http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
Madar, Zecharia,Stark, Aliza H.,Ilan, Erez,Timar, Bracha,Borenshtein, Diana The Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition 2002 Preventive Nutrition and Food Science Vol.7 No.2
Alpha-lipoic acid is a known hypoglycemic agent that may be useful in the treatment of diabetes. The objective of this study was to investigate the fate of glucose in isolated muscles incubated with lipoic acid by determining its direct effects on specific metabolic and signaling pathways. Soleus muscles from healthy rats were incubated with lipoic acid in the absence or presence of insulin. Glucose transport, glycogen synthesis, glucose oxidation and lipid synthesis were determined and affects on major pathways associated with insulin signaling were evaluated. Glucose transport was not significantly altered by the addition of lipoic acid to the incubation medium. However, lipoic acid decreased glycogen synthesis in comparison to controls. Glucose oxidation was moderately increased while de-novo lipid synthesis from glucose was inhibited. Wortmannin repressed insulin stimulation of glucose incorporation into glycogen, an effect that was augmented by the combined treatment of wortmannin and lipoic acid. Basal and insulin-stimulated serine phosphorylation of Akt was not changed by the addition of lipoic acid to the incubation medium. These data show that in this in vitro model, lipoic acid did not significantly affect glucose uptake but dramatically modified pathways of glucose metabolism within muscle tissue.
Aliza H. Stark,Erez Ilan,Bracha Timar,Diana Borenshtein,Zecharia Madar 한국식품영양과학회 2002 Preventive Nutrition and Food Science Vol.7 No.2
Alpha-lipoic acid is a known hypoglycemic agent that may be useful in the treatment of diabetes. The objective of this study was to investigate the fate of glucose in isolated muscles incubated with lipoic acid by determining its direct effects on specific metabolic, signaling pathways. Soleus muscles from healthy rats were incubated with lipoic acid in the absence or presence of insulin. Glucose transport, glycogen synthesis, glucose oxidation, lipid synthesis were determined, affects on major pathways associated with insulin signaling were evaluated. Glucose transport was not significantly altered by the addition of lipoic acid to the incubation medium. However, lipoic acid decreased glycogen synthesis in comparison to controls. Glucose oxidation was moderately increased while de-novo lipid synthesis from glucose was inhibited. Wortmannin repressed insulin stimulation of glucose incorporation into glycogen, an effect that was augmented by the combined treatment of wortmannin, lipoic acid. Basal, insulin-stimulated serine phosphorylation of Akt was not changed by the addition of lipoic acid to the incubation medium. These data show that in this in vitro model, lipoic acid did not significantly affect glucose uptake but dramatically modified pathways of glucose metabolism within muscle tissue.