Abstract

The mechanisms by which glucose may affect protein kinase C (PKC) activity in the pancreatic islet beta-cell are presently unclear. By developing adenovirally expressed chimeras encoding fusion proteins between green fluorescent protein and conventional (betaII), novel (delta), or atypical (zeta) PKCs, we show that glucose selectively alters the subcellular localization of these enzymes dynamically in primary islet and MIN6 beta-cells. Examined by laser scanning confocal or total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, elevated glucose concentrations induced oscillatory translocations of PKCbetaII to spatially confined regions of the plasma membrane. Suggesting that increases in free cytosolic Ca(2+) concentrations ([Ca(2+)](c)) were primarily responsible, prevention of [Ca(2+)](c) increases with EGTA or diazoxide completely eliminated membrane recruitment, whereas elevation of cytosolic [Ca(2+)](c) with KCl or tolbutamide was highly effective in redistributing PKCbetaII both to the plasma membrane and to the surface of dense core secretory vesicles. By contrast, the distribution of PKCdelta.EGFP, which binds diacylglycerol but not Ca(2+), was unaffected by glucose. Measurement of [Ca(2+)](c) immediately beneath the plasma membrane with a ratiometric "pericam," fused to synaptic vesicle-associated protein-25, revealed that depolarization induced significantly larger increases in [Ca(2+)](c) in this domain. These data demonstrate that nutrient stimulation of beta-cells causes spatially and temporally complex changes in the subcellular localization of PKCbetaII, possibly resulting from the generation of Ca(2+) microdomains. Localized changes in PKCbetaII activity may thus have a role in the spatial control of insulin exocytosis.

Highlights

  • Biochemical studies of the activation of protein kinase C (PKC) are complicated by the need for cell disruption and isolation of membrane and cytosol fractions [2] or for cell fixation and immunocytochemistry [2,3,4]

  • PKC␨1⁄7EGFP displayed any detectable change in subcellular distribution in primary ␤-cells in response to the above stimuli, while phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) caused translocation of PKC␦ from the cytosol to the nuclear periphery

  • Dynamics of PKC␤II1⁄7EGFP Translocation—We show here, for the first time in single living ␤-cells, that elevated glucose concentrations cause complex and dynamic changes in the localization of a conventional PKC isoform PKC␤II

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Summary

Introduction

Biochemical studies of the activation of PKC are complicated by the need for cell disruption and isolation of membrane and cytosol fractions [2] or for cell fixation and immunocytochemistry [2,3,4]. Using confocal and total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF)/evanescent wave (30 –34) imaging, we show that elevated glucose concentrations cause complex, oscillatory translocations to the plasma and other membranes of PKC␤II in primary ␤-cells and clonal MIN6 cells.

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