Glucose metabolism in mouse pancreatic islets
- 1 June 1970
- journal article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 118 (1) , 143-154
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1180143
Abstract
1. Rates of glucose oxidation, lactate output and the intracellular concentration of glucose 6-phosphate were measured in mouse pancreatic islets incubated in vitro. 2. Glucose oxidation rate, measured as the formation of 14CO2 from [U-14C]glucose, was markedly dependent on extracellular glucose concentration. It was especially sensitive to glucose concentrations between 1 and 2mg/ml. Glucose oxidation was inhibited by mannoheptulose and glucosamine but not by phlorrhizin, 2-deoxyglucose or N-acetylglucosamine. Glucose oxidation was slightly stimulated by tolbutamide but was not significantly affected by adrenaline, diazoxide or absence of Ca2+ (all of which may inhibit glucose-stimulated insulin release), by arginine or glucagon (which may stimulate insulin release) or by cycloheximide (which may inhibit insulin synthesis). 3. Rates of lactate formation were dependent on the extracellular glucose concentration and were decreased by glucosamine though not by mannoheptulose; tolbutamide increased the rate of lactate output. 4. Islet glucose 6-phosphate concentration was also markedly dependent on extracellular glucose concentration and was diminished by mannoheptulose or glucosamine; tolbutamide and glucagon were without significant effect. Mannose increased islet fructose 6-phosphate concentration but had little effect on islet glucose 6-phosphate concentration. Fructose increased islet glucose 6-phosphate concentration but to a much smaller extent than did glucose. 5. [1-14C]Mannose and [U-14C]fructose were also oxidized by islets but less rapidly than glucose. Conversion of [1-14C]mannose into [1-14C]glucose 6-phosphate or [1-14C]glucose could not be detected. It is concluded that metabolism of mannose is associated with poor equilibration between fructose 6-phosphate and glucose 6-phosphate. 6. These results are consistent with the idea that glucose utilization in mouse islets may be limited by the rate of glucose phosphorylation, that mannoheptulose and glucosamine may inhibit glucose phosphorylation and that effects of glucose on insulin release may be mediated through metabolism of the sugar.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Insulin release by isolated pancreatic islets of the mouse incubated in vitroDiabetologia, 1969
- Glucose metabolism of isolated mammalian Islets of Langerhans; effects of glucagon, 2-deoxy-D-glucose and D-mannoheptuloseDiabetologia, 1968
- Stimulation of insulin secretion by noncarbohydrate metabolites.1968
- Metabolism of Glucose in the Islets of LangerhansJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1968
- Oxidation of sugars, other than glucose, by isolated mammalian islets of LangerhansMetabolism, 1968
- Insulin Biosynthesis: Evidence for a PrecursorScience, 1967
- A New Method for the Measurementin Vitroof Pancreatic Insulin SecretionEndocrinology, 1967
- Cation Requirements for Insulin Secretion in the Isolated Perfused PancreasDiabetes, 1966
- Regulation of insulin secretion studied with pieces of rabbit pancreas incubated in vitroBiochemical Journal, 1964
- Inhibition of glucose phosphorylation by mannoheptuloseBiochemical Journal, 1964