MING is one of the few pancreatic beta cell lines that respond to physiological concentrations of glucose by secreting insulin, and little is known about the triggered molecular mechanisms. We report below that the response to glucose in the MIN6 cells includes an activation of the p42 and p44 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases (ERK2 and ERK1), This activation also occurred with the antidiabetic sulfonylurea glibenclamide and kainate, a specific agonist of a subtype of the ionotropic glutamate receptors, which depolarize the cytoplasmic membrane. The requirement for a. calcium entry through the L-type voltage-gated channels and other characteristics of the regulation of the MAP kinase activity, such as the effect of the elevation of the cAMP concentration by forskolin, were similar to those: of the secretion of insulin. However, the activation of the MAP kinases is not required for the secretion of insulin, inasmuch as this effect of glucose was not abolished when the MAP kinases were prevented from activation by PD098059, an inhibitor of the MAP kinase kinase, However, as the MAP kinases were translocated into the nucleus, they might be implicated in the calcium-dependent transcriptional response of the cells to glucose and thus regulate the expression of the insulin gene.