Abstract

In vivo insulin secretion was quantified as the AIRg or AIRa in islet-transplanted rats. Male Wistar-Furth rats previously made diabetic by STZ administration (55 mg/kg) were transplanted with 500, 1000, 2000, or 3000 islets infused into the portal vein (n = 12-14 per group) and were compared with sham-treated controls (CN, n = 16). At 4-5 wk posttransplantation, no significant differences were noted in the FPG or fasting plasma insulin of the experimental groups (P > 0.05). Body weight, however, was 10% less (P < 0.05) in rats receiving 500 islets than in controls, indicating an effect of beta-cell deficiency on growth rates. To determine the relationship between islet mass and insulin secretion, we measured AIRg after a 0.3 g/kg glucose bolus in fasted conscious animals. A significant correlation was observed between the AIRg and islet number (r = 0.61, P = 0.0001), and both 500- and 1000-islet groups could be differentiated from controls by ANOVA (500: 8%; 1000: 12% of controls; P < 0.05). During a glycemic potentiation protocol, AIRa was measured at basal and elevated blood glucose (approximately 16 mM). At neither basal nor elevated blood glucose was AIRa correlated with islet number (basal r = 0.0622, P = 0.7834; elevated r = 0.3133, P = 0.1667). None of the groups could be differentiated by ANOVA (elevated 500: 37%; 1000, 68% of controls; P > 0.05). Although this study illustrates that AIRa may be better preserved in islet-transplanted rats, AIRg is the better correlate of islet number.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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