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Role of thiol groups in insulin release : studies with poorly permeating disulphides

Hellman, B. ; Idahl, L. A. ; Lernmark, A. LU orcid ; Sehlin, J. and Täljedal, I. B. (1973) In Molecular Pharmacology 9(6). p.792-801
Abstract

At a concentration of 1.0 mM, 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid and 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid) stimulated insulin release from microdissected pancreatic islets of hereditary obese (ob/ob) mice. Microperifusion experiments showed that the secretory responses occurred promptly upon exposure to the sulfhydryl reagents. Perifusion with 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid induced a sustained enhancement of insulin release without any signs of multiphasic secretion. This reagent induced a similar release pattern at both 3 and 17 mM glucose, although the high glucose concentration appeared to potentiate the effect of 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid. The dynamics of insulin release in response to 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid) depended markedly,... (More)

At a concentration of 1.0 mM, 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid and 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid) stimulated insulin release from microdissected pancreatic islets of hereditary obese (ob/ob) mice. Microperifusion experiments showed that the secretory responses occurred promptly upon exposure to the sulfhydryl reagents. Perifusion with 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid induced a sustained enhancement of insulin release without any signs of multiphasic secretion. This reagent induced a similar release pattern at both 3 and 17 mM glucose, although the high glucose concentration appeared to potentiate the effect of 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid. The dynamics of insulin release in response to 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid) depended markedly, however, on the accompanying glucose concentration. At 0 and 3 mM glucose an initial peak of release was followed by a steady decline towards the basal release rate, whereas at 17 mM glucose 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid) produced a sustained enhancement of secretion. The omission of calcium significantly inhibited insulin release in response of either of the two disulfides, although clear cut stimulation was still obtained. In marked contrast, 17 glucose clucose did not elicit even an initial peak of insulin release when calcium was omitted from the perifusion medium. 6,6' Dithiodinicotinic acid (0.01-1.0 mM) had no effect on the oxidation of (U 14C)D glucose. Significant inhibition of glucose oxidation was obtained with 0.1 and 1.0 mM 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid), whereas at a concentration of 0.01 mM this reagent stimulated oxidation. Since the disulfides do not readily penetrate cell membranes, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that insulin release is regulated by relatively superficial thiol groups in the β cell plasma membrane. However, further studies are necessary to exclude the possibility that the observed effects were due to small amounts of disulphide entering the β cells.

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author
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publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
in
Molecular Pharmacology
volume
9
issue
6
pages
792 - 801
publisher
American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
external identifiers
  • scopus:0015755387
  • pmid:4587007
ISSN
0026-895X
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
06911622-d615-4937-a8af-93a1f176095e
date added to LUP
2019-09-18 12:20:54
date last changed
2024-03-13 08:08:22
@article{06911622-d615-4937-a8af-93a1f176095e,
  abstract     = {{<p>At a concentration of 1.0 mM, 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid and 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid) stimulated insulin release from microdissected pancreatic islets of hereditary obese (ob/ob) mice. Microperifusion experiments showed that the secretory responses occurred promptly upon exposure to the sulfhydryl reagents. Perifusion with 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid induced a sustained enhancement of insulin release without any signs of multiphasic secretion. This reagent induced a similar release pattern at both 3 and 17 mM glucose, although the high glucose concentration appeared to potentiate the effect of 6,6' dithiodinicotinic acid. The dynamics of insulin release in response to 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid) depended markedly, however, on the accompanying glucose concentration. At 0 and 3 mM glucose an initial peak of release was followed by a steady decline towards the basal release rate, whereas at 17 mM glucose 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid) produced a sustained enhancement of secretion. The omission of calcium significantly inhibited insulin release in response of either of the two disulfides, although clear cut stimulation was still obtained. In marked contrast, 17 glucose clucose did not elicit even an initial peak of insulin release when calcium was omitted from the perifusion medium. 6,6' Dithiodinicotinic acid (0.01-1.0 mM) had no effect on the oxidation of (U <sup>14</sup>C)D glucose. Significant inhibition of glucose oxidation was obtained with 0.1 and 1.0 mM 5,5' dithiobis (2 nitrobenzoic acid), whereas at a concentration of 0.01 mM this reagent stimulated oxidation. Since the disulfides do not readily penetrate cell membranes, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that insulin release is regulated by relatively superficial thiol groups in the β cell plasma membrane. However, further studies are necessary to exclude the possibility that the observed effects were due to small amounts of disulphide entering the β cells.</p>}},
  author       = {{Hellman, B. and Idahl, L. A. and Lernmark, A. and Sehlin, J. and Täljedal, I. B.}},
  issn         = {{0026-895X}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{12}},
  number       = {{6}},
  pages        = {{792--801}},
  publisher    = {{American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics}},
  series       = {{Molecular Pharmacology}},
  title        = {{Role of thiol groups in insulin release : studies with poorly permeating disulphides}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{1973}},
}