Rh. Chow et al., COINCIDENCE OF EARLY GLUCOSE-INDUCED DEPOLARIZATION WITH LOWERING OF CYTOPLASMIC CA2(-CELLS() IN MOUSE PANCREATIC BETA), Journal of physiology, 485(3), 1995, pp. 607-617
1. The temporal relationship between the early glucose-induced changes
of membrane potential and cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+](i))
was studied in insulin-releasing pancreatic beta-cells. 2. The mean re
sting membrane potential and [Ca2+](i) were about -70 mV and 60 nM, re
spectively, in 3 mM glucose. 3. Elevating the glucose concentration to
8-23 mM typically elicited a slow depolarization, which was parallele
d by a lowering of [Ca2+](i). When the slow depolarization had reached
a threshold of -55 to -40 mV, there was rapid further depolarization
to a plateau with superimposed action potentials, and [Ca2+](i) increa
sed dramatically. 4. Imposing hyperpolarizations and depolarizations o
f 1.0 mV from a holding potential of -70 mV had no detectable effect o
n [Ca2+](i). Furthermore, glucose elevation elicited a decrease in [Ca
2+](i) even at a holding potential of -70 mV. 5. Step depolarizations
induced [Ca2+](i) transients, which decayed with time courses well fit
ted by double exponentials. The slower component became faster by a fa
ctor of about 4 upon elevation of glucose, suggesting involvement of A
TP-dependent Ca2+ sequestration or extrusion of [Ca2+](i). 6. Glucose
stimulation increased the size and accelerated the recovery of carbach
ol-triggered [Ca2+](i) transients, and thapsigargin, an intracellular
Ca2+-ATPase inhibitor, counteracted the glucose-induced lowering of [C
a2+](i), indicating that calcium transport into intracellular stores i
s involved in glucose-induced lowering of [Ca2+](i). 7. The results su
pport the notion that in beta-cells, nutrient-induced elevation of ATP
leads initially to ATP-dependent removal of Ca2+ from the cytoplasm,
paralleled by a slow depolarization due to inhibition of ATP-sensitive
K+ channels. Only after depolarization has reached a threshold do act
ion potentials occur, inducing a sharp elevation in [Ca2+](i).