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DOI: 10.1530/eje.0.1380240
European Journal of Endocrinology, Vol 138, Issue 3, 240-248
Copyright © 1998 by European Society of Endocrinology
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Articles

Autoregulation of hepatic glucose production

MC Moore, CC Connolly, and AD Cherrington

Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-0615, USA.

In vitro evidence indicates that the liver responds directly to changes in circulating glucose concentrations with reciprocal changes in glucose production and that this autoregulation plays a role in maintenance of normoglycemia. Under in vivo conditions it is difficult to separate the effects of glucose on neural regulation mediated by the central nervous system from its direct effect on the liver. Nevertheless, it is clear that nonhormonal mechanisms can cause significant changes in net hepatic glucose balance. In response to hyperglycemia, net hepatic glucose output can be decreased by as much as 60-90% by nonhormonal mechanisms. Under conditions in which hepatic glycogen stores are high (i.e. the overnight-fasted state), a decrease in the glycogenolytic rate and an increase in the rate of glucose cycling within the liver appear to be the explanation for the decrease in hepatic glucose output seen in response to hyperglycemia. During more prolonged fasting, when glycogen levels are reduced, a decrease in gluconeogenesis may occur as a part of the nonhormonal response to hyperglycemia. A substantial role for hepatic autoregulation in the response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia is most clearly evident in severe hypoglycemia (< or = 2.8 mmol/l). The nonhormonal response to hypoglycemia apparently involves enhancement of both gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis and is capable of supplying enough glucose to meet at least half of the requirement of the brain. The nonhormonal response can include neural signaling, as well as autoregulation. However, even in the absence of the ability to secrete counterregulatory hormones (glucocorticoids, catecholamines, and glucagon), dogs with denervated livers (to interrupt neural pathways between the liver and brain) were able to respond to hypoglycemia with increases in net hepatic glucose output. Thus, even though the endocrine system provides the primary response to changes in glycemia, autoregulation plays an important adjunctive role.


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