Overview
Glucose signaling refers to the molecular processes by which cells sense the amount of glucose available and adjust their behaviour accordingly. Specialized sensor proteins, receptors, and enzymes detect changes in glucose levels and trigger pathways that regulate the uptake, storage, and breakdown of glucose, as well as broader decisions about growth, energy use, and gene expression. In multicellular organisms, glucose signaling is closely tied to hormones such as insulin and glucagon, which coordinate the responses of the liver, muscle, fat, and other tissues to keep blood glucose within a narrow range. Because glucose signaling governs how cells obtain and manage their primary fuel, its disruption is central to disorders such as diabetes, obesity, and certain cancers, and it intersects with hormonal regulation and energy balance more broadly. These themes fall within the journal's scope on Glycomics And Metabolism, which covers the sensing, transport, and utilization of sugars in health and disease. This page gathers peer-reviewed, open-access research relevant to glucose signaling and the cellular and hormonal control of glucose homeostasis.
Research published in this journal
3 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
The Impact of Nutrients on Diabetes
Evidence that N-acetylaspartylglutamate is the Astrocyte-Targeted Neurovascular Coupling Agent that Regulates Slow Tonic Control of Brain Blood Flow
How this research is being cited
The 3 articles above have been cited 23 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
-
2025 · Moscow University Chemistry Bulletin
-
S. D. Varfolomeev et al. · 2025 · Moscow University Chemistry Bulletin
-
María Ortuño et al. · 2025 · NeuroImage
-
B. Bravi et al. · 2025 · Brain, behavior, and immunity
-
A KINETIC MODEL OF THE GLUTAMATERGIC SYNAPSE FUNCTIONING - A KEY SYNAPTIC CONTACT IN THE HUMAN BRAINS. D. Varfolomeev et al. · 2025 · Lomonosov chemistry journal
-
2025 · Brain Behavior and Immunity
-
2025 · NeuroImage
-
Martin Grønbæk-Thygesen et al. · 2024 · Cell & Bioscience
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Glucose Signaling, linking to each citing work.