Affiliation:
1. From the Pacific Northwest Diabetes Research Institute and the Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Nutrition, Department of Medicine and Department of Pharmacology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
The intraislet insulin hypothesis proposes that glucagon secretion during hypoglycemia is triggered by a decrease in intraislet insulin secretion. A more recent hypothesis based on in vivo data from hypoglycemic rats is that it is the decrease in zinc cosecreted with insulin from β-cells, rather than the decrease in insulin itself, that signals glucagon secretion from α-cells during hypoglycemia. These studies were designed to determine whether closure of the α-cell ATP-sensitive K+ channel (KATP channel) is the mechanism through which the zinc switch-off signal triggers glucagon secretion during glucose deprivation.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
All studies were performed using perifused isolated islets.
RESULTS
In control experiments, the expected glucagon response to an endogenous insulin switch-off signal during glucose deprivation was observed in wild-type mouse islets. In experiments with streptozotocin-treated wild-type islets, a glucagon response to an exogenous zinc switch-off signal was observed during glucose deprivation. However, this glucagon response to the zinc switch-off signal during glucose deprivation was not seen in the presence of nifedipine, diazoxide, or tolbutamide or if KATP channel knockout mouse islets were used. All islets had intact glucagon responses to epinephrine.
CONCLUSIONS
These data demonstrate that closure of KATP channels and consequent opening of calcium channels is the mechanism through which the zinc switch-off signal triggers glucagon secretion during glucose deprivation.
Publisher
American Diabetes Association
Subject
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine
Cited by
49 articles.
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