Glucose Sensitivity of ATP-Sensitive K+ Channels Is Impaired in β-Cells of the GK Rat: A New Genetic Model of NIDDM

Author:

Tsuura Yoshiyuki1,Ishida Hitoshi1,Okamoto Yoshimasa1,Kato Seika1,Sakamoto Kimihiko1,Horie Minoru1,Ikeda Hitoshi1,Okada Yasunobu1,Seino Yutaka1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Metabolism and Clinical Nutrition and the Third Department of Internal Medicine, Kyoto University Faculty of Medicine Kyoto Pharmaceutical Research Laboratories-ll, Takeda Chemical Industry Osaka Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences Okazaki, Japan

Abstract

In the Goto-Kakizaki rat, a new genetic model of NIDDM, insulin response to glucose is selectively impaired. To elucidate the mechanism of this abnormality, we studied the properties of ATP-sensitive K+ channels, the inhibition of which is a key step of insulin secretion induced by fuel substrates, using the patch-clamp technique. The glucose-sensitivity of KATP channels was considerably reduced in GK rats. However, the inhibitory effects of ATP on channel activity and unitary conductance were not significantly different between control and GK rats. Thus, it appears that the impaired insulinotropic action of glucose in β-cells of GK rats is attributable to insufficient closure of the KATP channels, probably because of deficient ATP production by impaired glucose metabolism. KATP-channel activities in both control and diabetic β-cells were found to be equally suppressed by glyceraldehyde and 2-ketoisocaproate. These results strongly suggest that the step responsible for the metabolic dysfunction of diabetic β-cells is located within the glycolytic pathway before glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate or in the glycerol phosphate shuttle.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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