Abstract

The effects of chronic chloroquine treatment on intravenous glucose tolerance, and the plasma insulin response to intravenous glucose were studied in rats. Plasma glucose disappearance constants ( K g) were significantly greater (6.2 ± 0.5 %min −1) than in corresponding controls (3.7 ± 0.4 %min −1, P < 0.001). This improved glucose tolerance was associated with significantly higher plasma immunoreactive insulin levels in response to glucose injection. Islets isolated from rats treated with chloroquine showed significantly enhanced ( P < 0.05) insulin release when incubated with 16.7 mM glucose but not with lower glucose concentrations (3 and 8 mM). Pre-incubation of islets with streptozotocin (0.05–1.5 mg/ml) produced a dose-dependent reduction in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion which was not modified in islets from chloroquine-treated rats. The concentration of chloroquine in the pancreas increased rapidly during administration and reached a value of 20.2 ± 0.7 μg/g (fresh weight) after 20 weeks of treatment. It is concluded that chronic chloroquine treatment results in an improved glucose tolerance associated with an enhanced glucose-induced insulin secretion. Although earlier work showed chloroquine to reduce the severity of diabetes induced subsequently with streptozotocin, the present study shows that such an amelioration was not due to a protective effect against the β-cell cytotoxic action of streptozotocin.

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