Glucagon receptor gene deletion in insulin knockout mice modestly reduces blood glucose and ketones but does not promote survival

Objective: It has been thought that the depletion of insulin is responsible for the catabolic consequences of diabetes; however, evidence suggests that glucagon also plays a role in diabetes pathogenesis. Glucagon suppression by glucagon receptor (Gcgr) gene deletion, glucagon immunoneutralization,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ursula H. Neumann, Jessica S.S. Ho, Majid Mojibian, Scott D. Covey, Maureen J. Charron, Timothy J. Kieffer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-08-01
Series:Molecular Metabolism
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212877816300515
Description
Summary:Objective: It has been thought that the depletion of insulin is responsible for the catabolic consequences of diabetes; however, evidence suggests that glucagon also plays a role in diabetes pathogenesis. Glucagon suppression by glucagon receptor (Gcgr) gene deletion, glucagon immunoneutralization, or Gcgr antagonist can reverse or prevent type 1 diabetes in rodents suggesting that dysregulated glucagon is also required for development of diabetic symptoms. However, the models used in these studies were rendered diabetic by chemical- or immune-mediated β-cell destruction, in which insulin depletion is incomplete. Therefore, it is unclear whether glucagon suppression could overcome the consequence of the complete lack of insulin. Methods: To directly test this we characterized mice that lack the Gcgr and both insulin genes (GcgrKO/InsKO). Results: In both P1 pups and mice that were kept alive to young adulthood using insulin therapy, blood glucose and plasma ketones were modestly normalized; however, mice survived for only up to 6 days, similar to GcgrHet/InsKO controls. In addition, Gcgr gene deletion was unable to normalize plasma leptin levels, triglycerides, fatty acids, or hepatic cholesterol accumulation compared to GcgrHet/InsKO controls. Conclusion: Therefore, the metabolic manifestations associated with a complete lack of insulin cannot be overcome by glucagon receptor gene inactivation. Author Video: Author Video Watch what authors say about their articles Keywords: Mice, Type 1 diabetes, Insulin, Glucagon, Glucose metabolism, Lipid metabolism
ISSN:2212-8778