Diabetes, Vol 46, Issue 12 1996-2001, Copyright © 1997 by American Diabetes Association
Oscillations in activities of enzymes in pancreatic islet subcellular fractions induced by physiological concentrations of effectors
MJ MacDonald, H Al-Masri, M Jumelle-Laclau and MO Cruz
University of Wisconsin Childrens Diabetes Center, Madison, USA. mjmacdon@facstaff.wisc.edu
Glucose, the most potent insulin secretagogue, stimulates insulin secretion
by aerobic glycolysis, but other secretagogues stimulate insulin release
exclusively by mitochondrial metabolism. It is well known that in the
intact pancreatic beta-cell, either kind of secretagogue can induce
oscillations in metabolism (e.g., glycolysis, ATP/ADP, NAD(P)/NAD(P)H
ratios) that occur with a periodicity similar to oscillations in membrane
electrical potential and insulin secretion. In this study, pancreatic islet
cytosol or mitochondrial fractions were incubated in the presence of
physiological concentrations of substrates. Repeated additions of
physiological effectors caused oscillations in the activities of the three
enzymes studied. Succinate dehydrogenase activity in islet mitochondrial
extracts was made to oscillate by adding oxaloacetate (5 micromol/l) to
inhibit the enzyme. The enzyme was reactivated by adding acetyl-CoA (3
micromol/l), which combines with oxaloacetate in the citrate synthase
reaction and lowers the concentration of oxaloacetate, thus beginning
another oscillation. Pyruvate kinase activity was made to oscillate by
adding fructose bisphosphate (10 micromol/l). Fructose bisphosphate was
degraded to triose phosphates fairly rapidly, and, as it was degraded,
there was a parallel decrease in pyruvate kinase activity. The enzyme was
reactivated and made to oscillate with subsequent additions of fructose
bisphosphate. The mitochondrial glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase was made
to oscillate by adding EGTA to chelate calcium, which activates the enzyme.
When the concentration of free calcium was raised to >0.1 micromol/l by
adding more calcium, the activity of the enzyme increased. Repeated
additions of chelator and calcium caused the enzyme activity to oscillate.
The results with these three enzymes and physiological concentrations of
naturally occurring effectors raise the possibility that the activities of
not only these enzymes but of numerous enzymes oscillate in vivo in
response to levels of allosteric effectors and substrates. If this is the
case, pacemaker activity may result from complex effects distributed across
multiple regulatory sites in both the cytosol and mitochondria, rather than
from a single enzyme acting as a primary pacemaker.