Insulin-Induced Electrophysiology Changes in Human Pleura Are Mediated via Its Receptor

Joint Authors

Hatzoglou, C.
Kouritas, V. K.
Evaggelopoulos, K.
Gourgoulianis, K. I.
Foroulis, C. N.
Molyvdas, P.-A.
Ioannou, Maria
Desimonas, N.

Source

Journal of Diabetes Research

Issue

Vol. 2010, Issue 2010 (31 Dec. 2010), pp.1-6, 6 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2010-07-27

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

6

Main Subjects

Diseases
Medicine

Abstract EN

Insulin directly changes the sheep pleural electrophysiology.

The aim of this study was to investigate whether insulin induces similar effects in human pleura, to clarify insulin receptor's involvement, and to demonstrate if glibenclamide (hypoglycemic agent) reverses this effect.

Methods.

Human parietal pleural specimens were mounted in Ussing chambers.

Solutions containing insulin or glibenclamide and insulin with anti-insulin antibody, anti-insulin receptor antibody, and glibenclamide were used.

The transmesothelial resistance (RTM) was determined.

Immunohistochemistry for the presence of Insulin Receptors (IRa, IRb) was also performed.

Results.

Insulin increased RTM within 1st min (P=.016), when added mesothelially which was inhibited by the anti-insulin and anti-insulin receptor antibodies.

Glibenclamide also eliminated the insulin-induced changes.

Immunohistochemistry verified the presence of IRa and IRb.

Conclusion.

Insulin induces electrochemical changes in humans as in sheep via interaction with its receptor.

This effect is abolished by glibenclamide.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Kouritas, V. K.& Ioannou, Maria& Foroulis, C. N.& Desimonas, N.& Evaggelopoulos, K.& Gourgoulianis, K. I.…[et al.]. 2010. Insulin-Induced Electrophysiology Changes in Human Pleura Are Mediated via Its Receptor. Journal of Diabetes Research،Vol. 2010, no. 2010, pp.1-6.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-989280

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Kouritas, V. K.…[et al.]. Insulin-Induced Electrophysiology Changes in Human Pleura Are Mediated via Its Receptor. Journal of Diabetes Research No. 2010 (2010), pp.1-6.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-989280

American Medical Association (AMA)

Kouritas, V. K.& Ioannou, Maria& Foroulis, C. N.& Desimonas, N.& Evaggelopoulos, K.& Gourgoulianis, K. I.…[et al.]. Insulin-Induced Electrophysiology Changes in Human Pleura Are Mediated via Its Receptor. Journal of Diabetes Research. 2010. Vol. 2010, no. 2010, pp.1-6.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-989280

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-989280