Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmacology, University of Lund, S-223 62 Lund, Sweden
Abstract
An important signal involved in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion is transduced through the action of a lysosomal acid, glucan 1,4-α-glucosidase. We investigated the Ca2+ dependency of this enzyme activity in relation to insulin release. In isolated islets, increased levels of extracellular Ca2+induced a large increase in acid glucan 1,4-α-glucosidase activity accompanied by a similar increase in insulin release at both substimulatory and stimulatory concentrations of glucose. At low glucose the Ca2+ “inflow” blocker nifedipine unexpectedly stimulated enzyme activity without affecting insulin release. However, nifedipine suppressed45Ca2+outflow from perifused islets at low glucose and at Ca2+ deficiency when intracellular Ca2+ was mobilized by carbachol. This nifedepine-induced retention of Ca2+ was reflected in increased acid glucan 1,4-α-glucosidase activity. Adding different physiological Ca2+ concentrations or nifedipine to islet homogenates did not increase enzyme activity. Neither selective glucan 1,4-α-glucosidase inhibition nor the ensuing suppression of glucose-induced insulin release was overcome by a maximal Ca2+ concentration. Hence, Ca2+-induced changes in acid glucan 1,4-α-glucosidase activity were intimately coupled to similar changes in Ca2+-glucose-induced insulin release. Ca2+ did not affect the enzyme itself but presumably activated either glucan 1,4-α-glucosidase-containing organelles or closely interconnected messengers.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
11 articles.
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