A reappraisal of the blood glucose homeostat which comprehensively explains the type 2 diabetes mellitusâsyndrome X complex
Blood glucose concentrations are unaffected by exercise despite very high rates of glucose flux. The plasma ionised calcium levels are even more tightly controlled after meals and during lactation. This implies âintegral controlâ. However, pairs of integral counterregulatory controllers (e.g. in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-06, Vol.549 (2), p.333 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Blood glucose concentrations are unaffected by exercise despite very high rates of glucose flux. The plasma ionised calcium
levels are even more tightly controlled after meals and during lactation. This implies âintegral controlâ. However, pairs
of integral counterregulatory controllers (e.g. insulin and glucagon, or calcitonin and parathyroid hormone) cannot operate
on the same controlled variable, unless there is some form of mutual inhibition. Flip-flop functional coupling between pancreatic
α- and β-cells via gap junctions may provide such a mechanism. Secretion of a common inhibitory chromogranin by the parathyroids
and the thyroidal C-cells provides another. Here we describe how the insulin:glucagon flip-flop controller can be complemented
by growth hormone, despite both being integral controllers. Homeostatic conflict is prevented by somatostatin-28 secretion
from both the hypothalamus and the pancreatic islets. Our synthesis of the information pertaining to the glucose homeostat
that has accumulated in the literature predicts that disruption of the flip-flop mechanism by the accumulation of amyloid
in the pancreatic islets in type 2 diabetes mellitus will lead to hyperglucagonaemia, hyperinsulinaemia, insulin resistance,
glucose intolerance and impaired insulin responsiveness to elevated blood glucose levels. It explains syndrome X (or metabolic
syndrome) as incipient type 2 diabetes in which the glucose control system, while impaired, can still maintain blood glucose
at the desired level. It also explains why it is characterised by high plasma insulin levels and low plasma growth hormone
levels, despite normoglycaemia, and how this leads to central obesity, dyslipidaemia and cardiovascular disease in both syndrome
X and type 2 diabetes. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.037895 |