Abstract

Acute stimulation of protein kinase C (PKC) inhibited glucose-induced slow oscillations in cytoplasmic free Ca 2+-concentration, [Ca 2+] i, in mouse pancreatic B-cells. In PKC-depleted cells glucose induced rapid transients in [Ca 2+] i, lasting for approximately 10 s, superimposed on the slow oscillations in [Ca 2+] i. It was demonstrated that the transients did not occur in the absence of extracellular Ca 2+. Each transient typically was preceded by a slow increase in [Ca 2+] i, representing the rising phase of an ordinary glucose-induced slow oscillation, and the [Ca 2+] i, immediately after a transient was lower than just before the spike. These data further emphasize the interplay between voltage-dependent Ca 2+-channels and the phospholipase C system in the regulation of B-cell [Ca 2+] i-oscillations.

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