From the Departments of Exercise Science (A.L.H., C.M.D.) and Physiology and Biophysics (R.N.B.), University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Casey M. Donovan, University of Southern California, Dept. of Exercise Science, PED 107, 3560 S. Watt Way, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0652. E-mail: donovan{at}usc.edu .
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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To date, most efforts to elucidate the loci for hypoglycemic detection have focused on the brain and in particular the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH). Although it is clear that the VMH is critical for hypoglycemic counterregulation, it does not appear to be the exclusive site for glycemic detection. Glucoreceptive neurons have been identified within the hindbrain (4), and appear to be widespread throughout the brain (5) and peripheral tissues (6,7). Although many of the peripheral glucose-sensitive neurons may not be involved in detection of hypoglycemia, portohepatic neurons have been shown to be critical for the counterregulatory response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. The functional integrity of portohepatic glucosensors has been shown to be essential to engendering a full sympathetic response to hypoglycemia in both the dog and rat (8,9,10). Examined under conditions of hypoglycemia developed within hours, portohepatic glucosensors appear to be the primary glucosensors modulating the sympathoadrenal response. Possible functional alterations of portohepatic glucosensors in diabetes has yet to be investigated.
Evidence supporting the existence of glucose receptors in the portohepatic region has been functional; that is, irrigation of the portal vein and liver by glucose (8,9,10) or denervation of the region (11) was shown to markedly suppress the catecholamine response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. We originally considered that the putative receptors were localized to the liver. However, our most recent experimental studies pointed to the portal vein as the locus of these receptors, at least in rat (10). Furthermore, glucose sensing appears to be mediated by afferents innervating the portal vein (11). Although elucidating the importance of portal glucosensors, these findings did not exclude the existence of other glucosensory sites in the splanchnic region. Of particular interest was the hepatic artery, which like the portal vein is richly innervated and perfuses the liver (12,13).
The current study was undertaken to ascertain whether glucosensors, similar to those found in the portal vein, might also reside in the hepatic artery. Using the local irrigation technique, hepatic artery and liver glycemias were normalized despite systemic hypoglycemia induced by hyperinsulinemia. Because hepatic artery and portal blood mix in the hepatic sinusoids, this approach also allowed us to reevaluate the role of the liver in hypoglycemic detection. Results from liver irrigation experiments were compared with those achieved when equivalent hypoglycemia was allowed to develop in the entire body, including the hepatic artery and liver.
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RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
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Surgery. One week before initiating the experiment, animals were chronically cannulated under anesthesia induced by thiamylal sodium (Biotal, Bio-Ceutic Laboratories) and maintained with 0.5-1.0% halothane and nitrous oxide. The common hepatic artery was cannulated directly and secured so flow was not occluded. The tip of the cannula was advanced 1.5 cm past the origin of the left gastric artery, and the gastroduodenal artery was ligated. Cannulas (Tygon; ID = 0.13 cm) were also placed in the carotid artery for sampling and the jugular vein for insulin infusion. In addition, a femoral vein cannula advanced to the inferior vena cava superior to the hepatic vein was used for sampling mixed hepatic venous blood. An inflatable cuff (Model VO-4; Rhodes Medical) was placed around the inferior vena cava caudal to the hepatic vein (Fig. 1). Cuff inflation temporarily occluded subhepatic vena caval flow, allowing mixed hepatic venous blood to be sampled from the femoral catheter. All cannulas and the actuating tubing for the inflatable cuff were tunneled subcutaneously and exteriorized at the back of the neck. The cannulas were filled with heparinized saline (100 U/ml), coiled and capped, and placed in a small gauze pouch secured to the back of the neck. Catheter placement was confirmed at necropsy.
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Experimental design. Each animal participated in two
hyperinsulinemic-hypoglycemic clamp experiments distinguished by the site of
glucose infusion: peripheral (via the cephalic vein; PER protocol) and hepatic
artery (HA protocol) (Fig. 1).
Intracatheters (19-gauge; Deseret Medical, Sandy, UT) were acutely placed in
the right cephalic vein for infusion of indocyanine green dye (ICG) and in the
left cephalic vein for the PER protocol. A constant infusion of ICG (0.13
mg/min) was initiated at -120 min, followed by a 90-min equilibration period.
A 30-min basal sampling period (-30 to 0 min) followed, during which serial
samples, arterial (glucose, insulin, ICG, epinephrine, and norepinephrine),
and hepatic venous (ICG), were taken at 15-min intervals. At min 0, insulin
infusion (5.0 mU · kg-1 · min-1) was
initiated and maintained for the remaining 260 min of the experimental period.
Peripheral glucose infusion was initiated simultaneously in order to clamp
arterial glycemia at 5.55 mmol/l for the subsequent 60 min. Thereafter,
the glucose infusion rate was adjusted every 10 min to achieve
0.55
mmol/l reductions in blood glucose over a 40-min period. This provided a
stepwise decrease in arterial glycemia, reaching a nadir of 2.2 mmol/l between
220 and 260 min. Serial blood samples were taken every 10 min for glucose and
insulin and every 20 min for ICG during the 260-min experimental period.
Additional arterial blood samples were taken every 10 min during the final 20
min (i.e., at 20, 30, and 40 min) of each 40-min stage for measurements of
epinephrine and norepinephrine. An identical protocol was used for the HA
protocol; however, glucose was infused via the hepatic artery instead of the
cephalic vein. By design, the HA protocol allowed hepatic artery and liver
glycemia to remain markedly elevated above arterial concentrations. Each
animal was used for both the PER and HA protocols, with a 1-week interval
between experiments. The experimental order of protocols was randomized to
avoid an order effect.
Assays. Arterial plasma was assayed on-line for glucose by means of the glucose oxidase method (YSI, Yellow Springs, OH). Arterial and hepatic venous plasma ICG concentrations were determined spectrophotometrically at 805 nm. Insulin was measured in duplicate via radioimmunoassays (Linco Research, St. Charles, MO). Arterial blood samples for catecholamines (2 ml) were collected in chilled culture tubes containing heparin and glutathione and centrifuged; plasma was maintained at -60°C for subsequent analysis. Epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations were assayed using a single-isotope radioenzymatic approach (14).
Calculations. Hepatic plasma flow (HPF) in dl/min was calculated as HPF = IICG/(ICGA - ICGHV), where IICG is the ICG infusion rate (0.13 mg/min), ICGA is the arterial ICG concentration, and ICGHV is the hepatic-venous ICG concentration. The mean hepatic glycemia (MHG) in µmol/ml was calculated as MHG = GA + (GINFHA/HPF), where GA is arterial glucose (µmol/ml), GINFHA is the hepatic artery glucose infusion rate (µmol/min), and HPF is the hepatic plasma flow (ml/min). The mean hepatic artery glucose concentration (MHAG) in µmol/ml was calculated as MHAG = GA + (GINFHA/[HPF x 0.25]).
Statistical analyses. Comparisons between treatments over time were assessed using repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Tukey's test for post hoc comparisons. In additional, one-way ANOVA was used where appropriate for within animal pre- and posttreatment comparisons. Statistical significance was set at P < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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As expected, whole body hypoglycemia in the PER protocol elicited a robust sympathetic response. Arterial epinephrine concentrations increased eightfold above basal, from 0.54 ± 0.06 to a mean of 4.4 ± 0.86 nmol/ml by the final 40-min stage of hypoglycemia (P = 0.0001) (Fig. 3A). Prevention of hepatic arterial and liver hypoglycemia by direct hepatic artery glucose infusion had no effect on the sympathetic response to systemic hypoglycemia; that is, increases in plasma epinephrine after systemic hypoglycemia were identical with or without hepatic arterial hyperglycemia (P = 0.74). A similar pattern was observed between protocols for norepinephrine. In response to whole-body hypoglycemia in the PER protocol, norepinephrine increased fourfold to 3.6 ± 0.69 nmol/l (Fig. 3B). Normalizing hepatic artery and liver glycemia in the HA protocol had no impact on the norepinephrine response at any time point when compared with the response during whole-body hypoglycemia in the PER protocol (Fig. 3B).
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DISCUSSION |
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Our laboratory has consistently demonstrated a suppression of the sympathoadrenal response to systemic hypoglycemia of 3.3 ± 0.2 mmol/l or less during portal glucose infusion (i.e., portohepatic normoglycemia) (8,9,10,11). When hypoglycemia was allowed to develop slowly, these portohepatic glucosensors were shown to be the primary (70-100%) regulators of the sympathoadrenal response. This has been observed only when animals were cannulated in the portal vein upstream from the liver so that both the portal vein and liver glycemias were normalized (8,9). Subsequent refinement of the liver irrigation technique revealed that normalization of the liver glucose alone, in the absence of normalizing portal vein glucose, was insufficient to blunt the sympathoadrenal response to systemic hypoglycemia (10). These results were the first to reveal a portal vein, but not a liver, locus for glucosensors essential to hypoglycemic detection.
These earlier results did not exclude the possibility of hepatic artery glucose sensors, and suggested some importance for the level of glycemia entering the liver. However, the current findings demonstrate that the magnitude of the sympathoadrenal response to hypoglycemia is unaffected by the blood glucose concentration present in the hepatic artery. If glucosensors critical for detection of hypoglycemia were located in the hepatic artery, normalization of hepatic artery glycemia during systemic hypoglycemia should have led to a suppression of the sympathoadrenal response. Despite a substantial elevation in hepatic artery glucose concentration during the HA protocol, the catecholamine response to systemic hypoglycemia was virtually identical to the response observed during whole-body hypoglycemia (i.e., without hepatic artery glucose infusion). In addition, because in the current study the rate of glucose infusion via the hepatic artery was sufficient to normalize total liver glycemia, these results confirm our previous observation regarding the lack of any essential liver glucosensors (10). When considered in the context of our previous findings (8,9,10,11), the current results serve to further constrain the portohepatic site for hypoglycemic detection to the portal vein.
Much of the nerve supply to the liver ramifies around the portal vein (12), and studies have clearly demonstrated terminal vagal afferents in the adventitia of the portal vein (15). In situ studies have provided evidence of an inverse relationship between portal vein glucose concentration and the rate of vagal afferent firing (7,16). Glucose-sensitive neurons of the lateral hypothalamus and nuclear tractus solitarius have been shown to be responsive to changes in portal vein glucose concentration (17,18). In addition, the firing of the adrenal nerve has been shown to be inversely proportional to portal vein glucose concentration (16). This has led to the proposal of a portohepatic-adrenal neural reflex for the regulation of glucose homeostasis (19,20).
The importance of portal vein afferent innervation for hypoglycemic detection has recently been demonstrated by our laboratory (11). Denervation of the portal vein alone was shown to have a blunting effect on the sympathoadrenal response to hypoglycemia quantitatively similar to that observed with normalization of portal vein glucose; that is, in the presence of whole-body hypoglycemia, animals with denervated portal veins demonstrated a sympathoadrenal response that was only 50% of normal. Furthermore, portally denervated animals were unable to respond to glucose normalization of the portal vein; that is, no suppression of the sympathetic response was observed during portal vein glucose infusion when compared with whole-body hypoglycemia. These data suggest that those afferents responding to portal glucose infusion are the same as those that detect portal vein hypoglycemia. Consistent with the critical nature of the portal vein glucose-sensitive afferents, studies involving denervation of the liver alone have demonstrated no impact on the counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia (21). However, when the portal vein was clearly denervated along with the liver, there was an observed suppression in the catecholamine response to hypoglycemia (22).
In the current study, as with most studies of hypoglycemia, we induced a fall in blood glucose by elevating the circulating insulin concentration. It has been reported that pharmacological insulin levels result in exaggerated catecholamine responses to hypoglycemia (23,24). Although this has not been a universal observation (25, 26), the potential impact of hyperinsulinemia on our own findings remains unclear. It should be noted that Davis et al. (27) subsequently attributed the impact of hyperinsulinemia on hypoglycemic counter-regulation to its impact on the CNS. Also, our data across several studies (8,9,10,11) have demonstrated a quantitatively similar impact of portal glucose infusion on the catecholamine response to hypoglycemia over a wide range of insulin levels. However, because our lowest insulin levels remain substantially above normal physiological values, we cannot exclude hyperinsulinemia as a possible confounding variable.
The current findings exclude the hepatic artery and liver as loci for hypoglycemic detection, and are consistent with previous findings of a portal vein locus. Although not excluding other glucosensor loci (e.g., the brain), we have consistently demonstrated the importance of the portal vein in hypoglycemic detection and sympathoadrenal counterregulation in both the rat and dog. That there are no essential glucosensors in the liver has now been confirmed in both of these species. Consistent with these observations, it has recently been shown that humans undergoing liver transplantation, in which the portal vein innervation is clearly severed, demonstrate a significantly impaired sympathoadrenal response to hypoglycemia (28). These observations suggest that portal glucose sensing is a critical mechanism for hypoglycemic detection that is conserved across mammalian species.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We would like to thank Donna Moore, Erlinda Kirkman, Marla Smith, Elsa Demirchyan, Andy Trussler, and Richard Curtis for their technical assistance in these experiments.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Received for publication May 9, 2000 and accepted in revised form October 6, 2000
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REFERENCES |
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