首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Insulin release from statically incubated HIT-T15 cells was maximally stimulated by glucose, L-arginine and L-leucine. L-arginine stimulated insulin release in the absence of glucose. Glucose induced insulin release was potentiated by the addition of L-leucine, L-arginine and the two in combination. Both glibenclamide and chlorpropamide stimulated insulin release from HIT-T15 cells. Glibenclamide was the more potent and equivalent in insulinotrophic action to 7.5 mmol/l glucose. Only chlorpropamide significantly potentiated glucose induced insulin release. Perifused HIT-T15 cells produced a reproducible biphasic insulin response to glucose challenge which was characterised by a pronounced and sustained first phase and a reduced second phase. The stimulation of phase I by glibenclamide alone and the inhibition of phase II of glucose induced insulin release by colchicine suggested the presence of a readily available pool of insulin granules which was not rapidly restored by insulin biosynthesis and granule margination.  相似文献   

2.
At a glucose concentration of 3mm or less, iodoacetamide had no effect on the release of insulin from microdissected pancreatic islets of ob/ob-mice. At higher glucose concentrations, iodoacetamide exerted both an initial stimulatory and a subsequent inhibitory action. When islets were perifused with 1mm-iodoacetamide and 17mm-glucose the inhibitory action predominated after about 15min of transient stimulation. With decreasing concentrations of iodoacetamide the stimulatory phase was gradually prolonged, and with 0.003-0.1mm-iodoacetamide stimulation only was observed for 75min. Prolonged stimulation was also noted after a short pulse of iodoacetamide. Similar responses to 0.1mm-iodoacetamide were observed with islets from normal mice. With islets from ob/ob-mice the effect of 0.1mm-iodoacetamide was reproduced with 0.1mm-iodoacetate, whereas 0.1mm-acetamide had no apparent effect. Iodoacetamide increased the V(max.) of glucose-stimulated insulin release without altering the apparent K(m) for glucose. Leucine, glibenclamide or theophylline could not replace glucose in this synergistic action with iodoacetamide. Iodoacetamide rather inhibited the insulin-releasing action of theophylline. Iodoacetamide-induced potentiation of the glucose-stimulated insulin release was rapidly and reversibly inhibited by mannoheptulose, adrenaline, or calcium deficiency. The potentiating effect on insulin release was not paralleled by effects on glucose oxidation or on islet fructose 1,6-diphosphate. However, the inhibitory action of iodoacetamide might be explained by inhibition of glycolysis as evidenced by an inhibition of glucose oxidation and a rise of fructose 1,6-diphosphate. The results support our previous hypothesis that thiol reagents can stimulate insulin release by acting on relatively superficial thiol groups in the beta-cell plasma membrane. Glycolysis seems to be necessary in order for iodoacetamide to stimulate in this way.  相似文献   

3.
Hypoglycemic sulfonylureas such as glibenclamide have been widely used to treat type 2 diabetic patients for 40 yr, but controversy remains about their mode of action. The widely held view is that they promote rapid insulin exocytosis by binding to and blocking pancreatic beta-cell ATP-dependent K+ (KATP) channels in the plasma membrane. This event stimulates Ca2+ influx and sets in motion the exocytotic release of insulin. However, recent reports show that >90% of glibenclamide-binding sites are localized intracellularly and that the drug can stimulate insulin release independently of changes in KATP channels and cytoplasmic free Ca2+. Also, glibenclamide specifically and progressively accumulates in islets in association with secretory granules and mitochondria and causes long-lasting insulin secretion. It has been proposed that nutrient insulin secretagogues stimulate insulin release by increasing formation of malonyl-CoA, which, by blocking carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 (CPT-1), switches fatty acid (FA) catabolism to synthesis of PKC-activating lipids. We show that glibenclamide dose-dependently inhibits beta-cell CPT-1 activity, consequently suppressing FA oxidation to the same extent as glucose in cultured fetal rat islets. This is associated with enhanced diacylglycerol (DAG) formation, PKC activation, and KATP-independent glibenclamide-stimulated insulin exocytosis. The fat oxidation inhibitor etomoxir stimulated KATP-independent insulin secretion to the same extent as glibenclamide, and the action of both drugs was not additive. We propose a mechanism in which inhibition of CPT-1 activity by glibenclamide switches beta-cell FA metabolism to DAG synthesis and subsequent PKC-dependent and KATP-independent insulin exocytosis. We suggest that chronic CPT inhibition, through the progressive islet accumulation of glibenclamide, may explain the prolonged stimulation of insulin secretion in some diabetic patients even after drug removal that contributes to the sustained hypoglycemia of the sulfonylurea.  相似文献   

4.
Since prostaglandins are increasingly shown to play an important role on insulin secretion, an evaluation of the PGE1 action on insulin release by isolated islets of Langerhans has been undertaken. Pancreatic islets were prepared after a modification of the Lacy and Kostianovsky technique and incubated in Hanks solution containing glucose 1.63 or 16.3 mM and/or PGE1 10(-5) M. The insulin released was measured after 15, 30 or 60 min of incubation. The results obtained show that PGE1 does not modify insulin release induced by glucose 1.63 mM (non stimulant concentration) but that this PG significantly diminishes the insulin release induced by glucose 16.3 mM (stimulant concentration) after 15 and 30 min of incubation.  相似文献   

5.
Metformin lowers diabetic blood glucose primarily by reducing hepatic gluconeogenesis and increasing peripheral glucose uptake. However, possible effects by metformin on beta-cell function are incompletely understood. We speculated that metformin might positively influence insulin secretion through impacting the beta-cell nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-NO system, a negative modulator of glucose-stimulated insulin release. In short-time incubations with isolated murine islets either glibenclamide or high glucose augmented insulin release associated with increased NO production from both neural and inducible NOS. Metformin addition suppressed the augmented NO generation coinciding with amplified insulin release. Islet culturing with glibenclamide or high glucose revealed pronounced fluorescence of inducible NOS in the beta-cells being abolished by metformin co-culturing. These findings were reflected in medium nitrite-nitrate levels. A glucose challenge following islet culturing with glibenclamide or high glucose revealed markedly impaired insulin response. Metformin co-culturing restored this response. Culturing murine islets and human islets from controls and type 2 diabetics with high glucose or high glucose + glibenclamide induced a pronounced decrease of cell viability being remarkably restored by metformin co-culturing. We show here, that imposed overactivity of the beta-cell NOS-NO system by glibenclamide or high glucose leads to insulin secretory dysfunction and reduced cell viability and also, importantly, that these effects are relieved by metformin inhibiting beta-cell NO overproduction from both neural and inducible NOS thus ameliorating a concealed negative influence by NO induced by sulfonylurea treatment and/or high glucose levels. This double-edged effect of glibenclamide on the beta-cellsuggests sulfonylurea monotherapy in type 2 diabetes being avoided.  相似文献   

6.
I C Green  M Tadayyon 《Life sciences》1988,42(21):2123-2130
The inadequate insulin secretory response to glucose stimulation in non-insulin dependent diabetes has been attributed to many factors including high PGE2 levels blunting the secretory response, and to the existence of inhibitory opiate activity in vivo. The purpose of the present work was to see if there was a connection between these two independent theories. Radioimmunoassayable PGE2 in islets of Langerhans was found to be proportional to islet number and protein content and was typically 4 to 5pg/micrograms islet protein. Indomethacin (2.8 X 10(-5) M), sodium salicylate (1.25 X 10(-3) M) and chlorpropamide (7.2 X 10(-5) M) all lowered islet PGE2 levels and stimulated insulin release in vitro. Dynorphin (1-13), stimulated insulin release at a concentration of 6 X 10(-9) M, while lowering islet PGE2. Conversely, at a higher concentration, (6 X 10(-7) M), dynorphin had no stimulatory effect on insulin secretion and did not lower PGE2 levels in islets or in the incubation media. The stimulatory effects of dynorphin and sodium salicylate on insulin secretion were blocked by exogenous PGE2 (10(-5) M). PGE2 at a lower concentration (10(-9) M) did not exert any inhibitory effect on dynorphin- or sodium salicylate-induced insulin release. This concentration of exogenous PGE2 stimulated insulin release in the presence of 6mM glucose. Results from these experiments suggest that since an opioid peptide can lower endogenous PGE2 production in islets and since the stimulatory effects of the opioid peptide are reversed by exogenous PGE2 there may be interactions between these two modulators of insulin secretion.  相似文献   

7.
Sustained, 60-minute perfusion of glibenclamide (0.5, 1.5 and 10 mug/ml) elicits a one-phase insulin release profile, formed by a rapid secretion peak followed by a second peak with lower insulin levels than the former. Basal insulin secretion values are observed during the period comprised between 13 and 60 minutes of perfusion. Concurrent stimulation with glucose (100, 150, 200 and 300 mg%) plus glibenclamide (1 mug/ml) causes a marked rise in both phases of insulin secretion. The addition of glibenclamide does not modify the biphasic secretion pattern caused by maximal glucose concentration (400 mg%). The maximal values of both phases of secretion in the dose-response curve elicited by different glucose concentrations shift to the left when glibenclamide is added to the perfusate. The increase in insulin secretion caused by glibenclamide is not inhibited by puromycin. Both theophylline and phentolamine modify and increase the glibenclamide-induced insulin release pattern. Propranolol and imidazole inhibit glibenclamide-induced insulin release. Our results suggest that: 1. Glibenclamide increases beta cell sensitivity to glucose stimulation. 2. Glibenclamide and glucose induce secretion of insulin originating in the same compartment. 3. Modification of alpha and beta adrenergic receptors may modify glibodulate the beta cell response to glibenclamide.  相似文献   

8.
Understanding mechanisms by which glibenclamide stimulates insulin release is important, particularly given recent promising treatment by glibenclamide of permanent neonatal diabetic subjects. Antidiabetic sulfonylureas are thought to stimulate insulin secretion solely by inhibiting their high-affinity ATP-sensitive potassium (K(ATP)) channel receptors at the plasma membrane of beta-cells. This normally occurs during glucose stimulation, where ATP inhibition of plasmalemmal K(ATP) channels leads to voltage activation of L-type calcium channels for rapidly switching on and off calcium influx, governing the duration of insulin secretion. However, growing evidence indicates that sulfonylureas, including glibenclamide, have additional K(ATP) channel receptors within beta-cells at insulin granules. We tested nonpermeabilized beta-cells in mouse islets for glibenclamide-stimulated insulin secretion mediated by granule-localized K(ATP) channels by using conditions that bypass glibenclamide action on plasmalemmal K(ATP) channels. High-potassium stimulation evoked a sustained rise in beta-cell calcium level but a transient rise in insulin secretion. With continued high-potassium depolarization, addition of glibenclamide dramatically enhanced insulin secretion without affecting calcium. These findings support the hypothesis that glibenclamide, or an increased ATP/ADP ratio, stimulates insulin secretion in part by binding at granule-localized K(ATP) channels that functionally contribute to sustained second-phase insulin secretion.  相似文献   

9.
G protein-coupled receptor (GPR) 119 is highly expressed in pancreatic β-cells and enhances the effect of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) on activation. The development of an oral GPR119 agonist that specifically targets the first phase of GSIS represents a promising strategy for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. In the present study, we evaluated the therapeutic potential of a novel small molecule GPR119 agonist, AS1535907, which was modified from the previously identified 2,4,6-tri-substituted pyrimidine core agonist AS1269574. AS1535907 displayed an EC50 value of 4.8 μM in HEK293 cells stably expressing human GPR119 and stimulated insulin secretion in rat islets only under high-glucose (16.8 mM) conditions. In isolated perfused pancreata from normal rats, AS1535907 enhanced the first phase of insulin secretion at 16.8 mM glucose, but had no effect at 2.8 mM glucose. In contrast, the sulfonylurea glibenclamide predominantly induced insulin release in the second phase at 16.8 mM glucose and also markedly stimulated insulin secretion at 2.8 mM glucose. In in vivo studies, a single 10 μM administration of AS1535907 to diabetic db/db mice reduced blood glucose levels due to the rapid secretion of insulin secretion following oral glucose loading. These results demonstrate that GPR119 agonist AS1535907 has the ability to stimulate the first phase of GSIS, which is important for preventing the development of postprandial hypoglycemia. In conclusion, the GPR119 agonist AS1535907 induces a more rapid and physiological pattern of insulin release than glibenclamide, and represents a novel strategy for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

10.
The hypoglycemic sulfonylurea drugs cause reduction of blood glucose predominantly via stimulation of insulin release from pancreatic beta cells. In addition, during long-term treatment, an insulin-independent blood glucose-decreasing mechanism is assumed to operate. This may include insulin-sensitizing and insulin-mimetic activity in muscle and adipose tissue. This review summarizes our current knowledge about the putative modes of action of the sulfonylurea compound, Amaryl, in pancreatic beta cells and, in particular, peripheral target cells that form the molecular basis for its characteristic pharmacological and clinical profile. The analysis was performed in comparison with the conventional and the "golden standard" sulfonylurea, glibenclamide. I conclude: (I) The blood glucose decrease provoked by Amaryl can be explained by a combination of stimulation of insulin release from the pancreas and direct enhancement, as well as potentiation of the insulin response of glucose utilization in peripheral tissues only. (II) The underlying molecular mechanisms seemed to rely on beta cells on a sulfonylurea receptor protein, SURX, associated with the ATP-sensitive potassium channel (K(ATP)) and different from SUR1 for glibenclamide, and in muscle and adipose cells on: (a) the increased production of diacylglycerol and activation of protein kinase C; (b) the enhanced expression of glucose transporter isoforms; and (c) the insulin receptor-independent activation of the insulin receptor substrate/phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase pathway. (III) The latter mechanism involved a nonreceptor tyrosine kinase and a number of components, such as caveolin and glycosylphosphatidylinositol structures, which are assembled in caveolae/detergent-insoluble glycolipid-enriched rafts of the target cell plasma membrane. Since hyperinsulinism and permanent K(ATP) closure are supposed to negatively affect the pathogenesis and therapy of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, the demonstrated higher insulin-independent blood glucose-lowering activity of Amaryl may be therapeutically relevant.  相似文献   

11.
La3+ was used to study the involvement of Ca2+ in insulin secretion in beta-cell-rich pancreatic islets micro-dissected from non-inbred ob/ob mice. Ultrastructural studies revealed that the localization of La3+ was entirely restricted to the exterior of the cells. Consistent with a membrane action, exposure to La3+ failed to affect glucose oxidation and either the sucrose space or the general ultrastructure of the islets. In contrast, La3+ had marked effects on insulin release and 45Ca fluxes. Exposure to La3+ resulted in pronounced inhibition of insulin release irrespective of the presence or absence of Ca2+, 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine or glucose. Perifusion experiments revealed that the inhibitory action was prompt, sustained and readily reversible. Removal of La3+ was associated with a subsequent prolonged stimulatory phase of insulin release even in medium deficient in Ca2+. This action could not be attributed to an increase in cyclic AMP, but was potentiated by 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine and abolished by L-adrenaline. La3+ displaced 45Ca from superficially located binding sites and inhibited the uptake and efflux of 45Ca. The stimulatory and inhibitory actions of glucose on 45Ca efflux were also abolished in the presence of 2 mM-La3+ Removal of La3+ was associated with the preferential mobilization of 45Ca incorporated in response to glucose. The results indicate that binding of La3+ to superficial sites in the plasma membrane leads to inhibition of insulin release by suppression of transmembrane Ca2+ fluxes. It is suggested that accumulation of Ca2+ in the cytoplasm accounts for the stimulation of insulin release seen after removal of La3+ from inhibitory binding sites in the beta-cell plasma membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Prostaglandin generation and its inter-relation to the metabolic effects of insulin and prior exercise were examined in perfused muscle of fed rats. During a 60 min perfusion of the rat hindquarter, a substantial release of the prostaglandins PGF2 alpha, PGE2 and 6-oxoPGF1 alpha was observed. Blood cells present in the perfusate released these substances in negligible amounts indicating the prostaglandins were produced by the hindquarter. Addition of insulin to the perfusate increased both glucose uptake and the generation of PGE2 and 6-oxoPGF1 alpha. At 30 min after intense treadmill exercise, glucose and alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB) uptake by the hindquarter were increased in the absence of added insulin, but prostaglandin release was not increased. Insulin further increased glucose and AIB uptake; however, in contrast with its effects in non-exercised rats, insulin no longer stimulated prostaglandin generation. Indomethacin (10 microM) added to the perfusate inhibited the release of PGF2 alpha and PGE2 by 90% and the release of 6-oxoPGF1 alpha by 54%. It had no effect on the stimulation of glucose uptake by either insulin or prior exercise. The data indicate that insulin increases prostaglandin synthesis by perfused rat muscle, and that prior exercise blocks this effect. They suggest that under the conditions studied prostaglandins do not mediate the effects of insulin or prior exercise on glucose uptake.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of 1 week clofibrate administration on glucose and insulin responses to oral glucose and to intravenous tolbutamide was evaluated in 21 patients with mild maturity-onset diabetes (fasting plasma glucose 108-152 mg/100 ml). After treatment, oral glucose tolerance and hypoglycaemic effect of tolbutamide were significantly improved; plasma insulin response was reduced after glucose and unmodified after tolbutamide; fasting plasma glucose was also significantly reduced. These findings did not correlate with the observed fall in serum lipids. Short-term clofibrate improves glucose metabolism in mild diabetes irrespective of its effects on lipid metabolism. It is suggested that the drug's action may be mediated by reduced insulin resistance.  相似文献   

14.
Using the MIN6 B-cell line, we investigated the hypothesis that miniglucagon, the C-terminal () fragment processed from glucagon and present in pancreatic A cells, modulates insulin release, and we analyzed its cellular mode of action. We show that, at concentrations ranging from 0.01 to 1000 pM, miniglucagon dose-dependently (ID50 = 1 pM) inhibited by 80-100% the insulin release triggered by glucose, glucagon, glucagon-like peptide-1-(7-36) amide (tGLP-1), or glibenclamide, but not that induced by carbachol. Miniglucagon had no significant effects on cellular cAMP levels. The increase in 45Ca2+ uptake induced by depolarizing agents (glucose or extracellular K+), by glucagon, or by the Ca2+channel agonist Bay K-8644 was blocked by miniglucagon at the doses active on insulin release. Electrophysiological experiments indicated that miniglucagon induces membrane hyperpolarization, probably by opening potassium channels, which terminated glucose-induced electrical activity. Pretreatment with pertussis toxin abolished the effects of miniglucagon on insulin release. It is concluded that miniglucagon is a highly potent and efficient inhibitor of insulin release by closing, via hyperpolarization, voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels linked to a pathway involving a pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of sodium salicylate, a prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor, on glucose-induced secretion of insulin and glucagon by the isolated perfused rat pancreas have been studied. Sodium salicylate inhibited both basal (2.8 mM glucose) and stimulated (16.7 mM glucose) insulin release in a dose dependent manner (1, 5 and 10 mM). This inhibition is not interpretable in terms of a simple inhibition of cyclooxygenase by sodium salicylate. Basal glucagon release was not changed by 1 mM sodium salicylate but the latter partially blocked its inhibition by 16.7 mM glucose. Higher doses of sodium salicylate (5 and 10 mM) inhibited basal glucagon secretion without affecting its response to 16.7 mM glucose. These findings suggest a predominant stimulatory action of endogenous prostaglandins on glucagon release.  相似文献   

16.
Insulin release in the perfused isolated rat pancreas was measured after stimulation with 16.5 mM glucose with and without somatostatin (cycle form, 100 ng/ml) in the medium. A complete blockage of the typical biphasic pattern of insulin release ocurred with somatostatin in the medium. Such blockage was abolished when cAMP (2.5 mM) and a 0.5 ml solution of glucagon (1 mg/ml) were continuously perfused for 20-minute periods and for 30-second periods correspondently. It did not take place when glibenclamide (HB-419) was perfused for a 20-minute period at a rate of 10 mug/ml. The results suggest that the adenylcyclase dependent mechanisms of glucose-induced insulin release are involved in the inhibition of the glucose-induced insulin secretion by somatostatin.  相似文献   

17.
There is an urgent need to discover new compounds that effectively treat diabetes by mimicking the action of insulin (insulin mimetics). Traditional approaches to studying anti-diabetic agents in cells are inconvenient for screening chemical libraries to identify insulin mimetics. 2-(N-(7-Nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)amino)-2-deoxyglucose (2-NBDG) and 6-NBDG are fluorescent analogues of glucose that could be employed in screening. However, there are no published data about the use of these analogues to identify new insulin mimetics. We have developed a screening system based on 6-NBDG using 3T3-L1 adipocytes in a 96-well culture plate format. 6-NBDG was found to produce a larger signal than 2-NBDG in this screening system. 6-NBDG uptake in 3T3-L1 adipocytes was sensitive to insulin, known insulin mimetics, inhibitors of glucose transport and insulin-sensitizing compounds. To validate our screening system, a chemical library of 576 tagged, triazine-based small molecules was screened. The screening results were identical to that obtained from a commercial enzyme-based glucose assay. Two inducers of glucose uptake were shown to be non-cytotoxic and confirmed as insulin mimetic compounds by their inhibition of epinephrine-stimulated free fatty acid release from adipocytes. These novel insulin mimetics functioned at a markedly lower concentration than two widely studied insulin mimetics, zinc(ii) complexes and vanadium compounds, and also showed novel, beneficial effects on endothelial cell function (a key determinant of secondary complications in diabetes). The discovery of new insulin mimetics using 6-NBDG validates the use of this probe in the development of large-scale, cell-based screening systems based on the uptake of fluorescent-tagged glucose analogues. This research should aid the development of novel strategies to discover new drugs and drug targets for combating the increasing prevalence of diabetes.  相似文献   

18.
In the present study, Wistar rats, which received a streptozotocin injection to induce diabetes (STZ-diabetic rats), a model similar to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) or type 1 diabetes mellitus, were used to investigate the effect of prostaglandin (PG) E2 on plasma glucose. Intravenous injection of PGE2 produced a dose-dependent lowering of plasma glucose level in fasting STZ-diabetic rats after 60 min. In addition to the blockade of this hypoglycemic effect by guanethidine (a noradrenergic nerve terminal-blocking agent), prazosin at a dose effective to block alpha1-adrenoceptors abolished the action of PGE2. An increase of plasma norepinephrine (NE) was also observed in STZ-diabetic rats receiving PGE2 injections. Participation of sympathetic stimulation by PGE2 may thus be speculated. Also, the plasma glucose-lowering effect of PGE2 was also blocked by pretreatment with naloxone or naloxonazine at doses sufficient to block opioid mu-receptor. Injection of PGE2 increased plasma beta-endorphin-like immunoreactivity (BER) in STZ-diabetic rats, and this action was abolished by prazosin. Bilateral adrenalectomy resulted in the loss of this PGE2 effect, and no increase was seen in plasma BER with PGE2 in STZ-diabetic rats. Therefore, beta-endorphin from the adrenal gland appears to be responsible for the lowering of plasma glucose in STZ-diabetic rats by PGE2 through an increase of NE release to activate alpha1-adrenoceptors.  相似文献   

19.
Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) has many insulin-like activities, including stimulation of glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. However, those with diabetes or chronic liver disease are insulin resistant but show a normal hypoglycemic response to IGF-1. We have previously shown that insulin sensitivity depends on a hepatic parasympathetic reflex release of a hormone from the liver. The hypothesis was tested that insulin action, but not IGF-1 action, is dependent on the hepatic parasympathetic reflex. Glucose disposal in response to three doses of IGF-1 (25, 100, 200 microg/kg) was determined in rats. IGF-1 at 200 microg/kg had similar effect on glucose disposal as did 50 mU/kg of insulin. Interruption of the hepatic parasympathetic reflex either by surgical ablation of the anterior nerve plexus or by atropine (1.0 mg/kg) resulted in insulin, but not IGF-1, resistance. Sixteen hours of fasting resulted in insulin, but not IGF-1, resistance. In conclusion, insulin, but not IGF-1, triggers the hepatic parasympathetic dependent release of a putative hepatic insulin sensitizing substance (HISS) that stimulates glucose uptake in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

20.
Resveratrol is a stilbene present in different plant species and exerting numerous beneficial effects, including prevention of diabetes and attenuation of some diabetic complications. Its inhibitory effect on insulin secretion was recently documented, but the exact mechanism underlying this action remains unknown. Experiments employing diazoxide and a high concentration of K(+) revealed that, in depolarized pancreatic islets incubated for 90 min with resveratrol (1, 10, and 100 microM), insulin secretion stimulated by glucose and leucine was impaired. The attenuation of the insulin secretory response to 6.7 mM glucose was not abrogated by blockade of intracellular estrogen receptors and was found to be accompanied by diminished islet glucose oxidation, enhanced lactate production, and reduced ATP levels. Glucose-induced hyperpolarization of the mitochondrial membrane was also reduced in the presence of resveratrol. Moreover, in depolarized islets incubated with 2.8 mM glucose, activation of protein kinase C or protein kinase A potentiated insulin release; however, under these conditions, resveratrol was ineffective. Further studies also revealed that, under conditions of blocked voltage-dependent calcium channels, the stilbene reduced insulin secretion induced by a combination of glucose with forskolin. These data demonstrate that resveratrol 1) inhibits the amplifying pathway of insulin secretion, 2) exerts an insulin-suppressive effect independently of its estrogenic/anti-estrogenic activity, 3) shifts islet glucose metabolism from mitochondrial oxidation to anaerobic,4) fails to abrogate insulin release promoted without metabolic events, and 5) does not suppress hormone secretion as a result of the direct inhibition of Ca(2+) influx through voltage-dependent calcium channels.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号