4.5 Article

Tacrolimus impairment of insulin secretion in isolated rat islets occurs at multiple distal sites in stimulus-secretion coupling

Journal

ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 145, Issue 5, Pages 2264-2272

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/en.2003-1152

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the pathogenetic mechanisms remain controversial. We studied the mechanism of tacrolimus-induced impairment of insulin secretion using isolated rat pancreatic islets. Tacrolimus caused reductions in DNA and insulin contents per islet during 7-d culture. Tacrolimus time-dependently suppressed glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, and at a therapeutic concentration of 0.01 mumol/liter, it suppressed glucose-stimulated insulin secretion to 32 +/- 5% of the control value after 7-d incubation. Tacrolimus did not change islet glucose utilization and oxidation, ATP production, insulin mRNA expression, or the capacity for high glucose to increase intracellular Ca2+, but altered the rapid frequency oscillations of Ca2+ concentration. Tacrolimus suppressed insulin secretion stimulated by mitochondrial fuel ( combination of L-leucine and L-glutamine, and alpha-ketoisocaproate) and glibenclamide, but not by L-arginine. Tacrolimus suppressed insulin secretion induced by carbachol and by a protein kinase C agonist in the presence or absence of extracellular Ca2+. Under stringent Ca2+-free conditions, tacrolimus did not affect mastoparan-induced insulin secretion, but suppressed its glucose augmentation. Our results suggest that tacrolimus impairs glucose-stimulated insulin secretion downstream of the rise in intracellular Ca2+ at insulin exocytosis, and that protein kinase C-mediated (Ca2+-dependent and independent) and Ca2+-independent GTP signaling pathways may be involved. However, tacrolimus-induced impaired insulin secretion was reversed 3 d after removal of the drug. Our study demonstrated that tacrolimus impairs insulin secretion at multiple steps in stimulus-secretion coupling.

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