MacDonald Patrick E, De Marinis Yang Zhang, Ramracheya Reshma, Salehi Albert, Ma Xiaosong, Johnson Paul R V, Cox Roger, Eliasson Lena, Rorsman Patrik
Oxford Centre for Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
PLoS Biol. 2007 Jun;5(6):e143. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0050143.
Glucagon, secreted from pancreatic islet alpha cells, stimulates gluconeogenesis and liver glycogen breakdown. The mechanism regulating glucagon release is debated, and variously attributed to neuronal control, paracrine control by neighbouring beta cells, or to an intrinsic glucose sensing by the alpha cells themselves. We examined hormone secretion and Ca(2+) responses of alpha and beta cells within intact rodent and human islets. Glucose-dependent suppression of glucagon release persisted when paracrine GABA or Zn(2+) signalling was blocked, but was reversed by low concentrations (1-20 muM) of the ATP-sensitive K(+) (KATP) channel opener diazoxide, which had no effect on insulin release or beta cell responses. This effect was prevented by the KATP channel blocker tolbutamide (100 muM). Higher diazoxide concentrations (>/=30 muM) decreased glucagon and insulin secretion, and alpha- and beta-cell Ca(2+) responses, in parallel. In the absence of glucose, tolbutamide at low concentrations (<1 muM) stimulated glucagon secretion, whereas high concentrations (>10 muM) were inhibitory. In the presence of a maximally inhibitory concentration of tolbutamide (0.5 mM), glucose had no additional suppressive effect. Downstream of the KATP channel, inhibition of voltage-gated Na(+) (TTX) and N-type Ca(2+) channels (omega-conotoxin), but not L-type Ca(2+) channels (nifedipine), prevented glucagon secretion. Both the N-type Ca(2+) channels and alpha-cell exocytosis were inactivated at depolarised membrane potentials. Rodent and human glucagon secretion is regulated by an alpha-cell KATP channel-dependent mechanism. We propose that elevated glucose reduces electrical activity and exocytosis via depolarisation-induced inactivation of ion channels involved in action potential firing and secretion.
胰高血糖素由胰岛α细胞分泌,可刺激糖异生和肝糖原分解。调节胰高血糖素释放的机制存在争议,其归因于神经控制、邻近β细胞的旁分泌控制或α细胞自身的内在葡萄糖感知。我们研究了完整啮齿动物和人类胰岛内α细胞和β细胞的激素分泌及Ca(2+)反应。当旁分泌γ-氨基丁酸(GABA)或锌(Zn(2+))信号传导被阻断时,葡萄糖依赖性的胰高血糖素释放抑制仍然存在,但低浓度(1 - 20μM)的ATP敏感性钾(KATP)通道开放剂二氮嗪可逆转这种抑制,二氮嗪对胰岛素释放或β细胞反应没有影响。KATP通道阻滞剂甲苯磺丁脲(100μM)可阻止这种效应。更高浓度的二氮嗪(≥30μM)会同时降低胰高血糖素和胰岛素分泌以及α细胞和β细胞的Ca(2+)反应。在无葡萄糖的情况下,低浓度(<1μM)的甲苯磺丁脲刺激胰高血糖素分泌,而高浓度(>10μM)则起抑制作用。在存在最大抑制浓度的甲苯磺丁脲(0.5 mM)时,葡萄糖没有额外的抑制作用。在KATP通道下游,抑制电压门控钠(TTX)通道和N型钙(Ca(2+))通道(ω-芋螺毒素),而不是L型钙(Ca(2+))通道(硝苯地平),可阻止胰高血糖素分泌。N型钙通道和α细胞胞吐作用在去极化膜电位时均失活。啮齿动物和人类的胰高血糖素分泌受α细胞KATP通道依赖性机制调节。我们提出,升高的葡萄糖通过使参与动作电位发放和分泌的离子通道去极化诱导失活,从而降低电活动和胞吐作用。