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. 1991 Jul 1;277 ( Pt 1)(Pt 1):111-7.
doi: 10.1042/bj2770111.

Variations in the antagonistic effects of insulin and glucagon on glycogen metabolism in cultured foetal hepatocytes

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Variations in the antagonistic effects of insulin and glucagon on glycogen metabolism in cultured foetal hepatocytes

P Menuelle et al. Biochem J. .

Abstract

The antagonistic effects of insulin and glucagon on glycogen formation and mobilization were studied in cultured 18-day foetal rat hepatocytes with regard to different modes of exposure. Hormone combinations were achieved with a constant dose of 10 nM-insulin (maximal for the glycogenic effect of this hormone) and increasing doses of glucagon [from 0.03 to 10 nM: concn. causing half-maximal response (ED50) = 0.3 nM)]. When insulin and glucagon were added simultaneously, increasing glucagon concentrations progressively depressed the glycogenic effect of insulin and 0.3 nM-glucagon antagonized the insulin effect completely. The maximal glycogenolytic effect of glucagon was observed at concentrations greater than 1 nM. When the two hormones were introduced successively, with an interval of 4 h between additions, the effect of the second hormone was always fully expressed between 4 and 8 h. at which time the effect of the first hormone had ceased; the dominance of glucagon over insulin was also lost, due to cell desensitization to glucagon. Both continuous or intermittent (10 min on/10 min off periods) exposure to insulin and/or glucagon gave similar antagonistic effects, while in cells exposed to insulin plus glucagon alternating with exposure to insulin or glucagon alone, the glycogenic effect of insulin was less or more antagonized respectively by glucagon. Whatever the situation, the results obtained could not be related to antagonism by a glucagon-induced rise in either cyclic AMP levels (ED50 = 3 nM) or cell-surface hormone binding. Thus, depending on the hormonal state and the mode of hormone administration, regulation of glycogenesis in cultured foetal hepatocytes appears to be different from that predicted by the insulin/glucagon molar ratio, which is strikingly altered in the perinatal period.

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