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The KATP channel is critical for calcium sequestration into non-ER compartments in mouse pancreatic beta cells.
Authors:Martina Dufer  Dirk Haspel  Peter Krippeit-Drews  Mandy Kelm  Felicia Ranta  Roland Nitschke  Susanne Ullrich  Lydia Aguilar-Bryan  Joseph Bryan  Gisela Drews
Institution:Institute of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacology, University of Tubingen, Tubingen, Germany.
Abstract:K(ATP) channel activity influences beta cell Ca(2+) homeostasis by regulating Ca(2+) influx through L-type Ca(2+) channels. The present paper demonstrates that loss of K(ATP) channel activity due to pharmacologic or genetic ablation affects Ca(2+) storage in intracellular organelles. ATP depletion, by the mitochondrial inhibitor FCCP, led to Ca(2+) release from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of wildtype beta cells. Blockade of ER Ca(2+) ATPases by cyclopiazonic acid abolished the FCCP-induced Ca(2+) transient. In beta cells treated with K(ATP) channel inhibitors FCCP elicited a significantly larger Ca(2+) transient. Cyclopiazonic acid did not abolish this Ca(2+) transient suggesting that non-ER compartments are recruited as additional Ca(2+) stores in beta cells lacking K(ATP) channel activity. Genetic ablation of K(ATP) channels in SUR1KO mice produced identical results. In INS-1 cells transfected with a mitochondrial-targeted Ca(2+)-sensitive fluorescence dye (ratiometric pericam) the increase in mitochondrial Ca(2+) evoked by tolbutamide was 5-fold larger compared to 15 mM glucose. These data show that genetic or pharmacologic ablation of K(ATP) channel activity conveys Ca(2+) release from a non-ER store. Based on the sensitivity to FCCP and the property of tolbutamide to increase mitochondrial Ca(2+) it is suggested that mitochondria are the recruited store. The change in Ca(2+) sequestration in beta cells treated with insulinotropic antidiabetics may have implications for beta cell survival and the therapeutic use of these drugs.
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