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Hepatic Glucose Metabolism in Late Pregnancy: Normal Versus High-Fat and -Fructose Diet

Net hepatic glucose uptake (NHGU) is an important contributor to postprandial glycemic control. We hypothesized that NHGU is reduced during normal pregnancy and in a pregnant diet-induced model of impaired glucose intolerance/gestational diabetes mellitus (IGT/GDM). Dogs (n = 7 per group) that were...

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Autores principales: Coate, Katie C., Smith, Marta S., Shiota, Masakazu, Irimia, Jose M., Roach, Peter J., Farmer, Ben, Williams, Phillip E., Moore, Mary Courtney
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Diabetes Association 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3581200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23223020
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db12-0875
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author Coate, Katie C.
Smith, Marta S.
Shiota, Masakazu
Irimia, Jose M.
Roach, Peter J.
Farmer, Ben
Williams, Phillip E.
Moore, Mary Courtney
author_facet Coate, Katie C.
Smith, Marta S.
Shiota, Masakazu
Irimia, Jose M.
Roach, Peter J.
Farmer, Ben
Williams, Phillip E.
Moore, Mary Courtney
author_sort Coate, Katie C.
collection PubMed
description Net hepatic glucose uptake (NHGU) is an important contributor to postprandial glycemic control. We hypothesized that NHGU is reduced during normal pregnancy and in a pregnant diet-induced model of impaired glucose intolerance/gestational diabetes mellitus (IGT/GDM). Dogs (n = 7 per group) that were nonpregnant (N), normal pregnant (P), or pregnant with IGT/GDM (pregnant dogs fed a high-fat and -fructose diet [P-HFF]) underwent a hyperinsulinemic-hyperglycemic clamp with intraportal glucose infusion. Clamp period insulin, glucagon, and glucose concentrations and hepatic glucose loads did not differ among groups. The N dogs reached near-maximal NHGU rates within 30 min; mean ± SEM NHGU was 105 ± 9 µmol⋅100 g liver(−1)⋅min(−1). The P and P-HFF dogs reached maximal NHGU in 90–120 min; their NHGU was blunted (68 ± 9 and 16 ± 17 µmol⋅100 g liver(−1)⋅min(−1), respectively). Hepatic glycogen synthesis was reduced 20% in P versus N and 40% in P-HFF versus P dogs. This was associated with a reduction (>70%) in glycogen synthase activity in P-HFF versus P and increased glycogen phosphorylase (GP) activity in both P (1.7-fold greater than N) and P-HFF (1.8-fold greater than P) dogs. Thus, NHGU under conditions mimicking the postprandial state is delayed and suppressed in normal pregnancy, with concomitant reduction in glycogen storage. NHGU is further blunted in IGT/GDM. This likely contributes to postprandial hyperglycemia during pregnancy, with potential adverse outcomes for the fetus and mother.
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spelling pubmed-35812002014-03-01 Hepatic Glucose Metabolism in Late Pregnancy: Normal Versus High-Fat and -Fructose Diet Coate, Katie C. Smith, Marta S. Shiota, Masakazu Irimia, Jose M. Roach, Peter J. Farmer, Ben Williams, Phillip E. Moore, Mary Courtney Diabetes Metabolism Net hepatic glucose uptake (NHGU) is an important contributor to postprandial glycemic control. We hypothesized that NHGU is reduced during normal pregnancy and in a pregnant diet-induced model of impaired glucose intolerance/gestational diabetes mellitus (IGT/GDM). Dogs (n = 7 per group) that were nonpregnant (N), normal pregnant (P), or pregnant with IGT/GDM (pregnant dogs fed a high-fat and -fructose diet [P-HFF]) underwent a hyperinsulinemic-hyperglycemic clamp with intraportal glucose infusion. Clamp period insulin, glucagon, and glucose concentrations and hepatic glucose loads did not differ among groups. The N dogs reached near-maximal NHGU rates within 30 min; mean ± SEM NHGU was 105 ± 9 µmol⋅100 g liver(−1)⋅min(−1). The P and P-HFF dogs reached maximal NHGU in 90–120 min; their NHGU was blunted (68 ± 9 and 16 ± 17 µmol⋅100 g liver(−1)⋅min(−1), respectively). Hepatic glycogen synthesis was reduced 20% in P versus N and 40% in P-HFF versus P dogs. This was associated with a reduction (>70%) in glycogen synthase activity in P-HFF versus P and increased glycogen phosphorylase (GP) activity in both P (1.7-fold greater than N) and P-HFF (1.8-fold greater than P) dogs. Thus, NHGU under conditions mimicking the postprandial state is delayed and suppressed in normal pregnancy, with concomitant reduction in glycogen storage. NHGU is further blunted in IGT/GDM. This likely contributes to postprandial hyperglycemia during pregnancy, with potential adverse outcomes for the fetus and mother. American Diabetes Association 2013-03 2013-02-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3581200/ /pubmed/23223020 http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db12-0875 Text en © 2013 by the American Diabetes Association. Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.
spellingShingle Metabolism
Coate, Katie C.
Smith, Marta S.
Shiota, Masakazu
Irimia, Jose M.
Roach, Peter J.
Farmer, Ben
Williams, Phillip E.
Moore, Mary Courtney
Hepatic Glucose Metabolism in Late Pregnancy: Normal Versus High-Fat and -Fructose Diet
title Hepatic Glucose Metabolism in Late Pregnancy: Normal Versus High-Fat and -Fructose Diet
title_full Hepatic Glucose Metabolism in Late Pregnancy: Normal Versus High-Fat and -Fructose Diet
title_fullStr Hepatic Glucose Metabolism in Late Pregnancy: Normal Versus High-Fat and -Fructose Diet
title_full_unstemmed Hepatic Glucose Metabolism in Late Pregnancy: Normal Versus High-Fat and -Fructose Diet
title_short Hepatic Glucose Metabolism in Late Pregnancy: Normal Versus High-Fat and -Fructose Diet
title_sort hepatic glucose metabolism in late pregnancy: normal versus high-fat and -fructose diet
topic Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3581200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23223020
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db12-0875
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