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Date: 20-12-2021
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Metabolic Effects of Insulin and Glucagon
The integration of energy metabolism is controlled primarily by insulin and the opposing actions of glucagon and the catecholamines, particularly epinephrine (Fig. 1). Changes in the circulating levels of these hormones allow the body to store energy when food is abundant or to make stored energy available in times of physiologic stress (for example, during survival crises, such as famine). Insulin is a peptide hormone produced by the β cells of the islets of Langerhans of the pancreas. It consists of disulfide-linked A and B chains. A rise in blood glucose is the most important signal for insulin secretion. The catecholamines, secreted in response to stress, trauma, or extreme exercise, inhibit insulin secretion.
Insulin increases glucose uptake (by glucose transporters (GLUT-4) in muscle and adipose tissue) and the synthesis of glycogen, protein, and triacylglycerol: It is an anabolic hormone. These actions are mediated by binding to its membrane tyrosine kinase receptor. Binding initiates a cascade of cell-signaling responses, including phosphorylation of a family of proteins called insulin receptor substrate proteins. Glucagon is a monomeric peptide hormone produced by the α cells of the pancreatic islets (both insulin and glucagon synthesis involve formation of inactive precursors that are cleaved to form the active hormones). Glucagon, along with epinephrine, norepinephrine, cortisol, and growth hormone (the counterregulatory hormones), opposes many of the actions of insulin.
Glucagon acts to maintain blood glucose during periods of potential hypoglycemia. Glucagon increases glycogenolysis, gluconeogenesis, fatty acid oxidation, ketogenesis, and amino acid uptake: It is a catabolic hormone. Glucagon secretion is stimulated by low blood glucose, amino acids, and the catecholamines. Its secretion is inhibited by elevated blood glucose and by insulin. Glucagon binds to high-affinity G protein–coupled receptors on the cell membrane of hepatocytes. Binding results in the activation of adenylyl cyclase, which produces the second messenger cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). Subsequent activation of cAMPdependent protein kinase A results in the phosphorylation-mediated activation or inhibition of key regulatory enzymes involved in carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. Both insulin and glucagon affect gene transcription.
Hypoglycemia is characterized by low blood glucose accompanied by adrenergic and neuroglycopenic symptoms that are rapidly resolved by the administration of glucose. Insulin-induced, postprandial, and fasting hypoglycemia result in release of glucagon and epinephrine. The rise in nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) that accompanies ethanol metabolism inhibits gluconeogenesis, leading to hypoglycemia in individuals with depleted stores. Alcohol consumption also increases the risk for hypoglycemia in patients using insulin. Chronic alcohol consumption can cause fatty liver disease.
Figure 1: Key concept map for the metabolic effects of insulin and glucagon as well as hypoglycemia. IRS = insulin receptor substrates.
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