We evaluated the possible autocrine modulatory effect of insulin on glucose metabolism and glucose-induced insulin secretion in islets isolated from normal hamsters. We measured (CO2)-C-14 and (H2O)-H-3 production from D-[U-C-14] glucose and D-[5-H-3] glucose, respectively, in islets incubated with 0.6, 3.3, 8.3, and 16.7 mM glucose alone or with 5 or 15 mU/ml insulin, anti-insulin guinea pig serum ( 1: 500), 25 muM nifedipine, or 150 nM wortmannin. Insulin release was measured ( radioimmunoassay) in islets incubated with 3.3 or 16.7 mM glucose with or without 75, 150, and 300 nM wortmannin. Insulin significantly enhanced (CO2)-C-14 and (H2O)-H-3 production with 3.3 mM glucose but not with 0.6, 8.3, or 16.7 mM glucose. Addition of anti-insulin serum to the medium with 8.3 and 16.7 mM glucose decreased (CO2)-C-14 and (H2O)-H-3 production significantly. A similar decrease was obtained in islets incubated with 8.3 and 16.7 mM glucose and wortmannin or nifedipine. This latter effect was reversed by adding 15 mU/ml insulin to the medium. Glucose metabolism was almost abolished when islets were incubated in a Ca2+-deprived medium, but this effect was not reversed by insulin. No changes were found in (CO2)-C-14 and (H2O)-H-3 production by islets incubated with 3.3 mM glucose and anti-insulin serum, wortmannin, or nifedipine in the media. Addition of wortmannin significantly decreased insulin release induced by 16.7 mM glucose in a dose-dependent manner. Our results suggest that insulin exerts a physiological autocrine stimulatory effect on glucose metabolism in intact islets as well as on glucose-induced insulin release. Such an effect, however, depends on the glucose concentration in the incubation medium.