P2Y Purinergic Potentiation of Glucose-Induced Insulin Secretion and Pancreatic Beta-Cell Metabolism
- 1Center for Pharmacology and Health Biotechnology, CNRS UMR 5160, Montpellier, France
- 2Innodia, Montpellier, France
- Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. René Gross, Centre de Pharmacologie et Biotechnologie pour la Santé, CNRS UMR 5160, Faculté de Médecine, Institut de Biologie, 4 Boulevard Henri IV, CS89508, 34960 Montpellier Cedex 2, France. E-mail: gross{at}univ-montp1.fr
Abstract
Purine nucleotides and their analogs increase insulin secretion through activation of pancreatic β-cell P2Y receptors. The present study aimed at determining the role of glucose metabolism in the response to P2Y agonists and whether ATP-activated K+ channels (KATP channels) are involved in this response. The experiments were performed in the rat isolated pancreas, perfused with a Krebs-bicarbonate buffer supplemented with 2 g/l bovine serum albumin under dynamic glucose conditions from 5 mmol/l baseline to 11 mmol/l. ADPβS (0.5 μmol/l) was selected as a stable and selective P2Y agonist. This compound, ineffective on the 5 mmol/l glucose background, induced a significant threefold increase in insulin release triggered by the glucose challenge. The effect of ADPβS was markedly reduced (P < 0.001) in the presence of an inhibitor of glucose metabolism. In addition to glucose, the ADP analog also amplified the β-cell insulin response to 15 mmol/l methyl pyruvate (P < 0.05), but it was ineffective on the insulin response to 2.5 mmol/l methyl succinate. A nonmetabolic stimulus was applied using tolbutamide (185 μmol/l). Insulin secretion induced by the KATP channel blocker was strongly reinforced by ADPβS (P < 0.001), which prompted us to check a possible interplay of KATP channels in the effect of ADPβS. In the presence of diazoxide 250 μmol/l and 21 mmol/l KCl, ADPβS still amplified the second phase of glucose-induced insulin secretion (P < 0.001). We conclude that P2Y receptor activation is able to promote insulin secretion through a mechanism, involving β-cell metabolism and a rise in intracellular calcium; this effect does not result from a direct inhibitory effect on KATP channels.
Footnotes
-
This article is based on a presentation at a symposium. The symposium and the publication of this article were made possible by an unrestricted educational grant from Servier.
-
- Accepted May 13, 2004.
- Received March 18, 2004.
- DIABETES














