Abstract
Previous experiments using physiological variations of plasma glucose or pancreatic
hormones showed the existence of glucose-pancreatic hormone feed-back mechanisms in
the fasted Goose.
The present studies investigated this regulation in the fed state. In normal and depancreatectomized
fed, or force-fed geese, plasma glucose (G), plasma immunoreactive insulin (IRI) and
total plasma glucagon-like-immunoreactivity (GLI) (using a non-specific antiserum
L 7/69) were measured. Plasma pancreatic glucagon (GG) and gut GLI were assessed either
with a pancreas-specific antiserum (30K) or by comparison between normal and pancreatectomized
animals.
Normal force-fed geese are hyperglycemic and hyperinsulinemic; plasma GLI first declines
and then rises slightly above the basal level; normally fed animals show no significant
variation in palsma GLI. These observations can be attributed to opposed variations
in plasma pancreatic and gut GLI's: a) plasma pancreatic glucagon (measured with 30K) decreases by 50% after feeding b) plasma gut GLI increases in pancreatectomized geese after force-feeding or oral
glucose.
In conclusion 1 - the glucose-glucagon and the glucose-insulin feed-back mechanisms
operate in the fed state. 2 - feeding increases gut GLI secretion.
Key words
Goose, Feeding, Fasting, Oral Glucose - GLI/IRI - GG/ IRI Ratios - Plasma Metabolites
- Pancreatic Hormone Feed-back - Gut GLI Secretion
1 Dedicated to Professor F. Stutinsky