Glucose intolerance caused by a defect in the entero-insular axis: A study in gastric inhibitory polypeptide receptor knockout mice

Kazumasa Miyawaki(Chiba University), Yuichiro Yamada(Chiba University), Hideki Yano(Chiba University), Hitoshi Niwa(Chiba University), Nobuhiro Ban(Chiba University), Yu Ihara(Chiba University), Akira Kubota(Chiba University), Shinpei Fujimoto(Chiba University), Mariko Kajikawa(Chiba University), Akira Kuroe(Chiba University), Kinsuke Tsuda(Chiba University), Hiroyuki Hashimoto(Chiba University), Tokuyuki Yamashita(Chiba University), Takahito Jomori(Chiba University), Fumi Tashiro(Chiba University), Jun‐ichi Miyazaki(Chiba University), Yutaka Seino(Chiba University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 21, 1999
Cited by 453Open Access

Abstract

Mice with a targeted mutation of the gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) receptor gene (GIPR) were generated to determine the role of GIP as a mediator of signals from the gut to pancreatic beta cells. GIPR-/- mice have higher blood glucose levels with impaired initial insulin response after oral glucose load. Although blood glucose levels after meal ingestion are not increased by high-fat diet in GIPR+/+ mice because of compensatory higher insulin secretion, they are significantly increased in GIPR-/- mice because of the lack of such enhancement. Accordingly, early insulin secretion mediated by GIP determines glucose tolerance after oral glucose load in vivo, and because GIP plays an important role in the compensatory enhancement of insulin secretion produced by a high insulin demand, a defect in this entero-insular axis may contribute to the pathogenesis of diabetes.


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