Abstract

In order to examine the involvement of insulin in the activity of Na +/glucose cotransporter in rat small intestine, we compared Na +-dependent uptake of d-glucose by brush-border membrane vesicles prepared from control, streptozotocin-induced diabetic, insulin-treated diabetic and starved diabetic rats. In four groups, the uptake of d-glucose showed a transient overshoot in the presence of Na + gradient between medium and vesicles (medium > vesicles). The overshoot magnitude was increased (1.8-fold of controls) in diabetic brush border membrane vesicles and recovered to the control level by the treatment of diabetic rats with insulin. In contrast, increased uptake of d-glucose in diabetic rats was not recovered by the starvation of diabetic rats although the blood glucose level was the same as that of controls. Furthermore, we attempted to examine phlorizin binding activities among four groups. Scatchard analysis indicated that phlorizin binding to diabetic brush border membrane vesicles was increased (1.6-fold of controls) without a change of the affinity for phlorizin as compared with controls. Increased binding of phlorizin to diabetic brush border membrane vesicles was also recovered to the control level by the treatment of diabetic rats with insulin, but not by starvation. These results suggested that the increased activity of Na +/glucose cotransporter in diabetic rats was due to the increase of the number of cotransporter and that intestinal cotransporter was physiologically controlled by insulin, but not by blood glucose levels.

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