentration was increased compared to baseline study, and plasma glucagon/insulin ratio was significantly reduced by 24 % (p < 0.05). The rate of insulin-stimulated glucose disposal was inversely correlated with plasma glucagon/insulin ratio (r = -0.44, p < 0.05) and with glucagon AUC (r = -0.48, p < 0.05). During the 2-step hyperglycemic clamp (Study 2) plasma glucagon was similar before and after 72 h of glucose infusion; however, glucagon/insulin ratio was significantly reduced (p < 0.05). Incremental area under plasma insulin curve during the first (r = -0.74, p < 0.001) and second (r = -0.85, p < 0.001) hyperglycemic clamp steps was strongly and inversely correlated with plasma glucagon/insulin ratio. CONCLUSION: Sustained (48-72 h) physiologic hyperglycemia (+50 mg/dl) caused whole body insulin resistance and impaired insulin-mediated suppression of glucagon secretion, suggesting a role for glucotoxicity in development of hyperglucagonemia in T2DM.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]