Glucose-induced electrical activity in rat pancreatic β-cells: Dependence on intracellular chloride concentration

Abstract

A rise in glucose concentration depolarizes the β-cell membrane potential leading to electrical activity and insulin release. It is generally believed that closure of KATP channels underlies the depolarizing action of glucose, though work from several laboratories has indicated the existence of an additional anionic mechanism. It has been proposed that glucose activates a volume-regulated anion channel, generating an inward current due to Cl- efflux. This mechanism requires that intracellular [Cl-] is maintained above its electrochemical equilibrium. This hypothesis was tested in rat β-cells by varying [Cl-] in the patch pipette solution using the Cl--permeable antibiotic amphotericin B to allow Cl- equilibration with the cell interior. Under such conditions, a depolarization and electrical activity could be evoked by 16 mM glucose with pipette solutions containing 80 or 150 mM Cl-. At 40 or 20 mM Cl-, a subthreshold depolarization was usually observed, whilst further reduction to 12 or 6 mM abolished depolarization, in some cases leading to a glucose-induced hyperpolarization. With a pipette solution containing gramicidin, which forms Cl--impermeable pores, glucose induced a depolarization and electrical activity irrespective of [Cl-] in the pipette solution. Under the latter conditions, glucose-induced electrical activity was prevented by bumetanide, an inhibitor of the Na+-K+-2Cl- co-transporter. This inhibition could be overcome by the use of amphotericin B with a high [Cl-] pipette solution. These findings suggest that the maintenance of high intracellular [Cl-] in the β-cell is an important determinant in glucose-induced depolarization, and support the hypothesis that β-cell stimulation by glucose involves activation of the volume-regulated anion channel and generation of an inward Cl- current. © The Physiological Society 2005

Similar works

Full text

thumbnail-image

The University of Manchester - Institutional Repository

redirect
Last time updated on 01/02/2017

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.