4.7 Article

C16:0 sulfatide inhibits insulin secretion in rat β-cells by reducing the sensitivity of KATP channels to ATP inhibition

Journal

DIABETES
Volume 55, Issue 10, Pages 2826-2834

Publisher

AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db05-1355

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Sulfatide (3'-sulfo-beta-galactosyl ceramide) is a glycosphingolipid present in mammalians in various fatty acid isoforms of which the saturated 16 carbon-atom length (C16:0) is more abundant in pancreatic islets than in neural tissue, where long-chain sulfatide isoforms dominate. We previously reported that sulfatide isolated from pig brain inhibits glucose-induced insulin secretion by activation of ATP-sensitive K+ channels (K-ATP channels). Here, we show that C16:0 sulfatide is the active isoform. It inhibits glucose-stimulated insulin secretion by reducing the sensitivity of the K-ATP channels to ATP. (The half-maximal inhibitory concentration is 10.3 and 36.7 mu mol/l in the absence and presence of C16:0 sulfatide, respectively.) C16:0 sulfatide increased whole-cell KATP currents at intermediate glucose levels and reduced the ability of glucose to induce membrane depolarization, reduced electrical activity, and increased the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration. Recordings of cell capacitance revealed that C16:0 sulfatide increased Ca2+-induced exocytosis by 215%. This correlated with a stimulation of insulin secretion by C16:0 sulfatide in intact rat islets exposed to diazoxide and high K+. C24:0 sulfatide or the sulfatide precursor, beta-galactosyl ceramide, did not affect any of the measured parameters. C16:0 sulfatide did not modulate glucagon secretion from intact rat islets. In beta TC3 cells, sulfatide was expressed (mean [+/- SD] 0.30 +/- 0.04 pmol/mu g protein), and C16:0 sulfatide was found to be the dominant isoform. No expression of sulfatide was detected in alpha TC1-9 cells. We conclude that a major mechanism by which the predominant sulfatide isoform. in beta-cells, C16:0 sulfatide, inhibits glucose-induced insulin secretion is by reducing the K-ATP channel sensitivity to the ATP block.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available