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Title: Glucose-stimulated elevation of cytoplasmic calcium is defective in the diabetic Chinese hamster islet B cell. Author: Lindström P, Sehlin J, Frankel BJ. Journal: Eur J Endocrinol; 1996 May; 134(5):617-25. PubMed ID: 8664983. Abstract: To characterize insulin release and cytoplasmic free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) levels in the diabetic Chinese hamster islet B cell, islets from genetically normal (subline M) and diabetic (subline L) hamsters were collagenase isolated. Insulin release and glucose utilization (conversion of D-[5-(3H)]glucose to 3H2O) were measured in whole islets; [Ca2+]i levels were measured in single islet cells using fura-2. The Ca2+ channel agonist, 12 mmol/l perchlorate, ClO4-, increased the subnormal insulin response during 20 mmol/l glucose perifusion, but did not normalize it. Glucose utilization measured over a 2-h period was normal. Glucose induced an initial decrease and then a rise in [Ca2+]i in 85% of the normal (presumably B) cells. In diabetic cells, the [Ca2+]i response was delayed, subnormal and only observed in 23% of the cells. When perchlorate or another Ca2+ channel agonist, 10 mumol/l CGP 28392, was added with glucose, a larger proportion of the diabetic cells (61-67%) showed increased [Ca2+]i and the mean [Ca2+]i response was not different from normal. However, neither perchlorate nor CGP 28392 could normalize glucose-stimulated insulin release, and K(+)-induced insulin release was decreased in diabetic islets. The K(+)-induced [Ca2+]i rise was essentially normal in all the diabetic islet cells. Therefore, the diabetic hamster islet appears to metabolize glucose normally, but has a diminished insulin response to glucose and K+. The Ca2+ channel agonists markedly improve the subnormal [Ca2+]i response but not the insulin response. Glucose-induced elevation of [Ca2+]i and exocytosis appear defective in the diabetic Chinese hamster B cell.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]