scholarly journals Effects of the phorbol ester phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) on islet-cell responsiveness

1991 ◽  
Vol 278 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
W S Zawalich ◽  
K C Zawalich ◽  
S Ganesan ◽  
R Calle ◽  
H Rasmussen

Collagenase-isolated rat islets were labelled for 2 h in myo-[2-3H]inositol solution supplemented with 2.75 mM-glucose. The phorbol ester phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA; 0.1 or 1 microM) was also present in some experiments. After labelling, islets were washed and then perifused in 2.75 mM-glucose to establish basal [3H]inositol-efflux and insulin-secretory rates. Subsequently, the responses of these islets to stimulation with various agonists were assessed. Inositol phosphate accumulation was measured at the termination of the perifusion. In separate experiments, the cellular location of protein kinase C (PKC) after PMA pretreatment was measured by quantitative immunoblotting of membrane and cytosolic fractions. The following observations were made. (1) Labelling in 0.1-1 microM-PMA had no deleterious effect on total [3H]inositol incorporation during the 2 h labelling period. However, islets labelled for 2 h in 1 microM-PMA were unable to respond, in terms of increases in insulin release, to a 1 microM-PMA stimulus during the subsequent perifusion. (2) As compared with the responses of control islets labelled in 2.75 mM-glucose alone, islets labelled in the additional presence of 1 microM-PMA displayed a significant impairment in phosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis, but an enhancement of both first-and second-phase insulin secretion, in response to subsequent 20 mM-glucose stimulation. (3) Decreasing extracellular Ca2+ level to 0.1 mM and including the Ca(2+)-channel antagonist nitrendipine (0.5 microM) along with 1 microM-PMA during the [3H]inositol-labelling period did not alter the response of the islets to the subsequent addition of 20 mM-glucose. Glucose-induced PI hydrolysis was still inhibited and 20 mM-glucose-induced insulin release was still enhanced. (4) A markedly amplified and sustained insulin-secretory response to 200 microM-tolbutamide in the presence of 2.75 mM-glucose was also obtained from 1 microM-PMA-pretreated islets. This contrasts sharply with the small and transient response to tolbutamide noted in control islets. (5) When present only during the perifusion phase of the experiments, nitrendipine (0.5 microM) abolished the amplified insulin-secretory responses to both 20 mM-glucose and 200 microM-tolbutamide noted in PMA-pretreated islets. (6) Prior labelling in 1 microM-PMA dramatically amplified the insulinotropic effect of 25 mM-K+ or 5 microM-A23187 stimulation. The amplified insulin-secretory response to K+, but not to A23187, was abolished by inclusion of nitrendipine during the perifusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

1989 ◽  
Vol 259 (3) ◽  
pp. 743-749 ◽  
Author(s):  
W S Zawalich ◽  
K C Zawalich ◽  
H Rasmussen

Isolated rat islets were incubated with myo-[2-3H]inositol for 2 h to label their phosphoinositide (PI) pools. Labelling was carried out under three separate conditions: in media containing low (2.75 mM) glucose, high (13.75 mM) glucose, or low (2.75 mM) glucose plus sulphated cholecystokinin (CCK-8S; 200 nM). After labelling, the islets were perifused and the insulin-secretory response to 20 mM-glucose was measured. PI hydrolysis in these same islets was assessed by measurements of both [3H]inositol efflux and the accumulation of labelled inositol phosphates. The following major observations were made. After prelabelling for 2 h in low glucose, perifusion with 20 mM-glucose resulted in a biphasic insulin-secretory response, an increase in [3H]inositol efflux and a parallel increase in the accumulation of labelled inositol phosphates. After prelabelling in high (13.75 mM) glucose, peak first-phase insulin secretion induced by 20 mM-glucose increased 2-2.5-fold, whereas the second phase of insulin release, as well as [3H]inositol efflux and inositol phosphate accumulation, were significantly decreased. The simultaneous infusion of the diacylglycerol kinase inhibitor 1-mono-oleoylglycerol (50 microM), along with 20 mM-glucose, restored the second-phase insulin-secretory response from these islets. After labelling in low (2.75 mM) glucose plus CCK-8S, the initial phases of the insulin-secretory and [3H]inositol-efflux responses to 20 mM-glucose were blunted and the sustained phases of both responses were markedly decreased. Inositol phosphate accumulation was also impaired. Labelling islets in high (13.75 mM) glucose or low (2.75 mM) glucose plus CCK-8S suppresses, in a parallel fashion, glucose-induced increases in PI hydrolysis and in second-phase insulin release. These findings suggest that desensitization of the insulin-secretory response is a consequence of impaired information flow in the inositol lipid cycle.


1983 ◽  
Vol 245 (4) ◽  
pp. E391-E400
Author(s):  
R. S. Hill ◽  
W. B. Rhoten

The effect of microtubule-altering agents on the insulin secretory response to glucose during the perinatal period was investigated with an in vitro perifusion system. Rat pancreatic mince from day 17 of gestation (D17G) to day 6 postnatally (D6PN) were perifused for 60 min in basal glucose followed by 45 min with high glucose (3.5 mg/ml) or with high glucose plus 10 mM arginine (D17G). The two phases of insulin secretion in response to high glucose developed in an age-dependent and asynchronous manner. The first phase matured between D17G and D18G, and maturation of the second phase occurred subsequently. Vinblastine (VB) (20 or 100 microM) had a differential effect on the insulin secretory response. VB did not inhibit stimulated insulin release at D17G. This absence of an inhibitory effect of VB at D17G could not be explained by the absence of polymerized tubulin because microtubules were present in the control beta-cells and, in addition, VB treatment resulted in the formation of paracrystalline deposits. Subsequently in development, and with isolated islets of the adult, VB inhibited stimulated insulin release. Heavy water (deuterium oxide, D2O) inhibited stimulated insulin secretion at D17G but blocked completely insulin release from the near-term beta-cell. The inhibition of insulin secretion by D2O was rapidly reversed when water replaced D2O in the perifusion media. The results indicate that the maturation of the second phase of insulin secretion coincides with the ability of the microtubule-altering agents to modify the insulin secretory response. One possible explanation for these findings is that at D17G the microtubules are not coupled physicochemically to other molecules or structures necessary for their role in insulin secretion to be expressed fully.


1988 ◽  
Vol 254 (5) ◽  
pp. E609-E616 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. S. Zawalich ◽  
V. A. Diaz ◽  
K. C. Zawalich

Prior exposure of isolated perifused rat islets to 20 mM glucose or 10 mM glyceraldehyde amplifies their subsequent insulin secretory response to 10 mM glucose. The involvement of phosphoinositide turnover in the induction of this "time-dependent potentiation" (TDP) was investigated. In islets in which inositol-containing phospholipids were prelabeled with myo-[2-3H]inositol, the addition of 20 mM glucose augments the efflux of 3H. This effect persists for approximately 50 min after the cessation of stimulation. Direct measurements of labeled inositol phosphate accumulation confirmed that this increase in 3H efflux is primarily the result of a persistent increase in phosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis and not due to the slow efflux and/or degradation of performed [3H]inositol phosphates. The duration of the increase in 3H efflux parallels the duration of TDP. Mannoheptulose abolishes both the increase in 3H efflux evoked by 20 mM glucose and TDP. The omission of extracellular calcium plus 0.5 mM ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethylether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid also abolishes both of these effects of high glucose. D-Glyceraldehyde (10 mM) addition to 3H-inositol-prelabeled islets results in an acute efflux of 3H, a persistent efflux after removal of the D-glyceraldehyde from the perifusion medium, and the induction of TDP. Similar to the results obtained with high glucose, the return of 3H efflux rates to prestimulatory values is accompanied by the abolition of TDP. These results suggest that events associated with persistent stimulant-induced increases in phosphoinositide hydrolysis may participate in the induction and maintenance of TDP.


1987 ◽  
Vol 246 (3) ◽  
pp. 705-713 ◽  
Author(s):  
M P Schrey ◽  
A M Read ◽  
P J Steer

Vasopressin and oxytocin both stimulated inositol phosphate accumulation in isolated uterine decidua cells. Pretreatment of cells with the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) prevented this agonist-induced phosphoinositide hydrolysis. TPA (0.1 microM) alone had no effect on basal inositol phosphate accumulation, but stimulated phosphoinositide deacylation, as indicated by a 2-fold increase in lysophosphatidylinositol and glycerophosphoinositol. TPA also stimulated a dose-related release of arachidonic acid from decidua-cell phospholipid [phosphatidylcholine (PC) much greater than phosphatidylinositol (PI) greater than phosphatidylethanolamine]. The phorbol ester 4 beta-phorbol 12,13-diacetate (PDA) at 0.1 microM had no effect on arachidonic acid mobilization. The TPA-stimulated increase in arachidonic acid release was apparent by 2 1/2 min (116% of control), maximal after 20 min (283% of control), and remained around this value (306% of control) after 120 min incubation. TPA also stimulated significant increases in 1,2-diacylglycerol and monoacylglycerol production at 20 and 120 min. Although the temporal increases in arachidonic acid and monoacylglycerol accumulation in the presence of TPA continued up to 120 min, that of 1,2-diacylglycerol declined after 20 min. In decidua cells prelabelled with [3H]choline, TPA also stimulated a significant decrease in radiolabelled PC after 20 min, which was accompanied by an increased release of water-soluble metabolites into the medium. Most of the radioactivity in the extracellular pool was associated with choline, whereas the main cellular water-soluble metabolite was phosphorylcholine. TPA stimulated extracellular choline accumulation to 183% and 351% of basal release after 5 and 20 min respectively and cellular phosphorylcholine production to 136% of basal values after 20 min. These results are consistent with a model in which protein kinase C activation by TPA leads to arachidonic acid mobilization from decidua-cell phospholipid by a mechanism involving phospholipase A-mediated PI hydrolysis and phospholipase C-mediated PC hydrolysis, coupled with further hydrolysis of the 1,2-diacylglycerol product.


1973 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. S. Turner ◽  
D. A. B. Young

ABSTRACT The insulin secretory response in the rat to intravenous glucose was found to be greatly impaired by fasting for three days, whereas that to orally administered glucose was not significantly affected. Rats fasted for two days were given either protein or starch pellets for six hours, and then fasted for a further eighteen hours before the intravenous glucose test. The protein pre-feeding failed to affect significantly the subsequent insulin secretory response to intravenous glucose, whereas starch prefeeding greatly enhanced it. It is suggested that intestinal hormones released by glucose ingestion may exert not only an acute effect on insulin release, but also a 'priming' effect on the insulin release mechanism of the β cell, which enables it to respond to the subsequent stimulus of glucose alone.


1996 ◽  
Vol 271 (3) ◽  
pp. E409-E416 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. S. Zawalich ◽  
K. C. Zawalich

Biphasic insulin secretion in response to a sustained glucose stimulus occurs when rat or human islets are exposed to high levels of the hexose. A transient burst of hormone secretion is followed by a rising and sustained secretory response that, in the perfused rat pancreas, is 25- to 75-fold greater than prestimulatory insulin release rates. This insulin secretory response is paralleled by a significant five- to sixfold increase in the phospholipase C (PLC)-mediated hydrolysis of islet phosphoinositide (PI) pools by high glucose. In contrast, mouse islets, when stimulated under comparable conditions with high glucose, display a second-phase response that is flat and only slightly (two- to threefold) greater than prestimulatory release rates. The minimal second-phase insulin secretory response to high glucose is accompanied by the minimal activation of PLC in mouse islets as well. However, stimulation of mouse islets with the protein kinase C (PKC) activator tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate (TPA) or the muscarinic agonist carbachol, which significantly activates an isozyme of PLC distinct from that activated by high glucose, induces a rising and sustained second-phase insulin secretory response. When previously exposed to high glucose, both rat and human islets respond to subsequent restimulation with an amplified insulin secretory response. They display priming, sensitization, or time-dependent potentiation. In contrast, mouse islets primed under similar conditions with high glucose fail to display this amplified insulin secretory response on restimulation. Mouse islets can, however, be primed by brief exposure to either TPA or carbachol. Finally, whereas rat islets are desensitized by chronic exposure to high glucose, mouse islet insulin secretory responses are relatively immune to this adverse effect of the hexose. These and other findings are discussed in relationship to the role being played by agonist-induced increases in the PLC-mediated hydrolysis of islet phosphoinositide pools and the activation of PKC in these species-specific insulin secretory response patterns.


1986 ◽  
Vol 236 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
M E Monaco ◽  
R A Mufson

WRK-1 rat mammary tumour cells respond to vasopressin with increased accumulation of inositol phosphates as well as increased precursor incorporation into phosphatidylinositol. The phorbol ester, phorbol 13-myristate 12-acetate (PMA) inhibits by 80% both inositol phosphate accumulation and increased precursor incorporation. This inhibition is much less evident at early times (2 min) than at later times (25 min). The vasopressin-induced rise in cytosolic free Ca2+ is inhibited in a similar manner. Oleoylacetylglycerol is inactive with respect to inhibition of vasopressin-induced increases in incorporation of 32P into phosphoinositides. PMA has no effect on vasopressin binding at saturating concentrations of the hormone and does not affect the binding affinity.


1993 ◽  
Vol 138 (3) ◽  
pp. 391-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Salehi ◽  
I. Lundquist

ABSTRACT In previous in-vivo studies we have presented indirect evidence for the involvement of islet acid glucan-1,4-α-glucosidase (acid amyloglucosidase), a lysosomal glycogen-hydrolysing enzyme, in certain insulin secretory processes. In the present combined in-vitro and in-vivo investigation, we studied whether differential changes in islet acid amyloglucosidase activity were related to the insulin secretory response induced by two mechanistically different secretagogues, glucose and isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX). It was observed that addition of the selective α-glucosidehydrolase inhibitor emiglitate (1 mmol/l) to isolated pancreatic islets resulted in a marked reduction of glucose-induced insulin release. This was accompanied by a pronounced suppression of islet activities of acid amyloglucosidase and acid α-glucosidase, whereas other lysosomal enzyme activities, such as acid phosphatase and N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminidase, were unaffected. Furthermore, islets first incubated with emiglitate in the presence of high (16·7 mmol/l) glucose released less insulin than untreated controls in response to glucose in a second incubation period in the absence of emiglitate. In contrast, IBMX-induced insulin release was not influenced by emiglitate although accompanied by a marked reduction of islet activities of all three α-glucosidehydrolases. Basal insulin secretion (1 mmol glucose/1) was unaffected in the presence of emiglitate. In-vivo pretreatment of mice with highly purified fungal amyloglucosidase ('enzyme replacement'), a procedure known to increase islet amyloglucosidase activity, resulted in a greatly enhanced insulin secretory response to an i.v. glucose load. The increase in insulin release was accompanied by a markedly improved glucose tolerance curve in these animals. In contrast, enzyme pretreatment did not influence the insulin response or the blood glucose levels after an i.v. injection of IBMX. The data lend further support to our hypothesis that islet acid amyloglucosidase is involved in the multifactorial insulin secretory processes induced by glucose but not in those involving direct activation of the cyclic AMP system. The results also indicate separate, or at least partially separate, pathways for insulin release induced by glucose and IBMX. Journal of Endocrinology (1993) 138, 391–400


1989 ◽  
Vol 264 (1) ◽  
pp. 207-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Arkhammar ◽  
T Nilsson ◽  
M Welsh ◽  
N Welsh ◽  
P O Berggren

Effects of protein kinase C (PKC) activation on the insulin-secretory process were investigated, by using beta-cell-rich suspensions obtained from pancreatic islets of obese-hyperglycaemic mice. The phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA), which is known to activate PKC directly, the muscarinic-receptor agonist carbamoylcholine and high glucose concentration enhanced the phosphorylation of a specific 80 kDa PKC substrate in the beta-cells. At a non-stimulatory glucose concentration, 10 nM-TPA increased insulin release, although there were no changes in either the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) or membrane potential, as measured with the fluorescent indicators quin-2 and bisoxonol respectively. At a stimulatory glucose concentration TPA caused a lowering in [Ca2+]i, whereas membrane potential was unaffected. Despite the decrease in [Ca2+]i, there was a large stimulation of insulin release. Addition of TPA lowered [Ca2+]i also in beta-cells stimulated by tolbutamide or high K+, although to a lesser extent than in those stimulated by glucose. There was no effect of TPA on either Ca2+ buffering or the ability of Ins(1,4,5)P3 to release Ca2+ in permeabilized beta-cells. However, the phorbol ester inhibited the rise in [Ca2+]i in response to carbamoylcholine, which stimulates the formation of InsP3, in intact beta-cells. Down-regulation of PKC influenced neither glucose-induced insulin release nor the increase in [Ca2+]i. Hence, although PKC activation is of no major importance in glucose-stimulated insulin release, this enzyme can serve as a modulator of the glucose-induced insulin-secretory response. Such a modulation involves mechanisms promoting both amplification of the secretory response and lowering of [Ca2+]i.


1988 ◽  
Vol 255 (4) ◽  
pp. E422-E427 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Bergsten ◽  
E. Gylfe ◽  
N. Wesslen ◽  
B. Hellman

The interaction of diazoxide with the effects of glucose on the insulin-releasing mechanism was analyzed in beta-cell-rich pancreatic islets isolated from ob/ob mice. When added at a concentration of 400 microM to a medium containing 1.28 mM Ca2+, diazoxide converted glucose stimulation of insulin release into inhibition. Further addition of 2 mM theophylline restored the insulin secretory response to glucose. The paradoxical glucose inhibition of insulin release was accounted for by a diazoxide interaction with the entry of Ca2+, unmasking a capacity of the sugar to lower cytoplasmic Ca2+ below its resting concentration.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document