Ca 2+ is central to the stimulation of insulin secretion from pancreatic β-cells. Arginine-vasopressin (AVP) may participate in the modulation of insulin release. In the present study, the AVP-induced changes in cytosolic free Ca 2+ ([Ca 2+] i) were investigated in single fura-2 loaded insulin-secreting HIT cells. Stimulation with AVP (0.1–5 nM) caused repetitive Ca 2+ transients. The frequency but not the amplitude of the Ca 2+ transients was modulated by the concentration of AVP. High concentrations of AVP (10–100 nM) triggered a biphasic rise in [Ca 2+] i. In Ca 2+-free medium AVP caused only one or two Ca 2+ transients. Withdrawal of extracellular Ca 2+ rapidly abolished the AVP-induced Ca 2+ transients in all cells tested. The Ca 2+ channel blocker, verapamil (50 μM), reduced amplitude and frequency of the Ca 2+ transients by about 25% and 60%, respectively, and terminated the Ca 2+ transients in 2 of 6 cells. When HIT cells were incubated in Ca 2+-free medium, and extracellular Ca 2+ was restored, there was a small increase in [Ca 2+] i. If, however, the agonist-sensitive Ca 2+ pool was functionally depleted by repetitive stimulation with high concentrations of AVP or thapsigargin in Ca 2+-free medium before extracellular Ca 2+ was restored, an agonist-independent increase in [Ca 2+] i was observed, which was transiently larger than in the control cells, and was mainly preserved in the presence of verapamil. Thus, depletion of the agonistsensitive Ca 2+ pool enhances the influx of extracellular Ca 2+ through a Ca 2+ entry mechanism independent from verapamil-sensitive voltage-dependent Ca 2+ channels (VDCC). In conclusion, the AVP-induced Ca 2+ response in single HIT cells is periodic in nature with frequency-modulated repetitive Ca 2+ transients. AVP mobilizes Ca 2+ from intracellular pools, but influx of extracellular Ca 2+ partly through verapamil-sensitive VDCC, and partly through an additional, VDCC-independent pathway, which could be controlled by the filling state of the agonist-sensitive Ca 2+ pool, is required for maintaining the repetitive nature of the Ca 2+ response.
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