Effect of gastrin-releasing peptide on the secretion of mouse islet hormones in vitro

Abstract
Collagenase-isolated mouse islets were incubated with gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP). At 5·6 mmol glucose/1, 10 nmol GRP/l increased the release of insulin (by 50%) and glucagon (by twofold), decreased the release of pancreatic polypeptide (by 35%), but did not significantly affect the release of somatostatin. At 16·7 mmol glucose/l, 10 nmol GRP/l increased glucagon release (by fivefold) and decreased pancreatic polypeptide release (by 46%), without significantly altering insulin and somatostatin release. GRP (200 nmol/l) did not affect insulin release by perifused mouse islets at 2·8 mmol glucose/l, but increased both first and second phase insulin release after a square wave increase in the glucose concentration to 11·1 mmol/l. At 5·6 mmol glucose/l, GRP (100 pmol/1–100 nmol/l) increased (by 50–70%) insulin release by the RINm5F clonal cell line. GRP did not affect glucose oxidation or the cyclic adenosine monophosphate content of RINm5F cells. However, the intracellular free Ca2+ concentration of RINm5F cells was rapidly and transiently increased by GRP (maximum increase of 64% about 10 s after exposure to 1 μmol GRP/l). The rise of intracellular free Ca2+ was approximately halved in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. The results suggest that GRP may contribute to the normal regulation of the endocrine pancreas. The insulin-releasing effect of GRP is mediated via increased cytosolic free Ca2+, derived both from an increased net influx of extracellular Ca2+ and from mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ stores. Journal of Endocrinology (1990) 127, 335–340