036: Is Insulin Really a Response to Blood Glucose?
Mastering Nutrition Episode 36
Introduction
Insulin is almost universally considered a hormone whose primary purpose is to regulate blood glucose levels. Indeed, it does this. But is that the whole picture? When we look at what governs pancreatic insulin secretion inside the beta-cell, it’s about total energy and the versatility of the short-term energy supply, not about glucose. When we look at what insulin does to energy metabolism, it does far more than regulate blood glucose: it governs how we use energy and what we do with it.
What is insulin really doing? Find out in this episode. I can’t promise the episode is practical, but I promise it’s incredibly thought-provoking.
Show Notes
Here’s what you’ll find in this episode, and more:
0:00:57 Cliff Notes
0:05:40 Insulin is widely perceived as a response to blood glucose, yet there are a variety of reasons to see it as a response to short-term energy status and the versatility of that short-term energy.
0:07:42 Defining “insulin signaling.”
0:10:56 Dietary effects on insulin and glucagon: fat, protein, and carbohydrate.
0:14:40 Effects of insulin outside of energy metabolism: for example, glutathione synthesis, production and activation of thyroid hormone, protection against glycation.
0:21:04 Insulin signaling is directly triggered by the level of ATP in the pancreatic beta-cell.
0:28:06 Amplification signals in beta-cell: anaplerosis, cataplerosis, lipogenesis, and the pentose phosphate pathway.
0:38:26 The anatomy and physiology of macronutrient transport mean that fat and carbohydrate are delivered to the pancreatic beta-cell in very different ways, resulting from circulatory routes and the relative expression of glucose transporters and lipoprotein lipase.
01:00:10 Unique roles of glucose in specialized energetic pathways.
01:00:48 Cytosolic ATP generation depends on glucose and is important to red blood cells, astrocytes, the lens and cornea of the eye, the kidney medulla, the testes, and under conditions of high-intensity exercise, stress, hypoxia, or suffocation.
01:04:05 Only glucose can allow a tissue to borrow energy from the liver in the Cori cycle.
01:07:27 Glucose is the primary anaplerotic substrate; protein is secondary; fat has little anaplerotic pathway.
01:08:48 Only glucose can support the pentose phosphate pathway, which provides NADPH and 5-carbon sugars for DNA; RNA, all of the energy carriers in energy metabolism (NADPH, NADH, FADH2, Coenzyme A, ATP); synthesis of nucleotides, neurotransmitters, fatty acids, and cholesterol; recycling of vitamin K and folate.
01:14:36 Insulin as a response to total energy and energetic versatility.
Masterclass Lessons Related to “Is Insulin Really a Response to Blood Glucose?”
Lactate: Rescuing NAD+ and Generating ATP From Glycolysis | MWM 2.15
Anaplerosis: Why Carbs Spare Protein in Ways That Fat Can’t | MWM 2.16
Is Insulin Really a Response to Carbohydrate or Just a Gauge of Energy Status? | MWM 2.23
Insulin as a Gauge of Short-Term Energy Supply and Energetic Versatility | MWM 2.28
Other Posts Podcast Episodes Related to “Is Insulin Really a Response to Blood Glucose?”
The Biochemistry of Why Insulin Doesn’t Make You Fat | Mastering Nutrition Episode 35
Paleo f(x) Grab Bag: Carbs, Sex Hormones, Type 1 Diabetes, and More | Mastering Nutrition Episode 11
Why “Glycation” Is a Bad Reason to Restrict Carbs | Mastering Nutrition Episode 6
What Is Measuring Our Hba1c REALLY Telling Us About Our Blood Glucose and Diabetes Risk? | Mastering Nutrition Episode 12
Wait a Second, Is Glycation Actually GOOD For You? | Mastering Nutrition Episode 13
Examine.Com Editorial: Sugar is the Ultimate Antioxidant and Insulin Will Make You Younger
Research and Educational Resources Related to “Is Insulin Really a Response to Blood Glucose?”
Kawai et al. Postprandial glucose, insulin and glucagon responses to meals with different nutrient compositions in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.1987
Komatsu. Glucose‐stimulated insulin secretion: A newer perspective. 2013.
Keane and Newsholme. Metabolic Regulation of Insulin Secretion. 2014
Tortora, Principles of Anatomy and Physiology: 14th Edition , 2013, pp. 906-9, 642-6. 752-4, 787-8, 801-2, 912, and 920-2.
Byers et al. Avian and Mammalian Facilitative Glucose Transporters. 2017.
Kersten. Physiological regulation of lipoprotein lipase. 2014.
Nyrén et al. Localization of lipoprotein lipase and GPIHBP1 in mouse pancreas: effects of diet and leptin deficiency. 2012.
Kalwat and Cobb. Mechanisms of the amplifying pathway of insulin secretion in the β cell. 2017.
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