Abstract

Much evidence has accumulated to support the idea that leucine can stimulate insulin release by allosterically activating glutamate dehydrogenase thus enhancing glutamate metabolism. It is less clear how the metabolism of leucine itself contributes to the signal for insulin release. We recently found that culturing pancreatic islets for 1 day at low glucose (1 mM) suppressed glucose-induced insulin release, but preserved leucine-induced insulin release. When islets were cultured at high glucose (20 mM), glucose-induced insulin release was preserved, but leucine-induced insulin release was suppressed (MacDonald, M. J., Fahien, L. A., McKenzie, D. I., and Moran, S. M. (1990) Am. J. Physiol., 259, E548-E554). The suppression of leucine-induced insulin release can be explained by glucose's suppression of the synthesis of the enzyme that catalyzes the first committed step of leucine metabolism, branched chain ketoacid dehydrogenase complex (BCKDH). High glucose suppressed the enzyme activity of the E1 component of the BCKDH complex, as well as the total activity of the BCKDH complex, to usually negligible levels in islets and decreased by an average of 90% the mRNA which encodes E1 alpha, the catalytic subunit of the E1 component of BCKDH, in islets and rat insulinoma cells. Time course studies showed that about 24 h in culture was required to maximally induce or suppress the expression of BCKDH E1 alpha. Culture at high glutamine with or without leucine mimicked to a lesser and more variable degree the effects of high glucose on leucine-induced insulin release and BCKDH E1 alpha mRNA. Leucine-plus-glutamine-induced insulin release was present after culture of islets with glucose and with or without any other secretagogue. Also, glutamate dehydrogenase transcripts and enzyme activity were not significantly altered by varying the concentration of glucose in the culture medium. Thus, leucine's insulinotropism via activation of glutamate dehydrogenase is constitutive. Preproinsulin mRNA levels were markedly increased at high glucose and glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase transcripts were either unaffected or slightly increased by glucose. Glutamine did not significantly effect the expression of genes other than BCKDH E1 alpha, and leucine had little or no effect on the expression of any of the four genes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

Highlights

  • Glucose Regulates Leucine-induced InsulinRelease and the Expression of the Branched Chain Ketoacid DehydrogenasEe l a Subunit Genein Pancreatic Islets*

  • Islets cultured in the presence of glutamine (10 mM) with or without leucine (10 mM) exhibit decreased leucineinduced insulin release and acomplete lack of glucose-induced insulin release

  • Leucine did not affect the level of BCKDH Ela mRNA (Table 11), but islets cultured with 1 mM glucose and 10 mM glutamine in the presence or absence of leucine contained about one-half the amount of BCKDH

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Summary

PRregtrualnastiloantional by Glucose

Due to the small amount of tissue obtainable, confidence guanidine isothiocyanate followed by centrifugation through cesium inmeasurements of metabolite flux oractivities of some enzymes in pancreatic islets is diminished by not knowing if a n observed putative activity is due to the pathway or enzyme of interest To circumvent such problems and to complement existing information on leucine-induced insulin chloride (211,by extraction with RNAzol B [22], or by the cytodot method[23].Probes used were humanglutamate dehydrogenase (cDNA clone pGB2862 [24, 25]) from Carl Banner (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD), rat preproinsulin I (cDNA pG247L, from Arge Efstratiadis, Columbia University, New York), rat glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase fromRay Wu(Cornel1University, release, we studied the expression of two genes of enzymes Ithaca, NY), and ratliver E l a subunit of BCKDH [13] from Robert that might influence leucine's insulinotropism in islets. Matedwithslotblots of eithertotal cellular RNAextractedin dCTP (3000 Ci/mmol) and[l-14C]a-ketoisocaproic acid were from

PRretgrualnastliaotnional by Glucose
RESULTS
BCK INS GGPDDH
Pretranslational Regulation by Glucose
Relative amounts of mRNA encoding a protein
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