Abstract

Hyperinsulinemia (HI) is elevated plasma insulin at basal glucose. Impaired glucose tolerance is associated with HI, although the exact cause and effect relationship remains poorly defined. We tested the hypothesis that HI can result from an intrinsic response of the β-cell to chronic exposure to excess nutrients, involving a shift in the concentration dependence of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. INS-1 (832/13) cells were cultured in either a physiological (4 mm) or high (11 mm) glucose concentration with or without concomitant exposure to oleate. Isolated rat islets were also cultured with or without oleate. A clear hypersensitivity to submaximal glucose concentrations was evident in INS-1 cells cultured in excess nutrients such that the 25% of maximal (S0.25) glucose-stimulated insulin secretion was significantly reduced in cells cultured in 11 mm glucose (S0.25 = 3.5 mm) and 4 mm glucose with oleate (S0.25 = 4.5 mm) compared with 4 mm glucose alone (S0.25 = 5.7 mm). The magnitude of the left shift was linearly correlated with intracellular lipid stores in INS-1 cells (r(2) = 0.97). We observed no significant differences in the dose responses for glucose stimulation of respiration, NAD(P)H autofluorescence, or Ca(2+) responses between left- and right-shifted β-cells. However, a left shift in the sensitivity of exocytosis to Ca(2+) was documented in permeabilized INS-1 cells cultured in 11 versus 4 mm glucose (S0.25 = 1.1 and 1.7 μm, respectively). Our results suggest that the sensitivity of exocytosis to triggering is modulated by a lipid component, the levels of which are influenced by the culture nutrient environment.

Highlights

  • Fasting insulin secretion is increased in obesity and type 2 diabetes

  • A clear hypersensitivity to submaximal glucose concentrations was evident in INS-1 cells cultured in excess nutrients such that the 25% of maximal (S0.25) glucose-stimulated insulin secretion was significantly reduced in cells cultured in 11 mM glucose (S0.25 ‫؍‬ 3.5 mM) and 4 mM glucose with oleate (S0.25 ‫ ؍‬4.5 mM) compared with 4 mM glucose alone (S0.25 ‫ ؍‬5.7 mM)

  • Culture of Pancreatic Islets in Excess Lipid Altered Both Insulin Content and Secretion—Fig. 1A shows that a 48-h incubation of isolated rat islets in standard culture medium (11 mM glucose) with 0.2 mM oleate reduced the total insulin content by ϳ80%

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Summary

Background

Results: Culture of ␤-cells in excess nutrients resulted in increased lipid stores and a left-shifted dose-response curve of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion due to an enhanced sensitivity of exocytosis to Ca2ϩ. Obesity is associated with a marked elevation in insulin secretion under both fasting and nutrient-stimulated conditions even though glucose tolerance may be normal [1] This phenomenon manifests as hyperinsulinemia (HI) and has been. We found that culture in excess nutrients reduces insulin content, increases lipid stores, and left-shifts the concentration dependence of GSIS. This shift appears to be due to a difference in the sensitivity of exocytosis to the triggering Ca2ϩ signal

Experimental Procedures
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