Although isolated rat islets are widely used to study in vitro insulin secretion and the underlying metabolic and ionic processes, knowledge on the properties of glucose-induced electrical activity (GIEA), a key step in glucose-response coupling, has been gathered almost exclusively from microdissected mouse islets. Using a modified intracellular recording technique, we have now compared the patterns of GIEA in collagenase-isolated rat and mouse islets. Resting membrane potentials of rat and mouse beta-cells were approximately -50 and -60 mV, respectively. Both rat and mouse beta-cells displayed prompt membrane depolarizations in response to glucose. However, whereas the latter exhibited a bursting pattern consisting of alternating hyperpolarized and depolarized active phases, rat beta-cells fired action potentials from a nonoscillating membrane potential at all glucose concentrations (8.4-22.0 mmol/l). This was mirrored by changes in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), which was oscillatory in mouse and nonoscillatory in rat islets. Stimulated rat beta-cells were strongly hyperpolarized by diazoxide, an activator of ATP-dependent K+ channels. Glucose evoked dose-dependent depolarizations and [Ca2+]i increases in both rat (EC50 5.9-6.9 mmol/l) and mouse islets (EC50 8.3-9.5 mmol/l), although it did not affect the burst plateau potential in the latter case. We conclude that there are important differences between beta-cells from both species with respect to early steps in the stimulus-secretion coupling cascade based on the following findings: 1) mouse beta-cells have a larger resting K+ conductance in 2 mmol/l glucose, 2) rat beta-cells lack the compensatory mechanism responsible for generating membrane potential oscillations and holding the depolarized plateau potential in mouse beta-cells, and 3) the electrical and [Ca2+]i dose-response curves in rat beta-cells are shifted toward lower glucose concentrations. Exploring the molecular basis of these differences may clarify several a priori assumptions on the electrophysiological properties of rat beta-cells, which could foster the development of new working models of pancreatic beta-cell function.
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Abstract|
December 01 2000
Differential patterns of glucose-induced electrical activity and intracellular calcium responses in single mouse and rat pancreatic islets.
C M Antunes;
C M Antunes
Center for Neuroscience and Cell Biology, Faculty of Sciences and Technology, University of Coimbra, Portugal.
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A P Salgado;
A P Salgado
Center for Neuroscience and Cell Biology, Faculty of Sciences and Technology, University of Coimbra, Portugal.
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L M Rosário;
L M Rosário
Center for Neuroscience and Cell Biology, Faculty of Sciences and Technology, University of Coimbra, Portugal.
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R M Santos
R M Santos
Center for Neuroscience and Cell Biology, Faculty of Sciences and Technology, University of Coimbra, Portugal.
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Citation
C M Antunes, A P Salgado, L M Rosário, R M Santos; Differential patterns of glucose-induced electrical activity and intracellular calcium responses in single mouse and rat pancreatic islets.. Diabetes 1 December 2000; 49 (12): 2028–2038. https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.49.12.2028
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