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Diabetes, Vol 41, Issue 6 662-670, Copyright © 1992 by American Diabetes Association
Stimulus-secretion coupling in beta-cells of transplantable human islets of Langerhans. Evidence for a critical role for Ca2+ entry
S Misler, DW Barnett, DM Pressel, KD Gillis, DW Scharp and LC Falke
Department of Internal Medicine, Jewish Hospital, St. Louis, MO 63110.
With human islets isolated for transplantation, we examined the
applicability to humans of a metabolic fuel hypothesis of glucose
transduction and a Ca2+ hypothesis of depolarization-secretion coupling,
both previously proposed for rodent islet beta-cells. We report that
several features of human beta-cell physiology are well accounted for by
these hypotheses. With whole-islet perifusion, we demonstrated that insulin
secretion induced by glucose, tolbutamide, or elevated K+ is dependent on
extracellular Ca2+. Insulin release induced by these secretagogues is
enhanced by the dihydropyridine Ca2+ channel agonist BAYk8644 and depressed
by the dihydropyridine Ca(2+)-channel antagonist nifedipine. All of the
aforementioned secretagogues provoke increases in cytosolic free Ca2+,
which are dependent on extracellular Ca2+ and are altered by the
dihydropyridine drugs. Individual beta-cells in the islet display
diminished resting membrane conductance, graded depolarization, and complex
electrical patterns, including bursts of action potentials in response to
stimulatory concentrations of glucose or tolbutamide. Individual islet
beta-cells display voltage-dependent Ca2+ currents that are activated at
membrane potentials traversed during the excursion of the action potential.
In most cells, the Ca2+ currents are enhanced by BAYk8644 and depressed by
nifedipine at concentrations that have parallel effects on
secretagogue-induced increases in cytosolic Ca2+ and insulin secretion.
These survey studies should provide the basis for more detailed
investigations of the relationship of voltage-dependent ionic currents to
electrical activity patterns and of electrical activity patterns to granule
exocytosis in single human beta-cells.

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Copyright © 1992 by the American Diabetes Association.
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