| Literature DB >> 2221056 |
M J MacDonald1, L A Fahien, D I McKenzie, S M Moran.
Abstract
Agents that stimulate insulin release from fresh pancreatic islets were tested for their ability to capacitate pancreatic islets to secrete insulin and to support beta-cell survival in tissue culture. Capacitation was defined as the ability to release insulin after 24 h in culture in the presence of an insulinotropic concentration of a secretagogue. Viable islets that lose glucose-induced insulin release gradually regain it during culture for 24 h in 20 mM glucose. Survival was defined as the ability to regain glucose-induced insulin release. To measure insulin release after culture, islets were incubated with various secretagogues in Krebs-Ringer buffer for 1 h. Examples of the diverse patterns of responses included the following. Glucose was the only secretagogue that capacitated glucose-induced release. Leucine-, leucine plus glutamine-, and glyceraldehyde-induced release remained capacitated after culture with no secretagogue. Culture at high glucose completely inhibited leucine-induced release. Culture at low glucose (1 mM) or at both high leucine and glutamine abolished glucose-induced release. Only leucine and glutamine capacitated monomethyl succinate-induced release. All agents including subinsulinotropic glucose (1 mM), except D-glyceraldehyde, permitted islet survival. Thus the metabolic pathways for initiation, capacitation, and survival are not identical between and within secretagogues. There is a reciprocal relationship between leucine and glucose with respect to capacitation. Capacitation follows a time course, which suggests that it is regulated by enzyme induction.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2221056 DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.1990.259.4.E548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol ISSN: 0002-9513