Regulated Exocytosis of GABA-containing Synaptic-like Microvesicles in Pancreatic β-cells

Author:

Braun Matthias1,Wendt Anna1,Birnir Bryndis1,Broman Jonas1,Eliasson Lena1,Galvanovskis Juris1,Gromada Jesper2,Mulder Hindrik3,Rorsman Patrik1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiological Sciences, Lund University, BMC B11, SE-22184 Lund, Sweden

2. Lilly Research Laboratories, Lilly Forschung GmbH, D-22419 Hamburg, Germany

3. Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Lund University, BMC B11, SE-22184 Lund, Sweden

Abstract

We have explored whether γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is released by regulated exocytosis of GABA-containing synaptic-like microvesicles (SLMVs) in insulin-releasing rat pancreatic β-cells. To this end, β-cells were engineered to express GABAA-receptor Cl−-channels at high density using adenoviral infection. Electron microscopy indicated that the average diameter of the SLMVs is 90 nm, that every β-cell contains ∼3,500 such vesicles, and that insulin-containing large dense core vesicles exclude GABA. Quantal release of GABA, seen as rapidly activating and deactivating Cl−-currents, was observed during membrane depolarizations from −70 mV to voltages beyond −40 mV or when Ca2+ was dialysed into the cell interior. Depolarization-evoked GABA release was suppressed when Ca2+ entry was inhibited using Cd2+. Analysis of the kinetics of GABA release revealed that GABA-containing vesicles can be divided into a readily releasable pool and a reserve pool. Simultaneous measurements of GABA release and cell capacitance indicated that exocytosis of SLMVs contributes ∼1% of the capacitance signal. Mathematical analysis of the release events suggests that every SLMV contains 0.36 amol of GABA. We conclude that there are two parallel pathways of exocytosis in pancreatic β-cells and that release of GABA may accordingly be temporally and spatially separated from insulin secretion. This provides a basis for paracrine GABAergic signaling within the islet.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Physiology

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