A distinct difference in the metabolic stimulus-response coupling pathways for regulating proinsulin biosynthesis and insulin secretion that lies at the level of a requirement for fatty acyl moieties

被引:51
作者
Skelly, RH
Bollheimer, LC
Wicksteed, BL
Corkey, BE
Rhodes, CJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas, SW Med Ctr, Dept Internal Med, Gifford Labs Ctr Diabet Res, Dallas, TX 75235 USA
[2] Univ Texas, SW Med Ctr, Dept Pharmacol, Gifford Labs Ctr Diabet Res, Dallas, TX 75235 USA
[3] Boston Univ, Sch Med, Evans Dept Med, Diabet & Metab Unit, Boston, MA 02118 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1042/bj3310553
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The regulation of proinsulin biosynthesis in pancreatic beta-cells is vital for maintaining optimal insulin stores for glucose-induced insulin release. The majority of nutrient fuels that induce insulin release also stimulate proinsulin biosynthesis, but since insulin exocytosis and proinsulin synthesis involve different cellular mechanisms, a point of divergence in the respective metabolic stimulus-response coupling pathways must exist. A parallel examination of the metabolic regulation of proinsulin biosynthesis and insulin secretion was undertaken in the same beta-cells. In MIN6 cells, glucose-induced proinsulin biosynthesis and insulin release shared a requirement for glycolysis to generate stimulus-coupling signals. Pyruvate stimulated both proinsulin synthesis (threshold 0.13-0.2 mM) and insulin release (threshold 0.2-0.3 mM) in MIN6 cells, which was eliminated by an inhibitor of pyruvate transport (1 mM alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate). A combination of alpha-oxoisohexanoate and glutamine also stimulated proinsulin biosynthesis and insulin release in MIN6 cells, which, together with the effect of pyruvate, indicated that anaplerosis was necessary for instigating secondary metabolic stimulus-coupling signals in the beta-cell. A consequence of increased anaplerosis in beta-cells is a marked increase in malonyl-CoA, which in turn inhibits beta-oxidation and elevates cytosolic fatty acyl-CoA levels. In the beta-cell, long-chain fatty acyl moieties have been strongly implicated as metabolic stimulus-coupling signals for regulating insulin exocytosis. Indeed, it was found in MINE cells and isolated rat pancreatic islets that exogenous oleate, palmitate and 2-bromopalmitate all markedly potentiated glucose-induced insulin release. However, in the very same beta-cells, these fatty acids in contrast inhibited glucose-induced proinsulin biosynthesis. This implies that neither fatty acyl moieties nor beta-oxidation are required for the metabolic stimulus-response coupling pathway specific for proinsulin biosynthesis, and represent an early point of divergence of the two signalling pathways for metabolic regulation of proinsulin biosynthesis and insulin release. Therefore alternative metabolic stimulus-coupling factors for the specific control of proinsulin biosynthesis at the translational level were considered. One possibility examined was an increase in glycerophosphate shuttle activity and change in cytosolic redox state of the p-cell, as reflected by changes in the ratio of alpha-glycerophosphate to dihydroxyacetone phosphate. Although 16.7 mM glucose produced a significant rise in the alpha-glycerophosphate/dihydroxyacetone phosphate ratio, 1 mM pyruvate did not. It follows that the cytosolic redox state and fatty acyl moieties are not necessarily involved as secondary metabolic stimulus-coupling factors for regulation of proinsulin biosynthesis. However, the results indicate that glycolysis and the subsequent increase in anaplerosis are indeed necessary for this signalling pathway, and therefore an extramitochondrial product of beta-cell pyruvate metabolism (that is upstream of the increased cytosolic fatty acyl-CoA) acts as a key intracellular secondary signal for specific control of proinsulin biosynthesis by glucose at the level of translation.
引用
收藏
页码:553 / 561
页数:9
相关论文
共 49 条
[41]   THE COUPLING OF METABOLIC TO SECRETORY EVENTS IN PANCREATIC-ISLETS - THE CYTOSOLIC REDOX STATE [J].
SENER, A ;
MALAISSELAGAE, F ;
DUFRANE, SP ;
MALAISSE, WJ .
BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1984, 220 (02) :433-440
[42]   Glucose-regulated translational control of proinsulin biosynthesis with that of the proinsulin endopeptidases PC2 and PC3 in the insulin-producing MIN6 cell line [J].
Skelly, RH ;
Schuppin, GT ;
Ishihara, H ;
Oka, Y ;
Rhodes, CJ .
DIABETES, 1996, 45 (01) :37-43
[43]   The insulinotropic potency of fatty acids is influenced profoundly by their chain length and degree of saturation [J].
Stein, DT ;
Stevenson, BE ;
Chester, MW ;
Basit, M ;
Daniels, MB ;
Turley, SD ;
McGarry, JD .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1997, 100 (02) :398-403
[44]   Essentiality of circulating fatty acids for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in the fasted rat [J].
Stein, DT ;
Esser, V ;
Stevenson, BE ;
Lane, KE ;
Whiteside, JH ;
Daniels, MB ;
Chen, SY ;
McGarry, JD .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1996, 97 (12) :2728-2735
[45]   TRANSLATIONAL CONTROL OF INSULIN-BIOSYNTHESIS - EVIDENCE FOR REGULATION OF ELONGATION, INITIATION AND SIGNAL-RECOGNITION-PARTICLE-MEDIATED TRANSLATIONAL ARREST BY GLUCOSE [J].
WELSH, M ;
SCHERBERG, N ;
GILMORE, R ;
STEINER, DF .
BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1986, 235 (02) :459-467
[46]  
WENHAM RM, 1994, J BIOL CHEM, V269, P4947
[47]  
Williamson J R, 1979, Methods Enzymol, V55, P200
[48]   PROTEIN-KINASE-C IN INSULIN RELEASING CELLS - PUTATIVE ROLE IN STIMULUS-SECRETION COUPLING [J].
WOLLHEIM, CB ;
REGAZZI, R .
FEBS LETTERS, 1990, 268 (02) :376-380
[49]  
WOLLHEIM CB, 1996, DIABETES REV, V4, P276