Saïfia S, Chevrier A M, Bosshard A, Cuber J C, Chayvialle J A, Abello J
Unité INSERM 45, Hôpital Edouard Herriot, Lyon, France.
J Endocrinol. 1998 Apr;157(1):33-41. doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1570033.
The neuropeptide galanin is widely distributed in the gastrointestinal tract and exerts several inhibitory effects, especially on intestinal motility and on insulin release from pancreatic beta-cells. The presence of galanin fibres not only in the myenteric and submucosal plexus but also in the mucosa, prompted us to investigate the regulatory role of galanin, and its mechanism of action, on the secretion of the insulinotropic hormone glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). Rat ileal cells were dispersed through mechanical vibration followed by moderate exposure to hyaluronidase, DNase I and EDTA, and enriched for L-cells by counterflow elutriation. A 6- to 7-fold enrichment in GLP-1 cell content was registered after elutriation, as compared with the crude cell preparation (929 +/- 81 vs 138 +/- 14 fmol/10(6) cells). L-cells then accounted for 4-5% of the total cell population. Bombesin induced a time-(15-240 min) and dose- (0.1 nM-1 microM) dependent release of GLP-1. Glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide (GIP, 100 nM), forskolin (10 microM) and the phorbol ester 12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA, 1 microM) each stimulated GLP-1 secretion over a 1-h incubation period. Galanin (0.01-100 nM) induced a dose-dependent inhibition of bombesin- and of GIP-stimulated GLP-1 release (mean inhibition of 90% with 100 nM galanin). Galanin also dose-dependently inhibited forskolin-induced GLP-1 secretion (74% of inhibition with 100 nM galanin), but not TPA-stimulated hormone release. Pretreatment of cells with 200 ng/ml pertussis toxin for 3 h, or incubation with the ATP-sensitive K+ channel blocker disopyramide (200 microM), prevented the inhibition by galanin of bombesin- and GIP-stimulated GLP-1 secretion. These studies indicate that intestinal secretion of GLP-1 is negatively controlled by galanin, that acts through receptors coupled to pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein and involves ATP-dependent K+ channels.
神经肽甘丙肽广泛分布于胃肠道,并发挥多种抑制作用,尤其是对肠道运动以及胰腺β细胞胰岛素释放的抑制作用。甘丙肽纤维不仅存在于肌间神经丛和黏膜下神经丛,还存在于黏膜中,这促使我们研究甘丙肽对促胰岛素激素胰高血糖素样肽-1(GLP-1)分泌的调节作用及其作用机制。通过机械振动分散大鼠回肠细胞,随后适度暴露于透明质酸酶、脱氧核糖核酸酶I和乙二胺四乙酸(EDTA),并通过逆流淘析法富集L细胞。与粗细胞制剂相比,淘析后GLP-1细胞含量增加了6至7倍(929±81对138±14 fmol/10⁶细胞)。此时L细胞占细胞总数的4%至5%。蛙皮素诱导GLP-1呈时间(15至240分钟)和剂量(0.1 nM至1 μM)依赖性释放。葡萄糖依赖性促胰岛素多肽(GIP,100 nM)、福斯可林(10 μM)和佛波酯12-O-十四酰佛波醇-13-乙酸酯(TPA,1 μM)在1小时的孵育期内均刺激GLP-1分泌。甘丙肽(0.01至100 nM)诱导对蛙皮素和GIP刺激的GLP-1释放产生剂量依赖性抑制(100 nM甘丙肽时平均抑制率为90%)。甘丙肽还对福斯可林诱导的GLP-1分泌产生剂量依赖性抑制(100 nM甘丙肽时抑制率为74%),但对TPA刺激的激素释放无抑制作用。用200 ng/ml百日咳毒素预处理细胞3小时,或与ATP敏感性钾通道阻滞剂双异丙吡胺(200 μM)孵育,可防止甘丙肽对蛙皮素和GIP刺激的GLP-1分泌的抑制作用。这些研究表明,肠道GLP-1的分泌受到甘丙肽的负调控,甘丙肽通过与百日咳毒素敏感的G蛋白偶联的受体起作用,并涉及ATP依赖性钾通道。