Diabetes, Vol 38, Issue 4 416-421, Copyright © 1989 by American Diabetes Association
Tolbutamide as mimic of glucose on beta-cell electrical activity. ATP-sensitive K+ channels as common pathway for both stimuli
DL Cook and M Ikeuchi
Division of Metabolism, Seattle VA Medical Center, WA 98108.
It is accepted for insulin-secreting cells in culture that the closure of
ATP-sensitive K+ channels causes the glucose-dependent depolarization of
pancreatic beta-cells seen at subthreshold levels (less than 100 mg/dl) of
glucose. The question remains for the more thoroughly studied beta-cells in
freshly dissected intact islets, however, whether closure of these channels
is responsible for subthreshold glucose-dependent depolarization and
suprathreshold glucose-dependent regulation of membrane electrical
activity. To answer this, we took advantage of the ability of tolbutamide,
an orally active antidiabetic agent, to specifically inhibit ATP-sensitive
K+ channels in pancreatic beta-cells to determine whether these channels
are active at sub- and suprathreshold levels of glucose and whether channel
closure by tolbutamide reproduces the electrophysiological effects of
glucose stimulation. We recorded membrane electrical activity from freshly
dissected adult mouse pancreatic islets exposed to various levels of
glucose and tolbutamide. As previously found by others, tolbutamide
depolarizes islet cells in the absence of glucose, but we have found that,
although the depolarization can trigger Ca2+ action potentials (spikes), a
glucose-dependent permissive factor may be required for the normal bursting
pattern of spiking. More significantly, we found that, unlike other
beta-cell stimuli, tolbutamide specifically mimics the effects of glucose
stimulation on the pattern of suprathreshold electrical activity. The
effects were seen with levels of tolbutamide that correspond to those
required to inhibit ATP-sensitive K+ channels. These data suggest that
ATP-sensitive K+ channels are active at sub- and suprathreshold levels of
glucose and may be the sole pathway by which either glucose or tolbutamide
depolarizes beta-cells and controls beta-cell electrical activity.