Literature DB >> 12414839

BPDZ 154 activates adenosine 5'-triphosphate-sensitive potassium channels: in vitro studies using rodent insulin-secreting cells and islets isolated from patients with hyperinsulinism.

Karen E Cosgrove1, Marie-Hélène Antoine, Anne T Lee, Philippa D Barnes, Pascale de Tullio, Peter Clayton, Rory McCloy, Pascal De Lonlay, Claire Nihoul-Fékété, Jean-Jacques Robert, Jean-Marie Saudubray, Jacques Rahier, Keith J Lindley, Khalid Hussain, Al Aynsley-Green, Bernard Pirotte, Philippe Lebrun, Mark J Dunne.   

Abstract

A novel ATP-sensitive potassium channel (K(ATP)) channel agonist, BPDZ 154 (6,7-dichloro-3-isopropylamino-4H-1,2,4-benzothiadiazine 1,1-dioxide), was synthesized, and its effects on insulin-secreting cells were evaluated using electrophysiology, (86)Rb(+) and (45)Ca(2+) efflux, and RIA determinations of insulin secretion. BPDZ 154, an analog of diazoxide, inhibited both glucose-induced insulin secretion from isolated perifused islets and the secretion of insulin induced by glucose and tolbutamide. These effects were mediated by the activation of ATP-sensitive potassium channels because BPDZ 154 induced a concentration-dependent increase in channel activity that was inhibited by the sulfonylurea tolbutamide and the imidazoline efaroxan. In beta-cells isolated from patients with either nontypical hyperinsulinism (preserved K(ATP) channel function) or from the control areas of the pancreas of patients with focal hyperinsulinism, BPDZ 154 activated K(ATP) channels and was found to be more effective and less readily reversible than diazoxide. By contrast, it was not possible to activate K(ATP) channels by either diazoxide or BPDZ 154 in beta-cells from patients with hyperinsulinism as a consequence of defects in K(ATP) channel function. In beta-cells isolated from a patient with pancreatic insulinoma, K(ATP) channels were readily recorded and modulated by BPDZ 154. These data suggest that BPDZ 154 or BPDZ 154-like compounds may have therapeutic potential in the treatment of certain forms of hyperinsulinism.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12414839     DOI: 10.1210/jc.2002-020439

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0021-972X            Impact factor:   5.958


  4 in total

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2.  Congenital hyperinsulinism and mosaic abnormalities of the ploidy.

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Review 3.  What's new in metabolic and genetic hypoglycaemias: diagnosis and management.

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4.  In vitro recovery of ATP-sensitive potassium channels in β-cells from patients with congenital hyperinsulinism of infancy.

Authors:  Philippa D Powell; Christine Bellanné-Chantelot; Sarah E Flanagan; Sian Ellard; Raoul Rooman; Khalid Hussain; Mars Skae; Peter Clayton; Pascale de Lonlay; Mark J Dunne; Karen E Cosgrove
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  4 in total

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