Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.328, No.2, 601-607, 2005
Glutamate inhibits protein phosphatases and promotes insulin exocytosis in pancreatic beta-cells
In human type 2 diabetes mellitus, loss of glucose-sensitive insulin secretion from the pancreatic beta-cell is an early pathogenetic event, but the mechanisms involved in glucose sensing are poorly understood. A messenger role has been postulated for L-glutamate in linking glucose stimulation to sustained insulin exocytosis in the beta-cell, but the precise nature by which L-glutamate controls insulin secretion remains elusive. Effects of L-glutamate on the activities of ser/thr protein phosphatases (PPase) and Ca2+-regulated insulin exocytosis in INS-1E cells were investigated. Glucose increases L-glutamate contents and promotes insulin secretion from INS-1E Cells. L-Glutamate also dose-dependently inhibits PPase enzyme activities analogous to the specific PPase inhibitor, okadaic acid. L-glutamate and okadaic acid directly and non-additively promote insulin exocytosis from permeabilized INS-1E cells in a Ca2+-independent manner. Thus, an increase in phosphorylation state, through inhibition of protein dephosphorylation by glucose-derived L-glutamate, may be a novel regulatory mechanism linking glucose sensing to sustained insulin exocytosis. (C) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:diabetes;islet;insulin secretion;L-glutamate;protein phosphatase;okadaic acid;calcium;exocytosis;phosphorylation;stimulus-secretion coupling