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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI118219

Possible links between glucose-induced changes in the energy state of pancreatic B cells and insulin release. Unmasking by decreasing a stable pool of adenine nucleotides in mouse islets.

P Detimary, J C Jonas, and J C Henquin

Unité d'Endocrinologie et Métabolisme, University of Louvain Faculty of Medicine, UCL 55.30, Brussels, Belgium.

Find articles by Detimary, P. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

Unité d'Endocrinologie et Métabolisme, University of Louvain Faculty of Medicine, UCL 55.30, Brussels, Belgium.

Find articles by Jonas, J. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

Unité d'Endocrinologie et Métabolisme, University of Louvain Faculty of Medicine, UCL 55.30, Brussels, Belgium.

Find articles by Henquin, J. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

Published October 1, 1995 - More info

Published in Volume 96, Issue 4 on October 1, 1995
J Clin Invest. 1995;96(4):1738–1745. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI118219.
© 1995 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published October 1, 1995 - Version history
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Abstract

Whether adenine nucleotides in pancreatic B cells serve as second messengers during glucose stimulation of insulin secretion remains disputed. Our hypothesis was that the actual changes in ATP and ADP are obscured by the large pool of adenine nucleotides (ATP/ADP ratio close to 1) in insulin granules. Therefore, mouse islets were degranulated acutely with a cocktail of glucose, KCl, forskolin, and phorbol ester or during overnight culture in RPMI-1640 medium containing 10 mM glucose. When these islets were then incubated in 0 glucose + azide (to minimize cytoplasmic and mitochondrial adenine nucleotides), their content in ATP + ADP + AMP was decreased in proportion to the decrease in insulin stores. After incubation in 10 mM glucose (no azide), the ATP/ADP ratio increased from 2.4 to > 8 in cultured islets, and only from 2 to < 4 in fresh islets. These differences were not explained by changes in glucose oxidation. The glucose dependency (0-30 mM) of the changes in insulin secretion and in the ATP/ADP ratio were then compared in the same islets. In nondegranulated, fresh islets, the ATP/ADP ratio increased between 0 and 10 mM glucose and then stabilized although insulin release kept increasing. In degranulated islets, the ATP/ADP ratio also increased between 0 and 10 mM glucose, but a further increase still occurred between 10 and 20 mM glucose, in parallel with the stimulation of insulin release. In conclusion, decreasing the granular pool of ATP and ADP unmasks large changes in the ATP/ADP ratio and a glucose dependency which persists within the range of stimulatory concentrations. The ATP/ADP ratio might thus serve as a coupling factor between glucose metabolism and insulin release.

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