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1.
Glucose homeostasis in blood is mainly maintained by insulin released from beta-cells and glucagon released from alpha-cells, both integrated within the pancreatic islet of Langerhans. The secretory processes in both types of cells are triggered by a rise in intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+](i)). In this study, rapid effects of the natural hormone E2 on [Ca2+](i) were studied in both types of cells within intact islets using laser scanning confocal microscopy. alpha- And beta-cells showed opposite [Ca2+](i) responses when stimulated with physiological concentrations of 17beta-E2. Although the estrogen produced an increase in the frequency of glucose-induced [Ca2+](i) oscillations in insulin-releasing beta-cells, it prevented the low glucose-induced [Ca2+](i) oscillations in glucagon-releasing alpha-cells. The effects of 17beta-E2 on alpha-cells were mimicked by the cGMP permeable analog 8bromo-cGMP and blocked by the cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) inhibitor KT5823. Evidence indicated that these were membrane actions mediated by a nonclassical ER. Both effects were rapid in onset and were reproduced by 17beta-E2 linked to horseradish peroxidase, a cell-impermeable molecule. Furthermore, these actions were not blocked by the specific ER blocker ICI 182,780. Competition studies performed with 17beta-E2 linked to horseradish peroxidase binding in alpha-cells supported the idea that the membrane receptor involved is neither ERalpha nor ERbeta. Additionally, the binding site was shared by the neurotransmitters epinephrine, norepinephrine, and dopamine and had the same pharmacological profile as the receptor previously described for beta-cells. Therefore, rapid estrogen actions in islet cells are initiated by a nonclassical estrogen membrane receptor.  相似文献   

2.
The function of pancreatic beta-cells is the synthesis and release of insulin, the main hormone involved in blood glucose homeostasis. Estrogen receptors, ER alpha and ER beta, are important molecules involved in glucose metabolism, yet their role in pancreatic beta-cell physiology is still greatly unknown. In this report we show that both ER alpha and ER beta are present in pancreatic beta-cells. Long term exposure to physiological concentrations of 17beta-estradiol (E2) increased beta-cell insulin content, insulin gene expression and insulin release, yet pancreatic beta-cell mass was unaltered. The up-regulation of pancreatic beta-cell insulin content was imitated by environmentally relevant doses of the widespread endocrine disruptor Bisphenol-A (BPA). The use of ER alpha and ER beta agonists as well as ER alphaKO and ER betaKO mice suggests that the estrogen receptor involved is ER alpha. The up-regulation of pancreatic insulin content by ER alpha activation involves ERK1/2. These data may be important to explain the actions of E2 and environmental estrogens in endocrine pancreatic function and blood glucose homeostasis.  相似文献   

3.
ATP-sensitive potassium channels (KATP) regulate electrical activity and insulin secretion in pancreatic β-cells. When glucose concentration increases, the [ATP]/[ADP] ratio rises closing KATP channels, and the membrane potential depolarizes, triggering insulin secretion. This pivotal role of KATP channels is used not only by glucose but also by neurotransmitters, hormones and other physiological agents to modulate electrical and secretory β-cell response.In recent years, it has been demonstrated that estrogens and estrogen receptors are involved in glucose homeostasis, and that they can modulate the electrical activity and insulin secretion of pancreatic β-cells. The hormone 17β-estradiol (E2), at physiological levels, is implicated in maintaining normal insulin sensitivity for β-cell function. Long term exposure to E2 increases insulin content, insulin gene expression and insulin release via the estrogen receptor α (ERα), while rapid responses to E2 can regulate KATP channels increasing cGMP levels through the estrogen receptor β (ERβ) and type A guanylate cyclase receptor (GC-A). This review summarizes the main actions of 17β-estradiol on KATP channels and the subsequent insulin release in pancreatic β-cells.  相似文献   

4.
In the presence of an insulinotropic glucose concentration, beta-cells, in intact pancreatic islets, exhibit periodic bursting electrical activity consisting of an alternation of active and silent phases. The fraction of time spent in the active phase over a period is called the plateau fraction and is correlated with the rate of insulin release. However, the mechanisms that regulate the plateau fraction remain unclear. In this paper we investigate the possible role of the plasma membrane Na+/Ca2+ exchange of the beta-cell in controlling the plateau fraction. We have extended different single-cell models to incorporate this Ca2+-activated electrogenic Ca2+ transporter. We find that the Na+/Ca2+ exchange can provide a physiological mechanism to increase the plateau fraction as the glucose concentration is raised. In addition, we show theoretically that the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger is a key regulator of the cytoplasmic calcium concentration in clusters of heterogeneous cells with gap-junctional electrical coupling.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of protein kinase C (PKC) activation on the insulin-secretory process were investigated, by using beta-cell-rich suspensions obtained from pancreatic islets of obese-hyperglycaemic mice. The phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA), which is known to activate PKC directly, the muscarinic-receptor agonist carbamoylcholine and high glucose concentration enhanced the phosphorylation of a specific 80 kDa PKC substrate in the beta-cells. At a non-stimulatory glucose concentration, 10 nM-TPA increased insulin release, although there were no changes in either the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) or membrane potential, as measured with the fluorescent indicators quin-2 and bisoxonol respectively. At a stimulatory glucose concentration TPA caused a lowering in [Ca2+]i, whereas membrane potential was unaffected. Despite the decrease in [Ca2+]i, there was a large stimulation of insulin release. Addition of TPA lowered [Ca2+]i also in beta-cells stimulated by tolbutamide or high K+, although to a lesser extent than in those stimulated by glucose. There was no effect of TPA on either Ca2+ buffering or the ability of Ins(1,4,5)P3 to release Ca2+ in permeabilized beta-cells. However, the phorbol ester inhibited the rise in [Ca2+]i in response to carbamoylcholine, which stimulates the formation of InsP3, in intact beta-cells. Down-regulation of PKC influenced neither glucose-induced insulin release nor the increase in [Ca2+]i. Hence, although PKC activation is of no major importance in glucose-stimulated insulin release, this enzyme can serve as a modulator of the glucose-induced insulin-secretory response. Such a modulation involves mechanisms promoting both amplification of the secretory response and lowering of [Ca2+]i.  相似文献   

6.
Liu D  Ren M  Bing X  Stotts C  Deorah S  Love-Homan L  Dillon JS 《Steroids》2006,71(8):691-699
Both dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and DHEA sulfate (DHEAS) affect glucose stimulated insulin secretion, though their cellular mechanisms of action are not well characterized. We tested the hypothesis that human physiological concentrations of DHEA alter insulin secretion by an action initiated at the plasma membrane of beta-cells. DHEA alone had no effect on intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in a rat beta-cell line (INS-1). However, it caused an immediate and dose-dependent inhibition of carbachol-induced Ca(2+) release from intracellular stores, with a 25% inhibition at zero. One nanometer DHEA. DHEA also inhibited the Ca(2+) mobilizing effect of bombesin (29% decrease), but did not inhibit the influx of extracellular Ca(2+) evoked by glyburide (100 microM) or glucose (15 mM). The steroids (androstenedione, 17-alpha-hydroxypregnenolone, and DHEAS) had no inhibitory effect on carbachol-induced intracellular Ca(2+) release. The action of DHEA depended on a signal initiated at the plasma membrane, since membrane impermeant DHEA-BSA complexes also inhibited the carbachol effect on [Ca(2+)](i) (39% decrease). The inhibition of carbachol-induced Ca(2+) release by DHEA was blocked by pertussis toxin (PTX). DHEA also inhibited the carbachol induction of phosphoinositide generation, with a maximal inhibition at 0.1 nM DHEA. Furthermore, DHEA inhibited insulin secretion induced by carbachol in INS-1 cells by 25%, and in human pancreatic islets by 53%. Taken together, this is the first report showing that human physiological concentrations of DHEA decrease agonist-induced Ca(2+) release by a rapid, non-genomic mechanism in INS-1 cells. Furthermore, these data provide evidence consistent with the existence of a specific plasma membrane DHEA receptor, mediating this signal transduction pathway by pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Islets microdissected from ob/ob-mice were exposed to 3mM pentobarbital in media which were normal or deficient in Ca2+. This treatment resulted in marked decrease of the islet content of cyclic AMP recorded in the presence of the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. Pentobarbital had a dual effect on insulin release. In addition to being a potent inhibitor of glucose-stimulated insulin release in media containing 2.56 mM Ca2+ it increased the amounts of insulin released in high glucose media deficient in Ca2+. There was a transient stimulation with ordinary concentrations of Ca2+ and 3mM glucose whtn the media also contained 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. The stimulatory effect of pentobarbital persisted after replacing part of the Ca2+ in the beta-cell membrane with lanthanum ions and it could not be mimicked by lowering the oxygen tension of the incubation medium. It is suggested that pentobarbital stimulation of insulin release is the result of a specific action of the drug on the distribution of Ca2+ within the pancreatic beta-cells.  相似文献   

8.
T Yada  M Kakei  H Tanaka 《Cell calcium》1992,13(1):69-76
Since it was reported that glucose stimulation initially lowers as well as subsequently raises the cytosolic free calcium concentration [( Ca2+]i) in pancreatic islet cells from hyperglycemic ob/ob mice, it has been argued whether the lowering of [Ca2+]i is physiological or artifactual. In the present study, [Ca2+]i in single pancreatic beta-cells from normal rats was measured by Fura-2 microfluorometry. Following elevation of the glucose concentration from 2.8 mM (basal) to 16.7 mM, a bimodal change in [Ca2+]i, an initial decrease and subsequent increase, was demonstrated. When the basal glucose concentration was raised to 5.6 mM, the stimulation with 16.7 mM glucose also induced the decrease in [Ca2+]i in the majority of the cells, though the amplitude of the decrease was reduced. An elevation of the glucose concentration from 2.8 to 5.6 mM induced the decrease in [Ca2+]i but not usually the increase in [Ca2+]i. Removal of extracellular Ca2+ eliminated the increase in [Ca2+]i without affecting the decrease in [Ca2+]i. Thus, the decrease and increase in [Ca2+]i were clearly dissociated under certain conditions. In contrast, mannoheptulose (an inhibitor of glucose metabolism) inhibited both the decrease and increase in [Ca2+]i. These results demonstrate that the glucose-induced bimodal change in [Ca2+]i is a physiological response of islet beta-cells, and that the decrease and increase in [Ca2+]i are generated by mutually-independent mechanisms which are operated through glucose metabolism by islet beta-cells.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Ca2+-dependent processes are activated by Ba2+ in a variety of biological systems. When Ca2+ was replaced by equimolar amounts of Ba2+ there was a marked increase in insulin secretion from beta-cell-rich pancreatic islets microdissected from ob/ob-mice. At both 3 and 20 mM glucose Ba2+ stimulated insulin release in a concentration-dependent manner, being less stimulatory at high concentrations. The stimulatory effect of Ba2+ on insulin release is similar to that of Ca2+ in being more pronounced and reached at lower concentrations when the beta-cells were sensitized by cyclic AMP. However, both glucose oxidation and utilization were suppressed when Ca2+ was replaced by equimolar amounts of Ba2+. Ba2+-stimulated insulin release resembled physiological secretion initiated by Ca2+ in being inhibited by L-epinephrine, pentobarbital and a low oxygen tension.  相似文献   

11.
The role of intracellular calcium stores in stimulus-secretion coupling in the pancreatic beta-cell is largely unknown. We report here that tetracaine stimulates insulin secretion from collagenase-isolated mouse islets of Langerhans in the absence of glucose or extracellular calcium. We also found that the anesthetic evokes a dose-dependent rise of the intracellular free-calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) in cultured rat and mouse beta-cells. The tetracaine-specific [Ca2+]i rise also occurs in the absence of glucose, or in beta-cells depolarized by exposure to a Ca(2+)-deficient medium (< 1 microM) or elevated [K+]o. Furthermore, tetracaine (> or = 300 microM) depolarized the beta-cell membrane in mouse pancreatic islets, but inhibited Ca2+ entry through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels in HIT cells, an insulin-secreting cell line. From these data we conclude that tetracaine-enhancement of insulin release occurs by mechanisms that are independent of Ca2+ entry across the cell membrane. The tetracaine-induced [Ca2+]i rise in cultured rat beta-cells and insulin secretion from mouse islets is insensitive to dantrolene (20 microM), a drug that inhibits Ca2+ release evoked by cholinergic agonists in the pancreatic beta-cell, and thapsigargin (3 microM), a blocker of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ pump. We conclude that the Ca2+ required for tetracaine-potentiated insulin secretion is released from intracellular Ca2+ stores other than the ER. Furthermore, tetracaine-induced Ca2+ release was unaffected by the mitochondrial electron transfer inhibitors NaN3 and rotenone. Taken together, these data show that a calcium source other than the ER and mitochondria can affect beta-cell insulin secretion.  相似文献   

12.
Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) potentiates glucose-induced insulin release and increases cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in islet beta-cells in a concentration-dependent manner with two peaks at 10(-13) and 10(-9) M. PAC1 receptor (PAC1-R) and VPAC2 receptor (VPAC2-R) are expressed in pancreatic beta-cells and thought to be involved in insulin release. We aimed to determine the receptor types involved in the [Ca2+]i responses to 10(-13) and 10(-9) M PACAP. We measured [Ca2+]i in beta-cells and examined comparative effects of PAC1-R-selective agonist maxadilan, its antagonist M65, VPAC2-R-selective agonist Ro25-1553, and native ligands of PACAP and VIP. In the presence of 8.3 mM glucose, maxadilan, Ro25-1553, PACAP, and VIP at 10(-13) and 10(-9) M all increased [Ca2+]i. PACAP and maxadilan elicited greater effects at 10(-9) M than at 10(-13) M both in the incidence and amplitude of [Ca2+]i responses. For VIP and Ro25-1553, in contrast, the effects at 10(-9) and 10(-13) M were comparable. Furthermore, the amplitude of [Ca2+]i responses to 10(-9) M PACAP, but not 10(-13) M PACAP, was suppressed by M65. The results suggest that VPAC2-R and PAC1-R contribute equally to [Ca2+]i responses to sub-picomolar concentrations of PACAP, while PAC1-R has greater contribution to [Ca2+]i responses to nanomolar concentrations of this peptide.  相似文献   

13.
Phospholipase C (PLC) is a ubiquitous enzyme involved in the regulation of a variety of cellular processes. Its dependence on Ca2+ is well recognized, but it is not known how PLC activity is affected by physiological variations of the cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+](i)). Here, we applied evanescent wave microscopy to monitor PLC activity in parallel with [Ca2+](i) in individual insulin-secreting INS-1 cells using the phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate- and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-binding pleckstrin homology domain from PLCdelta(1) fused to green fluorescent protein (PH(PLCdelta1)-GFP) and the Ca2+ indicator fura red. In resting cells, PH(PLCdelta1)-GFP was located predominantly at the plasma membrane. Activation of PLC by muscarinic or purinergic receptor stimulation resulted in PH(PLCdelta1)-GFP translocation from the plasma membrane to the cytoplasm, detected as a decrease in evanescent wave-excited PH(PLCdelta1)-GFP fluorescence. Using this translocation as a measure of PLC activity, we found that depolarization by raising extracellular [K+] triggered activation of the enzyme. This effect could be attributed both to a rise of [Ca2+](i) and to depolarization per se, because some translocation persisted during depolarization in a Ca2+-deficient medium containing the Ca2+ chelator EGTA. Moreover, oscillations of [Ca2+](i) resulting from depolarization with Ca2+ influx evoked concentration-dependent periodic activation of PLC. We conclude that PLC activity is under tight dynamic control of [Ca2+](i). In insulin-secreting beta-cells, this mechanism provides a link between Ca2+ influx and release from intracellular stores that may be important in the regulation of insulin secretion.  相似文献   

14.
Pancreatic beta-cells have ryanodine receptors but little is known about their physiological regulation. Previous studies have shown that arachidonic acid releases Ca(2+) from intracellular stores in beta-cells but the identity of the channels involved in the Ca(2+) release has not been elucidated. We studied the mechanism by which arachidonic acid induces Ca(2+) concentration changes in pancreatic beta-cells. Cytosolic free Ca(2+) concentration was measured in fura-2-loaded INS-1E cells and in primary beta-cells from Wistar rats. The increase of cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration induced by arachidonic acid (150microM) was due to both Ca(2+) release from intracellular stores and influx of Ca(2+) from extracellular medium. 5,8,11,14-Eicosatetraynoic acid, a non-metabolizable analogue of arachidonic acid, mimicked the effect of arachidonic acid, indicating that arachidonic acid itself mediated Ca(2+) increase. The Ca(2+) release induced by arachidonic acid was from the endoplasmic reticulum since it was blocked by thapsigargin. 2-Aminoethyl diphenylborinate (50microM), which is known to inhibit 1,4,5-inositol-triphosphate-receptors, did not block Ca(2+) release by arachidonic acid. However, ryanodine (100microM), a blocker of ryanodine receptors, abolished the effect of arachidonic acid on Ca(2+) release in both types of cells. These observations indicate that arachidonic acid is a physiological activator of ryanodine receptors in beta-cells.  相似文献   

15.
Glucose-induced insulin secretion by pancreatic beta-cells depends on membrane depolarization and [Ca2+]i increase. We correlated voltage- and current-clamp recordings, [Ca2+]i measurements, and insulin reverse hemolytic plaque assay to analyze the activity of a thapsigargin-sensitive cationic channel that can be important for membrane depolarization in single rat pancreatic beta-cells. We demonstrate the presence of a thapsigargin-sensitive cationic current, which is mainly carried by Na+. Moreover, in basal glucose concentration (5.6 mM), thapsigargin depolarizes the plasma membrane, producing electrical activity and increasing [Ca2+]i. The latter is prevented by nifedipine, indicating that Ca2+ enters the cell through L-type Ca2+ channels, which are activated by membrane depolarization. Thapsigargin also increased insulin secretion by increasing the percentage of cells secreting insulin and amplifying hormone secretion by individual beta-cells. Nifedipine blocked the increase completely in 5.6 mM glucose and partially in 15.6 mM glucose. We conclude that thapsigargin potentiates a cationic current that depolarizes the cell membrane. This, in turn, increases Ca2+ entry through L-type Ca2+ channels promoting insulin secretion.  相似文献   

16.
Mouse islets were used to define the glucose-dependence and extracellular Ca2+ requirement of muscarinic stimulation of pancreatic beta-cells. In the presence of a stimulatory concentration of glucose (10 mM) and of Ca2+, acetylcholine (0.1-100 microM) accelerated 3H efflux from islets preloaded with myo-[3H]inositol. It also stimulated 45Ca2+ influx and efflux, 86Rb+ efflux and insulin release. In the absence of Ca2+, only 10-100 microM-acetylcholine mobilized enough intracellular Ca2+ to trigger an early but brief peak of insulin release. At a non-stimulatory concentration of glucose (3 mM), 1 microM- and 100 microM-acetylcholine increased 45Ca2+ and 86Rb+ efflux in the presence and absence of extracellular Ca2+. However, only 100 microM-acetylcholine marginally increased 45Ca2+ influx and caused a small, delayed, stimulation of insulin release, which was abolished by omission of Ca2+. At a maximally effective concentration of glucose (30 mM), 1 microM- and 100 microM-acetylcholine increased 45Ca2+ influx and efflux only slightly, but markedly amplified insulin release. Again, only 100 microM-acetylcholine mobilized enough Ca2+ to trigger a peak of insulin release in the absence of Ca2+. The results thus show that only high concentrations of acetylcholine (greater than or equal to 10 microM) can induce release at low glucose or in a Ca2+-free medium. beta-Cells exhibit their highest sensitivity to acetylcholine in the presence of Ca2+ and stimulatory glucose. Under these physiological conditions, the large amplification of insulin release appears to be the result of combined effects of the neurotransmitter on Ca2+ influx, on intracellular Ca2+ stores and on the efficiency with which Ca2+ activates the releasing machinery.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanisms for sulfonylurea stimulation of insulin release were explored by studying how these compounds interacted with beta-cell-rich pancreatic islets isolated from ob/ob-mice. Although sulfonylureas from the "second generation" were taken up to a greater extent, there was no direct correlation between the binding to the islets and the stimulation of insulin release. Drugs, which are known to augment the hypoglycemic action of the sulfonylureas, displaced these compounds from serum albumin to the islets. Sulfonylurea binding to the beta-cells is supposed to result from a hydrophobic interaction of the drug with the beta-cell surface counteracted by electrostatic repulsion from fixed negative charges at the cell surface. Like glucose, the sulfonylureas stimulate insulin release by promoting the Ca2+ influx into the beta-cells. The enhanced Ca2+ influx cannot be accounted for by Ca2+-ionophoretic activity but is secondary to a depolarisation of the beta-cells by a mechanism which may involve a reaction with thiol groups in the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of galanin and somatostatin on insulin release, membrane potential, and cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration [( Ca2+]i) were investigated using beta-cells isolated from obese hyperglycemic mice. Whereas insulin release was measured in a column perifusion system, membrane potential and [Ca2+]i were measured with the fluorescent indicators bisoxonol (bis-(1,3-diethylthiobarbiturate)trimethineoxonol) and quin 2, in cell suspensions in a cuvette. Galanin (16 nM) and somatostatin (400 nM) suppressed glucose-stimulated insulin release in parallel to promoting repolarization and a reduction in [Ca2+]i. The reduction in [Ca2+]i comprised an initial nadir followed by a slow rise and the establishment of a new steady state level. The slow rise in [Ca2+]i was abolished by 50 microM D-600, a blocker of voltage-activated Ca2+ channels. Both peptides suppressed insulin release even when [Ca2+]i was raised by 25 mM K+. Under these conditions the inhibition of insulin release was partly reversed by an increase in the glucose concentration. Addition of 5 mM Ca2+ to a cell suspension, incubated in the presence of 20 mM glucose and either galanin, somatostatin, or the alpha 2-adrenergic agonist clonidine (10 nM), induced oscillations in [Ca2+]i, this effect disappearing subsequent to the addition of D-600. The effects of galanin, somatostatin, and clonidine on [Ca2+]i were abolished in beta-cells treated with pertussis toxin. In accordance with measurements of [Ca2+]i, treatment with pertussis toxin reversed the inhibitory effect of galanin on insulin release. The inhibitory action of galanin and somatostatin on insulin release is probably accounted for by not only a repolarization-induced reduction in [Ca2+]i and a decreased sensitivity of the secretory machinery to Ca2+, but also by a direct interaction with the exocytotic process. It is proposed that these effects are mediated by a pertussis toxin-sensitive GTP-binding protein.  相似文献   

19.
The electrical activity of pancreatic beta-cells, which has been closely correlated both with intracellular Ca2+ concentration and insulin release, is characterized by a biphasic response to glucose and bursts of spiking action potentials. Recent voltage clamp and single channel patch clamp experiments have identified several transmembrane ionic channels that may play key roles in the electrophysiological behavior of beta-cells. There is a hypothesis that Ca2+-activated K+ channels are responsible for both the resting potential during low glucose concentration and the silent phase during bursting. The discovery of the ATP-inactivated K+ channel raises the possibility that the current for this latter K+ channel may dominate the resting potential, while the Ca2+-activated K+ current dominates the silent phase potential between bursts. The recent discovery that Ca2+-activated K+ channels are pH sensitive raises an interesting possibility for the biphasic electrical response. In this paper, numerical methods are presented for evaluating these hypotheses against experimental evidence.  相似文献   

20.
It has long been thought that long-chain free fatty acids (FFAs) stimulate insulin secretion via mechanisms involving their metabolism in pancreatic beta-cells. Recently, it was reported that FFAs function as endogenous ligands for GPR40, a G protein-coupled receptor, to amplify glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in an insulinoma cell line and rat islets. However, signal transduction mechanisms for GPR40 in beta-cells are little known. The present study was aimed at elucidating GPR40-linked Ca(2+) signaling mechanisms in rat pancreatic beta-cells. We employed oleic acid (OA), an FFA that has a high affinity for the rat GPR40, and examined its effect on cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in single beta-cells by fura 2 fluorescence imaging. OA at 1-10 microM concentration-dependently increased [Ca(2+)](i) in the presence of 5.6, 8.3, and 11.2 mM, but not 2.8 mM, glucose. OA-induced [Ca(2+)](i) increases at 11.2 mM glucose were inhibited in beta-cells transfected with small interfering RNA targeted to rat GPR40 mRNA. OA-induced [Ca(2+)](i) increases were also inhibited by phospholipase C (PLC) inhibitors, U73122 and neomycin, Ca(2+)-free conditions, and an L-type Ca(2+) channel blocker, nitrendipine. Furthermore, OA increased insulin release from isolated islets at 8.3 mM glucose, and it was markedly attenuated by PLC and L-type Ca(2+) channel inhibitors. These results demonstrate that OA interacts with GPR40 to increase [Ca(2+)](i) via PLC- and L-type Ca(2+) channel-mediated pathway in rat islet beta-cells, which may be link to insulin release.  相似文献   

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