Abstract
Rainbow trout are generally considered to be poor glucoregulators. To evaluate this, exogenous glucose was administered to chronically hyperglycemic fish at twice the endogenous rate of hepatic production, and their ability to modulate glucose fluxes was tested. Our goals were to determine: (1) whether hyperglycemic fish maintain higher glucose fluxes than normal; (2) whether they can lower hepatic production (Ra glucose) or stimulate disposal (Rd glucose) to cope with a carbohydrate overload; and (3) an estimate of the relative importance of glucose as an oxidative fuel. Results show that hyperglycemic trout sustain elevated baseline Ra and Rd glucose of 10.6±0.1 μmol kg-1 min-1 (or 30% above normal). If 50% of Rd glucosewas oxidized as in mammals, glucose could account for 36 to 100% of metabolic rate when exogenous glucose is supplied. In response to exogenous glucose, rainbow trout can completely suppress hepatic glucose production and increase disposal 2.6- fold, even with chronically elevated baseline fluxes. Such large changes in fluxes limit the increase in blood glucose to 2.5-fold and are probably mediated by the effects of insulin on glucose transporters 2 and 4 and on key enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism. Without this strong and rapid modulation of glucose kinetics, glycemia would rise four times faster to reach dangerous levels, exceeding 100 mmol l-1. Such responses are typical of mammals, but rather unexpected for an ectotherm. The impressive plasticity of glucose kinetics demonstrated here suggests that trout have a much better glucoregulatory capacity than is usually portrayed in the literature.
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Choi, K., & Weber, J. M. (2015). Pushing the limits of glucose kinetics: How rainbow trout cope with a carbohydrate overload. Journal of Experimental Biology, 218(18), 2873–2880. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.125716
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