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Evidence That in Uncontrolled Diabetes, Hyperglucagonemia Is Required for Ketosis but Not for Increased Hepatic Glucose Production or Hyperglycemia.

Diabetes · 2015

Last updated 2026-05-28

In rats with uncontrolled diabetes, a GLP-1 drug called liraglutide lowered high glucagon levels to normal but did not reduce high blood sugar or glucose production. However, it did significantly lower ketone levels, which are linked to a dangerous condition called ketosis. A separate experiment using a glucagon-neutralizing treatment showed similar results, suggesting that high glucagon is necessary for ketosis but not for high blood sugar in these rats.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes, 2015
Citations28
Relative citation ratio1.03
NIH percentile51
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Several lines of evidence implicate excess glucagon secretion in the elevated rates of hepatic glucose production (HGP), hyperglycemia, and ketosis characteristic of uncontrolled insulin-deficient diabetes (uDM), but whether hyperglucagonemia is required for hyperglycemia in this setting is unknown. To address this question, adult male Wistar rats received either streptozotocin (STZ) to induce uDM (STZ-DM) or vehicle and remained nondiabetic. Four days later, animals received daily subcutaneous injections of either the synthetic GLP-1 receptor agonist liraglutide in a dose-escalating regimen to reverse hyperglucagonemia or its vehicle for 10 days. As expected, plasma glucagon levels were elevated in STZ-DM rats, and although liraglutide treatment lowered glucagon levels to those of nondiabetic controls, it failed to attenuate diabetic hyperglycemia, elevated rates of glucose appearance (Ra), or increased hepatic gluconeogenic gene expression. In contrast, it markedly reduced levels of both plasma ketone bodies and hepatic expression of the rate-limiting enzyme involved in ketone body production. To independently confirm this finding, in a separate study, treatment of STZ-DM rats with a glucagon-neutralizing antibody was sufficient to potently lower plasma ketone bodies but failed to normalize elevated levels of either blood glucose or Ra. These data suggest that in rats with uDM, hyperglucagonemia is required for ketosis but not for increased HGP or hyperglycemia.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25633417 ↗