Abstract

Limited access to human islets has prompted the development of human beta cell models. The human beta cell lines EndoC-βH1 and EndoC-βH2 are increasingly used by the research community. However, little is known of their electrophysiological and secretory properties. Here, we monitored parameters that constitute the glucose-triggering pathway of insulin release. Both cell lines respond to glucose (6 and 20 mM) with 2- to 3-fold stimulation of insulin secretion which correlated with an elevation of [Ca2+]i, membrane depolarisation and increased action potential firing. Similar to human primary beta cells, KATP channel activity is low at 1 mM glucose and is further reduced upon increasing glucose concentration; an effect that was mimicked by the KATP channel blocker tolbutamide. The upstroke of the action potentials reflects the activation of Ca2+ channels with some small contribution of TTX-sensitive Na+ channels. The repolarisation involves activation of voltage-gated Kv2.2 channels and large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels. Exocytosis presented a similar kinetics to human primary beta cells. The ultrastructure of these cells shows insulin vesicles composed of an electron-dense core surrounded by a thin clear halo. We conclude that the EndoC-βH1 and -βH2 cells share many features of primary human β-cells and thus represent a useful experimental model.

Highlights

  • Limited access to human islets has prompted the development of human beta cell models

  • Similar to human primary beta cells, KATP channel activity is low at 1 mM glucose and is further reduced upon increasing glucose concentration; an effect that was mimicked by the KATP channel blocker tolbutamide

  • Whereas elevating glucose to 20 mmol/L had no additive effect in EndoC-βH1 (p = 0.003), it resulted in a further 50% stimulation in EndoC-βH2 cells (p = 0.006)

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Summary

Introduction

Limited access to human islets has prompted the development of human beta cell models. We monitored parameters that constitute the glucose-triggering pathway of insulin release Both cell lines respond to glucose (6 and 20 mM) with 2- to 3-fold stimulation of insulin secretion which correlated with an elevation of [Ca2+]i, membrane depolarisation and increased action potential firing. The EndoC-βH1 and -βH2 cells were generated from human foetal pancreatic buds and express numerous beta-cell markers These human beta-cell lines respond to elevated glucose with stimulation of insulin secretion[7,8] and are increasingly used to explore various aspects of human beta-cell biology[9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]. Our data show consistency between the EndoC-βH1 and -βH2 cells and primary human beta-cells, supporting their use as a valuable model system

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