Abstract

Dopamine signaling is mediated by five cloned receptors, grouped into D1-like (D1 and D5) and D2-like (D2, D3 and D4) families. We identified by reverse transcription-PCR the presence of dopamine receptors from both families in INS-1E insulin-secreting cells as well as in rodent and human isolated islets. D2 receptor expression was confirmed by immunodetection revealing localization on insulin secretory granules of INS-1E and primary rodent and human beta cells. We then tested potential effects mediated by the identified receptors on beta cell function. Dopamine (10 microM) and the D2-like receptor agonist quinpirole (5 microM) inhibited glucose-stimulated insulin secretion tested in several models, i.e. INS-1E beta cells, fluorescence-activated cell-sorted primary rat beta cells, and pancreatic islets of rat, mouse, and human origin. Insulin exocytosis is controlled by metabolism coupled to cytosolic calcium changes. Measurements of glucose-induced mitochondrial hyperpolarization and ATP generation showed that dopamine and D2-like agonists did not inhibit glucose metabolism. On the other hand, dopamine decreased cell membrane depolarization as well as cytosolic calcium increases evoked by glucose stimulation in INS-1E beta cells. These results show for the first time that dopamine receptors are expressed in pancreatic beta cells. Dopamine inhibited glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, an effect that could be ascribed to D2-like receptors. Regarding the molecular mechanisms implicated in dopamine-mediated inhibition of insulin release, our results point to distal steps in metabolism-secretion coupling. Thus, the role played by dopamine in glucose homeostasis might involve dopamine receptors, expressed in pancreatic beta cells, modulating insulin release.

Highlights

  • This study provides the basis of molecular mechanisms mediating dopamine inhibition of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in pancreatic beta cells

  • Dopamine receptors were present in INS-1E beta cells as well as rat, mouse, and human islets

  • Dopamine inhibited glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, an effect reproduced by activation of D2-like receptors using the dopamine 2/3 receptor agonist quinpirole

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Summary

Introduction

Mitochondrial metabolism generates ATP, which promotes the closure of ATP-sensitive potassium channels and, as a consequence, depolarization of the plasma membrane (6). This leads to calcium influx through voltage-gated calcium channels and a rise in cytosolic calcium, triggering insulin exocytosis (6, 7). A single injection with L-dopa results in the accumulation of dopamine in beta cells and inhibition of the insulin secretory responses (11, 12). Analogues of dopamine inhibit glucose-stimulated insulin release (13), whereas one study reports potentiation of insulin secretion upon acute dopamine accumulation (14). These previous studies suggest that beta cells might be directly responsive to dopamine. The inhibitory effects of dopamine are predominantly ascribed to activation of the D2-like receptor family members

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