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Insulin

About: Insulin is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 124295 publications have been published within this topic receiving 5129734 citations. The topic is also known as: human insulin.


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Journal ArticleDOI
05 Feb 1999-Cell
TL;DR: An important functional role for the insulin receptor in glucose sensing by the pancreatic beta cell is indicated and it is suggested that defects in insulin signaling at the level of the beta cell may contribute to the observed alterations in insulin secretion in type 2 diabetes.

1,140 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Not only are oxygen radicals involved in the cause of diabetes, they also appear to play a role in some of the complications seen in long-term treatment of diabetes.

1,136 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In muscle and fat cells, insulin stimulates the delivery of the glucose transporter GLUT4 from an intracellular location to the cell surface, where it facilitates the reduction of plasma glucose levels.
Abstract: In muscle and fat cells, insulin stimulates the delivery of the glucose transporter GLUT4 from an intracellular location to the cell surface, where it facilitates the reduction of plasma glucose levels. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that mediate this translocation event involves integrating our knowledge of two fundamental processes--the signal transduction pathways that are triggered when insulin binds to its receptor and the membrane transport events that need to be modified to divert GLUT4 from intracellular storage to an active plasma membrane shuttle service.

1,133 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2000-Diabetes
TL;DR: Besides the available drugs that act on K(ATP) channels and increase the triggering signal, novel drugs that correct a deficient amplifying pathway would be useful to restore adequate insulin secretion in type 2 diabetic patients.
Abstract: Glucose stimulates insulin secretion by generating triggering and amplifying signals in beta-cells. The triggering pathway is well characterized. It involves the following sequence of events: entry of glucose by facilitated diffusion, metabolism of glucose by oxidative glycolysis, rise in the ATP-to-ADP ratio, closure of ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels, membrane depolarization, opening of voltage-operated Ca2+ channels, Ca2+ influx, rise in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), and activation of the exocytotic machinery. The amplifying pathway can be studied when beta-cell [Ca2+]i is elevated and clamped by a depolarization with either a high concentration of sulfonylurea or a high concentration of K+ in the presence of diazoxide (K(ATP) channels are then respectively blocked or held open). Under these conditions, glucose still increases insulin secretion in a concentration-dependent manner. This increase in secretion is highly sensitive to glucose (produced by as little as 1-6 mmol/l glucose), requires glucose metabolism, is independent of activation of protein kinases A and C, and does not seem to implicate long-chain acyl-CoAs. Changes in adenine nucleotides may be involved. The amplification consists of an increase in efficacy of Ca2+ on exocytosis of insulin granules. There exists a clear hierarchy between both pathways. The triggering pathway predominates over the amplifying pathway, which remains functionally silent as long as [Ca2+]i has not been raised by the first pathway; i.e., as long as glucose has not reached its threshold concentration. The alteration of this hierarchy by long-acting sulfonylureas or genetic inactivation of K(ATP) channels may lead to inappropriate insulin secretion at low glucose. The amplifying pathway serves to optimize the secretory response not only to glucose but also to nonglucose stimuli. It is impaired in beta-cells of animal models of type 2 diabetes, and indirect evidence suggests that it is altered in beta-cells of type 2 diabetic patients. Besides the available drugs that act on K(ATP) channels and increase the triggering signal, novel drugs that correct a deficient amplifying pathway would be useful to restore adequate insulin secretion in type 2 diabetic patients.

1,132 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A newly identified adipocytokine, visfatin, that is highly enriched in the visceral fat of both humans and mice and whose expression level in plasma increases during the development of obesity is isolated.
Abstract: Recent studies of obesity show that fat tissue fulfills an endocrine function by producing a variety of secreted proteins, called adipocytokines, that may play key metabolic roles. The present investigators have isolateda newly identified adipocytokine, visfatin, from visceral fat of both mice and humans. Expression of visfatin in the plasma increases as obesity develops. This substance corresponds to a protein identified as preB cell colony-enhancing factor (PBEF), a cytokine expressed in lymphocytes. In a study of 101 human males and females, plasma levels of PBEF correlated closely with the amount of visceral fat as estimated by computed tomography. Correlation with the amount of subcutaneous fat was weak. Significant elevations of PBEF mRNA were also found in KKAy mice, which serve as a model for obesity-related type 2 diabetes. These mice become obese at age 6 to 12 weeks and, at the same time, plasma PBEF levels increase significantly, as do levels of PBEF mRNA in visceral fat. Levels in subcutaneous fat change very little. Mice fed a high-fat diet had higher plasma PBEF concentrations than those fed normal chow. When recombinant visfatin was administered intravenously to c57BL/6J mice, plasma glucose decreased within 30 minutes in a dose-dependent manner. The same effect was noted in insulin-resistant obese KKAy mice, mimicking the effect of insulin injection. Visfatin also had insulin-like effects on cultured cells. In both strains of mice, chronic exposure to visfatin, using adenovirus, significantly lowered plasma levels of both glucose and insulin. Visfatin was found to bind to-and activate-the insulin receptor but in a way different from insulin. These studies indicate that visfatin shares properties of insulin both in vitro and in vivo. In addition to helping to understand glucose and lipid homeostasis and adipocyte proliferation, visfatin may prove to be a useful target when developing drug treatments for diabetes.

1,131 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20243
20232,520
20225,252
20213,164
20203,368
20193,376