| Literature DB >> 27943300 |
Lotta E Andersson1, Lisa M Nicholas1, Karin Filipsson1, Jiangming Sun1, Anya Medina1, Mahmoud Al-Majdoub1, Malin Fex1, Hindrik Mulder1, Peter Spégel1,2.
Abstract
Glycogen metabolism in β-cells may affect downstream metabolic pathways controlling insulin release. We examined glycogen metabolism in human islets and in the rodent-derived INS-1 832/13 β-cells and found them to express the same isoforms of key enzymes required for glycogen metabolism. Our findings indicate that glycogenesis is insulin-independent but influenced by extracellular glucose concentrations. Levels of glycogen synthase decrease with increasing glucose concentrations, paralleling accumulation of glycogen. We did not find cAMP-elicited glycogenolysis and insulin secretion to be causally related. In conclusion, our results reveal regulated glycogen metabolism in human islets and insulin-secreting cells. Whether glycogen metabolism affects insulin secretion under physiological conditions remains to be determined.Entities:
Keywords: INS-1 832/13; human islets; insulin secretion
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27943300 DOI: 10.1002/1873-3468.12460
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEBS Lett ISSN: 0014-5793 Impact factor: 4.124