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. 1982 Feb 15;202(2):363–368. doi: 10.1042/bj2020363

Muscle protein synthesis in the streptozotocin-diabetic rat. A possible role for corticosterone in the insensitivity to insulin infusion in vivo.

B R Odedra, S S Dalal, D J Millward
PMCID: PMC1158119  PMID: 6178398

Abstract

The effect of insulin infusion in vivo on muscle protein synthesis was investigated in rats. In 10-days-streptozotocin-diabetic rats infused in vivo with amino acids and glucose, the rate of protein synthesis per unit of RNA (RNA activity) was markedly decreased. Pre-treatment with large doses of insulin at 17 and 1 h before the infusion fully restored RNA activity to normal. Infusion of insulin for 6 h with amino acids and glucose did not restore RNA activity to normal in the diabetic rats. However, in diabetic-adrenalectomized rats similar infusions of insulin fully restored RNA activity to normal. Measurements of plasma corticosterone concentrations indicated a 50% increase in the diabetic rats. Since pre-treatment with corticosterone suppressed the stimulatory effect of insulin infusion on RNA activity in adrenalectomized rats, and since corticosterone treatment for 6 days suppressed RNA activity even though insulin concentrations were elevated, it is suggested that increased concentrations of corticosterone are responsible for the lag in response to insulin in the diabetic rat. This means that the catabolic effects of glucocorticoids must be also considered together with the catabolic effect of insulin lack in diabetes.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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