Endocrinology Vol. 141, No. 11 4065-4071
Copyright © 2000 by The Endocrine Society
Energetic Requirement of Carbachol-Induced Ca2+ Signaling in Single Mouse ß-Cells1
Christof Schöfl,
Julia Börger,
Stefanie Lange,
Alexander von zur Mühlen and
Georg Brabant
Abteilung Klinische Endokrinologie, Medizinische Hochschule
Hannover, 30623 Hannover, Germany
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Dr. Christof Schöfl, Abteilung Klinische Endokrinologie, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, 30623 Hannover, Germany. E-mail:
schoefl.christof{at}mh-hannover.de
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Abstract
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Insulin secretion is under multifactorial control by glucose and
neurohumoral factors like acetylcholine (ACH), which activate the
Ca2+/phospholipase C signaling pathway. All insulin
secretagogues elevate cytosolic free Ca2+
([Ca2+]i) that is central to the stimulation
of insulin secretion. The actions of ACH on
[Ca2+]i are glucose dependent but the
metabolic steps involved are only partly understood. Here we have
characterized the metabolic steps by which glucose exerts its
synergistic effects on ACH-linked Ca2+-signals.
[Ca2+]i was measured in single fura-2 loaded
ß-cells. The ACH analog carbachol (3 µM) caused rise in
[Ca2+]i that was strongly dependent on the
extracellular glucose concentration ranging from 010 mM.
Iodoacetate, which blocks glycolysis, thereby preventing the generation
of NADH and ATP from glucose metabolism, and rotenone or antimycin,
which inhibit complex 1 and 2 of the mitochondrial respiratory chain,
respectively, inhibited in glucose (6 mM) the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal to a similar extent as
glucose deprivation. This demonstrates that glucose metabolism and
generation of ATP through oxidative phosphorylation of energy rich
substrates like NADH and FADH2 are required for
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signals. While sodium arsenate,
which prevents net glycolytic production of ATP without inhibiting
glycolysis, had no significant effect on the carbachol-induced
Ca2+-signal, the mitochondrial pyruvate transport inhibitor
-cyano-4- hydroxycinnamate and the Krebs cycle inhibitor
monofluoroacetate strongly suppressed the rise in
[Ca2+]i elicited by carbachol. While pyruvate
was ineffective, methyl pyruvate, a membrane-permeant pyruvate analog,
and
-ketoisocaproate in combination with glutamine, which are both
substrates for mitochondrial ATP production, could restore the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal in glucose-free medium. These
data demonstrate for the first time that Krebs cycle metabolism of
glucose and ATP formation through oxidative phosphorylation is critical
for the glucose dependency of ACH-linked Ca2+-signals in
mouse ß-cells, and they suggest that mitochondrial metabolism plays a
key role in the interactive regulation of ß-cells by neurohumoral
factors activating the Ca2+/phospholipase C signaling
pathway.
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Introduction
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THE CONTROL of insulin secretion is a
multifactorial and highly interconnected process involving nutrients
like glucose and neurohumoral factors like acetylcholine (ACH)
(1, 2, 3). The extracellular glucose concentration plays a
significant role in determining insulin release and in various ß-cell
functions (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). Glucose-dependent regulation of ß-cell
functions is largely determined by glucose metabolism yielding ATP
(1, 4, 5). Glucose-derived ATP is produced by cytosolic
glycolysis and by mitochondrial metabolism of glycolytic products.
Energetic products arising from the glycolytic flux are ATP, NADH, and
pyruvate. NADH and pyruvate are subsequently shifted from the cytosol
into the mitochondria and processed into ATP via the Krebs cycle and
oxidative phosphorylation. A rise in the cytosolic ratio of ATP to ADP
blocks ATP-sensitive K+ channels
(KATP channels), thereby causing membrane
depolarization, activation of voltage-sensitive
Ca2+ influx and a rise in the cytosolic free
Ca2+ concentration
([Ca2+]i), that triggers
insulin secretion (1, 2, 4, 5). In addition, glucose
further promotes insulin secretion by a KATP
channel-independent pathway i.e. by enhancing the
stimulatory effect of Ca2+ on the secretory
process involving ATP and the mitochondrial messenger glutamate as has
been shown recently (2, 6, 7, 8). There is evidence that
distinct metabolic requirements may exist for specific ATP-dependent
processes, such as control of KATP channels and
exocytosis (9, 10, 11). ACH, that activates the
Ca2+/phospholipase C (PLC) signaling pathway,
causes a rise in [Ca2+]i
and potentiates glucose-induced insulin release (3, 12).
The generation of Ca2+ signals by ACH requires
inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (Ip3)-linked
mobilization of Ca2+ from intracellular stores
and Ca2+ influx from the outside
(12). The actions of ACH on
[Ca2+]i and on insulin
secretion are strictly glucose-dependent demonstrating the
interconnected regulation of ß-cell functions and the principle role
of glucose therein (3, 12, 13). A rise in
[Ca2+]i plays a key role
in ACH-induced signal transduction processes leading to the exocytosis
of insulin. Little, however, is known about the critical ATP-producing
metabolic steps underlying the generation of glucose-dependent
ACH-induced Ca2+-signals in ß-cells. As
distinct energetic demands may exist for specific glucose-dependent
signaling processes in ß-cells, we characterized the metabolic steps
by which glucose exerts its synergistic effects on ACH-linked
Ca2+-signals in ß-cells. This is important for
our understanding of the integrative regulation of ß-cell functions
by metabolic and neurohumoral signals such as ACH.
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Materials and Methods
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Preparation of mouse islet ß-cells
NMRI mice were housed in a temperature-controlled room with a
12-h light, 12-h dark cycle and with ad libitum access to
standard chow and water. Islets of Langerhans were isolated from female
NMRI mice aged 812 weeks by collagenase digestion. To obtain
dispersed cells, islets were incubated for 10 min in
Ca2+-free medium (135 mM
NaCl, 5.6 mM KCl, 1.2 mM
MgCl2, 3 mM glucose, 10
mM NaHEPES, 100 U of penicillin/ml, and 100 µg
streptomycin/ml, 1% BSA (wt/vol) aerated with 100%
O2 (vol/vol), pH 7.4) with careful pipetting
through a siliconized glass pipette until the islets disappeared. Islet
cells were washed, resuspended in RPMI-1640 medium containing 11
mM glucose supplemented with 10% FCS (vol/vol),
100 U of penicillin/ml, and 100 µg streptomycin/ml, allowed to attach
to glass coverslips, and maintained in culture for up to 2 days at 37 C
in 5% CO2 and 95% air (vol/vol)
(14).
Measurement of [Ca2+]i
Primary islet cells subcultured on coverslips were loaded
with 5 µM fura-2/AM for 30 min at 37 C in medium
containing 130 mM NaCl, 4.7 mM KCl, 1.2
mM KH2PO4, 1.2
mM MgSO4, 1.5 mM
CaCl2, 6 mM glucose, 20
mM HEPES, 2% BSA (wt/vol), and 0.1% Pluronic F-127
(wt/vol), aerated with 100% O2 (vol/vol), pH
7.4. After loading, the coverslips were washed, mounted in a
temperature-controlled superfusion chamber (37 C), and placed on the
platform of a Carl Zeiss Axiovert IM 135 equipped with a
40x Achrostigmat oil immersion objective (Carl Zeiss,
Jena, Germany). The chamber was superfused with the same buffer as
above with glucose concentrations as indicated, 0.1% BSA (wt/vol) and
without 0.1% Pluronic F-127 (wt/vol) at a flow rate of 0.75 ml/min.
Ca2+ measurements were taken on cells of average
size and healthy appearance (round in shape, no membrane blebs). To
identify primary ß-cells, islet cells were briefly perfused with
medium containing 0.5 mM glucose and subsequently treated
with 6 mM glucose. Only cells that exhibited a typical
glucose-induced decrease in
[Ca2+]i were considered
to be ß-cells and chosen for the Ca2+
experiments. Fura-2 fluorescence from a single cell was recorded with a
dual excitation spectrofluorometer system (Deltascan 4000, Photon
Technology Instruments, Wedel, Germany).
[Ca2+]i was calculated
according to the formula
[Ca2+]i =
Kd x B x (R -
Rmin)/(Rmax - R), where
Kd = 225 nM (15),
Rmax, Rmin and B are
constants that were determined in the superfusion chamber from
solutions containing fura-2 free acid (1 µM) and various
concentrations of free Ca2+ (data not shown). All
records have been corrected for autofluorescence of unloaded cells at
each wavelength before the ratio was used.
Materials
Fura-2/AM and Pluronic F-127 were purchased from Molecular Probes, Inc. (Eugene, OR), RPMI-1640, penicillin and
streptomycin were from Life Technologies, Inc. (Berlin,
Germany), collagenase from Roche Molecular Biochemicals
(Mannheim, Germany), carbachol, and the other substances were from
Sigma (Munich, Germany). Stock solutions were prepared in
water or as follows: Rotenone (100 mM) in acetone.
Statistics
Unless representative tracings are shown, values are means
± SEM. Statistical analysis was performed using the
Students t test for paired or unpaired data when two
samples were compared. Multiple comparisons were assessed by ANOVA
followed by the Students-Newman-Keuls test. P < 0.05
was considered as significantly different.
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Results
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The carbachol-induced Ca2+-signal is glucose
dependent
In mouse ß-cells
[Ca2+]i was 93 ± 2
nM (n = 32) in the presence of glucose (6
mM). The ACH-analog carbachol (3 µM), which
stimulates muscarinic receptors coupled to the
Ca2+/PLC signaling pathway, elicited a rise in
[Ca2+]i with an initial
peak followed in the majority of cells by a sustained plateau (see
Figs. 1
, 2
, 3
, and 5
). In the presence of glucose (6
mM) carbachol (3 µM) increased
[Ca2+]i by 284 ± 25
nM and 47 ± 6 nM at its peak or plateau
(measured after 5 min), respectively (n = 67). Carbachol (3
µM) stimulation of ß-cells, which had been kept for
1 h in different glucose concentrations ranging from 0
mM to 10 mM, elicited a cytosolic
Ca2+-signal, which showed a clear dependency on
the extracellular glucose concentration (Fig. 1
). In the absence of
glucose, [Ca2+]i was
125 ± 10 nM and the carbachol (3
µM)-induced rise in
[Ca2+]i was largely
diminished and amounted to 33 ± 10 nM and 10 ±
5 nM at its peak or plateau, respectively (n = 10).
Deoxy-glucose (10 mM), which is a nonmetabolizable analog
of glucose, reduced the carbachol (3 µM)-induced
Ca2+ signal to a similar extent as glucose-free
medium (not shown). After 30 min pretreatment with deoxy-glucose (6
mM), the carbachol (3 µM)-induced increase in
[Ca2+]i was 14 ± 8
nM and 4 ± 2 nM at its peak or plateau,
respectively (n = 6). This indicates that metabolic signals, most
likely ATP, derived from glucose metabolism underlie the glucose
dependency of the Ca2+-signal stimulated by
carbachol (3 µM).

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Figure 1. Glucose dependency of the carbachol-induced
Ca2+-signal. A, The carbachol (3 µM)-induced
Ca2+-signal was dependent on the extracellular
glucose-concentration. ß-cells were pretreated for 1 h in the
respective glucose-concentration. Only cells were chosen, which
exhibited stable [Ca2+]i for 58 min before
carbachol (3 µM) stimulation. Representative tracings of
618 cells. B, The peak Ca2+ increase above basal values
induced by carbachol (3 µM) after 1 h pretreatment
in four different glucose-concentrations is shown. Values are
means ± SEM of 618 cells.
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Figure 3. Effect of inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation
on the carbachol-induced Ca2+-signal. A, Rotenone (1
µM), which inhibits complex 1 of the mitochondrial
respiratory chain, increased [Ca2+]i and
almost completely inhibited the carbachol (3 µM)-induced
increase in [Ca2+]i. B, Antimycin A (50
nM), which inhibits complex 2 of the mitochondrial
respiratory chain, increased [Ca2+]i and
abolished the carbachol-induced increase in
[Ca2+]i. Representative tracings of 4 or 7
cells are given. For mean values, see Fig. 4 .
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Figure 5. Effect of pyruvate, methyl pyruvate, and KIC in
the presence of glutamine on the carbachol-induced
Ca2+-signal in glucose-free medium. A, Pyruvate (12 or 24
mM) could not restore the carbachol (3
µM)-induced Ca2+ signal in glucose-free
medium. B, Methyl pyruvate (6 mM) lowered
[Ca2+]i and restored the carbachol (3
µM)-induced Ca2+ signal in the absence of
glucose. C, KIC (1.5 mM) in combination with glutamine (1
mM) decreased [Ca2+]i and
restored the carbachol (3 µM)-induced Ca2+
signal in the absence of glucose. Representative tracings of 47
cells. For mean values, see text.
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Inhibitors of glucose metabolism differentially modulate the
carbachol-induced Ca2+-signal
To determine the metabolic steps required for the stimulation of a
rise in [Ca2+]i by
carbachol, several inhibitors of glucose metabolism were used. The
experiments were performed in medium containing glucose (6
mM). A double stimulation protocol was used to minimize
problems arising from cell to cell variation of carbachol (3
µM)-induced Ca2+ signals. ß-cells
were stimulated twice with carbachol (3 µM). In control
cells, restimulation of cells with carbachol (3 µM) after
a washout period of 30 min caused a virtually identical
Ca2+ response when compared with the first
stimulation (96 ± 4% of the initial peak and plateau; n =
9; Fig. 2A
and Fig. 4
). Restimulation
with carbachol (3 µM) in the absence of glucose caused a
largely diminished cytosolic Ca2+ signal, which
was 12 ± 9% of the first carbachol stimulation (n = 4)
(Figs. 2B
and Fig. 4
). Inhibitors of glucose metabolism were added
515 min before the second stimulation with carbachol (3
µM) in the presence of glucose (6 mM), and
the carbachol-induced Ca2+-signal was then
compared with the first carbachol stimulation in the absence of the
respective inhibitor in the same cell. Iodoacetate (1 mM,
IAA), that blocks glycolysis by inhibiting glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
dehydrogenase (16), increased
[Ca2+]i by 30 ± 15
nM (n = 7) and largely reduced the carbachol-induced
Ca2+-signal (Figs. 2C
and 4
). Sodium arsenate (2
mM), which uncouples ATP formation in the conversion of
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate to phosphoglycerate without inhibiting
glycolysis, thereby preventing glycolytic net production of ATP
(17, 18), neither changed basal
[Ca2+]i nor affected the
carbachol-induced increase in
[Ca2+]i (n = 5;
Figs. 2D
and 4
).
-Cyano-4- hydroxycinnamate (
CHC) inhibits
the mitochondrial pyruvate transporter, thereby preventing the import
of pyruvate into the mitochondrion and its metabolism through the Krebs
cycle (19).
-CHC (1 mM) increased
[Ca2+]i by 44 ± 13
nM (n = 4) and largely inhibited the carbachol-induced
increase in [Ca2+]i
(Figs. 2E
and 4
). Monofluoroacetate (2 mM), which blocks
the Krebs cycle enzyme aconitase and halts the Krebs cycle before the
production of reduced nucleotides or GTP (20), increased
by 34 ± 9 nM (n = 5) and abolished the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal (Figs. 2F
and 4
).
Rotenone and antimycin A are inhibitors of site 1 and site 2,
respectively, of mitochondrial ATP production through oxidative
phosphorylation (21, 22). Rotenone (1 µM)
increased [Ca2+]i by
52 ± 6 nM (n = 7) and almost completely
inhibited the carbachol (3 µM)-induced increase in
[Ca2+]i (Figs. 3A
and 4
).
Antimycin A (50 nM) increased
[Ca2+]i by 38 ± 7
nM (n = 4) and virtually abolished the
carbachol-induced increase in
[Ca2+]i (Figs. 3B
and 4
).

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Figure 4. Summary of the effects of inhibitors of glucose
metabolism on the carbachol-induced Ca2+-signal. The
carbachol (3 µM)-induced peak Ca2+ rises in
the presence of inhibitors of glucose metabolism are shown in percent
of a control stimulation with carbachol in the same cell (control). The
respective inhibitors were added 515 min before carbachol (3
µM) stimulation. To determine the carbachol (3
µM)-induced Ca2+ response in zero glucose,
cells were kept in glucose-free medium for 30 min before carbachol
stimulation. The means ± SEM are depicted. n =
412 cells; **, P < 0.01; ***,
P < 0.001.
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Methyl pyruvate and
-ketoisocaproate in combination with
glutamine, but not pyruvate, restore the carbachol-linked
Ca2+-signal in glucose-free medium
To test whether substrates for Krebs-cycle dependent mitochondrial
ATP production could substitute for glucose in the generation of the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signals, we investigated
the effects of pyruvate, the membrane-permeant pyruvate analog methyl
pyruvate, and
-ketoisocaproate (KIC) with glutamine on
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signals in glucose-free
medium. ß-cells were first stimulated with carbachol (3
µM) in the presence of 6 mM glucose and then
perfused with glucose-free medium for 30 min. The addition of pyruvate
(12 or 24 mM) to glucose-free medium 510 min before the
second carbachol-stimulation neither changed
[Ca2+]i nor restored the
carbachol-induced rise in
[Ca2+]i (n = 7)
(Fig. 5A
). By contrast, methyl pyruvate
(6 mM) or KIC (1.5 mM) in the presence of
glutamine (1 mM) decreased
[Ca2+]i by 24 ± 4
(n = 7) and by 24 ± 5 (n = 6), respectively (Fig. 5
, B
and C). A subsequent rise in
[Ca2+]i occurred in 1 of
7 cells treated with methyl pyruvate (6 mM) and in 2 of 6
cells treated with KIC (1.5 mM) and glutamine (1
mM). To assess the effects of methyl pyruvate (6
mM) or KIC (1.5 mM) and glutamine (1
mM) on the carbachol (3 µM)-induced
Ca2+ signal, cells were chosen, which exhibited
only a decrease in
[Ca2+]i that was stable
for 38 min. Both methyl pyruvate (6 mM) and KIC (1.5
mM) in the presence of glutamine (1
mM) restored the carbachol-induced
Ca2+ signal, which amounted to 72 ± 25%
(n = 6) or 94 ± 13% (n = 4) of the first stimulation,
respectively (Fig. 5
, B and C). Thus methyl pyruvate and KIC, but not
pyruvate, could substitute for glucose in the generation of the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal.
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Discussion
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The ACH analog carbachol, which stimulates the
Ca2+/PLC signaling pathway, has a strictly
glucose-dependent effect on
[Ca2+]i as reported
previously (3, 12, 13). The amplitude of the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal was determined by
the ambient glucose concentration and increased almost 3-fold when
glucose was raised from 3 to 10 mM. The range of glucose
concentrations required for enhancing the carbachol-induced
Ca2+ signal corresponds well to the reported
dose-response curve for a glucose-induced rise in the ATP/ADP ratio in
mouse islets (23). Furthermore, deoxy-glucose, which is a
nonmetabolizable glucose analog, could not substitute for glucose in
the generation of carbachol-induced Ca2+ signals.
Taken together, this suggests that metabolic signals derived from
glucose metabolism underlie the glucose dependency of the
carbachol-stimulated rise in
[Ca2+]i.
As a rise in ATP is critical for glucose-dependent regulation of
various ß-cell functions, we characterized the metabolic steps by
which glucose exerts its synergistic effects on carbachol-linked
Ca2+-signals. Glucose-derived ATP is generated by
cytosolic glycolysis and by mitochondrial metabolism of the glycolytic
products pyruvate and NADH. The uptake of pyruvate into the
mitochondria is regulated by a specific transporter (24).
Pyruvate is then further metabolized through the mitochondrial Krebs
cycle, yielding energy rich substrates that are used to generate ATP
through oxidative phosphorylation. Mitochondrial entry of NADH occurs
through the malate-aspartate and/or the glycerol phosphate shuttle
system. This process directly transfers two electrons to site 1 or 2 of
the respiratory chain, thereby generating ATP through oxidative
phosphorylation (25). IAA, which blocks glycolysis by
inhibiting glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, thereby preventing
NADH and ATP formation from glucose oxidation (16),
reduced the carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal in the
presence of 6 mM glucose to a similar degree as did
preincubation in glucose-free medium. Identical results were obtained
with rotenone and antimycin A, which block oxidative phosphorylation
and the generation of ATP by inhibiting the respiratory chain at sites
1 and 2, respectively (21, 22). This demonstrates that ATP
derived from glucose metabolism underlies the glucose dependency of the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal. As arsenate, which
uncouples ATP formation during the conversion of
phosphoglycerophosphate to phosphoglycerate without inhibiting
glycolysis, thereby preventing glycolytic net production of ATP
(17, 18), did not inhibit the carbachol-stimulated rise in
[Ca2+]i, this indicates
that direct glycolytic ATP production is not required for carbachol to
elicit a cytosolic Ca2+ signal. Thus, ATP either
generated from NADH formed during glycolysis or derived from
mitochondrial metabolism of pyruvate during operation of the Krebs
cycle appears to underlie the glucose dependency of the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal. The mitochondrial
pyruvate transport inhibitor
CHC (19) and
monofluoroacetate, which blocks the Krebs cycle enzyme aconitase and
halts the Krebs cycle before the formation of energy rich substrates
(20), both strongly inhibited the carbachol-induced
Ca2+ signal in the presence of 6 mM
glucose. Both inhibitors were similarly effective in inhibiting the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal as were IAA,
rotenone, antimycin, or preincubation in glucose-free medium. Thus,
energy-rich substrates generated from pyruvate through Krebs cycle
metabolism are the predominant source for the formation of ATP through
oxidative phosphorylation, which is necessary for carbachol to
stimulate a rise in
[Ca2+]i.
If this is true, one would expect that Krebs cycle substrates, which
bypass cytosolic glycolysis, could substitute for glucose in the
generation of carbachol-induced Ca2+ signals.
However, even high concentrations of pyruvate (24 mM),
which freely permeates the plasma membrane to reach the cytosol, could
not restore the carbachol-induced Ca2+-signal in
glucose-free medium. Likewise, pyruvate (up to 24 mM) did
not change the [Ca2+]i
and in particular no decrease in
[Ca2+]i was observed,
which is an initial hallmark of the glucose-induced
Ca2+-signal (26). The fact that
pyruvate could not substitute for glucose is consistent with reports
demonstrating a lack of effect of pyruvate on
KATP channels (10), on
[Ca2+]i (10, 27), on insulin secretion (28) and on intracellular
ATP levels (28) in pancreatic islets. The reasons for the
difference in the action of pyruvate and glucose are still unclear.
This may involve shunting of pyruvate into lactate, thereby consuming
reduced nucleotides necessary for ATP production (10) and
causing a marked inhibition of the oxidation of endogenous nutrients by
high concentrations of pyruvate, thereby reducing the apparent yield of
ATP (10, 28). In contrast to pyruvate, methyl pyruvate at
a relatively low concentration of 6 mM decreased
[Ca2+]i similarly to 6
mM glucose without regularly triggering a rise in
[Ca2+]i and restored the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal in the absence of
glucose. As methyl pyruvate is a membrane permeant analog of pyruvate
that freely enters mitochondria where it is de-esterised and
metabolized through the Krebs cycle (10), it appears that
direct supply of pyruvate to the mitochondria can well substitute for
glucose in the generation of carbachol-induced
Ca2+ signals. KIC in the presence of glutamine is
an alternative way to stimulate Krebs cycle-dependent generation of ATP
(29). KIC, which is exclusively metabolized in the
mitochondria, transaminates with glutamate or glutamine to yield
leucine and
-ketoglutarate (30), which fuels the Krebs
cycle to yield energy rich substrates and finally ATP
(29). Like methyl pyruvate, a low concentration of KIC in
the presence of glutamine decreased
[Ca2+]i without regularly
triggering a rise in
[Ca2+]i and restored the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal in the absence of
glucose. This further demonstrates that Krebs-cycle dependent formation
of ATP is fully sufficient to allow for carbachol-dependent
Ca2+ signals in the absence of glucose. It is
important to note that this occurs at substrate concentrations, which
cause a decrease in
[Ca2+]i but do not
necessarily stimulate a rise in
[Ca2+]i by themselves.
Thus, supranormal stimulation of the Krebs cycle by either methyl
pyruvate or KIC/glutamine at the concentrations used in the experiments
appears to be unlikely.
Taken together, our observations suggest that the glucose dependency of
carbachol-induced Ca2+-signals rely on the
glycolytic production of pyruvate, which after import into the
mitochondria is metabolized through the Krebs cycle to yield energy
rich substrates, that are further processed to ATP through oxidative
phosphorylation. NADH and ATP generated through glycolysis, however,
are insufficient to allow for carbachol-induced
Ca2+-signals. This contrasts with the generation
of the glucose-induced rise in
[Ca2+]i, which is
critically regulated by ATP and NADH derived from glycolysis (10, 31). Thus, distinct energy demands or thresholds appear to exist
for specific glucose-dependent pathways in ß-cells. In addition or
alternatively, functional compartmentation of glycolytic and Krebs
cycle-derived ATP may exist in pancreatic ß-cells as has been
suggested from other cell types (32, 33), which could
explain the differing roles of ATP derived from distinct metabolic
processes in glucose-dependent signal transduction pathways
(10). In either case, distinct energy requirements for
different processes regulated by glucose clearly enhance the plasticity
of glucose-dependent signaling in ß-cells.
The generation of Ca2+ signals by ACH requires
Ip3-linked mobilization of
Ca2+ from intracellular stores and
Ca2+ influx from the outside (12).
We have recently shown that tolbutamide, which like a rise in
extracellular glucose inhibits KATP channels,
potentiated the carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal in
the absence of glucose (34). This indicates that closure
of KATP channels could well contribute to the
glucose- dependency of carbachol-induced Ca2+
signals. However, as modulation of KATP channel
activity by glucose is predominantly dependent on ATP generated from
NADH derived from glycolysis (10, 31), it appears that
other glucose-dependent processes exist, which are crucial for the
generation of carbachol-induced Ca2+ signals and
that require Krebs cycle metabolism. Glucose has been shown to enhance
the production of Ip3 in response to muscarinic
receptor activation in rat islets (35) and to be a
prerequisite for the uptake of Ca2+ into the
Ip3-sensitive Ca2+ pool
(36). All metabolic blockers that inhibited the
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signal, increased
[Ca2+]i just like glucose
deprivation, and this is thought to be caused by depletion of
intracellular Ca2+ pools due to impaired
Ca2+-ATPase function by cellular ATP depletion
(27). Conversely, methyl pyruvate and KIC in the presence
of glutamine, which restored the carbachol-induced
Ca2+ signal in absence of glucose, decreased
[Ca2+]i just like glucose
(6 mM), an effect that has been attributed to the uptake of
Ca2+ into intracellular stores by the stimulation
of Ca2+-ATPases caused by a rise in cellular ATP
(26, 27). Thus, although not tested here, it could be
speculated that mobilization of internal Ca2+ by
carbachol could directly or indirectly be dependent on Krebs
cycle-derived ATP production.
In summary, Krebs cycle-dependent ATP production from glucose is
required for carbachol-induced Ca2+ signaling in
pancreatic ß-cells. As this reflects five-sixths of the total ATP
that can be produced from complete oxidation of glucose, it appears
that ß-cells need to exploit almost fully the ATP-generating
capabilities of oxidative glucose metabolism to allow for
carbachol-induced Ca2+ signals. This may indicate
that the generation of a carbachol-induced rise in
[Ca2+]i is more energy
consuming than the closure of KATP channels and
the concomitant increase in
[Ca2+]i stimulated by
high glucose concentrations. This process requires just
glycolytic-derived ATP, which accounts for only one-sixth of the total
ATP that can be generated from oxidative glucose metabolism. The
regulation of insulin secretion from pancreatic ß-cells involves
nutrients and neurohumoral factors like ACH. While nutrients like
glucose are sufficient to initiate insulin secretion, neurohumoral
factors like ACH further potentiate and amplify glucose-induced insulin
release (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). Such amplification could be important to
ensure optimal utilization of nutritional glucose by peripheral tissues
and at the same time to avoid high circulating glucose concentrations,
which might be toxic (37, 38). By the same token, at low
glucose concentrations during the fasting state, inappropriate
stimulation of insulin secretion by neurohumeral factors like ACH has
to be strictly precluded to prevent severe hypoglycemia. Thus, it would
make sense that the rise in
[Ca2+]i, which is an
early cytosolic key event for the stimulation of ACH-dependent
exocytosis of insulin, is critically regulated by ATP and depends on
almost complete exploitation of the ATP-generating capabilities of
oxidative glucose metabolism. In this way, a decrease in extracellular
glucose, which is mirrored by a decline of intracellular ATP levels,
could sensitively and reliably shut off the ACH-induced
Ca2+ signal if intracellular ATP falls below a
certain threshold, thereby preventing inappropriate ACH-induced
Ca2+ signaling and insulin secretion.
 |
Acknowledgments
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We thank V. Ash for linguistic help.
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Footnotes
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1 This work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Grant
Scho 466/21. 
Received May 2, 2000.
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