Glucose Metabolism and Pulsatile Insulin Release From Isolated Islets
Abstract
The effects of metabolic inhibition on insulin release and the cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) were studied in individually perifused pancreatic islets from ob/ob mice. The modest basal secretion in the presence of 3 mmol/l glucose was pulsatile with a frequency of ∼0.2/min, although [Ca2+]i was stable at ∼100 nmol/l. Introduction of 11 mmol/l glucose resulted in large amplitude oscillations of [Ca2+]i and almost 20-fold stimulation of average secretion manifested as increased amplitude of the insulin pulses without change in frequency. Inhibition of glycolysis with iodoacetamide or mitochondrial metabolism with dinitrophenol or antimycin A reduced glucose-stimulated secretion back to basal levels with maintained pulsatility. The [Ca2+]i responses to the metabolic inhibitors were more complex, but in general there was an initial peak and eventually sustained elevation without oscillations. When introduced in the presence of 3 mmol/l glucose, the metabolic inhibitors tended to increase the amplitude of the insulin pulses, although the simultaneous elevation in [Ca2+]i occurred without oscillations. The data indicate that pulsatile secretion is regulated by factors other than [Ca2+]i under basal conditions and after metabolic inhibition. Although pulsatile secretion can be driven by oscillations in metabolism when [Ca2+]i is stable, it was not possible from the present data to determine whether insulin pulses have a glycolytic or mitochondrial origin.
Footnotes
-
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Associate Professor Peter Bergsten, Department of Medical Cell Biology, Uppsala University, Box 571, SE-751 23 Uppsala, Sweden.
Received for publication 11 September 2000 and accepted in revised form 9 May 2001.
[Ca2+]i, cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration; DNP, 2,4-dinitrophenol; IAA, iodoacetamide; KATP channel, ATP-sensitive K+ channel.














