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Limostatin

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Limostatin (from Limos, the Greek goddess of starvation) is a peptide hormone found in Drosophila melanogaster that suppresses the production and release of Insulin. The hormone is important in adaptation to starvation conditions, and represents a mechanism by which insulin is negatively regulated.

See also

References

  1. Alfa, Ronald W.; Park, Sangbin; Skelly, Kathleen-Rose; Poffenberger, Gregory; Jain, Nimit; Gu, Xueying; Kockel, Lutz; Wang, Jing; Liu, Yinghua; Powers, Alvin C.; Kim, Seung K. (February 2015). "Suppression of Insulin Production and Secretion by a Decretin Hormone". Cell Metabolism. 21 (2): 323–333. doi:10.1016/j.cmet.2015.01.006. PMC 4349554. PMID 25651184.
  2. "Metabolism: Limostatin—a decretin—suppresses insulin production". Nature Reviews Endocrinology. 2015-02-17. doi:10.1038/nrendo.2015.20.
  3. Conger, Krista (7 August 2014). "Researchers discover insulin-decreasing hormone in flies, humans". Stanford Medicine News Center.
Hormones
Endocrine
glands
Hypothalamic–
pituitary
Hypothalamus
Posterior pituitary
Anterior pituitary
Adrenal axis
Thyroid
Parathyroid
Gonadal axis
Testis
Ovary
Placenta
Pancreas
Pineal gland
Other
Thymus
Digestive system
Stomach
Duodenum
Ileum
Liver/other
Adipose tissue
Skeleton
Kidney
Heart


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