Abstract
2[2-(4,5-Dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)-1-phenylethyl]pyridine dihydrochloride sesquihydrate (DG-5128) was found to stimulate the glucose-primed insulin secretion from the isolated rat pancreatic islets throughout the incubation period, unlike tolbutamide which stimulated it only in the initial phase of incubation. The effect of DG-5128 was more pronounced at a higher glucose concentration (5 mg/ml). In the islet perifusion study, DG-5128 was also found to stimulate the glucose-induced insulin secretion in both the first and the second phases of the reaction, in contrast to tolbutamide which stimulated only the first phase of insulin secretion from the perifused islets. DG-5128 gave no significant effect on the glucose-stimulated increase in incorporation of [ 3H]leucine into the pro-insulin and insulin fractions, while tolbutamide significantly inhibited the incorporation especially at a low glucose concentration (1 mg/ml). These and the previous findings indicate that DG-5128 is a new class of hypoglycemic agent with a unique mode of action different from the known hypoglycemics ever reported.
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