Abstract

CCK-8 stimulates insulin secretion by an effect involving phosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis and release of Ca 2+ from intracellular stores. In this study, we examined the dependence of Na + for the effects of CCK-8. CCK-8 (100 nM) stimulated insulin secretion from isolated rat islets. A first phase, which lasted 10 min, was not affected by removal of external Na +, whereas a second phase was abolished. CCK-8-stimulated 45Ca 2+ and 3H efflux in 45Ca 2+- and myo-[2- 3H]-inositol-prelabelled islets were not affected by removal of external Na +. In a second series of experiments, pancreatic rat islet cells were loaded with the Ca 2+ fluorophore FURA 2-AM. CCK-8 (100 nM) induced a rapid and transient increase in the cytoplasmic free Ca 2+ concentration ([Ca 2+] IC), followed by a subsequent reduction of [Ca 2+] IC below the prestimulatory levels. The CCK-8-induced increase in [Ca 2+] IC was not dependent on extracellular Na +, whereas the decline in [Ca 2+] IC after the initial peak was slower in the absence than in the presence of Na +. Thus, the present study shows that both the second phase of CCK-8-stimulated insulin secretion and the CCK-8-stimulated postpeak reduction in [Ca 2+] IC are dependent on extracellular Na +.

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