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Insulin target tissues and cells.
In: Drug Discovery and Evaluation: Pharmacological Assays. Cham, Switzerland: Springer, 2016. 2681-2722
Rodent adipose tissue and cells represent the targets exhibiting the most prominent insulin sensitivity (i.e., lowest EC/IC50) and responsiveness (i.e., highest fold stimulation/inhibition above basal) of the relevant insulin signaling cascades (e.g., insulin receptor activation) and metabolic end effector systems (e.g., lipolysis) in comparison to liver (e.g., gluconeogenesis) and muscle cells (e.g., glucose transport). This might be based in part on technical advantages of the adipose tissue/adipocyte preparation in comparison to that of muscle/myocytes. But more likely, it reflects the exquisite physiological role of the adipose tissue in the regulation and coordination of glucose and lipid metabolism, i.e., insulin stimulation of lipid synthesis (lipogenesis) and insulin inhibition of lipolysis. On the basis of their relatively easy technical preparation, functional adipose tissue fragments (epididymal fat pads) and primary adipocytes (isolated epididymal adipocytes) from rats as well as adipocyte cell lines derived from mice (3T3-L1, F442A) are the first choice for the development of robust and reliable cell-/tissue-based assay systems for insulin-like activity.
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Publication type
Article: Edited volume or book chapter
Editors
Hock, F.J.*
e-ISSN
978-3-319-05392-9
ISBN
978-3-319-05391-2
Book Volume Title
Drug Discovery and Evaluation: Pharmacological Assays
Quellenangaben
Pages: 2681-2722
Publisher
Springer
Publishing Place
Cham, Switzerland
Non-patent literature
Publications
Institute(s)
Institute of Diabetes and Obesity (IDO)