Evidence for a melatonin receptor within pancreatic islets of neonate rats: functional, autoradiographic, and molecular investigations

Abstract
In a recent perifusion investigation, we showed that the pineal secretory product melatonin reduces insulin secretion from isolated pancreatic islets of neonate rats stimulated with potassium chloride (KCl), glucose, and forskolin. This effect of melatonin was reproduced with doses ranging from 200 pmol/L to 5 μmol/L. Because it is generally accepted that melatonin exerts some of its biological effects through specific, high‐affinity pertussis‐toxin‐sensitive G‐protein‐coupled receptors, we blocked the putative melatonin receptor of pancreatic islets using both the non‐hydrolyzable guanosine triphosphate analog guanosine 5′‐O‐(3‐thiotriphosphate) (GTPΓS, 30 μmol/L) and the melatonin antagonist luzindole (10 μmol/L). Both GTPΓS and luzindole caused a near normalization of the melatonin‐induced inhibition of the forskolin‐stimulated insulin secretion. To localize putative melatonin receptors within the pancreatic islets autoradiographic studies were additionally carried out. These investigations showed specific binding of 2‐[125I]iodomelatonin, which were in exact correspondence with the localization of the islets. In addition, gray‐level analysis showed that unlabeled melatonin was able to reduce the binding of 2‐[125I]iodomelatonin in a dose‐dependent manner. Concentrations of unlabeled melatonin of 10−9 mol/L produced a 50% reduction in specific binding, whereas concentrations of 10−6 mol/L displaced the binding completely. Likewise, the results of molecular investigations showed that the rat pancreas contains a melatonin receptor, since reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) experiments, using specific primers for the rat melatonin receptor Mel1a, showed that mRNA for this melatonin receptor type is expressed in pancreatic tissue of newborn rats. In summary, it may be said that our functional, autoradiographic, and molecular results indicate that the Mel1a receptor is located on the pancreatic islets, possibly in the beta cells.

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