Accurate measurement of glucagon concentrations in a variety of conditions is necessary for subsequent estimation of glucagon secretion. Glucagon arises in the α-cell as a product of proglucagon processing. Modern 2-site immunoassays have overcome prior problems with glucagon measurement caused by cross-reactivity with other proglucagon-derived fragments. However, in response to hyperglycemia, glucagon concentrations can fall below the limit of quantification of commercial immunoassays. This has implications for the characterization of α-cell function in health, in prediabetes and in type 2 diabetes. An increase in the sensitivity of glucagon measurement was achieved by ethanol precipitation and concentration of sample prior to measurement. Concentrating the sample 6-fold enabled a decrease in the level of quantitation from 1.7 to 0.3 pmol/L with acceptable precision. To establish whether this enhanced high-sensitivity glucagon assay enhances the characterization of α-cell function in health and disease, we then estimated glucagon secretion rate (GSR) in 4 subjects. We subsequently used the relationship of GSR to glucose concentrations to characterize the α-cell response to glucose and demonstrate improved characterization of α-cell dysfunction in vivo.
Keywords: alpha-cell function; glucagon secretion; glucagon suppression.