Vitamin D Deficiency Inhibits Pancreatic Secretion of Insulin

Anthony W. Norman(University of California, Riverside), Barbara J. Frankel(University of California, San Francisco), Anneliese Heldt(University of California, San Francisco), Gerald M. Grodsky(University of California, San Francisco)
Science
August 15, 1980
Cited by 715

Abstract

The effects of a vitamin D deficiency on insulin and glucagon release was determined in the isolated perfused rat pancreas by radioimmunoassay of the secreted proteins. During a 30-minute period of perfusion with glucose and arginine, pancreases from vitamin D-deficient rats exhibited a 48 percent reduction in insulin secretion compared to that for pancreases from vitamin D-deficient rats that had been replenished with vitamin D. Vitamin D status had no effect on pancreatic glucagon secretion. This result, along with the previously demonstrated presence in the pancreas of a vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding protein and cytosol receptor for the hormonal form of vitamin D, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, indicates an important role for vitamin D in the endocrine functioning of the pancreas.


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