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. 1986 Jul 7;202(2):255-9.
doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(86)80697-4.

A portal-arterial glucose concentration gradient as a signal for an insulin-dependent net glucose uptake in perfused rat liver

Free article

A portal-arterial glucose concentration gradient as a signal for an insulin-dependent net glucose uptake in perfused rat liver

A Gardemann et al. FEBS Lett. .
Free article

Abstract

Since in the usual perfusion of isolated rat liver via the portal vein an insulin-dependent increase of hepatic glucose uptake could not be demonstrated, the possibility was considered that hepatic glucose uptake might not be a function of the absolute concentration of this substrate but of its concentration gradient between the portal vein and the hepatic artery. Therefore a new method was established for the simultaneous perfusion of isolated rat liver via both the hepatic artery (20-35% flow) and the portal vein (80-65% flow). When glucose was offered in a concentration gradient, 9.5 mM in the portal vein and 6 mM in the hepatic artery, insulin given via both vessels caused a shift from net glucose release to uptake. This insulin-dependent shift was not observed when glucose was offered without a gradient or with an inverse gradient, 6 mM in the portal vein and 9.5 mM in the hepatic artery. Using a portal-arterial glucose gradient as a signal the liver might be able to differentiate between endogenous and exogenous glucose.

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