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The area of diabetes research is rapidly evolving, and various directions are being pursued based on emerging insights into glucose regulation. In recent years, scientific attention has been directed to incretin hormones and their role in glycemic control. Incretins are intestinal hormones released in response to ingestion of food that, at physiologic levels, increase the insulin response in a glucose-dependent manner. 50,51 Interest in incretins as a basis for therapy has grown in recent years and has led to the discovery of additional approaches for treating type 2 diabetes.
Bayliss and Starling made the first observation that a factor produced by the intestine could stimulate secretion from the pancreas. 50,52
La Barre introduced the term incretin to describe hormonal activity deriving from the gut that was able to increase the endocrine secretion from the pancreas. 53
Two independent research teams (McIntyre, Elrick) simultaneously communicated the discovery that oral administration of glucose 42,50,54 induced a greater insulin response than IV infusion of glucose. This difference was called the incretin effect. 50
The insulin stimulatory role of GIP, initially called gastric inhibitory peptide, could be demonstrated in humans. Thus, GIP became the first identified incretin hormone and was renamed glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide. 50
Nauck et al observed a reduced incretin effect in type 2 diabetes. 43
The glucose-dependent incretin effect of a second intestinal peptide hormone, glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) (7-36), was demonstrated in humans. 44
The finding that GLP-1 and GIP are degraded by the enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) 27,39,55 initiated the development of agents for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
Ongoing research and investigation.