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1.
Mulder H  Yang S  Winzell MS  Holm C  Ahrén B 《Diabetes》2004,53(1):122-128
Lipids may serve as coupling factors in K(ATP)-independent glucose sensing in beta-cells. We have previously demonstrated that beta-cells harbor lipase activities, one of which is the hormone-sensitive lipase. Whether beta-cell lipases are critical for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) by providing lipid-derived signals from endogenous lipids is unknown. Therefore, using a lipase inhibitor (orlistat), we examined whether lipase inhibition reduces insulin secretion. Islet lipolysis stimulated by glucose and diglyceride lipase activity was abolished by orlistat. Incubation of rat islets with orlistat dose dependently inhibited GSIS; this inhibition was reversed by 1 mmol/l palmitate, suggesting that orlistat acts via impaired formation of an acylglyceride-derived coupling signal. Orlistat inhibited the potentiating effect of forskolin on GSIS, an effect proposed to be due to activation of a lipase. In perifused islets, orlistat attenuated mainly the second phase of insulin secretion. Because the rise in islet ATP/ADP levels in response to glucose and oxidation of the sugar were unaffected by orlistat whereas the second phase of insulin secretion was reduced, it seems likely that a lipid coupling factor involved in K(ATP)-independent glucose sensing has been perturbed. Thus, beta-cell lipase activity is involved in GSIS, emphasizing the important role of beta-cell lipid metabolism for insulin secretion.  相似文献   

2.
Fatty acids (FAs) and other lipid molecules are important for many cellular functions, including vesicle exocytosis. For the pancreatic beta-cell, while the presence of some FAs is essential for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, FAs have enormous capacity to amplify glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, which is particularly operative in situations of beta-cell compensation for insulin resistance. In this review, we propose that FAs do this via three interdependent processes, which we have assigned to a "trident model" of beta-cell lipid signaling. The first two arms of the model implicate intracellular metabolism of FAs, whereas the third is related to membrane free fatty acid receptor (FFAR) activation. The first arm involves the AMP-activated protein kinase/malonyl-CoA/long-chain acyl-CoA (LC-CoA) signaling network in which glucose, together with other anaplerotic fuels, increases cytosolic malonyl-CoA, which inhibits FA partitioning into oxidation, thus increasing the availability of LC-CoA for signaling purposes. The second involves glucose-responsive triglyceride (TG)/free fatty acid (FFA) cycling. In this pathway, glucose promotes LC-CoA esterification to complex lipids such as TG and diacylglycerol, concomitant with glucose stimulation of lipolysis of the esterification products, with renewal of the intracellular FFA pool for reactivation to LC-CoA. The third arm involves FFA stimulation of the G-protein-coupled receptor GPR40/FFAR1, which results in enhancement of glucose-stimulated accumulation of cytosolic Ca2+ and consequently insulin secretion. It is possible that FFA released by the lipolysis arm of TG/FFA cycling is partly "secreted" and, via an autocrine/paracrine mechanism, is additive to exogenous FFAs in activating the FFAR1 pathway. Glucose-stimulated release of arachidonic acid from phospholipids by calcium-independent phospholipase A2 and/or from TG/FFA cycling may also be involved. Improved knowledge of lipid signaling in the beta-cell will allow a better understanding of the mechanisms of beta-cell compensation and failure in diabetes.  相似文献   

3.
We previously reported decreased glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) in hormone-sensitive lipase-null mice (HSL(-/-)), both in vivo and in vitro. The focus of the current study was to gain further insight into the signaling role and regulation of lipolysis in islet tissue. The effect of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) on GSIS was also studied, as GLP-1 could augment GSIS via protein kinase A activation of HSL and lipolysis. Freshly isolated islets from fasted and fed male HSL(-/-) and wild-type (HSL(+/+)) mice were studied at ages 4 and 7 months. Neutral cholesteryl ester hydrolase activity was markedly reduced in islets from both 4- and 7-month-old male HSL(-/-) mice, whereas a marked deficiency in triglyceride lipase activity became evident only in the older mice. The deficiencies in lipase activities were associated with higher islet triglyceride content and reduced lipolysis at basal glucose levels. Lipolysis was stimulated by high glucose in islets of both wild-type and HSL-null mice. Severe deficiencies in GSIS were found, but only in islets from 7-month-old, fasted, male HSL(-/-) mice. GSIS was less affected in 4-month-old fasted male HSL(-/-) mice and not reduced in female mice. Exogenous delivery of free fatty acids (FFAs) rescued GSIS, supporting the view that the lack of endogenous FFA supply for lipid-signaling processes in HSL(-/-) mice was responsible for the loss of GSIS. GLP-1 also rescued GSIS in HSL(-/-) mice, indicating that signaling via HSL is not a major pathway for its incretin effect. Thus, the secretory phenotype of HSL-null mice is gender dependent, increases with age, and is influenced by the nutritional state. Under most circumstances, the major determinant of lipolytic flux in the beta-cell involves an enzyme(s) other than HSL that is acutely activated by glucose. Our results support the view that the availability of endogenous FFA through HSL and an additional enzyme(s) is involved in providing lipid moieties for beta-cell signaling for secretion in response to glucose.  相似文献   

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6.
MacDonald PE  Salapatek AM  Wheeler MB 《Diabetes》2002,51(Z3):S443-S447
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) acts through its G-protein-coupled receptor to enhance glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from pancreatic beta-cells. This is believed to result from modulation of at least two ion channels: ATP-sensitive K(+) (K(ATP)) channels and voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels. Here, we report that GLP-1 receptor signaling also regulates the activity of beta-cell voltage-dependent K(+) (K(V)) channels, themselves potent glucose-dependent regulators of insulin secretion. GLP-1 receptor activation with exendin 4 (10(-8) mol/l) in rat beta-cells antagonized K(V) currents by 43.3 +/- 6.3%, whereas the GLP-1 receptor antagonist exendin 9-39 had no effect. The effect of GLP-1 receptor activation on K(V) currents could be replicated (current reduction of 55.7 +/- 6.0%) by G-protein activation with GMP-PNP (10 nmol/l). The cAMP pathway antagonist Rp-cAMPS (100 micro mol/l) prevented current inhibition by exendin 4, implicating cAMP signaling in GLP-1 receptor modulation of beta-cell K(V) currents. Finally, exendin 4 (10(-8) mol/l) increased the amplitude (130 +/- 5.7%) and duration (285 +/- 15.9%) of the beta-cell depolarization response to current injection, independent of any effect on K(ATP) or Ca(2+) channels. The present results demonstrate that GLP-1 receptor signaling can antagonize beta-cell repolarization by reducing voltage-dependent K(+) currents, an effect likely to contribute to GLP-1's glucose-dependent insulinotropic effect.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Delayed-rectifier K+ currents (I(DR)) in pancreatic beta-cells are thought to contribute to action potential repolarization and thereby modulate insulin secretion. The voltage-gated K+ channel, K(V)2.1, is expressed in beta-cells, and the biophysical characteristics of heterologously expressed channels are similar to those of I(DR) in rodent beta-cells. A novel peptidyl inhibitor of K(V)2.1/K(V)2.2 channels, guangxitoxin (GxTX)-1 (half-maximal concentration approximately 1 nmol/l), has been purified, characterized, and used to probe the contribution of these channels to beta-cell physiology. In mouse beta-cells, GxTX-1 inhibits 90% of I(DR) and, as for K(V)2.1, shifts the voltage dependence of channel activation to more depolarized potentials, a characteristic of gating-modifier peptides. GxTX-1 broadens the beta-cell action potential, enhances glucose-stimulated intracellular calcium oscillations, and enhances insulin secretion from mouse pancreatic islets in a glucose-dependent manner. These data point to a mechanism for specific enhancement of glucose-dependent insulin secretion by applying blockers of the beta-cell I(DR), which may provide advantages over currently used therapies for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

9.
Glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) and glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) are gut-derived incretins that potentiate glucose clearance following nutrient ingestion. Elimination of incretin receptor action in GIPR(-/-) or GLP-1R(-/-) mice produces only modest impairment in glucose homeostasis, perhaps due to compensatory upregulation of the remaining incretin. We have now studied glucose homeostasis in double incretin receptor knockout (DIRKO) mice. DIRKO mice exhibit normal body weight and fail to exhibit an improved glycemic response after exogenous administration of GIP or the GLP-1R agonist exendin-4. Plasma glucagon and the hypoglycemic response to exogenous insulin were normal in DIRKO mice. Glycemic excursion was abnormally increased and levels of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion were decreased following oral but not intraperitoneal glucose challenge in DIRKO compared with GIPR(-/-) or GLP-1R(-/-) mice. Similarly, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion and the response to forskolin were well preserved in perifused DIRKO islets. Although the dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPP-IV) inhibitors valine pyrrolidide (Val-Pyr) and SYR106124 lowered glucose and increased plasma insulin in wild-type and single incretin receptor knockout mice, the glucose-lowering actions of DPP-IV inhibitors were eliminated in DIRKO mice. These findings demonstrate that glucose-stimulated insulin secretion is maintained despite complete absence of both incretin receptors, and they delineate a critical role for incretin receptors as essential downstream targets for the acute glucoregulatory actions of DPP-IV inhibitors.  相似文献   

10.
Whereas the loss of ATP-sensitive K(+) channel (K(ATP) channel) activity in human pancreatic beta-cells causes severe hypoglycemia in certain forms of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, similar channel loss in sulfonylurea receptor-1 (SUR1) and Kir6.2 null mice yields a milder phenotype that is characterized by normoglycemia, unless the animals are stressed. While investigating potential compensatory mechanisms, we found that incretins, specifically glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GIP), can increase the cAMP content of Sur1KO islets but do not potentiate glucose-stimulated insulin release. This impairment is secondary to a restriction in the ability of Sur1KO beta-cells to sense cAMP correctly. Potentiation does not appear to require cAMP-activated protein kinase (PKA) because H-89 (N-[2-(p-bromocinnamylamino)ethyl]-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide) and KT5720, inhibitors of PKA, do not affect stimulation by GLP-1, GIP, or exendin-4 in wild-type islets, although they block phosphorylation of cAMP-response element-binding protein. The impaired incretin response in Sur1KO islets is specific; the stimulation of insulin release by other modulators, including mastoparan and activators of protein kinase C, is conserved. The results suggest that the defect responsible for the loss of cAMP-induced potentiation of insulin secretion is PKA independent. We hypothesize that a reduced release of insulin in response to incretins may contribute to the unexpected normoglycemic phenotype of Sur1KO mice versus the pronounced hypoglycemia seen in neonates with loss of K(ATP) channel activity.  相似文献   

11.
Holz GG 《Diabetes》2004,53(1):5-13
Recently published studies of islet cell function reveal unexpected features of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor-mediated signal transduction in the pancreatic beta-cell. Although GLP-1 is established to be a cAMP-elevating agent, these studies demonstrate that protein kinase A (PKA) is not the only cAMP-binding protein by which GLP-1 acts. Instead, an alternative cAMP signaling mechanism has been described, one in which GLP-1 activates cAMP-binding proteins designated as cAMP-regulated guanine nucleotide exchange factors (cAMPGEFs, also known as Epac). Two variants of Epac (Epac1 and Epac2) are expressed in beta-cells, and downregulation of Epac function diminishes stimulatory effects of GLP-1 on beta-cell Ca(2+) signaling and insulin secretion. Of particular note are new reports demonstrating that Epac couples beta-cell cAMP production to the stimulation of fast Ca(2+)-dependent exocytosis. It is also reported that Epac mediates the cAMP-dependent mobilization of Ca(2+) from intracellular Ca(2+) stores. This is a process of Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+) release (CICR), and it generates an increase of [Ca(2+)](i) that may serve as a direct stimulus for mitochondrial ATP production and secretory granule exocytosis. This article summarizes new findings concerning GLP-1 receptor-mediated signal transduction and seeks to define the relative importance of Epac and PKA to beta-cell stimulus-secretion coupling.  相似文献   

12.
Kim HI  Cha JY  Kim SY  Kim JW  Roh KJ  Seong JK  Lee NT  Choi KY  Kim KS  Ahn YH 《Diabetes》2002,51(3):676-685
Thiazolidinediones, synthetic ligands of peroxisomal proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPAR-gamma), improve peripheral insulin sensitivity and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in pancreatic beta-cells. To explore the role of PPAR-gamma in glucose sensing of beta-cells, we have dissected the beta-cell-specific glucokinase (betaGK) promoter, which constitutes glucose-sensing apparatus in pancreatic beta-cells, and identified a peroxisomal proliferator response element (PPRE) in the promoter. The betaGK-PPRE is located in the region between +47 and +68 bp. PPAR-gamma/retinoid X receptor-alpha heterodimer binds to the element and activates the betaGK promoter. The betaGK promoter lacking or having mutations in PPRE cannot be activated by PPAR-gamma. PPAR-gamma activates the betaGK promoter in beta-cells as well as non-beta-cells. Furthermore, troglitazone increases endogenous GK expression and its enzyme activity in beta-cell lines. These results indicate that PPAR-gamma can regulate GK expression in beta-cells. Taking these results together with our previous work, we conclude that PPAR-gamma regulates gene expression of glucose-sensing apparatus and thereby improves glucose-sensing ability of beta-cells, contributing to the restoration of beta-cell function in type 2 diabetic subjects by troglitazone.  相似文献   

13.
Liu D  Zhen W  Yang Z  Carter JD  Si H  Reynolds KA 《Diabetes》2006,55(4):1043-1050
Although genistein, a soy isoflavone, has beneficial effects on various tissues, it is unclear whether it plays a role in physiological insulin secretion. Here, we present evidence that genistein increases rapid glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) in both insulin-secreting cell lines (INS-1 and MIN6) and mouse pancreatic islets. Genistein elicited a significant effect at a concentration as low as 10 nmol/l with a maximal effect at 5 micromol/l. The effect of genistein on GSIS was not dependent on estrogen receptor and also not related to an inhibition of protein tyrosine kinase (PTK). Consistent with its effect on GSIS, genistein increases intracellular cAMP and activates protein kinase A (PKA) in both cell lines and the islets by a mechanism that does not involve estrogen receptor or PTK. The induced cAMP by genistein, at physiological concentrations, may result primarily from enhanced adenylate cyclase activity. Pharmacological or molecular intervention of PKA activation indicated that the insulinotropic effect of genistein is primarily mediated through PKA. These findings demonstrated that genistein directly acts on pancreatic beta-cells, leading to activation of the cAMP/PKA signaling cascade to exert an insulinotropic effect, thereby providing a novel role of soy isoflavones in the regulation of insulin secretion.  相似文献   

14.
One subtype of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY)-3 results from mutations in the gene encoding hepatocyte nuclear factor (HNF)-1 alpha. We generated transgenic mice expressing a naturally occurring dominant-negative form of human HNF-1 alpha (P291fsinsC) in pancreatic beta-cells. A progressive hyperglycemia with age was seen in these transgenic mice, and the mice developed diabetes with impaired glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. The pancreatic islets exhibited abnormal architecture with reduced expression of glucose transporter (GLUT2) and E-cadherin. Blockade of E-cadherin-mediated cell adhesion in pancreatic islets abolished the glucose-stimulated increases in intracellular Ca(2+) levels and insulin secretion, suggesting that loss of E-cadherin in beta-cells is associated with impaired insulin secretion. There was also a reduction in beta-cell number (50%), proliferation rate (15%), and pancreatic insulin content (45%) in 2-day-old transgenic mice and a further reduction in 4-week-old animals. Our findings suggest various roles for HNF-1 alpha in normal glucose metabolism, including the regulation of glucose transport, beta-cell growth, and beta-cell-to-beta-cell communication.  相似文献   

15.
Mu J  Woods J  Zhou YP  Roy RS  Li Z  Zycband E  Feng Y  Zhu L  Li C  Howard AD  Moller DE  Thornberry NA  Zhang BB 《Diabetes》2006,55(6):1695-1704
Inhibitors of dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4), a key regulator of the actions of incretin hormones, exert antihyperglycemic effects in type 2 diabetic patients. A major unanswered question concerns the potential ability of DPP-4 inhibition to have beneficial disease-modifying effects, specifically to attenuate loss of pancreatic beta-cell mass and function. Here, we investigated the effects of a potent and selective DPP-4 inhibitor, an analog of sitagliptin (des-fluoro-sitagliptin), on glycemic control and pancreatic beta-cell mass and function in a mouse model with defects in insulin sensitivity and secretion, namely high-fat diet (HFD) streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic mice. Significant and dose-dependent correction of postprandial and fasting hyperglycemia, HbA(1c), and plasma triglyceride and free fatty acid levels were observed in HFD/STZ mice following 2-3 months of chronic therapy. Treatment with des-fluoro-sitagliptin dose dependently increased the number of insulin-positive beta-cells in islets, leading to the normalization of beta-cell mass and beta-cell-to-alpha-cell ratio. In addition, treatment of mice with des-fluoro-sitagliptin, but not glipizide, significantly increased islet insulin content and improved glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in isolated islets. These findings suggest that DPP-4 inhibitors may offer long-lasting efficacy in the treatment of type 2 diabetes by modifying the courses of the disease.  相似文献   

16.
17.
We analyzed the effect of a brief exposure to nerve growth factor (NGF) on insulin secretion and macroscopic barium currents of single adult rat pancreatic beta-cells. After a 1-h exposure to NGF (50 ng/ml), single beta-cells show a 2.5-fold increase in the insulin secretion index in 5.6 mmol/l glucose and a nearly twofold increase in 15.6 mmol/l glucose compared with control cells. We have recently demonstrated that pancreatic beta-cells synthesize and secrete NGF. We analyzed the effect of endogenous NGF on insulin secretion by incubating islet cells in the presence of an anti-NGF monoclonal antibody for 1 h in different glucose concentrations. Although the basal insulin secretion index (5.6 mmol/l glucose) is not affected, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (15.6 mmol/l glucose) is decreased by 41% in the presence of the antibody. This effect is mediated by the activation of the NGF receptor TrkA because the specific inhibitor of Trk phosphorylation K252a also blocks NGF-induced increase in insulin secretion, both in the presence and absence of exogenous NGF. Using the whole-cell variation of the patch-clamp technique, we found that cells exposed to NGF for 5 min exhibit a 32% increase in the average barium current density. These results suggest that the effects of NGF on insulin secretion are partially mediated by an increase in calcium current through Ca channels. These results further suggest that NGF plays an important autoregulatory role in pancreatic beta-cell function. Two targets of short-term NGF-modulation are insulin secretion and calcium-channel activity.  相似文献   

18.
Roduit R  Masiello P  Wang SP  Li H  Mitchell GA  Prentki M 《Diabetes》2001,50(9):1970-1975
Endogenous lipid stores are thought to be involved in the mechanism whereby the beta-cell adapts its secretory capacity in obesity and diabetes. In addition, hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) is expressed in beta-cells and may provide fatty acids necessary for the generation of coupling factors linking glucose metabolism to insulin release. We have recently created HSL-deficient mice that were used to directly assess the role of HSL in insulin secretion and action. HSL(-/-) mice were normoglycemic and normoinsulinemic under basal conditions, but showed an approximately 30% reduction of circulating free fatty acids (FFAs) with respect to control and heterozygous animals after an overnight fast. An intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test revealed that HSL-null mice were glucose-intolerant and displayed a lack of a rise in plasma insulin after a glucose challenge. Examination of plasma glucose during an insulin tolerance test suggested that HSL-null mice were insulin-resistant, because plasma glucose was barely lowered after the injection of insulin. Freshly isolated islets from HSL-deficient mice displayed elevated secretion at low (3 mmol/l) glucose, failed to release insulin in response to high (20 mmol/l) glucose, but had a normal secretion when challenged with elevated KCl. The phenotype of heterozygous mice with respect to the measured parameters in vitro was similar to that of wild type. Finally, the islet triglyceride content of HSL(-/-) mice was 2-2.5 fold that in HSL(-/+) and HSL(+/+) animals. The results demonstrate an important role of HSL and endogenous beta-cell lipolysis in the coupling mechanism of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. The data also provide direct support for the concept that some lipid molecule(s), such as FFAs, fatty acyl-CoA or their derivatives, are implicated in beta-cell glucose signaling.  相似文献   

19.
Boden G  Chen X 《Diabetes》1999,48(3):577-583
The objective of this study was to assess the role of free fatty acids (FFAs) as insulin secretagogues in patients with type 2 diabetes. To this end, basal insulin secretion rates (ISR) in response to acute increases in plasma FFAs were evaluated in patients with type 2 diabetes and in age- and weight-matched nondiabetic control subjects during 1) intravenous infusion of lipid plus heparin (L/H), which stimulated intravascular lipolysis, and 2) the FFA rebound, which followed lowering of plasma FFAs with nicotinic acid (NA) and was a consequence of increased lipolysis from the subject's own adipose tissue. At comparable euglycemia, diabetic patients had similar ISR but higher plasma beta-hydroxybutyrate (beta-OHB) levels during L/H infusion and higher plasma FFA and beta-OHB levels during the FFA rebound than nondiabetic control subjects. Correlating ISR with plasma FFA plus beta-OHB levels showed that in response to the same changes in FFA plus beta-OHB levels, diabetic patients secreted approximately 30% less insulin than nondiabetic control subjects. In addition, twice as much insulin was secreted during L/H infusion as during the FFA rebound in response to the same FFA/beta-OHB stimulation by both diabetic patients and control subjects. Glycerol, which was present in the infused lipid (272 mmol/l) did not affect ISR. We concluded that 1) assessment of FFA effects on ISR requires consideration of effects on ISR by ketone bodies; 2) ISR responses to FFA/beta-OHB were defective in patients with type 2 diabetes (partial beta-cell lipid blindness), but this defect was compensated by elevated plasma levels of FFAs and ketone bodies; and 3) approximately two times more insulin was released per unit change in plasma FFA plus beta-OHB during L/H infusion than during the FFA rebound after NA. The reason for this remains to be explored.  相似文献   

20.
When attached on a matrix produced by a rat bladder carcinoma cell line (804G matrix), rat pancreatic beta-cells spread in response to glucose and secrete more insulin compared with cells attached on poly-l-lysine. The aim of this study was to determine whether laminin-5 and its corresponding cell receptor beta1 integrin are implicated in these phenomena. By using specific blocking antibodies, we demonstrated that laminin-5 is the component present in 804G matrix responsible for the effect of 804G matrix on beta-cell function and spreading. When expression of two well-known laminin-5 ligands, beta1 and beta4 integrin, was assessed by Western blot and RT-PCR, only the beta1 integrin was detected in beta-cells. Anti-beta1 integrin antibody reduced the spreading of beta-cells on 804G matrix. Blockade of the interaction between beta1 integrins and laminin-5 resulted in a reduction in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Blocking anti-beta1 integrin antibody also inhibited focal adhesion kinase phosphorylation induced by 804G matrix. In conclusion, anti-beta1 integrin and -laminin-5 antibodies interfere with spreading of beta-cells, resulting in decreased insulin secretion in response to glucose. Our findings indicate that outside-in signaling via engagement of beta1 integrins by laminin-5 is an important component of normal beta-cell function.  相似文献   

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