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Implication of sugar, protein and incretins in excessive glucagon secretion in type 2 diabetes after mixed meals.

Authors :
Zhang, Jiudan
Schäfer, Sylva Mareike
Kabisch, Stefan
Csanalosi, Marta
Schuppelius, Bettina
Kemper, Margrit
Markova, Mariya
Meyer, Nina Marie Tosca
Pivovarova-Ramich, Olga
Keyhani-Nejad, Farnaz
Rohn, Sascha
Pfeiffer, Andreas F.H.
Source :
Clinical Nutrition; Apr2023, Vol. 42 Issue 4, p467-476, 10p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Amino acids powerfully release glucagon but their contribution to postprandial hyperglucagonemia in type 2 diabetes remains unclear. Exogenously applied GIP stimulates, while GLP-1 inhibits, glucagon secretion in humans. However, their role in mixed meals is unclear, which we therefore characterized. In three experiments, participants with type 2 diabetes and obese controls randomly received different loads of sugars and/or proteins. In the first experiment, participants ingested the rapidly cleaved saccharose (SAC) or slowly cleaved isomaltulose (ISO) which is known to elicit opposite profiles of GIP and GLP-1 secretion. In the second one participants received test meals which contained saccharose or isomaltulose in combination with milk protein. The third set of participants underwent randomized oral protein tests with whey protein or casein. Incretins, glucagon, C-peptide, and insulin were profiled by specific immunological assays. 50 g of the sugars alone suppressed glucagon in controls but slightly less in type 2 diabetes patients. Participants with type 2 diabetes showed excessive glucagon responses within 15 min and lasting over 3 h, while the obese controls showed small initial and delayed greater glucagon responses to mixed meals. The release of GIP was significantly faster and greater with SAC compared to ISO, while GLP-1 showed an inverse pattern. The glucagon responses to whey or casein were only moderately increased in type 2 diabetes patients without a left shift of the dose response curve. The rapid hypersecretion of glucagon after mixed meals in type 2 diabetes patients compared to controls is unaffected by endogenous incretins. The defective suppression of glucagon by glucose combined with hypersecretion to protein is required for the exaggerated response. NCT03806920, NCT02219295, NCT04564391. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02615614
Volume :
42
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Clinical Nutrition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162388778
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clnu.2023.02.011