Abstract

The ability of the amino acid leucine and its keto acid, alpha-ketoisocaproate, to induce insulin release, to initiate phosphoinositide hydrolysis, and to amplify the subsequent insulin secretory response to glucose was assessed. In islets whose inositol-containing lipids were prelabelled with myo[2-3H]inositol, the addition of either compound resulted in an increase in insulin output, an increase in 3H efflux, rapid and significant increases in labelled inositol phosphate accumulation and a sustained increase in 3H efflux after removal of the stimulant. Direct measurements of labelled inositol phosphate accumulation in islets previously stimulated with alpha-ketoisocaproate demonstrate that this sustained increase in 3H efflux was the result of a persistent increase in phosphoinositide hydrolysis and was not simply a consequence of the hydrolysis of preformed inositol phosphates into more membrane permeable species. Prior exposure of islets to alpha-ketoisocaproate or leucine also resulted in an amplified secretory response to a subsequent glucose (10 mmol/l) stimulus. While peak first phase insulin release averaged 66 +/- 4 (mean +/- SEM, n = 18) pg.islet-1. min-1 from control islets, this value increased to 204 +/- 14 and 246 +/- 11 pg.islet-1.min-1 in the leucine or alpha-keto-isocaproate pretreated islets respectively. The duration of this amplified response paralleled the duration of the persistent increase in 3H efflux. Prior alpha-ketoisocaproate exposure also amplified the subsequent insulin secretory response to tolbutamide and glyceraldehyde.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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