scholarly journals Glucose stimulation of insulin secretion from the isolated pancreas of foetal and newborn rats

Diabetologia ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 260-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Asplound ◽  
S. Westman ◽  
C. Hellerste�m
2004 ◽  
Vol 287 (2) ◽  
pp. E207-E217 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Z. Khaldi ◽  
Y. Guiot ◽  
P. Gilon ◽  
J. C. Henquin ◽  
J. C. Jonas

Chronic hyperglycemia has been shown to induce either a lack of response or an increased sensitivity to glucose in pancreatic β-cells. We reinvestigated this controversial issue in a single experimental model by culturing rat islets for 1 wk in 10 or 30 mmol/l glucose (G10, Controls; or G30, High-glucose islets) before testing the effect of stepwise glucose stimulation from G0.5 to G20 on key β-cell stimulus-secretion coupling events. Compared with Controls, the glucose sensitivity of High-glucose islets was markedly increased, leading to maximal stimulation of oxidative metabolism and both triggering and amplifying pathways of insulin secretion in G6 rather than G20, hence to loss of glucose effect above G6. This enhanced glucose sensitivity occurred despite an approximately twofold increase in islet uncoupling protein 2 mRNA expression. Besides this increased glucose sensitivity, the maximal glucose stimulation of insulin secretion in High-glucose islets was reduced by ∼50%, proportionally to the reduction of insulin content. In High-glucose islets, changes in 45Ca2+ influx induced by glucose and diazoxide were qualitatively similar but quantitatively smaller than in Control islets and, paradoxically, did not lead to detectable changes in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration measured by microspectrofluorimetry (fura PE 3). In conclusion, after 1 wk of culture in G30, the loss of glucose stimulation of insulin secretion in the physiological range of glucose concentrations (G5–G10) results from the combination of an increased sensitivity to glucose of both triggering and amplifying pathways of insulin secretion and an ∼50% reduction in the maximal glucose stimulation of insulin secretion.


1969 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. LERNMARK ◽  
B. HELLMAN ◽  
H. G. COORE

SUMMARY Several investigations in vivo and in vitro have shown that gastrointestinal hormones stimulate insulin secretion. Whether gastrin also has such an effect was tested both with the isolated mouse pancreas and with micro-dissected pancreatic islets from obese-hyperglycaemic mice. A fairly low concentration of human synthetic gastrin I (0·15 μg./ml.) was found to inhibit the stimulation of insulin release normally obtained with increasing glucose concentrations. However, when a higher concentration of gastrin was tested on the isolated pancreas in the presence of a low glucose concentration there was a stimulation of insulin secretion.


Diabetes ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 763-770 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Karam ◽  
G. M. Grodsky ◽  
K.-N. Ching ◽  
F. Schmid ◽  
K. Burrill ◽  
...  

1995 ◽  
Vol 268 (3) ◽  
pp. C780-C791 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. W. Maki ◽  
J. Keizer

We explore possible kinetic mechanisms responsible for the oscillatory (pulsatile) secretion of insulin observed in vitro when pancreatic islets or islet-derived cells are perifused with glucose. Three primary processes are included: 1) glucose stimulation of insulin secretion, controlled by glucokinase; 2) uptake of glucose through GLUT transporters; and 3) glucose metabolism. Perifusion is approximated as a limiting case of a chemical flow reactor. Using experimentally determined rate laws for the three processes, we examine the effects of exogenous insulin as a phenomenological activator and inhibitor of secretion. The resulting differential equations support oscillations using either direct or indirect inhibition by insulin. The oscillations have many of the characteristics observed in vitro, although the indirect model is in better overall agreement with experiment. We conclude that the mechanisms explored here may help explain insulin oscillations for HIT cells, but not for islets, and predict that oscillations can be modulated by including insulin in the perifusion medium.


1996 ◽  
Vol 271 (4) ◽  
pp. E702-E710 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. A. Cunningham ◽  
J. T. Deeney ◽  
C. R. Bliss ◽  
B. E. Corkey ◽  
K. Tornheim

Normal insulin secretion is oscillatory in vivo and from groups of perifused islets. Stimulation of rat islets with different glucose concentrations gave insulin oscillations of similar period (5-8 min) but increasing amplitude. It has been assumed that oscillatory secretion is due to oscillations in intracellular free Ca2+, as seen in single islets and single pancreatic beta-cells. However, when islets were perifused with diazoxide and high KCl to maintain high intracellular free Ca2+, insulin oscillations of similar amplitude and period still occurred on glucose stimulation, although superimposed on elevated basal secretion. Several likely possibilities for a diffusible synchronizing factor were tested, including pyruvate, lactate, ATP, and insulin itself; nevertheless, perifusion with high concentrations of these did not prevent insulin oscillations. Clonal pancreatic beta-cells (HIT) and dissociated islets also exhibited oscillatory insulin secretion, but with the 5- to 8-min period oscillations superimposed on 15- to 20-min period oscillations. These results indicate that the mechanisms for generating and synchronizing insulin oscillations reside in the beta-cell, although the structure of the islet may modulate the oscillation pattern.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tal Israeli ◽  
Yael Riahi ◽  
Perla Garzon ◽  
Ruy Andrade Louzada ◽  
Joao Pedro Werneck-de-Castro ◽  
...  

The dynamic regulation of autophagy in b-cells by cycles of fasting-feeding and its effects on insulin secretion are unknown. In b-cells mTORC1 is inhibited while fasting, and is rapidly stimulated during refeeding by a single amino acid, leucine, and glucose. Stimulation of mTORC1 by nutrients inhibited the autophagy initiator ULK1 and the transcription factor TFEB, thereby preventing autophagy when b-cells are continuously exposed to nutrients. Inhibition of mTORC1 by <i>Raptor</i> knockout mimicked the effects of fasting and stimulated autophagy while inhibiting insulin secretion, whereas moderate inhibition of autophagy under these conditions rescued insulin secretion. These results show that mTORC1 regulates insulin secretion through modulation of autophagy under different nutritional situations. In the fasting state, autophagy is regulated in an mTORC1-dependent manner and its stimulation is required to keep insulin levels low, thereby preventing hypoglycemia. Reciprocally, stimulation of mTORC1 by elevated leucine and glucose, which is common in obesity, may promote hyperinsulinemia by inhibiting autophagy.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tal Israeli ◽  
Yael Riahi ◽  
Perla Garzon ◽  
Ruy Andrade Louzada ◽  
Joao Pedro Werneck-de-Castro ◽  
...  

The dynamic regulation of autophagy in b-cells by cycles of fasting-feeding and its effects on insulin secretion are unknown. In b-cells mTORC1 is inhibited while fasting, and is rapidly stimulated during refeeding by a single amino acid, leucine, and glucose. Stimulation of mTORC1 by nutrients inhibited the autophagy initiator ULK1 and the transcription factor TFEB, thereby preventing autophagy when b-cells are continuously exposed to nutrients. Inhibition of mTORC1 by <i>Raptor</i> knockout mimicked the effects of fasting and stimulated autophagy while inhibiting insulin secretion, whereas moderate inhibition of autophagy under these conditions rescued insulin secretion. These results show that mTORC1 regulates insulin secretion through modulation of autophagy under different nutritional situations. In the fasting state, autophagy is regulated in an mTORC1-dependent manner and its stimulation is required to keep insulin levels low, thereby preventing hypoglycemia. Reciprocally, stimulation of mTORC1 by elevated leucine and glucose, which is common in obesity, may promote hyperinsulinemia by inhibiting autophagy.


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