The role of glucose metabolism in sperm cell motility was examined in purified human spermatozoa from the perspective of elucidating its possible significance in spontaneous and experimental diabetes. After a 4-h incubation in the absence of D-glucose, the mean progressive velocity of h u m a n sper
Glucose metabolism in murine fetal cortical brain cells: Lack of insulin effects
✍ Scribed by Frans K. Gorus; Elisabeth L. Hooghe-Peters; Daniël G. Pipeleers
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 618 KB
- Volume
- 121
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
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✦ Synopsis
Glucose uptake and oxidation were markedly higher in cultured than in freshly isolated neural cells, prepared from murine fetal brain cortices. The hexose transport process-measured as 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake-appeared comparable in both conditions, and proceeded proportionally to the extracellular sugar concentration up to 6 mM. In contrast, glucose oxidation occurred independently of the prevailing glucose concentration from 1.4 mM on. Acute or chronic exposure to insulin exerted no effect upon cellular glucose uptake or oxidation. These results suggest that glucose handling by maturing fetal cortical cells is mainly determined by t h e rate of cellular glucose breakdown rather than by the rate of glucose transport into the cell; the marked rise in cellular glucose metabolism during culture might result from the synthesis andlor activation of a key enzyme in glucose catabolism. Our observations also indicate that the previously described neurotrophic effects of insulin are not mediated via enhanced glucose handling.
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The effects of insulin and glucose on parameters of metabolism were investigated in myoblast-like (MBL) cells, a human myoblast-like cell line derived from a Wilms'tumor. Insulin responses were studied after 4 h r pre-incubation in serum free media, with or without 5 m M glucose. Insulin was added d