Abstract
The release and oxidation of 5-hydroxytryptamine from 5-hydroxytryptamine-preloaded beta-cells has been used as a surrogate marker for insulin secretion. Findings made using this methodology have been used to support the concept that insulin stimulates its own release. In the present studies, the effects of 5-hydroxytryptamine on stimulated insulin secretion from isolated perifused rat islets was determined. When added together with stimulatory glucose, 5-hydroxytryptamine (0.5 mm) significantly reduced both phases of 8 mm glucose-induced secretion and reduced the first phase of 15 mm glucose-induced release by 60% without any effect on sustained insulin release rates. Preloading of beta-cells with 0.5 mm 5-hydroxytryptamine for 3 h resulted in a more severe impairment of 15 mm glucose-induced secretion. First and second phase release rates were reduced by 70 and 55%, respectively. In addition, this pretreatment protocol also abolished 200 microm tolbutamide-induced insulin secretion from perifused islets. These findings confirm that 5-hydroxytryptamine is a powerful inhibitor of stimulated insulin secretion. The responses of 5-hydroxytryptamine-preloaded beta-cells may not accurately reflect the biochemical events occurring during the physiologic regulation of insulin secretion. The suggestion that insulin stimulates its own secretion based exclusively on amperometric measurements should be reconsidered.
Highlights
Impairment in phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling in -cells might be responsible for the hyperinsulinemia noted in a variety of insulin-resistant states including obesity and type 2 diabetes
Peak first phase release noted during the initial minutes of 8 mM glucose stimulation was impaired by the inclusion of 0.5 mM 5HT
They averaged 89 Ϯ 7 pg/islet/min from control islets and 62 Ϯ 6 pg/islet/min from islets stimulated with the combination of 8 mM glucose plus 5HT
Summary
Impairment in PI3K signaling in -cells might be responsible for the hyperinsulinemia noted in a variety of insulin-resistant states including obesity and type 2 diabetes. The effects of 5-hydroxytryptamine on stimulated insulin secretion from isolated perifused rat islets was determined. In agreement with several previous studies [29, 30], we observed that 5HT exerts profound acute and long lasting inhibitory effects on glucose-induced insulin secretion from perifused rat islets.
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