Abstract

In rat pancreatic islets, the apparent space of distribution of galactose is not different from that of other hexoses. In homogenates of islets or tumoral insulin-producing cells, galactose is phosphorylated at a very low rate relative to either glucose phosphorylation in the same tissues or galactose phosphorylation by liver homogenates. In intact islets, galactose increases modestly the glucose 6-phosphate content and is oxidized at a much lower rate than glucose. Galactose slightly increases insulin output in the presence of a stimulatory concentration of glucose but fails to provoke insulin release in the absence of glucose, whether in islets removed from rats fed a normal or galactose-rich diet. The low rate of galactose oxidation and its poor insulinotropic capacity appear attributable to the weak activity of galactokinase in pancreatic islets.

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