Glucokinase Is a Critical Regulator of Ventromedial Hypothalamic Neuronal Glucosensing

  1. Ling Kang1,
  2. Ambrose A. Dunn-Meynell12,
  3. Vanessa H. Routh13,
  4. Larry D. Gaspers3,
  5. Yasufumi Nagata4,
  6. Teruyuki Nishimura4,
  7. Junichi Eiki4,
  8. Bei B. Zhang5 and
  9. Barry E. Levin123
  1. 1Department of Neurology and Neuroscience, New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey
  2. 2Neurology Service, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, East Orange, New Jersey
  3. 3Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey
  4. 4Tsukuba Research Institute, Banyu Pharmaceutical, Ibaraki, Japan
  5. 5Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, New Jersey
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Barry E. Levin, MD, Neurology Service (127C), VA Medical Center, 385 Tremont Ave., East Orange, NJ 07018-1095. E-mail: levin{at}umdnj.edu

Abstract

To test the hypothesis that glucokinase is a critical regulator of neuronal glucosensing, glucokinase activity was increased, using a glucokinase activator drug, or decreased, using RNA interference combined with calcium imaging in freshly dissociated ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMN) neurons or primary ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH; VMN plus arcuate nucleus) cultures. To assess the validity of our approach, we first showed that glucose-induced (0.5–2.5 mmol/l) changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) oscillations, using fura-2 and changes in membrane potential (using a membrane potential–sensitive dye), were highly correlated in both glucose-excited and -inhibited neurons. Also, glucose-excited neurons increased (half-maximal effective concentration [EC50] = 0.54 mmol/l) and glucose-inhibited neurons decreased (half-maximal inhibitory concentration [IC50] = 1.12 mmol/l) [Ca2+]i oscillations to incremental changes in glucose from 0.3 to 5 mmol/l. In untreated primary VMH neuronal cultures, the expression of glucokinase mRNA and the number of demonstrable glucosensing neurons fell spontaneously by half over 12–96 h without loss of viable neurons. Transfection of neurons with small interfering glucokinase RNA did not affect survival but did reduce glucokinase mRNA by 90% in association with loss of all demonstrable glucose-excited neurons and a 99% reduction in glucose-inhibited neurons. A pharmacological glucokinase activator produced a dose-related increase in [Ca2+]i oscillations in glucose-excited neurons (EC50 = 0.98 mmol/l) and a decrease in glucose-inhibited neurons (IC50 = 0.025 μmol/l) held at 0.5 mmol/l glucose. Together, these data support a critical role for glucokinase in neuronal glucosensing.

Footnotes

  • B.E.L. holds stock and has received grant/research support from Merck, holds stock in Pfizer, and has received honoraria/consulting fees from Amylin Pharma.

    • Accepted November 7, 2005.
    • Received September 20, 2005.
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