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Minimal modeling of insulin secretion in the perfused rat pancreas: a drug effect case study.

Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers adapted a mathematical model to measure how well insulin-producing cells in rat pancreases respond to diabetes drugs. The model showed that GLP-1 and the drug lixisenatide both increased insulin secretion by about 12-fold in one phase and 2-3-fold in another phase. A different drug, SAR1, further improved insulin secretion when combined with GLP-1.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalAm J Physiol Endocrinol Metab, 2014
Citations9
Relative citation ratio0.34
NIH percentile21
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

The experimental protocol of the perfused rat pancreas is commonly used to evaluate β-cell function. In this context, mathematical models become useful tools through the determination of indexes that allow the assessment of β-cell function in different experimental groups and the quantification of the effects of antidiabetic drugs, secretagogues, or treatments. However, a minimal model applicable to the isolated perfused rat pancreas has so far been unavailable. In this work, we adapt the C-peptide minimal model applied previously to the intravenous glucose tolerance test to obtain a specific model for the experimental settings of the perfused pancreas. Using the model, it is possible to estimate indexes describing β-cell responsivity for first (ΦD) and second phase (ΦS, T) of insulin secretion. The model was initially applied to untreated pancreata and afterward used for the assessment of pharmacologically relevant agents (the gut hormone GLP-1, the potent GLP-1 receptor agonist lixisenatide, and a GPR40/FFAR1 agonist, SAR1) to quantify and differentiate their effect on insulin secretion. Model fit was satisfactory, and parameters were estimated with good precision for both untreated and treated pancreata. Model application showed that lixisenatide reaches improvement of β-cell function similarly to GLP-1 (11.7- vs. 13.1-fold increase in ΦD and 2.3- vs. 2.8-fold increase in ΦS) and demonstrated that SAR1 leads to an additional improvement of β-cell function in the presence of postprandial GLP-1 levels.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24425760 ↗