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Assessment of the Role of Interstitial Glucagon in the Acute Glucose Secretory Responsiveness of In Situ Pancreatic β-Cells

  1. Karen Moens1,
  2. Veerle Berger1,
  3. Jung-Mo Ahn2,
  4. Chris Van Schravendijk1,
  5. Victor J. Hruby2,
  6. Daniel Pipeleers1 and
  7. Frans Schuit1
  1. 1Diabetes Research Center, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium
  2. 2Department of Chemistry, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona

    Abstract

    Glucagon is a potent stimulator of insulin release in the presence of a permissive glucose concentration, activating β-cells in vitro via both glucagon- and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1)-receptors. It is still unclear whether locally released glucagon amplifies the secretory responsiveness of neighboring β-cells in the intact pancreas. The present study investigates this question in the perfused pancreas by examining the effects of antagonists for glucagon receptors ([des-His1,des-Phe6,Glu9]glucagon-NH2, 10 μmol/l) and GLP-1-receptors [exendin-(9-39)-NH2, 1 μmol/l] on the insulin secretory response to glucose. The specificity of both antagonists was demonstrated by their selective interaction with glucagon-receptor signaling in rat hepatocytes and GLP-1-receptor signaling in Chinese hamster lung (CHL) fibroblasts. In purified rat β-cells, the glucagon-receptor antagonist (10 μmol/l) inhibited the effect of 1 nmol/l glucagon upon glucose-induced insulin release by 78 ± 6%. In the perfused rat pancreas, neither of these antagonists inhibited the potent secretory response to 20 mmol/l glucose, although they effectively suppressed the potentiating effect of, respectively, an infusion of glucagon (1 nmol/l) or GLP-1 (1 nmol/l) on insulin release. When endogenous glucagon release was enhanced by isoproterenol (100 nmol/l), no amplification was seen in the simultaneous or subsequent insulin secretory response to glucose. It is concluded that, at least under the present selected conditions, the glucose-induced insulin release by the perfused rat pancreas seems to occur independent of an amplifying glucagon signal from neighboring α-cells.

    Footnotes

    • Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Frans Schuit, Molecular Pharmacology Unit, Diabetes Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Laarbeeklaan 103, B-1090 Brussels, Belgium. E-mail: fschuit{at}minf.vub.ac.be.

      Received for publication 10 July 2001 and accepted in revised form 26 November 2001.

      AUC, area under the curve; CHL, Chinese hamster lung; GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide-1; IBMX, 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine; RIA, radioimmunoassay.

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