Summary
In humans with diabetes mellitus or in individuals given infusions of insulin or insulin
plus glucose, plasma aldosterone levels have been reported to be suppressed. Whether
insulin has a direct effect to suppress aldosterone secretion by the adrenal gland
has not been established. The effect of insulin on glucose-induced inhibition of angiotensin
II-stimulated aldosterone secretion was examined. The effect of glucose and insulin
plus glucose on angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion was examined amined
in isolated perfused canine adrenal glands. In the absence of insulin, 15.6 mM glucose
decreased angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion by 35 ± 7%, while in the
presence of insulin the same glucose concentration had no significant effect on angiotensin
II-stimulated aldosterone secretion. In contrast, insulin had no effect on NaCl-induced
inhibition of angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion. Neither insulin alone
nor saline vehicle affected angiotensin II-stimulated aldosterone secretion. These
results (1) demonstrate that insulin can prevent inhibition of glucose-induced angiotensin
II-stimulated aldosterone secretion, possibly by preventing a glucose-induced decrease
in cell volume, and (2) suggest that the suppressed plasma level of aldosterone found
in individuals with diabetes mellitus may in part be due to the direct effects of
hyperglycemia on the adrenal gland secretion of aldosterone.
Key words
Cell Volume - Osmolality - Steroidogenesis