Use of Fetal Streptozotocin Injection To Determine the Role of Normal Levels of Fetal Insulin in Regulating Uteroplacental and Umbilical Glucose Exchange
- 31 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Pediatric Research
- Vol. 24 (3) , 312-317
- https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-198809000-00007
Abstract
The present study was performed to determine the role of the normal fetal concentration of insulin in regulating placental-fetal glucose exchange. Fetal insulin deficiency was produced by streptozotocin injection into near term fetal sheep, and the effects of this insulin deficiency on net uteroplacental glucose uptake and net umbilical glucose uptake were measured. Each fetus received two or three doses of streptozotocin, 100 mgkg-1 · dose-1, given on separate days. This dosage of streptozotocin produced a 97.6% reduction in fetal pancreatic insulin content, a fall in fetal plasma insulin concentration (21 ± 2 to 10 ± 1 μU · ml-1), a rise in fetal plasma glucose concentration (57 ± 4 to 114 ± 19 pg · ml-1), a rise in fetal blood glucose concentration (20.4 ± 0.9 to 33.4 ± 4.4 mg · dl-1), and a failure of insulin secretion in response to glucose infusion. Fetal blood oxygen content and umbilical oxygen uptake were normal and did not change during the entire study. Umbilical glucose uptake was reduced by 66% (5.98 ± 0.38 to 2.02 ± 1.31 mgmin-1 · kg-1) after the streptozotocin-induced hypoinsulinemia and hyperglycemia but was returned to the control level by an insulin infusion into the fetus that reestablished the control maternal to fetal glucose concentration gradient. Net uteroplacental glucose uptake (consumption) did not change throughout the study. Because glucose concentration and umbilical glucose uptake could be normalized by an insulin infusion, it is unlikely that direct or toxic effects of streptozotocin on fetal or placental glucose metabolism were primarily responsible for the hyperglycemia and the reduced rate of umbilical glucose uptake. Thus, changes in fetal glucose concentration primarily affected umbilical glucose uptake. Furthermore, the failure of the fetus to respond to a glucose infusion after streptozotocin injection with the same rate of exogenous glucose entry (umbilical uptake plus intravenous infusion) measured during the control period glucose infusion indicates that hypoinsulinemia contributed to the fetal hyperglycemia. These results indicate that the normal fetal insulin concentration determines net umbilical glucose uptake by regulating fetal glucose concentration.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE EFFECT OF HYPERINSULINAEMIA ON GLUCOSE UTILIZATION AND OXIDATION AND ON OXYGEN CONSUMPTION IN THE FETAL LAMBQuarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology, 1986
- Effects of pancreatectomy on the growth and metabolite concentrations of the sheep fetusJournal of Endocrinology, 1986
- Effect of Insulin on Glucose Uptake in Near-Term Fetal LambsExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1985
- Fetal glucose uptake and utilization as functions of maternal glucose concentrationAmerican Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 1984
- Influence of Exogenous Glucagon on Fetal Glucose Metabolism and Ketone ProductionPediatric Research, 1983
- Effect of Streptozotocin on Foetal Lambs in Mid-pregnancyAustralian Journal of Biological Sciences, 1982
- Insulin Effect on Fetal Glucose UtilizationPediatric Research, 1978