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Hypertonicity during a rapid rise in D-glucose mediates first-phase insulin secretion. | LitMetric

Hypertonicity during a rapid rise in D-glucose mediates first-phase insulin secretion.

Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)

University of Washington Medicine Diabetes Institute, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how first-phase insulin secretion (ISR) in the pancreas is influenced by both glucose metabolism and osmotic effects, particularly in relation to hypertonicity.
  • Significant experiments were conducted with rat, mouse, and human islets to analyze ISR while manipulating glucose and other carbohydrates to evaluate tonicity's role.
  • Findings indicate that the first-phase ISR is primarily driven by changes in tonicity rather than glucose concentration alone, suggesting a novel understanding of glucose-stimulated ISR mechanisms that may have implications for treating Type 2 diabetes.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Biphasic insulin secretion is an intrinsic characteristic of the pancreatic islet and has clinical relevance due to the loss of first-phase in patients with Type 2 diabetes. As it has long been shown that first-phase insulin secretion only occurs in response to rapid changes in glucose, we tested the hypothesis that islet response to an increase in glucose is a combination of metabolism plus an osmotic effect where hypertonicity is driving first-phase insulin secretion.

Methods: Experiments were performed using perifusion analysis of rat, mouse, and human islets. Insulin secretion rate (ISR) and other parameters associated with its regulation were measured in response to combinations of D-glucose and membrane-impermeable carbohydrates (L-glucose or mannitol) designed to dissect the effect of hypertonicity from that of glucose metabolism.

Results: Remarkably, the appearance of first-phase responses was wholly dependent on changes in tonicity: no first-phase in NAD(P)H, cytosolic calcium, cAMP secretion rate (cAMP SR), or ISR was observed when increased D-glucose concentration was counterbalanced by decreases in membrane-impermeable carbohydrates. When D-glucose was greater than 8 mM, rapid increases in L-glucose without any change in D-glucose resulted in first-phase responses in all measured parameters that were kinetically similar to D-glucose. First-phase ISR was completely abolished by H89 (a non-specific inhibitor of protein kinases) without affecting first-phase calcium response. Defining first-phase ISR as the difference between glucose-stimulated ISR with and without a change in hypertonicity, the peak of first-phase ISR occurred after second-phase ISR had reached steady state, consistent with the well-established glucose-dependency of mechanisms that potentiate glucose-stimulated ISR.

Discussion: The data collected in this study suggests a new model of glucose-stimulated biphasic ISR where first-phase ISR derives from (and after) a transitory amplification of second-phase ISR and driven by hypertonicity-induced rise in H89-inhibitable kinases likely driven by first-phase responses in cAMP, calcium, or a combination of both.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11233695PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2024.1395028DOI Listing

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