Yamatani T, Yamaguchi A, Nakamura A, Morishita T, Kadowaki S, Fujita T, Chiba T
Department of Internal Medicine, Kobe University School of Medicine, Japan.
Am J Physiol. 1990 Jul;259(1 Pt 1):E73-9. doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.1990.259.1.E73.
An investigation was done to elucidate the regulatory role of protein kinase C (PKC) in insulin release and also the effects of PKC activation on NaF-induced inositol phospholipid (PI) turnover in and insulin release from rat insulinoma cells (RINr). NaF stimulated insulin secretion in association with an increase in [3H]inositol phosphate formation in RINr cells. Furthermore, NaF induced a rapid decrease in 32P-labeling of phosphatidylinositol-4,5-diphosphate (PIP2) with a concomitant increase of [32P]phosphatidic acid in prelabeled cells. In contrast, NaF had no effect on cyclic AMP production. Although phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu) also stimulated insulin release, on concomitant administration of NaF and PDBu, insulin secretion was clearly less than that expected on the basis of an additive action. Moreover, PDBu significantly inhibited NaF-enhanced PI turnover. However, this inhibition was abolished after downregulating PKC by pretreating RINr cells with PDBu. Thus NaF-induced insulin release from RINr cells appears to involve enhancement of PI turnover. Moreover, because NaF is known to activate guanine nucleotide binding proteins (G proteins) directly, PKC activation appears to induce a mechanism that inhibits stimulus-secretion coupling at a level between G protein and phospholipase C-induced PIP2 hydrolysis.