Mitochondrial Reactive Oxygen Species Are Obligatory Signals For Glucose-Induced Insulin Secretion
- Corinne Leloup (coleloup{at}toulouse.inserm.fr) (leloup{at}cict.fr)1,
- Cécile Tourrel-Cuzin2,
- Christophe Magnan2,
- Melis Karaca2,
- Julien Castel2,
- Lionel Carneiro1,
- Anne-Laure Colombani1,
- Alain Ktorza2,
- Louis Casteilla1 and
- Luc Pénicaud1
- 1 UMR 5241 CNRS UPS, Metabolism, Plasticity and Mitochondria, Université P. Sabatier, IFR31, IFR109, bât. 4R3B1, 118 route de Narbonne, 31 403 Toulouse cedex 9, France
- 2 UMR-7059-CNRS, 2 place Jussieu, 75 005 Paris, France
Abstract
Objective. Insulin secretion involves complex events in which the mitochondria play a pivotal role in the generation of signals that couple glucose detection to insulin secretion. Studies on the mitochondrial generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generally focus on chronic nutrient exposure. Here, we investigate whether transient mitochondrial ROS-production linked to glucose-induced increased respiration might act as a signal for monitoring insulin secretion.
Design and Methods. ROS production in response to glucose was investigated in freshly-isolated rat islets. ROS effects were studied using a pharmacological approach and calcium imaging.
Results. Transient glucose increase from 5.5 to 16.7 mM stimulated ROS generation, reversed by antioxidants. Insulin secretion was dose-dependently blunted by antioxidants and highly-correlated with ROS levels. The incapacity of β-cells to secrete insulin in response to glucose with antioxidants was associated with a decrease in ROS production and, in contrast to the maintenance of high levels of ATP and NADH. Then, we investigated the mitochondrial origin of ROS (mROS) as the triggering signal. Insulin release was mimicked by the mitochondrial-complex blockers, antimycin and rotenone, that generate mROS. The adding of antioxidants to mitochondrial blockers or to glucose were both used in order to lower mROS reversed insulin secretion. Finally, calcium imaging on perifused islets using glucose stimulation or mitochondrial blockers revealed that calcium mobilization was completely reversed using the antioxidant trolox and that it was of extracellular origin. No toxic effects were present using these pharmacological approaches.
Conclusions. Altogether, these complementary results demonstrate that mROS production is a necessary stimulus for glucose-induced insulin secretion.
Footnotes
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- Received July 31, 2007.
- Accepted December 4, 2008.
- Copyright © American Diabetes Association














