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. 1985 Mar;60(3):659-65.
doi: 10.2527/jas1985.603659x.

Effect of exogenous glucagon and free fatty acids on gluconeogenesis in fasting neonatal pigs

Effect of exogenous glucagon and free fatty acids on gluconeogenesis in fasting neonatal pigs

R D Boyd et al. J Anim Sci. 1985 Mar.

Abstract

Thirty-two pigs (1 d old) were used to determine if exogenous glucagon and(or) free fatty acids (FFA oleic acid) would enhance gluconeogenesis and glucose homeostasis during fasting. Pigs were acquired at birth, fitted with an indwelling arterial cannula (via umbilicus) and fasted 24 h to deplete liver glycogen. A jugular cannula was inserted nonsurgically 8 to 10 h before initiation of a primed-continuous infusion consisting of control (excipient), glucagon (Glu), oleic acid (FFA), or both glucagon and oleic acid (Glu-FFA). Plasma Glu averaged 395 pg/ml preinfusion and was similar across treatments. The concentration increased fivefold (P less than .05) by 80 min for Glu and Glu-FFA pigs and remained constant thereafter (160 min: 2,379, 2,258 pg/ml; 240 min: 2,355, 2,274 pg/ml, respectively). Glucagon infusion did not alter plasma glucose after 240 min of infusion (control, 50 vs Glu, 51 mg/dl); however, Glu-FFA effected an increase (60 mg/dl, P less than .10). In contrast, pigs infused with FFA alone had a lower glucose concentration (40 mg/dl, P less than .10). Rate of glucose synthesis was determined using liver slices, acquired immediately postinfusion, with alanine and lactate as substrate (7.5 mM). The rate of synthesis was not altered by Glu or Glu-FFA infusion (2.91, 2.43 mumol glucose X g-1 X h-1 vs 2.91 for control). In contrast, exogenous FFA reduced synthesis to 1.85 mumol glucose X g-1 X h-1 (P less than .05) with lactate as substrate. It appears that Glu is not the primary factor limiting gluconeogenesis in fasting newborn pigs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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